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+The Project Gutenberg eBook of Tish, The Chronicle of Her Escapades and Excursions, by Mary Roberts Rinehart
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
+most other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you
+will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
+using this eBook.
+
+Title: Tish, The Chronicle of Her Escapades and Excursions
+
+Author: Mary Roberts Rinehart
+
+Release Date: February 16, 2005 [eBook #3464]
+[Most recently updated: April 18, 2023]
+
+Language: English
+
+Produced by: Lynn Hill
+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK TISH ***
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: "The outside edge, by George!" said Charlie Sands. "The
+old sport!"]
+
+
+
+
+
+TISH
+
+The Chronicle of Her Escapades and Excursions
+
+By MARY ROBERTS RINEHART
+
+
+_With Illustrations_
+_by May Wilson Preston_
+
+
+
+1916
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+MIND OVER MOTOR
+
+LIKE A WOLF ON THE FOLD
+
+THE SIMPLE LIFERS
+
+TISH'S SPY
+
+MY COUNTRY TISH OF THEE--
+
+
+
+
+ILLUSTRATIONS
+
+
+"The outside edge, by George!" said Charlie Sands. "The old sport!"
+
+Without cutting down her speed, bumped home the winner
+
+The real meaning of what was occurring did not penetrate to any of us
+
+It ended with Tish stalking off into the woods with the rabbit in one
+hand and the knife in the other
+
+As fast as she wet a bit of lawn, we followed with the pails
+
+"Get the canoe and follow. I'm heading for Island Eleven"
+
+"It's well enough for you, Tish Carberry, to talk about gripping a horse
+with your knees"
+
+"The older I get, Aggie Pilkington, the more I realize that to take you
+anywhere means ruin"
+
+"It would be just like the woman to refuse to come any farther and spoil
+everything"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+MIND OVER MOTOR
+
+HOW TISH BROKE THE LAW AND SOME RECORDS
+
+I
+
+
+So many unkind things have been said of the affair at Morris Valley
+that I think it best to publish a straightforward account of everything.
+The ill nature of the cartoon, for instance, which showed Tish in a pair
+of khaki trousers on her back under a racing-car was quite uncalled
+for. Tish did not wear the khaki trousers; she merely took them along
+in case of emergency. Nor was it true that Tish took Aggie along as
+a mechanician and brutally pushed her off the car because she was not
+pumping enough oil. The fact was that Aggie sneezed on a curve and fell
+out of the car, and would no doubt have been killed had she not been
+thrown into a pile of sand.
+
+It was in early September that Eliza Bailey, my cousin, decided to go
+to London, ostensibly for a rest, but really to get some cretonne at
+Liberty's. Eliza wrote me at Lake Penzance asking me to go to Morris
+Valley and look after Bettina.
+
+I must confess that I was eager to do it. We three were very comfortable
+at Mat Cottage, "Mat" being the name Charlie Sands, Tish's nephew, had
+given it, being the initials of "Middle-Aged Trio." Not that I regard
+the late forties as middle-aged. But Tish, of course, is fifty. Charlie
+Sands, who is on a newspaper, calls us either the "M.A.T." or the
+"B.A.'s," for "Beloved Aunts," although Aggie and I are not related
+to him.
+
+Bettina's mother's note:--
+
+ Not that she will allow you to do it, or because she isn't entirely
+ able to take care of herself; but because the people here are a talky
+ lot. Bettina will probably look after you. She has come from college
+ with a feeling that I am old and decrepit and must be cared for. She
+ maddens me with pillows and cups of tea and woolen shawls. She thinks
+ Morris Valley selfish and idle, and is disappointed in the church,
+ preferring her Presbyterianism pure. She is desirous now of learning
+ how to cook. If you decide to come I'll be grateful if you can keep
+ her out of the kitchen.
+
+ Devotedly, ELIZA.
+
+ P.S. If you can keep Bettina from getting married while I'm away
+ I'll be very glad. She believes a woman should marry and rear a
+ large family!
+
+ E.
+
+
+We were sitting on the porch of the cottage at Lake Penzance when I
+received the letter, and I read it aloud. "Humph!" said Tish, putting
+down the stocking she was knitting and looking over her spectacles at
+me--"Likes her Presbyterianism pure and believes in a large family! How
+old is she? Forty?"
+
+"Eighteen or twenty," I replied, looking at the letter. "I'm not anxious
+to go. She'll probably find me frivolous."
+
+Tish put on her spectacles and took the letter. "I think it's your duty,
+Lizzie," she said when she'd read it through. "But that young woman
+needs handling. We'd better all go. We can motor over in half a day."
+
+That was how it happened that Bettina Bailey, sitting on Eliza Bailey's
+front piazza, decked out in chintz cushions,--the piazza, of course,--saw
+a dusty machine come up the drive and stop with a flourish at the steps.
+And from it alight, not one chaperon, but three.
+
+After her first gasp Bettina was game. She was a pretty girl in a white
+dress and bore no traces in her face of any stern religious proclivities.
+
+"I didn't know--" she said, staring from one to the other of us. "Mother
+said--that is--won't you go right upstairs and have some tea and lie
+down?" She had hardly taken her eyes from Tish, who had lifted the
+engine hood and was poking at the carbureter with a hairpin.
+
+"No, thanks," said Tish briskly. "I'll just go around to the garage and
+oil up while I'm dirty. I've got a short circuit somewhere. Aggie, you
+and Lizzie get the trunk off."
+
+Bettina stood by while we unbuckled and lifted down our traveling trunk.
+She did not speak a word, beyond asking if we wouldn't wait until the
+gardener came. On Tish's saying she had no time to wait, because she
+wanted to put kerosene in the cylinders before the engine cooled,
+Bettina lapsed into silence and stood by watching us.
+
+Bettina took us upstairs. She had put Drummond's "Natural Law in the
+Spiritual World" on my table and a couch was ready with pillows and a
+knitted slumber robe. Very gently she helped us out of our veils and
+dusters and closed the windows for fear of drafts.
+
+"Dear mother is so reckless of drafts," she remarked. "Are you sure you
+won't have tea?"
+
+"We had some blackberry cordial with us," Aggie said, "and we all had a
+little on the way. We had to change a tire and it made us thirsty."
+
+"Change a tire!"
+
+Aggie had taken off her bonnet and was pinning on the small lace cap she
+wears, away from home, to hide where her hair is growing thin. In her
+cap Aggie is a sweet-faced woman of almost fifty, rather ethereal. She
+pinned on her cap and pulled her crimps down over her forehead.
+
+"Yes," she observed. "A bridge went down with us and one of the nails
+spoiled a new tire. I told Miss Carberry the bridge was unsafe, but she
+thought, by taking it very fast--"
+
+Bettina went over to Aggie and clutched her arm. "Do you mean to say,"
+she quavered, "that you three women went through a bridge--"
+
+"It was a small bridge," I put in, to relieve her mind; "and only a foot
+or two of water below. If only the man had not been so disagreeable--"
+
+"Oh," she said, relieved, "you had a man with you!"
+
+"We never take a man with us," Aggie said with dignity. "This one was
+fishing under the bridge and he was most ungentlemanly. Quite refused
+to help, and tried to get the license number so he could sue us."
+
+"Sue you!"
+
+"He claimed his arm was broken, but I distinctly saw him move it."
+Aggie, having adjusted her cap, was looking at it in the mirror. "But
+dear Tish thinks of everything. She had taken off the license plates."
+
+Bettina had gone really pale. She seemed at a loss, and impatient at
+herself for being so. "You--you won't have tea?" she asked.
+
+"No, thank you."
+
+"Would you--perhaps you would prefer whiskey and soda."
+
+Aggie turned on her a reproachful eye. "My dear girl," she said, "with
+the exception of a little home-made wine used medicinally we drink
+nothing. I am the secretary of the Woman's Prohibition Party."
+
+Bettina left us shortly after that to arrange for putting up Letitia
+and Aggie. She gave them her mother's room, and whatever impulse she
+may have had to put the Presbyterian Psalter by the bed, she restrained
+it. By midnight Drummond's "Natural Law" had disappeared from my table
+and a novel had taken its place. But Bettina had not lost her air of
+bewilderment.
+
+That first evening was very quiet. A young man in white flannels called,
+and he and Letitia spent a delightful evening on the porch talking
+spark-plugs and carbureters. Bettina sat in a corner and looked at the
+moon. Spoken to, she replied in monosyllables in a carefully sweet tone.
+The young man's name was Jasper McCutcheon.
+
+It developed that Jasper owned an old racing-car which he kept in the
+Bailey garage, and he and Tish went out to look it over. They very
+politely asked us all to go along, but Bettina refusing, Aggie and I sat
+with her and looked at the moon.
+
+Aggie in her capacity as chaperon, or as one of an association of
+chaperons, used the opportunity to examine Bettina on the subject of
+Jasper.
+
+"He seems a nice boy," she remarked. Aggie's idea of a nice boy is one
+who in summer wears fresh flannels outside, in winter less conspicuously.
+"Does he live near?"
+
+"Next door," sweetly but coolly.
+
+"He is very good-looking."
+
+"Ears spoil him--too large."
+
+"Does he come around--er--often?"
+
+"Only two or three times a day. On Sunday, of course, we see more of
+him."
+
+Aggie looked at me in the moonlight. Clearly the young man from the next
+door needed watching. It was well we had come.
+
+"I suppose you like the same things?" she suggested. "Similar tastes
+and--er--all that?"
+
+Bettina stretched her arms over her head and yawned.
+
+"Not so you could notice it," she said coolly. "I can't thick of
+anything we agree on. He is an Episcopalian; I'm a Presbyterian. He
+approves of suffrage for women; I do not. He is a Republican; I'm a
+Progressive. He disapproves of large families; I approve of them, if
+people can afford them."
+
+Aggie sat straight up. "I hope you don't discuss that!" she exclaimed.
+
+Bettina smiled. "How nice to find that you are really just nice elderly
+ladies after all!" she said. "Of course we discuss it. Is it anything to
+be ashamed of?"
+
+"When I was a girl," I said tartly, "we married first and discussed
+those things afterward."
+
+"Of course you did, Aunt Lizzie," she said, smiling alluringly. She was
+the prettiest girl I think I have ever seen, and that night she was
+beautiful. "And you raised enormous families who religiously walked to
+church in their bare feet to save their shoes!"
+
+"I did nothing of the sort," I snapped.
+
+"It seems to me," Aggie put in gently, "that you make very little of
+love." Aggie was once engaged to be married to a young man named
+Wiggins, a roofer by trade, who was killed in the act of inspecting a
+tin gutter, on a rainy day. He slipped and fell over, breaking his neck
+as a result.
+
+Bettina smiled at Aggie. "Not at all," she said. "The day of blind love
+is gone, that's all--gone like the day of the chaperon."
+
+Neither of us cared to pursue this, and Tish at that moment appearing
+with Jasper, Aggie and I made a move toward bed. But Jasper not going,
+and none of us caring to leave him alone with Bettina, we sat down
+again.
+
+We sat until one o'clock.
+
+At the end of that time Jasper rose, and saying something about its
+being almost bedtime strolled off next door. Aggie was sound asleep in
+her chair and Tish was dozing. As for Bettina, she had said hardly a
+word after eleven o'clock.
+
+Aggie and Tish, as I have said, were occupying the same room. I went to
+sleep the moment I got into bed, and must have slept three or four hours
+when I was awakened by a shot. A moment later a dozen or more shots were
+fired in rapid succession and I sat bolt upright in bed. Across the
+street some one was raising a window, and a man called "What's the
+matter?" twice.
+
+There was no response and no further sound. Shaking in every limb, I
+found the light switch and looked at the time. It was four o'clock in
+the morning and quite dark.
+
+Some one was moving in the hall outside and whimpering. I opened the
+door hurriedly and Aggie half fell into the room.
+
+"Tish is murdered, Lizzie!" she said, and collapsed on the floor in a
+heap.
+
+"Nonsense!"
+
+"She's not in her room or in the house, and I heard shots!"
+
+Well, Aggie was right. Tish was not in her room. There was a sort of
+horrible stillness everywhere as we stood there clutching at each other
+and listening.
+
+"She's heard burglars downstairs and has gone down after them, and this
+is what has happened! Oh, Tish! brave Tish!" Aggie cried hysterically.
+
+And at that Bettina came in with her hair over her shoulders and asked
+us if we had heard anything. When we told her about Tish, she insisted
+on going downstairs, and with Aggie carrying her first-aid box and I
+carrying the blackberry cordial, we went down.
+
+The lower floor was quiet and empty. The man across the street had put
+down his window and gone back to bed, and everything was still. Bettina
+in her dressing-gown went out on the porch and turned on the light. Tish
+was not there, nor was there a body lying on the lawn.
+
+"It was back of the house by the garage," Bettina said. "If only
+Jasper--"
+
+And at that moment Jasper came into the circle of light. He had a
+Norfolk coat on over his pajamas and a pair of slippers, and he was
+running, calling over his shoulder to some one behind as he ran.
+
+"Watch the drive!" he yelled. "I saw him duck round the corner."
+
+We could hear other footsteps now and somebody panting near us. Aggie
+was sitting huddled in a porch chair, crying, and Bettina, in the hall,
+was trying to get down from the wall a Moorish knife that Eliza Bailey
+had picked up somewhere.
+
+"John!" we heard Jasper calling. "John! Quick! I've got him!"
+
+He was just at the corner of the porch. My heart stopped and then rushed
+on a thousand a minute. Then:--
+
+"Take your hands off me!" said Tish's voice.
+
+The next moment Tish came majestically into the circle of light and
+mounted the steps. Jasper, with his mouth open, stood below looking up,
+and a hired man in what looked like a bed quilt was behind in the
+shadow.
+
+Tish was completely dressed in her motoring clothes, even to her
+goggles. She looked neither to the right nor left, but stalked across
+the porch into the house and up the stairway. None of us moved until we
+heard the door of her room slam above.
+
+"Poor old dear!" said Bettina. "She's been walking in her sleep!"
+
+"But the shots!" gasped Aggie. "Some one was shooting at her!"
+
+Conscious now of his costume, Jasper had edged close to the veranda and
+stood in its shadow.
+
+"Walking in her sleep, of course!" he said heartily. "The trip to-day was
+too much for her. But think of her getting into that burglar-proof
+garage with her eyes shut--or do sleep-walkers have their eyes
+shut?--and actually cranking up my racer!"
+
+Aggie looked at me and I looked at Aggie.
+
+"Of course," Jasper went on, "there being no muffler on it, the racket
+wakened her as well as the neighborhood. And then the way we chased
+her!"
+
+"Poor old dear!" said Bettina again. "I'm going in to make her some
+tea."
+
+"I think," said Jasper, "that I need a bit of tea too. If you will put
+out the porch lights I'll come up and have some."
+
+But Aggie and I said nothing. We knew Tish never walked in her sleep.
+She had meant to try out Jasper's racing-car at dawn, forgetting that
+racers have no mufflers, and she had been, as one may say, hoist with
+her own petard--although I do not know what a petard is and have never
+been able to find out.
+
+We drank our tea, but Tish refused to have any or to reply to our
+knocks, preserving a sulky silence. Also she had locked Aggie out and
+I was compelled to let her sleep in my room.
+
+I was almost asleep when Aggie spoke:--
+
+"Did you think there was anything queer about the way that Jasper boy
+said good-night to Bettina?" she asked drowsily.
+
+"I didn't hear him say good-night."
+
+"That was it. He didn't. I think"--she yawned--"I think he kissed her."
+
+
+
+
+II
+
+
+Tish was down early to breakfast that morning and her manner forbade any
+mention of the night before. Aggie, however, noticed that she ate her
+cereal with her left hand and used her right arm only when absolutely
+necessary. Once before Tish had almost broken an arm cranking a car and
+had been driven to arnica compresses for a week; but this time we dared
+not suggest anything.
+
+Shortly after breakfast she came down to the porch where Aggie and I
+were knitting.
+
+"I've hurt my arm, Lizzie," she said. "I wish you'd come out and crank
+the car."
+
+"You'd better stay at home with an arm like that," I replied stiffly.
+
+"Very well, I'll crank it myself."
+
+"Where are you going?"
+
+"To the drug store for arnica."
+
+Bettina was not there, so I turned on Tish sharply. "I'll go, of
+course," I said; "but I'll not go without speaking my mind, Letitia
+Carberry. By and large, I've stood by you for twenty-five years, and
+now in the weakness of your age I'm not going to leave you. But I warn
+you, Tish, if you touch that racing-car again, I'll send for Charlie
+Sands."
+
+"I haven't any intention of touching it again," said Tish, meekly
+enough. "But I wish I could buy a second-hand racer cheap."
+
+"What for?" Aggie demanded.
+
+Tish looked at her with scorn. "To hold flowers on the dining-table,"
+she snapped.
+
+It being necessary, of course, to leave a chaperon with Bettina, because
+of the Jasper person's habit of coming over at any hour of the day, we
+left Aggie with instructions to watch them both.
+
+Tish and I drove to the drug store together, and from there to a garage
+for gasoline. I have never learned to say "gas" for gasoline. It seems
+to me as absurd as if I were to say "but" for butter. Considering that
+Aggie was quite sulky at being left, it is absurd for her to assume an
+air of virtue over what followed that day. Aggie was only like a lot of
+people--good because she was not tempted; for it was at the garage that
+we met Mr. Ellis.
+
+We had stopped the engine and Tish was quarreling with the man about
+the price of gasoline when I saw him--a nice-looking young man in a
+black-and-white checked suit and a Panama hat. He came over and stood
+looking at Tish's machine.
+
+"Nice lines to that car," he said. "Built for speed, isn't she? What do
+you get out of her?"
+
+Tish heard him and turned. "Get out of her?" she said. "Bills mostly."
+
+"Well, that's the way with most of them," he remarked, looking steadily
+at Tish. "A machine's a rich man's toy. The only way to own one is to
+have it endowed like a university. But I meant speed. What can you
+make?"
+
+"Never had a chance to find out," Tish said grimly. "Between nervous
+women in the machine and constables outside I have the
+twelve-miles-an-hour habit. I'm going to exchange the speedometer for
+a vacuum bottle."
+
+He smiled. "I don't think you're fair to yourself. Mostly--if you'll
+forgive me--I can tell a woman's driving as far off as I can see the
+machine; but you are a very fine driver. The way you brought that car
+in here impressed me considerably."
+
+"She need not pretend she crawls along the road," I said with some
+sarcasm. "The bills she complains of are mostly fines for speeding."
+
+"No!" said the young man, delighted. "Good! I'm glad to hear it. So are
+mine!"
+
+After that we got along famously. He had his car there--a low gray thing
+that looked like an armored cruiser.
+
+"I'd like you ladies to try her," he said. "She can move, but she is as
+gentle as a lamb. A lady friend of mine once threaded a needle as an
+experiment while going sixty-five miles an hour."
+
+"In this car?"
+
+"In this car."
+
+Looking back, I do not recall just how the thing started. I believe Tish
+expressed a desire to see the car go, and Mr. Ellis said he couldn't let
+her out on the roads, but that the race-track at the fair-ground was
+open and if we cared to drive down there in Tish's car he would show us
+her paces, as he called it.
+
+From that to going to the race-track, and from that to Tish's getting in
+beside him on the mechanician's seat and going round once or twice, was
+natural. I refused; I didn't like the look of the thing.
+
+Tish came back with a cinder in her eye and full of enthusiasm. "It was
+magnificent, Lizzie," she said. "The only word for it is sublime. You
+see nothing. There is just the rush of the wind and the roar of the
+engine and a wonderful feeling of flying. Here! See if you can find this
+cinder."
+
+"Won't you try it, Miss--er--Lizzie?"
+
+"No, thanks," I replied. "I can get all the roar and rush of wind I want
+in front of an electric fan, and no danger."
+
+He stood by, looking out over the oval track while I took three cinders
+from Tish's eye.
+
+"Great track!" he said. "It's a horse-track, of course, but it's in
+bully shape--the county fair is held there and these fellows make a big
+feature of their horse-races. I came up here to persuade them to hold an
+automobile meet, but they've got cold feet on the proposition."
+
+"What was the proposition?" asked Tish.
+
+"Well," he said, "it was something like this. I've been turning the
+trick all over the country and it works like a charm. The town's ahead
+in money and business, for an automobile race always brings a big crowd;
+the track owners make the gate money and the racing-cars get the prizes.
+Everybody's ahead. It's a clean sport too."
+
+"I don't approve of racing for money," Tish said decidedly.
+
+But Mr. Ellis shrugged his shoulders. "It's really hardly racing for
+money," he explained. "The prizes cover the expenses of the racing-cars,
+which are heavy naturally. The cars alone cost a young fortune."
+
+"I see," said Tish. "I hadn't thought of it in that light. Well, why
+didn't Morris Valley jump at the chance?"
+
+He hesitated a moment before he answered. "It was my fault really," he
+said. "They were willing enough to have the races, but it was a matter
+of money. I made them a proposition to duplicate whatever prize money
+they offered, and in return I was to have half the gate receipts and the
+betting privileges."
+
+Tish quite stiffened. "Clean sport!" she said sarcastically. "With
+betting privileges!"
+
+"You don't quite understand, dear lady," he explained. "Even in the
+cleanest sport we cannot prevent a man's having an opinion and backing
+it with his own money. What I intended to do was to regulate it.
+Regulate it."
+
+Tish was quite mollified. "Well, of course," she said, "I suppose since
+it must be, it is better--er,--regulated. But why haven't you
+succeeded?"
+
+"An unfortunate thing happened just as I had the deal about to close,"
+he replied, and drew a long breath. "The town had raised twenty-five
+hundred. I was to duplicate the amount. But just at that time a--a young
+brother of mine in the West got into difficulties, and I--but why go
+into family matters? It would have been easy enough for me to pay my
+part of the purse out of my share of the gate money; but the committee
+demands cash on the table. I haven't got it."
+
+Tish stood up in her car and looked out over the track.
+
+"Twenty-five hundred dollars is a lot of money, young man."
+
+"Not so much when you realize that the gate money will probably amount
+to twelve thousand."
+
+Tish turned and surveyed the grandstand.
+
+"That thing doesn't seat twelve hundred."
+
+"Two thousand people in the grandstand--that's four thousand dollars.
+Four thousand standing inside the ropes at a dollar each, four thousand
+more. And say eight hundred machines parked in the oval there at five
+dollars a car, four thousand more. That's twelve thousand for the gate
+money alone. Then there are the concessions to sell peanuts, toy
+balloons, lemonade and palm-leaf fans, the lunch-stands, merry-go-round
+and moving-picture permits. It's a bonanza! Fourteen thousand anyhow."
+
+"Half of fourteen thousand is seven," said Tish dreamily. "Seven
+thousand less twenty-five hundred is thirty-five hundred dollars
+profit."
+
+"Forty-five hundred, dear lady," corrected Mr. Ellis, watching her.
+"Forty-five hundred dollars profit to be made in two weeks, and nothing
+to do to get it but sit still and watch it coming!"
+
+I can read Tish like a book and I saw what was in her mind. "Letitia
+Carberry!" I said sternly. "You take my warning and keep clear of this
+foolishness. If money comes as easy as that it ain't honest."
+
+"Why not?" demanded Mr. Ellis. "We give them their money's worth,
+don't we? They'd pay two dollars for a theater seat without half
+the thrills--no chances of seeing a car turn turtle or break its
+steering-knuckle and dash into the side-lines. Two dollars' worth?
+It's twenty!"
+
+But Tish had had a moment to consider, and the turning-turtle business
+settled it. She shook her head. "I'm not interested, Mr. Ellis," she
+said coldly. "I couldn't sleep at night if I thought I'd been the cause
+of anything turning turtle or dashing into the side-lines."
+
+"Dear lady!" he said, shocked; "I had no idea of asking you to help
+me out of my difficulties. Anyhow, while matters are at a standstill
+probably some shrewd money-maker here will come forward before long and
+make a nice profit on a small investment."
+
+As we drove away from the fair grounds Tish was very silent; but just as
+we reached the Bailey place, with Bettina and young Jasper McCutcheon
+batting a ball about on the tennis court, Tish turned to me.
+
+"You needn't look like that, Lizzie," she said. "I'm not even thinking
+of backing an automobile race--although I don't see why I shouldn't, so
+far as that goes. But it's curious, isn't it, that I've got twenty-five
+hundred dollars from Cousin Angeline's estate not even earning four per
+cent?"
+
+I got out grimly and jerked at my bonnet-strings.
+
+"You put it in a mortgage, Tish," I advised her with severity in every
+tone. "It may not be so fast as an automobile race or so likely to turn
+turtle or break its steering-knuckle, but it's safe."
+
+"Huh!" said Tish, reaching for the gear lever. "And about as exciting as
+a cold pork chop."
+
+"And furthermore," I interjected, "if you go into this thing now that
+your eyes are open, I'll send for Charlie Sands!"
+
+"You and Charlie Sands," said Tish viciously, jamming at her gears,
+"ought to go and live in an old ladies' home away from this cruel
+world."
+
+Aggie was sitting under a sunshade in the broiling sun at the tennis
+court. She said she had not left Bettina and Jasper for a moment, and
+that they had evidently quarreled, although she did not know when,
+having listened to every word they said. For the last half-hour, she
+said, they had not spoken at all.
+
+"Young people in love are very foolish," she said, rising stiffly. "They
+should be happy in the present. Who knows what the future may hold?"
+
+I knew she was thinking of Mr. Wiggins and the icy roof, so I patted her
+shoulder and sent her up to put cold cloths on her head for fear of
+sunstroke. Then I sat down in the broiling sun and chaperoned Bettina
+until luncheon.
+
+
+
+
+III
+
+
+Jasper took dinner with us that night. He came across the lawn, freshly
+shaved and in clean white flannels, just as dinner was announced, and
+said he had seen a chocolate cake cooling on the kitchen porch and that
+it was a sort of unwritten social law that when the Baileys happened to
+have a chocolate cake at dinner they had him also.
+
+There seemed to be nothing to object to in this. Evidently he was right,
+for we found his place laid at the table. The meal was quite cheerful,
+although Jasper ate the way some people play the piano, by touch, with
+his eyes on Bettina. And he gave no evidence at dessert of a fondness
+for chocolate cake sufficient to justify a standing invitation.
+
+After dinner we went out on the veranda, and under cover of showing me a
+sunset Jasper took me round the corner of the house. Once there, he
+entirely forgot the sunset.
+
+"Miss Lizzie," he began at once, "what have I done to you to have you
+treat me like this?"
+
+"I?" I asked, amazed.
+
+"All three of you. Did--did Bettina's mother warn you against me?"
+
+"The girl has to be chaperoned."
+
+"But not jailed, Miss Lizzie, not jailed! Do you know that I haven't had
+a word with Bettina alone since you came?"
+
+"Why should you want to say anything we cannot hear?"
+
+"Miss Lizzie," he said desperately, "do you want to hear me propose to
+her? For I've reached the point where if I don't propose to Bettina
+soon, I'll--I'll propose to somebody. You'd better be warned in time. It
+might be you or Miss Aggie."
+
+I weakened at that. The Lord never saw fit to send me a man I could care
+enough about to marry, or one who cared enough about me, but I couldn't
+look at the boy's face and not be sorry for him.
+
+"What do you want me to do?" I asked.
+
+"Come for a walk with us," he begged. "Then sprain your ankle or get
+tired, I don't care which. Tell us to go on and come back for you later.
+Do you see? You can sit down by the road somewhere."
+
+"I won't lie," I said firmly. "If I really get tired I'll say so. If I
+don't--"
+
+"You will." He was gleeful. "We'll walk until you do! You see it's like
+this, Miss Lizzie. Bettina was all for me, in spite of our differing on
+religion and politics and--"
+
+"I know all about your differences," I put in hastily.
+
+"Until a new chap came to town--a fellow named Ellis. Runs a sporty car
+and has every girl in the town lashed to the mast. He's a novelty and
+I'm not. So far I have kept him away from Bettina, but at any time they
+may meet, and it will be one-two-three with me."
+
+I am not defending my conduct; I am only explaining. Eliza Bailey
+herself would have done what I did under the circumstances. I went for a
+walk with Bettina and Jasper shortly after my talk with Jasper, leaving
+Tish with the evening paper and Aggie inhaling a cubeb cigarette, her
+hay fever having threatened a return. And what is more, I tired within
+three blocks of the house, where I saw a grassy bank beside the road.
+
+Bettina wished to stay with me, but I said, in obedience to Jasper's
+eyes, that I liked to sit alone and listen to the crickets, and for them
+to go on. The last I saw of them Jasper had drawn Bettina's arm through
+his and was walking beside her with his head bent, talking. I sat for
+perhaps fifteen minutes and was growing uneasy about dew and my
+rheumatism when I heard footsteps and, looking up, I saw Aggie coming
+toward me. She was not surprised to see me and addressed me coldly.
+
+"I thought as much!" she said. "I expected better of you, Lizzie. That
+boy asked me and I refused. I dare say he asked Tish also. For you, who
+pride yourself on your strength of mind--"
+
+"I was tired," I said. "I was to sprain my ankle," she observed
+sarcastically. "I just thought as I was sitting there alone--"
+
+"Where's Tish?"
+
+"A young man named Ellis came and took her out for a ride," said Aggie.
+"He couldn't take us both, as the car holds only two."
+
+I got up and stared at Aggie in the twilight. "You come straight home
+with me, Aggie Pilkington," I said sternly.
+
+"But what about Bettina and Jasper?"
+
+"Let 'em alone," I said; "they're safe enough. What we need to keep an
+eye on is Letitia Carberry and her Cousin Angeline's legacy."
+
+But I was too late. Tish and Mr. Ellis whirled up to the door at
+half-past eight and Tish did not even notice that Bettina was absent.
+She took off her veil and said something about Mr. Ellis's having heard
+a grinding in the differential of her car that afternoon and that he
+suspected a chip of steel in the gears. They went out together to the
+garage, leaving Aggie and me staring at each other. Mr. Ellis was
+carrying a box of tools.
+
+Jasper and Bettina returned shortly after, and even in the dusk I knew
+things had gone badly for him. He sat on the steps, looking out across
+the dark lawn, and spoke in monosyllables. Bettina, however, was very
+gay.
+
+It was evident that Bettina had decided not to take her Presbyterianism
+into the Episcopal fold. And although I am a Presbyterian myself I felt
+sorry.
+
+Tish and Mr. Ellis came round to the porch about ten o'clock and he was
+presented to Bettina. From that moment there was no question in my mind
+as to how affairs were going, or in Jasper's either. He refused to move
+and sat doggedly on the steps, but he took little part in the
+conversation.
+
+Mr. Ellis was a good talker, especially about himself.
+
+"You'll be glad to know," he said to me, "that I've got this race matter
+fixed up finally. In two weeks from now we'll have a little excitement
+here."
+
+I looked toward Tish, but she said nothing.
+
+"Excitement is where I live," said Mr. Ellis. "If I don't find any
+waiting I make it."
+
+"If you are looking for excitement, we'll have to find you some," Jasper
+said pointedly.
+
+Mr. Ellis only laughed. "Don't put yourself out, dear boy," he said.
+"I have enough for present necessities. If you think an automobile race
+is an easy thing to manage, try it. Every man who drives a racing-car
+has a _coloratura_ soprano beaten to death for temperament. Then every
+racing-car has quirky spells; there's the local committee to propitiate;
+the track to look after; and if that isn't enough, there's the promotion
+itself, the advertising. That's my stunt--the advertising."
+
+"It's a wonderful business, isn't it?" asked Bettina. "To take a mile
+or so of dirt track and turn it into a sort of stage, with drama every
+minute and sometimes tragedy!"
+
+"Wait a moment," said Mr. Ellis; "I want to put that down. I'll use it
+somewhere in the advertising." He wrote by the light of a match, while
+we all sat rather stunned by both his personality and his alertness.
+"Everything's grist that comes to my mill. I suppose you all remember
+when I completed the speedway at Indianapolis and had the Governor of
+Indiana lay a gold brick at the entrance? Great stunt that! But the best
+part of that story never reached the public."
+
+Bettina was leaning forward, all ears and thrills. "What was that?" she
+asked.
+
+"I had the gold brick stolen that night--did it myself and carried the
+brick away in my pocket--only gold-plated, you know. Cost eight or nine
+dollars, all told, and brought a million dollars in advertising. But the
+papers were sore about some passes and wouldn't use the story. Too bad
+we can't use the brick here. Still have it kicking about somewhere."
+
+It was then, I think, that Jasper yawned loudly, apologized, said
+good-night and lounged away across the lawn. Bettina hardly knew he was
+going. She was bending forward, her chin in her palms, listening to Mr.
+Ellis tell about a driver in a motor race breaking his wrist cranking a
+car, and how he--Ellis--had jumped into the car and driven it to
+victory. Even Aggie was enthralled. It seemed as if, in the last hour,
+the great world of stress and keen wits and endeavor and mad speed had
+sat down on our door-step.
+
+As Tish said when we were going up to bed, why shouldn't Mr. Ellis brag?
+He had something to brag about.
+
+
+
+
+IV
+
+
+Although I felt quite sure that Tish had put up the prize money for Mr.
+Ellis, I could not be certain. And Tish's attitude at that time did not
+invite inquiry. She took long rides daily with the Ellis man in his gray
+car, and I have reason to believe that their objective point was always
+the same--the race-track.
+
+Mr. Ellis was the busiest man in Morris Valley. In the daytime he was
+superintending putting the track in condition, writing what he called
+"promotion stuff," securing entries and forming the center of excited
+groups at the drug store and one or other of the two public garages.
+In the evenings he was generally to be found at Bettina's feet.
+
+Jasper did not come over any more. He sauntered past, evening after
+evening, very much white-flanneled and carrying a tennis racket. And
+once or twice he took out his old racing-car, and later shot by the
+house with a flutter of veils and a motor coat beside him.
+
+Aggie was exceedingly sorry for him, and even went the length of having
+the cook bake a chocolate cake and put it on the window sill to cool. It
+had, however, no perceptible effect, except to draw from Mr. Ellis, who
+had been round at the garage looking at Jasper's old racer, a remark
+that he was exceedingly fond of cake, and if he were urged--
+
+That was, I believe, a week before the race. The big city papers had
+taken it up, according to Mr. Ellis, and entries were pouring in.
+
+"That's the trouble on a small track," he said--"we can't crowd 'em.
+A dozen cars will be about the limit. Even with using the cattle pens
+for repair pits we can't look after more than a dozen. Did I tell you
+Heckert had entered his Bonor?"
+
+"No!" we exclaimed. As far as Aggie and I were concerned, the Bonor
+might have been a new sort of dog.
+
+"Yes, and Johnson his Sampler. It's going to be some race--eh, what!"
+
+Jasper sauntered over that evening, possibly a late result of the cake,
+after all. He greeted us affably, as if his defection of the past week
+had been merely incidental, and sat down on the steps.
+
+"I've been thinking, Ellis," he said, "that I'd like to enter my car."
+
+"What!" said Ellis. "Not that--"
+
+"My racer. I'm not much for speed, but there's a sort of feeling in the
+town that the locality ought to be represented. As I'm the only owner of
+a speed car--"
+
+"Speed car!" said Ellis, and chuckled. "My dear boy, we've got Heckert
+with his ninety-horse-power Bonor!"
+
+"Never heard of him." Jasper lighted a cigarette. "Anyhow, what's that
+to me? I don't like to race. I've got less speed mania than any owner of
+a race car you ever met. But the honor of the town seems to demand a
+sacrifice, and I'm it."
+
+"You can try out for it anyhow," said Ellis. "I don't think you'll make
+it; but, if you qualify, all right. But don't let any other town people,
+from a sense of mistaken local pride, enter a street roller or a
+traction engine."
+
+Jasper colored, but kept his temper.
+
+Aggie, however, spoke up indignantly. "Mr. McCutcheon's car was a very
+fine racer when it was built."
+
+"_De mortuis nil nisi bonum_," remarked Mr. Ellis, and getting up said
+good-night.
+
+Jasper sat on the steps and watched him disappear. Then he turned to
+Tish.
+
+"Miss Letitia," he said, "do you think you are wise to drive that racer
+of his the way you have been doing?"
+
+Aggie gave a little gasp and promptly sneezed, as she does when she is
+excited.
+
+"I?" said Tish.
+
+"You!" he smiled. "Not that I don't admire your courage. I do. But the
+other day, now, when you lost a tire and went into the ditch--"
+
+"Tish!" from Aggie.
+
+"--you were fortunate. But when a racer turns over the results are not
+pleasant."
+
+"As a matter of fact," said Tish coldly, "it was a wheat-field, not a
+ditch."
+
+Jasper got up and threw away his cigarette. "Well, our departing friend
+is not the only one who can quote Latin," he said. "_Verbum sap._, Miss
+Tish. Good-night, everybody. Good-night, Bettina."
+
+Bettina's good-night was very cool. As I went up to bed that night, I
+thought Jasper's chances poor indeed. As for Tish, I endeavored to speak
+a few words of remonstrance to her, but she opened her Bible and began to
+read the lesson for the day and I was obliged to beat a retreat.
+
+
+It was that night that Aggie and I, having decided the situation was
+beyond us, wrote a letter to Charlie Sands asking him to come up. Just
+as I was sealing it Bettina knocked and came in. She closed the door
+behind her and stood looking at us both.
+
+"Where is Miss Tish?" she asked.
+
+"Reading her Bible," I said tartly. "When Tish is up to some mischief,
+she generally reads an extra chapter or two as atonement."
+
+"Is she--is she always like this?"
+
+"The trouble is," explained Aggie gently, "Miss Letitia is an
+enthusiast. Whatever she does, she does with all her heart."
+
+"I feel so responsible," said Bettina. "I try to look after her, but
+what can I do?"
+
+"There is only one thing to do," I assured her--"let her alone. If she
+wants to fly, let her fly; if she wants to race, let her race--and trust
+in Providence."
+
+"I'm afraid Providence has its hands full!" said Bettina, and went to
+bed.
+
+For the remainder of that week nothing was talked of in Morris Valley
+but the approaching race. Some of Eliza Bailey's friends gave fancy-work
+parties for us, which Aggie and I attended. Tish refused, being now
+openly at the race-track most of the day. Morris Valley was much
+excited. Should it wear motor clothes, or should it follow the example
+of the English Derby and the French races and wear its afternoon
+reception dress with white kid gloves? Or--it being warm--wouldn't
+lingerie clothes and sunshades be most suitable?
+
+Some of the gossip I retailed to Jasper, oil-streaked and greasy, in the
+Baileys' garage where he was working over his car.
+
+"Tell 'em to wear mourning," he said pessimistically. "There's always a
+fatality or two. If there wasn't a fair chance of it nothing would make
+'em sit for hours watching dusty streaks going by."
+
+The race was scheduled for Wednesday. On Sunday night the cars began to
+come in. On Monday Tish took us all, including Bettina, to the track.
+There were half a dozen tents in the oval, one of them marked with a
+huge red cross.
+
+"Hospital tent," said Tish calmly. We even, on permission from Mr.
+Ellis, went round the track. At one spot Tish stopped the car and got
+out.
+
+"Nail," she said briefly. "It's been a horse-racing track for years, and
+we've gathered a bushel of horse-shoe nails."
+
+Aggie and I said nothing, but we looked at each other. Tish had said
+"we." Evidently Cousin Angeline's legacy was not going into a mortgage.
+
+The fair-grounds were almost ready. Peanut and lunch stands had sprung
+up everywhere. The oval, save by the tents and the repair pits, was
+marked off into parking-spaces numbered on tall banners. Groups of dirty
+men in overalls, carrying machine wrenches, small boys with buckets of
+water, onlookers round the tents and track-rollers made the place look
+busy and interesting. Some of the excitement, I confess, got into my
+blood. Tish, on the contrary, was calm and businesslike. We were sorry
+we had sent for Charlie Sands. She no longer went out in Mr. Ellis's
+car, and that evening she went back to the kitchen and made a boiled
+salad dressing.
+
+We were all deceived.
+
+Charlie Sands came the next morning. He was on the veranda reading a
+paper when we got down to breakfast. Tish's face was a study.
+
+"Who sent for you?" she demanded.
+
+"Sent for me! Why, who would send for me? I'm here to write up the race.
+I thought, if you haven't been out to the track, we'd go out this
+morning."
+
+"We've been out," said Tish shortly, and we went in to breakfast. Once
+or twice during the meal I caught her eye on me and on Aggie and she was
+short with us both. While she was upstairs I had a word with Charlie
+Sands.
+
+"Well," he said, "what is it this time? Is she racing?"
+
+"Worse than that," I replied. "I think she's backing the thing!"
+
+"No!"
+
+"With her cousin Angeline's legacy." With that I told him about our
+meeting Mr. Ellis and the whole story. He listened without a word.
+
+"So that's the situation," I finished. "He has her hypnotized, Charlie.
+What's more, I shouldn't be surprised to see her enter the race under an
+assumed name."
+
+Charlie Sands looked at the racing list in the Morris Valley Sun.
+
+"Good cars all of them," he said. "She's not here among the drivers,
+unless she's--Who are these drivers anyhow? I never heard of any of
+them."
+
+"It's a small race," I suggested. "I dare say the big men--"
+
+"Perhaps." He put away his paper and got up. "I'll just wander round the
+town for an hour or two, Aunt Lizzie," he said. "I believe there's a
+nigger in this woodpile and I'm a right nifty little nigger-chaser."
+
+When he came back about noon, however, he looked puzzled. I drew him
+aside.
+
+"It seems on the level," he said. "It's so darned open it makes me
+suspicious. But she's back of it all right. I got her bank on the
+long-distance 'phone."
+
+We spent that afternoon at the track, with the different cars doing what
+I think they called "trying out heats." It appeared that a car, to
+qualify, must do a certain distance in a certain time. It grew
+monotonous after a while. All but one entry qualified and Jasper just
+made it. The best showing was made by the Bonor car, according to
+Charlie Sands.
+
+Jasper came to our machine when it was over, smiling without any
+particular good cheer.
+
+"I've made it and that's all," he said. "I've got about as much chance
+as a watermelon at a colored picnic. I'm being slaughtered to make a
+Roman holiday."
+
+"If you feel that way why do you do it?" demanded Bettina coldly. "If
+you go in expecting to be slaughtered--"
+
+He was leaning on the side of the car and looked up at her with eyes
+that made my heart ache, they were so wretched.
+
+"What does it matter?" he said. "I'll probably trail in at the last,
+sound in wind and limb. If I don't, what does it matter?"
+
+He turned and left us at that, and I looked at Bettina. She had her lips
+shut tight and was blinking hard. I wished that Jasper had looked back.
+
+
+
+
+V
+
+
+Charlie Sands announced at dinner that he intended to spend the night at
+the track.
+
+Tish put down her fork and looked at him. "Why?" she demanded.
+
+"I'm going to help the boy next door watch his car," he said calmly.
+"Nothing against your friend Mr. Ellis, Aunt Tish, but some enemy of
+true sport might take a notion in the night to slip a dope pill into
+the mouth of friend Jasper's car and have her go to sleep on the track
+to-morrow."
+
+We spent a quiet evening. Mr. Ellis was busy, of course, and so was
+Jasper. The boy came to the house to get Charlie Sands and, I suppose,
+for a word with Bettina, for when he saw us all on the porch he looked,
+as you may say, thwarted.
+
+When Charlie Sands had gone up for his pajamas and dressing-gown, Jasper
+stood looking up at us.
+
+"Oh, Association of Chaperons!" he said, "is it permitted that my lady
+walk to the gate with me--alone?"
+
+"I am not your lady," flashed Bettina.
+
+"You've nothing to say about that," he said recklessly. "I've selected
+you; you can't help it. I haven't claimed that you have selected me."
+
+"Anyhow, I don't wish to go to the gate," said Bettina.
+
+He went rather white at that, and Charlie Sands coming down at that
+moment with a pair of red-and-white pajamas under his arm and a
+toothbrush sticking out of his breast pocket, romance, as Jasper said
+later in referring to it, "was buried in Sands."
+
+Jasper went up to Bettina and held out his hand. "You'll wish me luck,
+won't you?"
+
+"Of course." She took his hand. "But I think you're a bit of a coward,
+Jasper!"
+
+He eyed her. "Coward!" he said. "I'm the bravest man you know. I'm doing
+a thing I'm scared to death to do!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The race was to begin at two o'clock in the afternoon. There were small
+races to be run first, but the real event was due at three.
+
+From early in the morning a procession of cars from out of town poured
+in past Eliza Bailey's front porch, and by noon her cretonne cushions
+were thick with dust. And not only automobiles came, but hay-wagons,
+side-bar buggies, delivery carts--anything and everything that could
+transport the crowd.
+
+At noon Mr. Ellis telephoned Tish that the grand-stand was sold out and
+that almost all the parking-places that had been reserved were taken.
+Charlie Sands came home to luncheon with a curious smile on his face.
+
+"How are you betting, Aunt Tish?" he asked.
+
+"Betting!"
+
+"Yes. Has Ellis let you in on the betting?"
+
+"I don't know what you are talking about," Tish said sourly. "Mr. Ellis
+controls the betting so that it may be done in an orderly manner. I am
+sure I have nothing to do with it."
+
+"I'd like to bet a little, Charlie," Aggie put in with an eye on Tish.
+"I'd put all I win on the collection plate on Sunday."
+
+"Very well." Charlie Sands took out his notebook. "On what car and how
+much?"
+
+"Ten dollars on the Fein. It made the best time at the trial heats."
+
+"I wouldn't if I were you," said Charlie Sands. "Suppose we put it on
+our young friend next door."
+
+Bettina rather sniffed. "On Jasper!" she exclaimed.
+
+"On Jasper," said Charlie Sands gravely.
+
+Tish, who had hardly heard us, looked up from her plate.
+
+"Betting is betting," she snapped. "Putting it on the collection plate
+doesn't help any." But with that she caught Charlie Sands' eye and he
+winked at her. Tish colored. "Gambling is one thing, clean sport is
+another," she said hotly.
+
+I believe, however, that whatever Charlie Sands may have suspected, he
+really knew nothing until the race had started. By that time it was too
+late to prevent it, and the only way he could think of to avoid getting
+Tish involved in a scandal was to let it go on.
+
+We went to the track in Tish's car and parked in the oval. Not near the
+grandstand, however. Tish had picked out for herself a curve at one end
+of the track which Mr. Ellis had said was the worst bit on the course.
+"He says," said Tish, as we put the top down and got out the vacuum
+bottle--oh, yes, Mr. Ellis had sent Tish one as a present--"that if
+there are any smashups they'll occur here."
+
+Aggie is not a bloodthirsty woman ordinarily, but her face quite lit up.
+
+"Not really!" she said.
+
+"They'll probably turn turtle," said Tish. "There is never a race
+without a fatality or two. No racer can get any life insurance. Mr.
+Ellis says four men were killed at the last race he promoted."
+
+"Then I think Mr. Ellis is a murderer," Bettina cried. We all looked at
+her. She was limp and white and was leaning back among the cushions with
+her eyes shut. "Why didn't you tell Jasper about this curve?" she
+demanded of Tish.
+
+But at that moment a pistol shot rang out and the races were on.
+
+The Fein won two of the three small races. Jasper was entered only for
+the big race. In the interval before the race was on, Jasper went round
+the track slowly, looking for Bettina. When he saw us he waved, but did
+not stop. He was number thirteen.
+
+I shall not describe the race. After the first round or two, what with
+dust in my eyes and my neck aching from turning my head so rapidly, I
+just sat back and let them spin in front of me.
+
+It was after a dozen laps or so, with number thirteen doing as well as
+any of them, that Tish was arrested.
+
+Charlie Sands came up beside the car with a gentleman named Atkins, who
+turned out to be a county detective. Charlie Sands was looking stern and
+severe, but the detective was rather apologetic.
+
+"This is Miss Carberry," said Charlie Sands. "Aunt Tish, this gentleman
+wishes to speak to you."
+
+"Come around after the race," Tish observed calmly.
+
+"Miss Carberry," said the detective gently, "I believe you are back of
+this race, aren't you?"
+
+"What if I am?" demanded Tish.
+
+Charlie Sands put a hand on the detective's arm. "It's like this, Aunt
+Tish," he said; "you are accused of practicing a short-change game,
+that's all. This race is sewed up. You employ those racing-cars with
+drivers at an average of fifty dollars a week. They are hardly worth it,
+Aunt Tish. I could have got you a better string for twenty-five."
+
+Tish opened her mouth and shut it again without speaking.
+
+"You also control the betting privileges. As you own all the racers you
+have probably known for a couple of weeks who will win the race. Having
+made the Fein favorite, you can bet on a Brand or a Bonor, or whatever
+one you chance to like, and win out. Only I take it rather hard of you,
+Aunt Tish, not to have let the family in. I'm hard up as the dickens."
+
+"Charlie Sands!" said Tish impressively. "If you are joking--"
+
+"Joking! Did you ever know a county detective to arrest a prominent
+woman at a race-track as a little jest between friends? There's no joke,
+Aunt Tish. You've financed a phony race. The permit is taken in your
+name--L. Carberry. Whatever car wins, you and Ellis take the prize
+money, half the gate receipts, and what you have made out of the
+betting--"
+
+Tish rose in the machine and held out both her hands to Mr. Atkins.
+
+"Officer, perform your duty," she said solemnly. "Ignorance is no
+defense and I know it. Where are the handcuffs?"
+
+"We'll not bother about them, Miss Carberry", he said. "If you like I'll
+get into the car and you can tell me all about it while we watch the
+race. Which car is to win?"
+
+"I may have been a fool, Mr. County Detective," she said coldly; "but
+I'm not a knave. I have not bet a dollar on the race."
+
+We were very silent for a time. The detective seemed to enjoy the race
+very much and ate peanuts out of his pocket. He even bought a
+red-and-black pennant, with "Morris Valley Races" on it, and fastened it
+to the car. Charlie Sands, however, sat with his arms folded, stiff and
+severe.
+
+Once Tish bent forward and touched his arm.
+
+"You--you don't think it will get in the papers, do you?" she quavered.
+
+Charlie Sands looked at her with gloom. "I shall have to send it myself,
+Aunt Tish," he said; "it is my duty to my paper. Even my family pride,
+hurt to the quick and quivering as it is, must not interfere with my
+duty."
+
+It was Bettina who suggested a way out--Bettina, who had sat back as
+pale as Tish and heard that her Mr. Ellis was, as Charlie Sands said
+later, as crooked as a pretzel.
+
+"But Jasper was not--not subsidized," she said. "If he wins, it's all
+right, isn't it?"
+
+The county detective turned to her.
+
+"Jasper?" he said.
+
+"A young man who lives here." Bettina colored.
+
+"He is--not to be suspected?"
+
+"Certainly not," said Bettina haughtily; "he is above suspicion.
+Besides, he--he and Mr. Ellis are not friends."
+
+Well, the county detective was no fool. He saw the situation that
+minute, and smiled when he offered Bettina a peanut. "Of course," he
+said cheerfully, "if the race is won by a Morris Valley man, and not by
+one of the Ellis cars, I don't suppose the district attorney would care
+to do anything about it. In fact," he said, smiling at Bettina, "I don't
+know that I'd put it up to the district attorney at all. A warning to
+Ellis would get him out of the State."
+
+It was just at that moment that car number thirteen, coming round the
+curve, skidded into the field, threw out both Jasper McCutcheon and his
+mechanician, and after standing on two wheels for an appreciable moment
+of time, righted herself, panting, with her nose against a post.
+
+Jasper sat up almost immediately and caught at his shoulder. The
+mechanician was stunned. He got up, took a step or two and fell down,
+weak with fright.
+
+I do not recall very distinctly what happened next. We got out of the
+machine, I remember, and Bettina was cutting off Jasper's sweater with
+Charlie Sands' penknife, and crying as she did it. And Charlie Sands was
+trying to prevent Jasper from getting back into his car, while Jasper
+was protesting that he could win in two or more laps and that he could
+drive with one hand--he'd only broken his arm.
+
+The crowd had gathered round us, thick. Suddenly they drew back, and
+in a sort of haze I saw Tish in Jasper's car, with Aggie, as white as
+death, holding to Tish's sleeve and begging her not to get in. The next
+moment Tish let in the clutch of the racer and Aggie took a sort of
+flying leap and landed beside her in the mechanician's seat.
+
+Charlie Sands saw it when I did, but we were both too late. Tish was
+crossing the ditch into the track again, and the moment she struck level
+ground she put up the gasoline.
+
+It was just then that Aggie fell out, landing, as I have said before, in
+a pile of sand. Tish said afterward that she never missed her. She had
+just discovered that this was not Jasper's old car, which she knew
+something about, but a new racer with the old hood and seat put on in
+order to fool Mr. Ellis. She didn't know a thing about it.
+
+Well, you know the rest--how Tish, trying to find how the gears worked,
+side-swiped the Bonor car and threw it off the field and out of the
+race; how, with the grandstand going crazy, she skidded off the track
+into the field, turned completely round twice, and found herself on the
+track again facing the way she wanted to go; how, at the last lap, she
+threw a tire and, without cutting down her speed, bumped home the
+winner, with the end of her tongue nearly bitten off and her spine
+fairly driven up into her skull.
+
+[Illustration: Without cutting down her speed, bumped home the winner]
+
+All this is well known now, as is also the fact that Mr. Ellis
+disappeared from the judges' stand after a word or two with Mr. Atkins,
+and was never seen at Morris Valley again.
+
+Tish came out of the race ahead by half the gate money--six thousand
+dollars--by a thousand dollars from concessions, and a lame back that
+she kept all winter. Even deducting the twenty-five hundred she had put
+up, she was forty-five hundred dollars ahead, not counting the prize
+money. Charlie Sand brought the money from the track that night, after
+having paid off Mr. Ellis's racing-string and given Mr. Atkins a small
+present. He took over the prize money to Jasper and came back with it,
+Jasper maintaining that it belonged to Tish, and that he had only raced
+for the honor of Morris Valley. For some time the money went begging,
+but it settled itself naturally enough, Tish giving it to Jasper in the
+event of--but that came later.
+
+On the following evening--Bettina, in the pursuit of learning to cook,
+having baked a chocolate cake--we saw Jasper, with his arm in a sling,
+crossing the side lawn.
+
+Jasper stopped at the foot of the steps. "I see a chocolate cake cooling
+on the kitchen porch," he said. "Did you order it, Miss Lizzie?"
+
+I shook my head.
+
+"Miss Tish? Miss Aggie?"
+
+"I ordered it," said Bettina defiantly--"or rather I baked it."
+
+"And you did that, knowing what it entailed? He was coming up the steps
+slowly and with care.
+
+"What does it entail?" demanded Bettina.
+
+"Me."
+
+"Oh, that!" said Bettina. "I knew that."
+
+Jasper threw his head back and laughed. Then:--
+
+"Will the Associated Chaperons," he said, "turn their backs?"
+
+"Not at all," I began stiffly. "If I--"
+
+"She baked it herself!" said Jasper exultantly. "One--two. When I say
+three I shall kiss Bettina."
+
+And I have every reason to believe he carried out his threat.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Eliza Bailey forwarded me this letter from London where Bettina had sent
+it to her:--
+
+ _Dearest Mother_: I hope you are coming home soon. I really think you
+ should. Aunt Lizzie is here and she brought two friends, and, mother,
+ I feel so responsible for them! Aunt Lizzie is sane enough, if somewhat
+ cranky; but Miss Tish is almost more than I can manage--I never know
+ what she is going to do next--and I am worn out with chaperoning her.
+ And Miss Aggie, although she is very sweet, is always smoking cubeb
+ cigarettes for hay fever, and it looks terrible! The neighbors do not
+ know they are cubeb, and, anyhow, that's a habit, mother. And yesterday
+ Miss Tish was arrested, and ran a motor race and won it, and to-day she
+ is knitting a stocking and reciting the Twenty-third Psalm. Please,
+ mother, I think you should come home.
+
+ Lovingly, BETTINA.
+
+ P.S. I think I shall marry Jasper after all. He says he likes the
+ Presbyterian service.
+
+
+I looked up from reading Eliza's letter. Tish was knitting quietly and
+planning to give the money back to the town in the shape of a library,
+and Aggie was holding a cubeb cigarette to her nose. Down on the tennis
+court Jasper and Bettina were idly batting a ball round.
+
+"I'm glad the Ellis man did not get her," said Aggie. And then, after a
+sneeze, "How Jasper reminds me of Mr. Wiggins."
+
+The library did not get the money after all. Tish sent it, as a wedding
+present, to Bettina.
+
+
+
+
+LIKE A WOLF ON THE FOLD
+
+I
+
+
+Aggie has always been in the habit of observing the anniversary of Mr.
+Wiggins's death. Aggie has the anniversary habit, anyhow, and her life
+is a succession of small feast-days, on which she wears mental crape or
+wedding garments--depending on the occasion. Tish and I always remember
+these occasions appropriately, sending flowers on the anniversaries of
+the passing away of Aggie's parents; grandparents; a niece who died in
+birth; her cousin, Sarah Webb, who married a missionary and was
+swallowed whole by a large snake,--except her shoes, which the reptile
+refused and of which Aggie possesses the right, given her by the
+stricken husband; and, of course, Mr. Wiggins.
+
+For Mr. Wiggins Tish and I generally send the same things each
+year--Tish a wreath of autumn foliage and I a sheaf of wheat tied with a
+lavender ribbon. The program seldom varies. We drive to the cemetery in
+the afternoon and Aggie places the sheaf and the wreath on Mr. Wiggins's
+last resting-place, after first removing the lavender ribbon, of which
+she makes cap bows through the year and an occasional pin-cushion or
+fancy-work bag; then home to chicken and waffles, which had been Mr.
+Wiggins's favorite meal. In the evening Charlie Sands generally comes in
+and we play a rubber or two of bridge.
+
+On the thirtieth anniversary of Mr. Wiggins's falling off a roof and
+breaking his neck, Tish was late in arriving, and I found Aggie sitting
+alone, dressed in black, with a tissue-paper bundle in her lap. I put my
+sheaf on the table and untied my bonnet-strings.
+
+"Where's Tish?" I asked.
+
+"Not here yet."
+
+Something in Aggie's tone made me look at her. She was eyeing the bundle
+in her lap.
+
+"I got a paler shade of ribbon this time," I said, seeing she made no
+comment on the sheaf. "It's a better color for me if you're going to
+make my Christmas present out of it this year again. Where's Tish's
+wreath?"
+
+"Here." Aggie pointed dispiritedly to the bundle in her lap and went on
+rocking.
+
+"That! That's no wreath."
+
+In reply Aggie lifted the tissue paper and shook out, with hands that
+trembled with indignation, a lace-and-linen centerpiece. She held it up
+before me and we eyed each other over it. Both of us understood.
+
+"Tish is changed, Lizzie," Aggie said hollowly. "Ask her for bread these
+days and she gives you a Cluny-lace fandangle. On mother's anniversary
+she sent me a set of doilies; and when Charlie Sands was in the hospital
+with appendicitis she took him a pair of pillow shams. It's that Syrian!"
+
+Both of us knew. We had seen Tish's apartment change from a sedate and
+spinsterly retreat to a riot of lace covers on the mantel, on the backs
+of chairs, on the stands, on the pillows--everywhere. We had watched
+her Marseilles bedspreads give way to hem-stitched covers, with bolsters
+to match. We had seen Tish go through a cold winter clad in a succession
+of sleazy silk kimonos instead of her flannel dressing-gown; terrible
+kimonos--green and yellow and red and pink, that looked like fruit
+salads and were just as heating.
+
+"It's that dratted Syrian!" cried Aggie--and at that Tish came in. She
+stood inside the door and eyed us.
+
+"What about him?" she demanded. "If I choose to take a poor starving
+Christian youth and assist him by buying from him what I need--what I
+need!--that's my affair, isn't it? Tufik was starving and I took him
+in."
+
+"He took you in, all right!" Aggie sniffed. "A great, mustached, dirty,
+palavering foreigner, who's probably got a harem at home and no respect
+for women!"
+
+Tish glanced at my sheaf and at the centerpiece. She was dressed as she
+always dressed on Mr. Wiggins's day--in black; but she had a new lace
+collar with a jabot, and we knew where she had got it. She saw our eyes
+on it and she had the grace to flush.
+
+"Once for all," she snapped, "I intend to look after this unfortunate
+Syrian! If my friends object, I shall be deeply sorry; but, so far as
+I care, they may object until they are purple in the face and their
+tongues hang out. I've been sending my money to foreign missions long
+enough; I'm doing my missionary work at home now."
+
+"He'll marry you!" This from Aggie.
+
+Tish ignored her. "His father is an honored citizen of Beirut, of the
+nobility. The family is impoverished, being Christian, and grossly
+imposed on by the Turks. Tufik speaks French and English as well as
+Mohammedan. They offered him a high government position if he would
+desert the Christian faith; but he refused firmly. He came to this
+country for religious freedom; at any moment they may come after him and
+take him back."
+
+A glint of hope came to me. I made a mental note to write to the mayor,
+or whatever they call him over there, and tell him where he could locate
+his wandering boy.
+
+"He loves the God of America," said Tish.
+
+"Money!" Aggie jeered.
+
+"And he is so pathetic, so grateful! I told Hannah at noon to-day--that's
+what delayed me--to give him his lunch. He was starving; I thought we'd
+never fill him. And when it was over, he stooped in the sweetest way,
+while she was gathering up the empty dishes, and kissed her hand. It was
+touching!"
+
+"Very!" I said dryly. "What did Hannah do?"
+
+"She's a fool! She broke a cup on his head."
+
+Mr. Wiggins's anniversary was not a success. Part of this was due to
+Tish, who talked of Tufik steadily--of his youth; of the wonderful
+bargains she secured from him; of his belief that this was the land of
+opportunity--Aggie sniffed; of his familiarity with the Bible and
+Biblical places; of the search the Turks were making for him. The
+atmosphere was not cleared by Aggie's taking the Cluny-lace centerpiece
+to the cemetery and placing it, with my sheaf, on Mr. Wiggins's grave.
+
+As we got into Tish's machine to go back, Aggie was undeniably peevish.
+She caught cold, too, and was sneezing--as she always does when she is
+irritated or excited.
+
+"Where to?" asked Tish from the driving-seat, looking straight ahead and
+pulling on her gloves. From where we sat we could still see the dot of
+white on the grass that was the centerpiece.
+
+"Back to the house," Aggie snapped, "to have some chicken and waffles
+and Tufik for dinner!"
+
+Tish drove home in cold silence. As well as we could tell from her back,
+she was not so much indignant as she was determined. Thus we do not
+believe that she willfully drove over every rut and thank-you-ma'am on
+the road, scattering us generously over the tonneau, and finally, when
+Aggie, who was the lighter, was tossed against the top and sprained her
+neck, eliciting a protest from us. She replied in an abstracted tone,
+which showed where her mind was.
+
+"It would be rougher on a camel," she said absently. "Tufik was telling
+me the other day--"
+
+Aggie had got her head straight by that time and was holding it with
+both hands to avoid jarring. She looked goaded and desperate; and, as
+she said afterward, the thing slipped out before she knew she was more
+than thinking it.
+
+"Oh, damn Tufik!" she said.
+
+Fortunately at that moment we blew out a tire and apparently Tish did
+not hear her. While I was jacking up the car and Tish was getting the
+key of the toolbox out of her stocking, Aggie sat sullenly in her place
+and watched us.
+
+"I suppose," she gibed, "a camel never blows out a tire!"
+
+"It might," Tish said grimly, "if it heard an oath from the lips of a
+middle-aged Sunday-school teacher!"
+
+We ate Mr. Wiggins's anniversary dinner without any great hilarity.
+Aggie's neck was very stiff and she had turned in the collar of her
+dress and wrapped flannels wrung out of lamp oil round it. When she
+wished to address either Tish or myself she held her head rigid and
+turned her whole body in her chair; and when she felt a sneeze coming on
+she clutched wildly at her head with both hands as if she expected it to
+fly off.
+
+Tufik was not mentioned, though twice Tish got as far as Tu-- and then
+thought better of it; but her mind was on him and we knew it. She worked
+the conversation round to Bible history and triumphantly demanded
+whether we knew that Sodom and Gomorrah are towns to-day, and that a
+street-car line is contemplated to them from some place or other--it
+developed later that she meant Tyre and Sidon. Once she suggested that
+Aggie's sideboard needed new linens, but after a look at Aggie's rigid
+head she let it go at that.
+
+No one was sorry when, with dinner almost over, and Aggie lifting her
+ice-cream spoon straight up in front of her and opening her mouth with
+a sort of lockjaw movement, the bell rang. We thought it was Charlie
+Sands. It was not. Aggie faced the doorway and I saw her eyes widen.
+Tish and I turned.
+
+A boy stood in the doorway--a shrinking, timid, brown-eyed young
+Oriental, very dark of skin, very white of teeth, very black of hair--a
+slim youth of eighteen, possibly twenty, in a shabby blue suit, broken
+shoes, and a celluloid collar. Twisting between nervous brown fingers,
+not as clean as they might have been, was a tissue-paper package.
+
+"My friends!" he said, and smiled.
+
+Tish is an extraordinary woman. She did not say a word. She sat still
+and let the smile get in its work. Its first effect was on Aggie's neck,
+which she forgot. Tufik's timid eyes rested for a moment on Tish and
+brightened. Then like a benediction they turned to mine, and came to a
+stop on Aggie. He took a step farther into the room.
+
+"My friend's friend are my friend," he said. "America is my friend--this
+so great God's country!"
+
+Aggie put down her ice-cream spoon and closed her mouth, which had been
+open.
+
+"Come in, Tufik," said Tish; "and I am sure Miss Pilkington would like
+you to sit down."
+
+Tufik still stood with his eyes fixed on Aggie, twisting his package.
+
+"My friend has said," he observed--he was quite calm and divinely
+trustful--"My friend has said that this is for Miss Pilk a sad day. My
+friend is my mother; I have but her and God. Unless--but perhaps I have
+two new friend also--no?"
+
+"Of course we are your friends," said Aggie, feeling for the table-bell
+with her foot. "We are--aren't we, Lizzie?"
+
+Tufik turned and looked at me wistfully. It came over me then what an
+awful thing it must be to be so far from home and knowing nobody, and
+having to wear trousers and celluloid collars instead of robes and
+turbans, and eat potatoes and fried things instead of olives and figs
+and dates, and to be in danger of being taken back and made into a
+Mohammedan and having to keep a harem.
+
+"Certainly," I assented. "If you are good we will be your friends."
+
+He flashed a boyish smile at me.
+
+"I am good," he said calmly--"as the angels I am good. I have here a
+letter from a priest. I give it to you. Read!"
+
+He got a very dirty envelope from his pocket and brought it round the
+table to me. "See!" he said. "The priest says: 'Of all my children Tufik
+lies next my heart.'"
+
+He held the letter out to me; but it looked as if it had been copied
+from an Egyptian monument and was about as legible as an outbreak of
+measles.
+
+"This," he said gently, pointing, "is the priest's blessing. I carry
+it ever. It brings me friends." He put the paper away and drew a long
+breath; then surveyed us all with shining eyes. "It has brought me you."
+
+We were rather overwhelmed. Aggie's maid having responded to the bell,
+Aggie ordered ice cream for Tufik and a chair drawn to the table; but
+the chair Tufik refused with a little, smiling bow.
+
+"It is not right that I sit," he said. "I stand in the presence of my
+three mothers. But first--I forget--my gift! For the sadness, Miss
+Pilk!"
+
+He held out the tissue-paper package and Aggie opened it. Tufik's gift
+proved to be a small linen doily, with a Cluny-lace border!
+
+We were gone from that moment--I know it now, looking back. Gone! We
+were lost the moment Tufik stood in the doorway, smiling and bowing.
+Tish saw us going; and with the calmness of the lost sat there nibbling
+cake and watching us through her spectacles--and raised not a hand.
+
+Aggie looked at the doily and Tufik looked at her.
+
+"That's--that's really very nice of you," said Aggie. "I thank you."
+
+Tufik came over and stood beside her.
+
+"I give with my heart," he said shyly. "I have had nobody--in all so
+large this country--nobody! And now--I have you!" Aggie saw--but too
+late. He bent over and touched his lips to her hands. "The Bible says:
+'To him that overcometh I will give the morning star!' I have
+overcometh--ah, so much!--the sea; the cold, wet England; the Ellis
+Island; the hunger; the aching of one who has no love, no money! And
+now--I have the morning star!"
+
+He looked at us all three at once--Charlie Sands said this was
+impossible, until he met Tufik. Aggie was fairly palpitant and Tish was
+smug, positively smug. As for me, I roused with a start to find myself
+sugaring my ice cream.
+
+Charlie Sands was delayed that night. He came in about nine o'clock and
+found Tufik telling us about his home and his people and the shepherds
+on the hills about Damascus and the olive trees in sunlight. We
+half-expected Tufik to adopt Charlie Sands as a father; but he contented
+himself with a low Oriental salute, and shortly after he bowed himself
+away.
+
+Charlie Sands stood looking after him and smiling to himself. "Pretty
+smooth boy, that!" he said.
+
+"Smooth nothing!" Tish snapped, getting the bridge score. "He's a
+sad-hearted and lonely boy; and we are going to do the kindest thing--we
+are going to help him to help himself."
+
+"Oh, he'll help himself all right!" observed Charlie Sands. "But, since
+his people are Christians, I wish you'd tell me how he knows so much
+about the inside of a harem!"
+
+Seeing that comment annoyed us, he ceased, and we fell to our bridge
+game; but more than once his eye fell on Aggie's doily, and he muttered
+something about the Assyrian coming down like a wolf on the fold.
+
+
+
+
+II
+
+
+The problem of Tufik's future was a pressing one. Tish called a meeting
+of the three of us next morning, and we met at her house. We found her
+reading about Syria in the encyclopædia, while spread round her on
+chairs and tables were numbers of silk kimonos, rolls of crocheted lace,
+shirt-waist patterns, and embroidered linens.
+
+Hannah let us in. She looked surly and had a bandage round her head, a
+sure sign of trouble--Hannah always referring a pain in her temper to
+her ear or her head or her teeth. She clutched my arm in the hall and
+held me back.
+
+"I'm going to poison him!" she said. "Miss Lizzie, that little snake
+goes or I go!"
+
+"I'm ashamed of you, Hannah!" I replied sternly. "If out of the breadth
+of her charity Miss Tish wishes to assist a fellow man--"
+
+Hannah reeled back and freed my arm.
+
+"My God!" she whispered. "You too!"
+
+I am very fond of Hannah, who has lived with Tish for many years; but I
+had small patience with her that morning.
+
+"I cannot see how it concerns you, anyhow, Hannah," I observed severely.
+
+Hannah put her apron to her eyes and sniffled into it.
+
+"Oh, you can't, can't you!" she wailed. "Don't I give him half his
+meals, with him soft-soapin' Miss Tish till she can't see for suds?
+Ain't I fallin' over him mornin', noon, and night, and the postman
+telling all over the block he's my steady company--that snip that's not
+eighteen yet? And don't I do the washin'? And will you look round the
+place and count the things I've got to do up every week? And don't he
+talk to me in that lingo of his, so I don't know whether he's askin' for
+a cup of coffee or insultin' me?"
+
+I patted Hannah on the arm. After all, none of the exaltation of a good
+deed upheld Hannah as it sustained us.
+
+"We are going to help him help himself, Hannah," I said kindly. "He
+hasn't found himself. Be gentle with him. Remember he comes from the
+land of the Bible."
+
+"Humph!" said Hannah, who reads the newspapers. "So does the plague!"
+
+The problem we had set ourselves we worked out that morning. As Tish
+said, the boy ought to have light work, for the Syrians are not a
+laboring people.
+
+"Their occupation is--er--mainly pastoral," she said, with the authority
+of the encyclopædia. "Grazing their herds and gathering figs and olives.
+If we knew some one who needed a shepherd--"
+
+Aggie opposed the shepherd idea, however. As she said, and with reason,
+the climate is too rigorous. "It's all well enough in Syria," she said,
+"where they have no cold weather; but he'd take his death of pneumonia
+here."
+
+We put the shepherd idea reluctantly aside. My own notion of finding a
+camel for him to look after was negatived by Tish at once, and properly
+enough I realized.
+
+"The only camels are in circuses," she said, "and our duty to the boy is
+moral as well as physical. Circuses are dens of immorality. Of course
+the Syrians are merchants, and we might get him work in a store. But
+then again--what chance has he of rising? Once a clerk, always a clerk."
+She looked round at the chairs and tables, littered with the contents of
+Tufik's pasteboard suitcase, which lay empty at her feet. "And there is
+nothing to canvassing from door to door. Look at these exquisite
+things!--and he cannot sell them. Nobody buys. He says he never gets
+inside a house door. If you had seen his face when I bought a kimono
+from him!"
+
+At eleven o'clock, having found nothing in the "Help Wanted" column to
+fit Tufik's case, Tish called up Charlie Sands and offered Tufik as a
+reporter, provided he was given no nightwork. But Charlie Sands said it
+was impossible--that the editors and owners of the paper were always
+putting on their sons and relatives, and that when there was a vacancy
+the big advertisers got it. Tish insisted--she suggested that Tufik
+could run an Arabian column, like the German one, and bring in a lot of
+new subscribers. But Charlie Sands stood firm.
+
+At noon Tufik came. We heard a skirmish at the door and Hannah talking
+between her teeth.
+
+"She's out," she said.
+
+"Well, I think she is not out," in Tufik's soft tones.
+
+"You'll not get in."
+
+"Ah, but my toes are in. See, my foot wishes to enter!" Then something
+soft, coaxing, infinitely wistful, in Arabian followed by a slap. The
+next moment Hannah, in tears, rushed back to the kitchen. There was no
+sound from the hallway. No smiling Tufik presented himself in the
+doorway.
+
+Tish rose in the majesty of wrath. "I could strangle that woman!" she
+said, and we followed her into the hall.
+
+Tufik was standing inside the door with his arms folded, staring ahead.
+He took no notice of us.
+
+"Tufik!" Aggie cried, running to him. "Did she--did she dare--Tish, look
+at his cheek!"
+
+"She is a bad woman!" Tufik said somberly. "I make my little prayer to
+see Miss Tish, my mother, and she--I kill her!"
+
+We had a hard time apologizing to him for Hannah. Tish got a basin of
+cold water so he might bathe his face; and Aggie brought a tablespoonful
+of blackberry cordial, which is soothing. When the poor boy was calmer
+we met in Tish's bedroom and Tish was quite firm on one point--Hannah
+must leave!
+
+Now, this I must say in my own defense--I was sorry for Tufik; and it is
+quite true I bought him a suit and winter flannels and a pair of yellow
+shoes--he asked for yellow. He said he was homesick for a bit of
+sunshine, and our so somber garb made him heart-sad. But I would never
+have dismissed a cook like Hannah for him.
+
+"I shall have to let her go," Tish said. "He is Oriental and passionate.
+He has said he will kill her--and he'll do it. They hold life very
+lightly."
+
+"Humph!" I said. "Very well, Tish, that holding life lightly isn't a
+Christian trait. It's Mohammedan--every Mohammedan wants to die and go
+to his heaven, which is a sort of sublimated harem. The boy's probably a
+Christian by training, but he's a Mohammedan by blood."
+
+Aggie thought my remark immoral and said so. And just then Hannah solved
+her own problem by stalking into the room with her things on and a
+suitcase in her hand.
+
+"I'm leaving, Miss Tish!" she said with her eye-rims red. "God knows I
+never expected to be put out of this place by a dirty dago! You'll find
+your woolen stockings on the stretchers, and you've got an appointment
+with the dentist tomorrow morning at ten. And when that little
+blackguard has sucked you dry, and you want him killed to get rid of
+him, you'll find me at my sister's."
+
+She picked up her suitcase and Tish flung open the door. "You're a
+hard-hearted woman, Hannah Mackintyre!" Tish snapped. "Your sister can't
+keep you. You'll have to work."
+
+Hannah turned in the doorway and sneered at the three of us.
+
+"Oh, no!" she said. "I'm going to hunt up three soft-headed old maids
+and learn to kiss their hands and tell 'em I have nobody but them and
+God!"
+
+She slammed out at that, leaving us in a state of natural irritation.
+But our rage soon faded. Tufik was not in the parlor; and Tish,
+tiptoeing back, reported that he was in the kitchen and was mixing up
+something in a bowl.
+
+"He's a dear boy!" she said. "He feels responsible for Hannah's leaving
+and he's getting luncheon! Hannah is a wicked and uncharitable woman!"
+
+ "Man's inhumanity to man,
+ Makes countless thousands mourn!"
+
+quoted Aggie softly. From the kitchen came the rhythmic beating of a
+wooden spoon against the side of a bowl; a melancholy chant--quite
+archaic, as Tish said--kept time with the spoon, and later a smell of
+baking flour and the clatter of dishes told us that our meal was
+progressing.
+
+"'The Syrians,'" read Tish out of her book, "'are a peaceful and
+pastoral people. They have not changed materially in nineteen centuries,
+and the traveler in their country finds still the life of Biblical
+times.' Something's burning!"
+
+Shortly after, Tufik, beaming with happiness and Hannah clearly
+forgotten, summoned us to the dining-room. Tufik was not a cook. We
+realized that at once. He had made coffee in the Oriental way--strong
+enough to float an egg, very sweet and full of grounds; and after a bite
+of the cakes he had made, Tish remembered the dentist the next day and
+refused solid food on account of a bad tooth. The cakes were made of
+lard and flour, without any baking-powder or flavoring, and the tops
+were sprinkled thick with granulated sugar. Little circles of grease
+melted out of them on to the plate, and Tufik, wide-eyed with triumph,
+sweetly wistful over Tish's tooth, humble and joyous in one minute,
+stood by the cake plate and fed them to us!
+
+I caught Aggie's agonized eye, but there was nothing else to do. Were we
+not his friends? And had he not made this delicacy for us? On her third
+cake, however, Aggie luckily turned blue round the mouth and had to go
+and lie down. This broke up the meal and probably saved my life, though
+my stomach has never been the same since. Tish says the cakes are
+probably all right in the Orient, where it is hot and the grease does
+not get a chance to solidify. She thinks that Tufik is probably a good
+cook in his own country. But Aggie says that a good many things in the
+Bible that she never understood are made plain to her if that is what
+they ate in Biblical times--some of the things they saw in visions, and
+all that. She dropped asleep on Tish's lounge and distinctly saw Tufik
+murdering Hannah by forcing one of his cakes down her throat.
+
+The next month was one of real effort. We had planned to go to Panama,
+and had our passage engaged; but when we broke the news to Tufik he
+turned quite pale.
+
+"You go--away?" he said wistfully.
+
+"Only for a month," Tish hastened to apologize. "You see, we--we are all
+very tired, and the Panama Canal--"
+
+"Canal? I know not a canal."
+
+"It is for ships--"
+
+"You go there in a ship?"
+
+"Yes. A canal is a--"
+
+"You go far--in a ship--and I--I stay here?"
+
+"Only for a month," Aggie broke in. "We will leave you enough money to
+live on; and perhaps when we come back you will have found something to
+do--"
+
+"For a month," he said brokenly. "I have no friends, no Miss Tish, no
+Miss Liz, no Miss Pilk. I die!"
+
+He got up and walked to the window. It was Aggie who realized the awful
+truth. The poor lonely boy was weeping--and Charlie Sands may say what
+he likes! He was really crying--when he turned, there were large tears
+on his cheeks. What made it worse was that he was trying to smile.
+
+"I wish you much happiness on the canal," he said. "I am wicked; but my
+sad heart--it ache that my friends leave me. I am sad! If only my
+seester--"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+That was the first we had known of Tufik's sister, back in Beirut,
+wearing a veil over her face and making lace for the bazaars. We were to
+know more.
+
+Well, between getting ready to go to Panama and trying to find something
+Tufik could do, we were very busy for the next month. Tufik grew
+reconciled to our going, but he was never cheerful about it; and finding
+that it pained him we never spoke about it in his presence.
+
+He was with us a great deal. In the morning he would go to Tish, who
+would give him a list of her friends to see. Then Tish would telephone
+and make appointments for him, and he would start off hopefully,
+with his pasteboard suitcase. But he never sold anything--except a
+shirt-waist pattern to Mrs. Ostermaier, the minister's wife. We took day
+about giving him his carfare, but this was pauperizing and we knew it.
+Besides, he was very sensitive and insisted on putting down everything
+we gave him in a book, to be repaid later when he had made a success.
+
+The allowance idea was mine and it worked well. We figured that,
+allowing for his washing,--which was not much, as he seemed to prefer
+the celluloid collar,--he could live in a sort of way on nine dollars a
+week. We subscribed equally to this; and to save his pride we mailed it
+to him weekly by check.
+
+His failure to sell his things hurt him to the soul. More than once we
+caught tears in his eyes. And he was not well--he could not walk any
+distance at all and he coughed. At last Tish got Charlie Sands to take
+him to a lung specialist, a stupid person, who said it was a cigarette
+cough. This was absurd, as Tufik did not smoke.
+
+At last the time came for the Panama trip. Tish called me up the day she
+packed and asked me to come over.
+
+"I can't. I'm busy, Tish," I said.
+
+She was quite disagreeable. "This is your burden as well as mine," she
+snapped. "Come over and talk to that wretched boy while I pack my trunk.
+He stands and watches everything I put in, and I haven't been able to
+pack a lot of things I need."
+
+I went over that afternoon and found Tufik huddled on the top step of
+the stairs outside Tish's apartment, with his head in his hands.
+
+"She has put me out!" he said, looking up at me with tragic eyes. "My
+mother has put me out! She does not love Tufik! No one loves Tufik! I am
+no good. I am a dirty dago!"
+
+I was really shocked. I rang the bell and Tish let me in. She had had no
+maid since Hannah's departure and was taking her meals out. She saw
+Tufik and stiffened.
+
+"I thought I sent you away!" she said, glaring at him.
+
+He looked at her pitifully.
+
+"Where must I--go?" he asked, and coughed.
+
+Tish sighed and flung the door wide open. "Bring him in," she said with
+resignation, "but for Heaven's sake lock him in a closet until I get my
+underwear packed. And if he weeps--slap him."
+
+The poor boy was very repentant, and seeing that his cough worried us he
+fought it back bravely. I mixed the white of an egg with lemon juice and
+sugar, and gave it to him. He was pathetically grateful and kissed my
+hand. At five o'clock we sent him away firmly, having given him
+thirty-six dollars. He presented each of us with a roll of crocheted
+lace to take with us and turned in the doorway to wave a wistful final
+good-bye.
+
+We met at Tish's that night so that we might all go together to the
+train. Charlie Sands had agreed to see us off and to keep an eye on
+Tufik during our absence. Aggie was in a palpitating travel ecstasy,
+clutching a patent seasick remedy and a map of the Canal Zone; Tish was
+seeing that the janitor shut off the gas and water in the apartment; and
+Charlie Sands was jumping on top of a steamer trunk to close it. The
+taxicab was at the door and we had just time to make the night train.
+The steamer sailed early the next morning.
+
+"All ready!" cried Charlie Sands, getting the lid down finally. "All off
+for the Big Ditch!"
+
+We all heard a noise in the hall--a sort of scuffling, with an
+occasional groan. Tish rushed over and threw open the door. On the top
+step, huddled and shivering, with streams of water running off his hair
+down over his celluloid collar, pouring out of his sleeves and cascading
+down the stairs from his trousers legs, was Tufik. The policeman on the
+beat was prodding at him with his foot, trying to make him get up. When
+he saw us the officer touched his hat.
+
+"Evening, Miss Tish," he said, grinning. "This here boy of yours has
+been committing suicide. Just fished him out of the lake in the park!"
+
+"Get up!" snapped Charlie Sands. "You infernal young idiot! Get up and
+stop sniveling!"
+
+He stooped and took the poor boy by the collar. His brutality roused us
+all out of our stupor. Tish and I rushed forward and commanded him to
+stand back; and Aggie, with more presence of mind than we had given her
+credit for, brought a glass containing a tablespoonful of blackberry
+cordial into which she had poured ten drops of seasickness remedy. Tufik
+was white and groaning, but he revived enough to sit up and stare at us
+with his sad brown eyes.
+
+"I wish to die!" he said brokenly. "Why you do not let me die? My
+friends go on the canal! I am alone! My heart is empty!"
+
+Tish wished to roll him on a barrel, but we had no barrel; so, with
+Charlie Sands standing by with his watch in his hand, refusing to assist
+and making unkind remarks, we got him to Tish's room and laid out on her
+mackintosh on the bed. He did not want to live. We could hardly force
+him to drink the hot coffee Tish made for him. He kept muttering things
+about his loneliness and being only a dirty dago; and then he turned
+bitter and said hard things about this great America, where he could
+find no work and must be a burden on his three mothers, and could not
+bring his dear sister to be company for him. Aggie quite broke down and
+had to lie down on the sofa in the parlor and have a cracker and a cup
+of tea.
+
+When Tish and I had succeeded in making Tufik promise to live, and had
+given him one of his own silk kimonos to put on until his clothing could
+be dried--Charlie Sands having disagreeably refused to lend his
+overcoat--and when we had given the officer five dollars not to arrest
+the boy for attempting suicide, we met in the parlor to talk things
+over.
+
+Charlie Sands was sitting by the lamp in his overcoat. He had put our
+railway and steamer tickets on the table, and was holding his cigarette
+so that Aggie could inhale the fumes, she having hay fever and her
+cubebs being on their way to Panama.
+
+"I suppose you know," he said nastily, "that your train has gone and
+that you cannot get the boat tomorrow?"
+
+Tish was in an exalted mood--and she took off her things and flung them
+on a chair.
+
+"What is Panama," she demanded, "to saving a life? Charlie, we must plan
+something for this boy. If you will take off your overcoat--"
+
+"And see you put it on that little parasite? Not if I melt! Do you know
+how deep the lake is? Three feet!"
+
+"One can drown in three feet of water," said Aggie sadly, "if one is
+very tired of life. People drown themselves in bathtubs."
+
+Tish's furious retort to this was lost, Tufik choosing that moment to
+appear in the doorway. He wore a purple-and-gold kimono that had given
+Tish bronchitis early in the winter, and he had twisted a bath towel
+round the waist. He looked very young, very sad, very Oriental. He
+ignored Charlie Sands, but made at once for Tish and dropped on one knee
+beside her.
+
+"Miss Tish!" he begged. "Forgive, Miss Tish! Tufik is wicked. He has the
+bad heart. He has spoil the going on the canal. No?"
+
+"Get up!" said Tish. "Don't be a silly child. Go and take your shoes out
+of the oven. We are not going to Panama. When you are better, I am going
+to give you a good scolding."
+
+Charlie Sands put the cigarette on a book under Aggie's nose and stood
+up.
+
+"I guess I'll go," he said. "My nerves are not what they used to be and
+my disposition feels the change."
+
+Tufik had risen and the two looked at each other. I could not quite make
+out Tufik's expression; had I not known his gentleness I would have
+thought his expression a mixture of triumph and disdain.
+
+"'The Assyrian came down like a wolf on the fold, and his cohorts were
+gleaming in purple and gold!'" said Charlie Sands, and went out,
+slamming the door.
+
+
+
+
+III
+
+
+The next day was rainy and cold. Aggie sneezed all day and Tish had
+neuralgia. Being unable to go out for anything to eat and the exaltation
+of the night before having passed, she was in a bad humor. When I got
+there she was sitting in her room holding a hot-water bottle to her
+face, and staring bitterly at the plate containing a piece of burned
+toast and Tufik's specialty--a Syrian cake crusted with sugar.
+
+"I wish he had drowned!" she said. "My stomach's gone, Lizzie! I ate one
+of those cakes for breakfast. You've got to eat this one."
+
+"I'll do nothing of the sort! This is your doing, Tish Carberry. If it
+hadn't been for you and your habit of picking up stray cats and dogs and
+Orientals and imposing them on your friends we'd be on the ocean to-day,
+on our way to a decent climate. The next time your duty to your brother
+man overwhelms you, you'd better lock yourself in your room and throw
+the key out the window."
+
+Tish was not listening, however. Her eye and her mind both were on the
+cake.
+
+"If you would eat it and then take some essence of pepsin--" she
+hazarded. But I looked her full in the eye and she had the grace to
+color. "He loves to make them," she said--"he positively beamed when he
+brought it. He has another kind he is making now--of pounded beans, or
+something like that. Listen!" I listened.
+
+From back in the kitchen came a sound of hammering and Tufik's voice
+lifted in a low, plaintive chant. "He says that song is about the
+valleys of Lebanon," said Tish miserably. "Lizzie, if you'll eat half of
+it, I'll eat the rest."
+
+My answer was to pick up the plate and carry it into the bathroom.
+Heroic measures were necessary: Tish was not her resolute self; and,
+indeed, through all the episode of Tufik, and the shocking denouement
+that followed, Tish was a spineless individual who swayed to and fro
+with every breeze.
+
+She divined my purpose and followed me to the bathroom door.
+
+"Leave some crumbs on the plate!" she whispered. "It will look more
+natural. Get rid of the toast too."
+
+I turned and faced her, the empty plate in my hands.
+
+"Tish," I said sternly, "this is hypocrisy, which is just next door to
+lying. It's the first step downward. I have a feeling that this boy is
+demoralizing us! We shall have to get rid of him."
+
+"As for instance?" she sarcastically asked.
+
+"Send him back home," I said with firmness. "He doesn't belong here; he
+isn't accustomed to anything faster than a camel. He doesn't know how to
+work--none of them do. He comes from a country where they can eat food
+like this because digestion is one of their occupations."
+
+I was right and Tish knew it. Even Tufik was satisfied when we put it up
+to him. He spread his hands in his Oriental way and shrugged his
+shoulders.
+
+"If my mothers think best," he said softly. "In my own land Tufik is
+known--I sell in the bazaar the so fine lace my sister make. I drink
+wine, not water. My stomach--I cannot eat in this America. But--I have
+no money."
+
+"We will furnish the money," Tish said gently. "But you must promise one
+thing, Tufik. You must not become a Mohammedan."
+
+"Before that I die!" he said proudly.
+
+"And--there is something else, Tufik,--something rather personal. But I
+want you to promise. You are only a boy; but when you are a man--" Tish
+stopped and looked to me for help.
+
+"Miss Tish means this," I put in, "you are to have only one wife, Tufik.
+We are not sending you back to start a harem. We--we disapprove strongly
+of--er--anything like that."
+
+"Tufik takes but one wife," he said. "Our people--we have but one wife.
+My first child--it is called Tish; my next, Lizzie; and my next, Aggie
+Pilk. All for my so kind friends. And one I call Charlie Sands; and one
+shall be Hannah. So that Tufik never forget America."
+
+Aggie was rather put out when we told her what we had done; but after
+eating one of the cakes made of pounded beans and sugar, under Tufik's
+triumphant eyes, she admitted that it was probably for the best. That
+evening, while Tufik took his shrunken and wrinkled clothing to be
+pressed by a little tailor in the neighborhood who did Tish's repairing,
+the three of us went back to the kitchen and tried to put it in order.
+It was frightful--flour and burned grease over everything, every pan
+dirty, dishes all over the place and a half-burned cigarette in the
+sugar bin. But--it touched us all deeply--he had found an old photograph
+of the three of us and had made a sort of shrine of the clock-shelf--the
+picture in front of the clock and in front of the picture a bunch of red
+geraniums.
+
+While we were looking at the picture and Aggie was at the sink putting
+water in the glass that held the geraniums, Tufik having forgotten to do
+so, Tish's neighbor from the apartment below, an elderly bachelor, came
+up the service staircase and knocked at the door. Tish opened it.
+
+"Humph!" said the gentleman from below. "Gone is he?"
+
+"Is who gone?"
+
+"Your thieving Syrian, madam!"
+
+Tish stiffened.
+
+"Perhaps," she said, "if you will explain--"
+
+"Perhaps," snarled the visitor, "you will explain what you have done
+with my geraniums! Why don't you raise your own flowers?"
+
+Tish was quite stunned and so was I. After all, it was Aggie who came to
+the rescue. She slammed the lid on to the teakettle and set it on the
+stove with a bang.
+
+"If you mean," she said indignantly, "that you think we have any
+geraniums of yours--"
+
+"Think! Didn't my cook see your thieving servant steal 'em off the box
+on the fire-escape?"
+
+"Then, perhaps," Aggie suggested, "you will look through the apartment
+and see if they are here. You will please look everywhere!"
+
+Tish and I gasped. It was not until the visitor had made the rounds of
+the apartment, and had taken an apologetic departure, that Tish and I
+understood. The teakettle was boiling and from its spout coming a spicy
+and familiar odor. Aggie took it off the stove and removed the lid. The
+geraniums, boiled to a pulp, were inside.
+
+"Back to Syria that boy goes!" said Tish, viewing the floral remains.
+"He did it out of love and we must not chide him. But we have our own
+immortal souls to think of."
+
+The next morning two things happened. We gave Tufik one hundred and
+twenty dollars to buy a ticket back to Syria and to keep him in funds on
+the way. And Tish got a note from Hannah:--
+
+ _Dear Miss Tish_: I here you still have the dago--or, as my sister's
+ husband says, he still has you. I am redy to live up to my bargen if
+ you are.
+
+ HANNAH.
+
+ P.S. I have lerned a new salud--very rich, but delissious.
+
+ H.
+
+
+In spite of herself, Tish looked haunted. It was the salad, no doubt.
+She said nothing, but she looked round the untidy rooms, where
+everything that would hold it had a linen cover with a Cluny-lace
+edge--all of them soiled and wrinkled. She watched Tufik, chanting about
+the plains of Lebanon and shoving the carpet-sweeper with a bang against
+her best furniture; and, with Hannah's salad in mind, she sniffed a
+warning odor from the kitchen that told of more Syrian experiments with
+her digestion. Tish surrendered: that morning she wrote to Hannah that
+Tufik was going back to Syria, and to come and bring the salad recipe
+with her.
+
+That was, I think, on a Monday. Tufik's steamer sailed on Thursday. On
+Tuesday Aggie and I went shopping; and in a spirit of repentance--for we
+felt we were not solving Tufik's question but getting rid of him--we
+bought him a complete new outfit. He almost disgraced us by kissing
+our hands in the store, and while we were buying him some ties he
+disappeared--to come back later with the rims of his eyes red from
+weeping. His gentle soul was touched with gratitude. Aggie had to tell
+him firmly that if he kissed any more hands he would get his ears boxed.
+
+The clerks in the store were all interested, and two or three cash-boys
+followed us round and stood, open-mouthed, staring at us. Neither Aggie
+nor I knew anything about masculine attire, and Tufik's idea was a suit,
+with nothing underneath, a shirt-front and collar of celluloid, and a
+green necktie already tied and hooking on to his collar-button. He was
+dazed when we bought him a steamer trunk and a rug, and disappeared
+again, returning in a few moments with a small paper bag full of
+gumdrops. We were quite touched.
+
+That, as I say, was on Tuesday. Tufik had been sleeping in Tish's
+guest-room since his desperate attempt at suicide, and we sent his
+things to Tish's apartment. That evening Tufik asked permission to spend
+the night with a friend in the restaurant business--a Damascan. Tish let
+him go against my advice.
+
+"He'll eat a lot of that Syrian food," I objected, "and get sick and
+miss his boat, and we'll have the whole thing over again!"
+
+But Tish was adamant. "It's his last night," she said, "and he has
+promised not to smoke any cigarettes and I've given him two pepsin
+tablets. This is the land of the free, Lizzie."
+
+We were to meet Tufik at the station next morning and we arranged a
+lunch for him to eat on the train, Aggie bringing fried chicken and I
+sandwiches and cake. Tish's domestic arrangements being upset, she
+supplied fruit, figs and dates mostly, to make him think of home.
+
+The train left early, and none of us felt very cheerful at having to be
+about. Aggie sat in the station and sneezed; Tish had a pain above her
+eye and sat by a heater. We had the luncheon in a large shoebox, wrapped
+in oiled paper to keep it moist.
+
+He never appeared! The train was called, filled up, and left. People
+took to staring at us as we sat there. Aggie sneezed and Tish held her
+eye. And no Tufik! In a sort of helpless, breakfastless rage we called a
+taxicab and went to Tish's. No one said much. We were all thinking.
+
+We were hungry; so we spread out the shoebox lunch on one of the
+Cluny-lace covers and ate it, mostly in silence. The steamer trunk and
+the rug had gone. We let them go. They might go to Jerusalem, as far as
+we were concerned! After we had eaten,--about eleven o'clock, I
+think,--Tish got up and surveyed the apartment. Then, with a savage
+gleam in her eye, she whisked off all the fancy linens, the Cluny laces,
+the hemstitched bedspreads, and piled them in a heap on the floor. Aggie
+and I watched her in silence. She said nothing, but kicked the whole lot
+into the bottom of a cupboard. When she had slammed the door, she turned
+and faced us grimly.
+
+"That roll of fiddle-de-dees has cost me about five hundred dollars,"
+she said. "It's been worth it if it teaches me that I'm an old fool and
+that you are two others! If that boy shows his face here again, I'll
+hand him over to the police."
+
+However, as it happened, she did nothing of the sort. At four o'clock
+that afternoon there was a timid ring at the doorbell and I answered it.
+Outside was Tufik, forlorn and drooping, and held up by main force by a
+tall, dark-skinned man with a heavy mustache.
+
+"I bring your boy!" said the mustached person, smiling. "He has great
+trouble--sorrow; he faint with grief."
+
+I took a good look at Tufik then. He was pale and shaky, and his new
+suit looked as if he had slept in it. His collar was bent and wilted,
+and the green necktie had been taken off and exchanged for a ragged
+black one.
+
+"Miss Liz!" he said huskily. "I die; the heart is gone! My parent--"
+
+He broke down again; and leaning against the door jamb he buried his
+face in a handkerchief that I could not believe was one of the lot we
+had bought only yesterday. I hardly knew what to do. Tish had said she
+was through with the boy. I decided to close them out in the hallway
+until we had held a council; but Tufik's foot was on the sill, and the
+more I asked him to move it, the harder he wept.
+
+The mustached person said it was quite true. Tufik's father had died of
+the plague; the letter had come early that morning. Beirut was full of
+the plague. He waved the letter at me; but I ordered him to burn it
+immediately--on account of germs. I brought him a shovel to burn it on;
+and when that was over Tufik had worked out his own salvation. He was at
+the door of Tish's room, pouring out to Aggie and Tish his grief, and
+offering the black necktie as proof.
+
+We were just where we had started, but minus one hundred and twenty
+dollars; for, the black-mustached gentleman having gone after trying to
+sell Tish another silk kimono, I demanded Tufik's ticket--to be
+redeemed--and was met with two empty hands, outstretched.
+
+"Oh, my friends,--my Miss Tish, my Miss Liz, my Miss Ag,--what must I
+say? I have not the ticket! I have been wikkid--but for my sister--only
+for my sister! She must not die--she so young, so little girl!"
+
+"Tufik," said Tish sternly, "I want you to tell us everything this
+minute, and get it over."
+
+"She ees so little!" he said wistfully. "And the body of my
+parent--could I let it lie and rot in the so hot sun? Ah, no; Miss Tish,
+Miss Liz, Miss Ag,--not so. To-day I take back my ticket, get the
+money, and send it to my sister. She will bury my parent, and then--she
+comes to this so great America, the land of my good friends!"
+
+There was a moment's silence. Then Aggie sneezed!
+
+
+
+
+IV
+
+
+I shall pass over the next month, with its unpleasantnesses; over
+Charlie Sands's coming one evening with a black tie and, on the strength
+of having killed a dog with his machine, asking for money to bury it,
+and bring another one from Syria! I shall not more than mention Hannah,
+who kept Tish physically comfortable and well fed and mentally wretched,
+having a teakettle of boiling water always ready if Tufik came to the
+apartment; I shall say nothing of our success in getting him employment
+in the foreign department of a bank, and his ending up by washing its
+windows; or of the position Tish got him as elevator boy in her
+hospital, where he jammed the car in some way and held up four surgeons
+and three nurses and a patient on his way to the operating-room--until
+the patient changed his mind and refused to be operated on.
+
+Aggie had a brilliant idea about the census--that he could make the
+census reports in the Syrian district. To this end she worked for some
+time, coaching Tufik for the examination, only to have him fail--fail
+absolutely and without hope. He was staying in the Syrian quarter at
+that time, on account of Hannah; and he brought us various tempting
+offers now and then--a fruit stand that could be bought for a hundred
+dollars; a restaurant for fifty; a tailor's shop for twenty-five. But,
+as he knew nothing of fruits or restaurants or tailoring, we refused to
+invest. Tish said that we had been a good while getting to it, but that
+we were being businesslike at last. We gave the boy nine dollars a week
+and not a penny more; and we refused to buy any more of his silly linens
+and crocheted laces. We were quite firm with him.
+
+And now I come to the arriving of Tufik's little sister--not that she
+was really little. But that comes later.
+
+Tufik had decided at last on what he would be in our so great America.
+Once or twice, when he was tired or discouraged, Tish had taken him out
+in her machine, and he had been thrilled--really thrilled. He did not
+seem able to learn how to crank it--Tish's car is hard to crank--but he
+learned how to light the lamps and to spot a policeman two blocks away.
+Several times, when we were going into the country, Tish took him
+because it gave her a sense of security to have a man along.
+
+Having come from a country where the general travel is by camel,
+however, he had not the first idea of machinery. He thought Tish made
+the engine go by pressing on the clutch with her foot, like a sewing
+machine, and he regarded her strength with awe. And once, when we were
+filling a tire from an air bottle and the tube burst and struck him, he
+declared there was a demon in the air bottle and said a prayer in the
+middle of the road. About that time Tish learned of a school for
+chauffeurs, and the three of us decided to divide the expense and send
+him.
+
+"In three months," Tish explained, "we can get him a state license and
+he can drive a taxicab. It will suit him, because he can sit to do it."
+
+So Tufik went to an automobile school and stood by while some one drew
+pictures of parts of the engine on a blackboard, and took home lists of
+words that he translated into Arabic at the library, and learned
+everything but why and how the engine of an automobile goes. He still
+thought--at the end of two months--that the driver did it with his
+foot! But we were ignorant of all that. He would drop round in the
+evenings, when Hannah was out or in bed, and tell us what "magneto" was
+in Arabic, and how he would soon be able to care for Tish's car and
+would not take a cent for it, doing it at night when the taxicab was
+resting.
+
+At the end of six weeks we bought him a chauffeur's outfit. The next
+day the sister arrived and Tufik brought her to Aggie's, where we were
+waiting. We had not told Hannah about the sister; she would not have
+understood.
+
+Charlie Sands telephoned while we were waiting and asked if he might
+come over and help receive the girl. We were to greet her and welcome
+her to America; then she was to go to the home of the Syrian with the
+large mustache. Charlie Sands came in and shook hands all round,
+surveying each of us carefully.
+
+"Strange!" he muttered. "Curious is no name for it! What do we know of
+the vagaries of the human mind? Three minds and one obsession!" he said
+with the utmost gentleness. "Three maiden ladies who have lived
+impeccable lives for far be it from me to say how many years; and
+now--this! Oh, Aunt Tish! Dear Aunt Tish!"
+
+He got out his handkerchief and wiped his eyes. Tish was speechless with
+rage, but I rose to our defense.
+
+"We don't want to do it and you know it!" I said tartly. "But when the
+Lord sends want and suffering to one's very door--"
+
+"Want, with large brown eyes and a gentle voice!" he retorted. "My dear
+ladies, it's your money; and I dare say it costs you less than bridge at
+five cents a point, or the Gay White Way. But, for Heaven's sake, my
+respected but foolish virgins, why not an American that wants a real
+job? Why let a sticky Oriental pull your legs--"
+
+"Charlie Sands!" cried Tish, rising in her wrath. "I will not endure
+such vulgarity. And when Tufik takes you out in a taxicab--"
+
+"God forbid!" said Charlie Sands, and sat down to wait for Tufik's
+sister.
+
+She did not look like Tufik and she was tired and dirty from the
+journey; but she had big brown eyes and masses of dark hair and she
+spoke not a single word of English. Tufik's joy was boundless; his soft
+eyes were snapping with excitement; and Aggie, who is sentimental, was
+obliged to go out and swallow half a glass of water without breathing to
+keep from crying. Charlie Sands said nothing, but sat back in a corner
+and watched us all; and once he took out his notebook and made a
+memorandum of something. He showed it to us later.
+
+Tufik's sister was the calmest of us all, I believe. She sat on a stiff
+chair near the door and turned her brown eyes from one to the other.
+Tish said that proper clothing would make her beautiful; and Aggie,
+disappearing for a few minutes, came back with her last summer's foulard
+and a jet bonnet. When the poor thing understood they were for her, she
+looked almost frightened, the thing being unexpected; and Tufik, in a
+paroxysm of delight, kissed all our hands and the girl on each cheek.
+
+Tish says our vulgar lip-osculation is unknown in the Orient and that
+they rub noses by way of greeting. I think, however, that she is
+mistaken in this and that the Australians are the nose-rubbers. I recall
+a returned missionary's telling this, but I cannot remember just where
+he had been stationed.
+
+Things were very quiet for a couple of weeks. Tufik came round only
+once--to tell us that, having to pay car fare to get to the automobile
+school, his nine dollars were not enough. We added a dollar a week under
+protest; and Tish suggested with some asperity that as he was only busy
+four hours a day he might find some light employment for the balance of
+the day. He spread out his hands and drew up his shoulders.
+
+"My friends are angry," he said sadly. "It is not enough that I study? I
+must also work? Ver' well, I labor. I sell the newspaper. But, to buy
+newspapers, one must have money--a dollar; two dollars. Ver' leetle;
+only--I have it not."
+
+We gave him another dollar and he went out smiling and hopeful. It
+seemed that at last we had solved his problem. Tish recalled one of her
+Sunday-school scholars who sold papers and saved enough to buy a
+second-hand automobile and rear a family. But our fond hopes were dashed
+to the ground when, the next morning, Hannah, opening the door at Tish's
+to bring in the milk bottles, found a huge stack of the night-before's
+newspapers and a note on top addressed to Tish, which said:-
+
+ _Deer Mother Tish_: You see now that I am no good. I wish to die!
+ I hav one papier sold, and newsboys kell me on sight. I hav but you
+ and God--and God has forget!
+
+ TUFIK.
+
+
+We were discouraged and so, clearly, was Tufik. For ten days we did not
+hear from him, except that a flirty little Syrian boy called for the ten
+dollars on Saturday and brought a pair of Tufik's shoes for us to have
+resoled. But one day Tish telephoned in some excitement and said that
+Tufik was there and wanted us to go to a wedding.
+
+"His little sister's wedding!" she explained. "The dear child is all
+excited. He says it has been going on for two days and this is the day
+of the ceremony."
+
+Aggie was spending the afternoon with me, and spoke up hastily.
+
+"Ask her if I have time to go home and put on my broadcloth," she said.
+"I'm not fixed for a wedding."
+
+Tish said there was no time. She would come round with the machine and
+we were to be ready in fifteen minutes. Aggie hesitated on account of
+intending to wash her hair that night and so not having put up her
+crimps; but she finally agreed to go and Tish came for us. Tufik was in
+the machine. He looked very tidy and wore the shoes we had had repaired,
+a pink carnation in his buttonhole, and an air of suppressed excitement.
+
+"At last," he said joyously while Tish cranked the car--"at last my
+friends see my three mothers! They think Tufik only talks--now they
+see! And the priest will bless my mothers on this so happy day."
+
+Tish having crawled panting from her exertion into the driver's seat and
+taken the wheel, in sheer excess of boyish excitement he leaned over and
+kissed the hand nearest him.
+
+The janitor's small boy was on the curb watching, and at that he set up
+a yell of joy. We left him calling awful things after us and Tish's face
+was a study; but soon the care of the machine made her forget everything
+else.
+
+The Syrian quarter was not impressive. It was on a hillside above the
+Russian Jewish colony, and consisted of a network of cobble-paved
+alleys, indescribably dirty and incredibly steep. In one or two of these
+alleys Tish was obliged to turn the car and go up backward, her machine
+climbing much better on the reverse gear. Crowds of children followed
+us; dogs got under the wheels and apparently died, judging by the
+yelps--only to follow us with undiminished energy after they had picked
+themselves up. We fought and won a battle with a barrel of ashes and
+came out victorious but dusty; and at last, as Tufik made a lordly
+gesture, we stopped at an angle of forty-five degrees and Tufik bowed us
+out of the car. He stood by visibly glowing with happiness, while Tish
+got a cobblestone and placed it under a wheel, and Aggie and I took in
+our surroundings.
+
+We were in an alley ten feet wide and paved indiscriminately with stones
+and tin cans, babies and broken bottles. Before us was a two-story brick
+house with broken windows and a high, railed wooden stoop, minus two
+steps. Under the stoop was a door leading into a cellar, and from this
+cellar was coming a curious stamping noise and a sound as of an animal
+in its death throes.
+
+Aggie caught my arm. "What's that?" she quavered.
+
+I had no time to reply. Tufik had thrown open the door and stood aside
+to let us pass.
+
+"They dance," he said gravely. "There is always much dancing before a
+wedding. The music one hears is of Damascus and he who dances now is a
+sheik among his people."
+
+Reassured as to the sounds, we stepped down into the basement. That was
+at four o'clock in the afternoon.
+
+I have never been fairly clear as to what followed and Aggie's memory
+is a complete blank. I remember a long, boarded-in and floored cellar,
+smelling very damp and lighted by flaring gas jets. The center was empty
+save for a swarthy gentleman in a fez and his shirt-sleeves, wearing a
+pair of green suspenders and dancing alone--a curious stamping dance
+that kept time to a drum. I remember the musicians too--three of them
+in a corner: one playing on a sort of pipes-of-Pan affair of reeds,
+one on a long-necked instrument that looked like a guitar with zither
+ambitions, and a drummer who chanted with his eyes shut and kept time
+to his chants by beating on a sheepskin tied over the mouth of a brass
+bowl. Round three sides of the room were long, oil cloth-covered tables;
+and in preparation for the ceremony a little Syrian girl was sweeping up
+peanut shells, ashes, and beer bottles, with absolute disregard of the
+guests.
+
+All round the wall, behind rows of beer bottles, dishes of bananas,
+and plates of raw liver, were men,--soft-eyed Syrians with white
+teeth gleaming and black hair plastered close and celluloid
+collars,--gentle-voiced, urbane-mannered Orientals, who came up gravely
+one by one and shook hands with us; who pressed on us beer and peanuts
+and raw liver.
+
+Aggie, speaking between sneezes and over the chanting and the drum, bent
+toward me. "It's a breath of the Orient!" she said ecstatically. "Oh,
+Lizzie, do you think I could buy that drum for my tabouret?"
+
+"Orient!" observed Tish, coughing. "I'm going out and take the
+switch-key out of that car. And I wish I'd brought Charlie Sands!"
+
+It was in vain we reminded her that the Syrians are a pastoral people
+and that they come from the land of the Bible. She looked round her
+grimly.
+
+"They look like a lot of bandits to me," she sniffed. "And there's
+always a murder at a wedding of this sort. There isn't a woman here but
+ourselves!"
+
+She was exceedingly disagreeable and Aggie and I began to get
+uncomfortable. But when Tufik brought us little thimble-sized glasses
+filled with a milky stuff and assured us that the women had only gone to
+prepare the bride, we felt reassured. He said that etiquette demanded
+that we drink the milky white stuff.
+
+Tish was inclined to demur. "Has it any alcohol in it?" she demanded.
+Tufik did not understand, but he said it was harmless and given to all
+the Syrian babies; and while we were still undecided Aggie sniffed it.
+
+"It smells like paregoric, Tish," she said. "I'm sure it's harmless."
+
+We took it then. It tasted sweet and rather spicy, and Aggie said it
+stopped her sneezing at once. It was very mild and pleasant, and rather
+medicinal in its flavor. We each had two little glasses--and Tish said
+she would not bother about the switch-key. The car was insured against
+theft.
+
+A little later Aggie said she used to do a little jig step when she was
+a girl, and if they would play slower she would like to see if she had
+forgotten it. Tish did not hear this--she was talking to Tufik, and a
+moment later she got up and went out.
+
+Aggie had decided to ask the musicians to play a little slower and I had
+my hands full with her; so it was with horror that, shortly after, I
+heard the whirring of the engine and through the cellar window caught a
+glimpse of Tish's machine starting off up the hill. I rose excitedly,
+but Tufik was before me, smiling and bowing.
+
+"Miss Tish has gone for the bride," he said softly. "The taxicab hav'
+not come. Soon the priest arrive, and so great shame--the bride is not
+here! Miss Tish is my mother, my heart's delight!"
+
+When Aggie realized that Tish had gone, she was rather upset--she
+depends a great deal on Tish--and she took another of the little glasses
+of milky stuff to revive her.
+
+I was a little bit nervous with Tish gone and the sun setting and
+another tub of beer bottles brought in--though the people were orderly
+enough and Tufik stood near. But Aggie began to feel very strange,
+and declared that the man with the sheepskin drum was winking at her and
+that her head was twitching round on her shoulders. And when a dozen or
+so young Syrians formed a circle, their hands on each other's shoulders,
+and sang a melancholy chant, stamping to beat time, she wept with sheer
+sentiment.
+
+"Ha! Hoo! Ta, Ta, Ta!" they chanted in unison; and Tufik bent over us,
+his soft eyes beaming.
+
+"They are shepherds and the sons of shepherds from Palestine," he
+whispered. "That is the shepherd's call to his sheep. In my country many
+are shepherds. Perhaps some day you go with me back to my country, and
+we hear the shepherd call his sheep--'Ha! Hoo! Ta, Ta, Ta!'--and we hear
+the sleepy sheep reply: 'Maaaa!'"
+
+"It is too beautiful!" murmured Aggie. "It is the Holy Land all over
+again! And we should never have known this but for you, Tufik!"
+
+Just then some one near the door clapped his hands and all the noise
+ceased. Those who were standing sat down. The little girl with the broom
+swept the accumulations of the room under a chair and put the broom in a
+corner. The music became loud and stirring.
+
+Aggie swayed toward me. "I'm sick, Lizzie!" she gasped. "That paregoric
+stuff has poisoned me. Air!"
+
+I took one arm and Tufik the other, and we got her out and seated on one
+of the wooden steps. She was a blue-green color and the whites of her
+eyes were yellow. But I had little time for Aggie. Tufik caught my hand
+and pointed.
+
+Tish's machine was coming down the alley. Beside her sat Tufik's sister,
+sobbing at the top of her voice and wearing Aggie's foulard, a pair of
+cotton gloves, and a lace curtain over her head. Behind in the tonneau
+were her maid of honor, a young Syrian woman with a baby in her arms and
+four other black-eyed children about her. But that was not all. In front
+of the machine, marching slowly and with dignity, were three bearded
+gentlemen, two in coats and one in a striped vest, blowing on curious
+double flutes and making a shrill wailing noise. And all round were
+crowds of women and children, carrying tin pans and paper bags full of
+parched peas, which they were flinging with all their might.
+
+I caught Tish's eye as the procession stopped, and she looked
+subdued--almost stunned. The pipers still piped. But the bride refused
+to move. Instead, her wails rose higher; and Aggie, who had paid no
+attention so far, but was sitting back with her eyes shut, looked up.
+
+"Lizzhie," she said thickly, "Tish looks about the way I feel." And with
+that she fell to laughing awful laughter that mingled with the bride's
+cries and the wail of the pipes.
+
+The bride, after a struggle, was taken by force from the machine and
+placed on a chair against the wall. Her veil was torn and her wreath
+crooked, and she observed a sulky silence. To our amazement, Tufik was
+still smiling, urbane and cheerful.
+
+"It is the custom of my country, my mothers," he said. "The bride leave
+with tears the home of her good parents or of her friends; and she speak
+no word--only weep--until she is marriaged. Ah--the priest!"
+
+The rest of the story is short and somewhat blurred. Tish having broken
+her glasses, Aggie being, as one may say, _hors de combat_, and I having
+developed a frightful headache in the dust and bad air, the real meaning
+of what was occurring did not penetrate to any of us. The priest
+officiated from a table in the center of the room, on which he placed
+two candles, an Arabic Bible, and a sacred picture, all of which he took
+out of a brown valise. He himself wore a long black robe and a beard,
+and looked, as Tish observed, for all the world as if he had stepped
+from an Egyptian painting. Before him stood Tufik's sister, the maid of
+honor with her baby, the black-mustached friend who had brought Tufik to
+us after his tragic attempt at suicide, and Tufik himself.
+
+[Illustration: The real meaning of what was occurring did not penetrate
+to any of us]
+
+Everybody held lighted candles, and the heat was frightful. The music
+ceased, there was much exhorting in Arabic, much reading from the book,
+many soft replies indiscriminately from the four principals--and then
+suddenly Tish turned and gripped my arm.
+
+"Lizzie," she said hoarsely, "that little thief and liar has done us
+again! That isn't his sister at all. He's marrying her--for us to keep!"
+
+Luckily Aggie grew faint again at that moment, and we led her out into
+the open air. Behind us the ceremony seemed to be over; the drum was
+beating, the pipes screaming, the lute thrumming.
+
+Tish let in the clutch with a vicious jerk, and the whir of the engine
+drowned out the beating of the drum and the clapping of the hands.
+Twilight hid the tin cans and ash-barrels, and the dogs slept on the
+cool pavements. In the doorways soft-eyed Syrian women rocked their
+babies to drowsy chants. The air revived Aggie. She leaned forward and
+touched Tish on the shoulder.
+
+"After all," she said softly, "if he loves her very much, and there was
+no other way--Do you remember that night she arrived--how he looked at
+her?"
+
+"Yes," Tish snapped. "And I remember the way he looked at us every time
+he wanted money. We've been a lot of sheep and we've been sheared good
+and proper! But we needn't bleat with joy about it!"
+
+As we drew up at my door, Tish pulled out her watch.
+
+"It's seven o'clock," she said brusquely. "I am going to New York on the
+nine-forty train and I shall take the first steamer outward bound--I
+need a rest! I'll go anywhere but to the Holy Land!"
+
+We went to Panama.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Two months afterward, in the dusk of a late spring evening, Charlie
+Sands met us at the station and took us to Tish's in a taxicab. We were
+homesick, tired, and dirty; and Aggie, who had been frightfully seasick,
+was clamoring for tea.
+
+As the taxicab drew up at the curb, Tish clutched my arm and Aggie
+uttered a muffled cry and promptly sneezed. Seated on the doorstep,
+celluloid collar shining, the brown pasteboard suitcase at his feet, was
+Tufik. He sat calmly smoking a cigarette, his eyes upturned in placid
+and Oriental contemplation of the heavens.
+
+"Drive on!" said Tish desperately. "If he sees us we are lost!"
+
+"Drive where?" demanded Charlie.
+
+Tufik's gaze had dropped gradually--another moment and his brown eyes
+would rest on us. But just then a diversion occurred. A window overhead
+opened with a slam and a stream of hot water descended. It had been
+carefully aimed--as if with long practice. Tufik was apparently not
+surprised. He side-stepped it with a boredom as of many repetitions,
+and, picking up his suitcase, stood at a safe distance looking up.
+First, in his gentle voice he addressed the window in Arabic; then from
+a safer distance in English.
+
+"You ugly old she-wolf!" he said softly. "When my three old women come
+back I eat you, skin and bones,--and they shall say nothing! They love
+me--Tufik! I am their child. Aye! And my child--which comes--will be
+their grandchild!"
+
+He kissed his fingers to the upper window which closed with a slam.
+Tufik stooped, picked up his suitcase, and saw the taxi for the first
+time. Even in the twilight we saw his face change, his brown eyes
+brighten, his teeth show in his boyish smile. The taxicab driver had
+stalled his engine and was cranking it.
+
+"Sh!" I said desperately, and we all cowered back into the shadows.
+
+Tufik approached, uncertainty changing to certainty. The engine was
+started now. Oh, for a second of time! He was at the window now, peering
+into the darkness.
+
+"Miss Tish!" he said breathlessly. No one answered. We hardly breathed.
+And then suddenly Aggie sneezed! "Miss Pilk!" he shouted in delight. "My
+mothers! My so dear friends--"
+
+The machine jerked, started, moved slowly off. He ran beside it, a hand
+on the door. Tish bent forward to speak, but Charlie Sands put his hand
+over her mouth.
+
+And so we left him, standing in the street undecided, staring after us
+wistfully, uncertainly--the suitcase, full of Cluny-lace centerpieces,
+crocheted lace, silk kimonos, and embroidered bedspreads, in his hand.
+
+That night we hid in a hotel and the next day we started for Europe. We
+heard nothing from Tufik; but on the anniversary of Mr. Wiggins's death,
+while we were in Berlin, Aggie received a small package forwarded from
+home. It was a small lace doily, and pinned to it was a card. It read:--
+
+ For the sadness, Miss Pilk!
+
+ TUFIK.
+
+
+Aggie cried over it.
+
+
+
+
+THE SIMPLE LIFERS
+
+I
+
+
+I suppose there is something in all of us that harks back to the soil.
+When you come to think of it, what are picnics but outcroppings of
+instinct? No one really enjoys them or expects to enjoy them, but with
+the first warm days some prehistoric instinct takes us out into the
+woods, to fry potatoes over a strangling wood fire and spend the next
+week getting grass stains out of our clothes. It must be instinct; every
+atom of intelligence warns us to stay at home near the refrigerator.
+
+Tish is really a child of instinct. She is intelligent enough, but in a
+contest between instinct and brains, she always follows her instinct.
+Aggie under the same circumstances follows her heart. As for me, I
+generally follow Tish and Aggie, and they've led me into some curious
+places.
+
+This is really a sort of apology, because, whereas usually Tish leads
+off and we follow her, in the adventure of the Simple Life we were all
+equally guilty. Tish made the suggestion, but we needed no urging. As
+you know, this summer two years ago was a fairly good one, as summers
+go,--plenty of fair weather, only two or three really hot spells, and
+not a great deal of rain. Charlie Sands, Tish's nephew, went over to
+England in June to report the visit of the French President to London
+for his newspaper, and Tish's automobile had been sent to the factory to
+be gone over. She had been teaching Aggie to drive it, and owing to
+Aggie's thinking she had her foot on the brake when it was really on the
+gas, they had leaped a four-foot ditch and gone down into a deep ravine,
+from which both Tish and Aggie had had to be pulled up with ropes.
+
+Well, with no machine and Charlie Sands away, we hardly knew how to plan
+the summer. Tish thought at first she would stay at home and learn to
+ride. She thought her liver needed stirring up. She used to ride, she
+said, and it was like sitting in a rocking-chair, only perhaps more so.
+Aggie and I went out to her first lesson; but when I found she had
+bought a divided skirt and was going to try a man's saddle, I could not
+restrain my indignation.
+
+"I'm going, Tish," I said firmly, when she had come out of the
+dressing-room and I realized the situation. "I shan't attempt to
+restrain you, but I shall not remain to witness your shame."
+
+Tish eyed me coldly. "When you wish to lecture me," she snapped, "about
+revealing to the public that I have two legs, if I do wear a skirt,
+don't stand in a sunny doorway in that linen dress of yours. I am going
+to ride; every woman should ride. It's good for the liver."
+
+I think she rather wavered when they brought the horse, which looked
+larger than usual and had a Roman nose. The instructor handed Tish four
+lines and she grabbed them nervously in a bunch.
+
+"Just a moment!" said the instructor, and slipped a line between each
+two of her fingers.
+
+Tish looked rather startled. "When I used to ride--" she began with
+dignity.
+
+But the instructor only smiled. "These two are for the curb," he
+said--"if he bolts or anything like that, you know. Whoa, Viper! Still,
+old man!"
+
+"Viper!" Tish repeated, clutching at the lines. "Is--is he--er--nasty?"
+
+"Not a bit of it," said the instructor, while he prepared to hoist her
+up. "He's as gentle as a woman to the people he likes. His only fault is
+that he's apt to take a little nip out of the stablemen now and then.
+He's very fond of ladies."
+
+"Humph!" said Tish. "He's looking at me rather strangely, don't you
+think? Has he been fed lately?"
+
+"Perhaps he sees that divided skirt," I suggested.
+
+Tish gave me one look and got on the horse. They walked round the ring
+at first and Tish seemed to like it. Then a stableman put a nickel into
+a player-piano and that seemed to be a signal for the thing to trot.
+Tish said afterward that she never hit the horse's back twice in the
+same place. Once, she says, she came down on his neck, and several times
+she was back somewhere about his tail. Every time she landed, wherever
+it might be, he gave a heave and sent her up again. She tried to say
+"Whoa," but it came out in pieces, so to speak, and the creature seemed
+to be encouraged by it and took to going faster. By that time, she said,
+she wasn't coming down at all, but was in the air all the time, with the
+horse coming up at the rate of fifty revolutions a second. She had
+presence of mind enough to keep her mouth shut so she wouldn't bite her
+tongue off.
+
+After four times round the music stopped and the horse did also. They
+were just in front of us, and Tish looked rather dazed.
+
+"You did splendidly!" said Aggie. "Honestly, Tish, I was frightened at
+first, but you and that dear horse seemed one piece. Didn't they,
+Lizzie?"
+
+Tish straightened out the fingers of her left hand with her right and
+extricated the lines. Then she turned her head slowly from right to left
+to see if she could.
+
+"Help me down, somebody," she said in a thin voice, "and call an
+osteopath. There is something wrong with my spine!"
+
+She was in bed three days, having massage and a vibrator and being
+rubbed with chloroform liniment. At the end of that time she offered me
+her divided skirt, but I refused.
+
+"Riding would be good for your liver, Lizzie," she said, sitting up in
+bed with pillows all about her.
+
+"I don't intend to detach it to do it good," I retorted. "What your
+liver and mine and most of the other livers need these days isn't to be
+sent out in a divided skirt and beaten to a jelly: they need rest--less
+food and simpler food. If instead of taking your liver on a horse you'd
+put it in a tent and feed it nuts and berries, you wouldn't be the color
+you are to-day, Tish Carberry."
+
+That really started the whole thing, although at the time Tish said
+nothing. She has a way of getting an idea and letting it simmer on the
+back of her brain, as you may say, when nobody knows it's been cooking
+at all, and then suddenly bringing it out cooked and seasoned and ready
+to serve.
+
+On the day Tish sat up for the first time, Aggie and I went over to see
+her. Hannah, the maid, had got her out of bed to a window, and Tish was
+sitting there with books all about her. It is in times of enforced
+physical idleness that most of Tish's ideas come to her, and Aggie had
+reminded me of that fact on the way over.
+
+"You remember, Lizzie," she said, "how last winter when she was getting
+over the grippe she took up that correspondence-school course in
+swimming. If she's reading, watch her books. It'll probably be suffrage or
+airships."
+
+Tish always believes anything she reads. She had been quite sure she
+could swim after six correspondence lessons. She had all the movements
+exactly, and had worried her trained nurse almost into hysteria for a
+week by turning on her face in bed every now and then and trying the
+overhand stroke. She got very expert, and had decided she'd swim
+regularly, and even had Charlie Sands show her the Australian crawl
+business so she could go over some time and swim the Channel. It was a
+matter of breathing and of changing positions, she said, and was up to
+intelligence rather than muscle.
+
+Then when she was quite strong, she had gone to the natatorium. Aggie
+and I went along, not that we were any good in emergency, but because
+Tish had convinced us there would be no emergency. And Tish went in at
+the deep end of the pool, head first, according to diagram, and _did not
+come up_.
+
+Well, there seemed to be nothing threatening in what Tish was reading
+this time. She had ordered some books for Maria Lee's children and was
+looking them over before she sent them. The "Young Woods-man" was one
+and "Camper Craft" was another. How I shudder when I recall those names!
+
+Aggie had baked an angel cake and I had brought over a jar of cookies.
+But Tish only thanked us and asked Hannah to take them out. Even then we
+were not suspicious. Tish sat back among her pillows and said very
+little. The conversation was something like this:--
+
+ _Aggie_: Well, you're up again: I hope to goodness it will be a lesson
+ to you. If you don't mind, I'd like Hannah to cut that cake. It fell
+ in the middle.
+
+ _Tish_: Do you know that the Indians never sweetened their food and that
+ they developed absolutely perfect teeth?
+
+ _Aggie_: Well, they never had any automobiles either, but they didn't
+ develop wings.
+
+ _Lizzie_: Don't you want that window closed? I'm in a draft.
+
+ _Tish_: Air in motion never gave any one a cold. We do not catch cold;
+ we catch heat. It's ridiculous the way we shut ourselves up in houses
+ and expect to remain well.
+
+ _Aggie_: Well, I'b catchig sobethig.
+
+ _Lizzie_ (_changing the subject_): Would you like me to help you dress?
+ It might rest your back to have your corset on.
+
+ _Tish_ (_firmly_): I shall never wear a corset again.
+
+ _Aggie_ (_sneezing_): Why? Didn't the Iddiads wear theb?
+
+
+Tish is very sensitive to lack of sympathy and she shut up like a clam.
+She was coldly polite to us for the remainder of our visit, but she did
+not again refer to the Indians, which in itself was suspicious.
+
+Fortunately for us, or unfortunately, Tish's new scheme was one she
+could not very well carry out alone. I believe she tried to induce
+Hannah to go with her, and only when Hannah failed her did she turn to
+us. Hannah was frightened and came to warn us.
+
+I remember the occasion very well. It was Mr. Wiggins's birthday
+anniversary, and we usually dine at Aggie's and have a cake with thirty
+candles on it. Tish was not yet able to be about, so Aggie and I ate
+together. She always likes to sit until the last candle is burned out,
+which is rather dispiriting and always leaves me low in my mind.
+
+Just as it flickered and went out, Hannah came in.
+
+"Miss Tish sent over Mr. Charlie's letter from London," said Hannah, and
+put it in front of Aggie. Then she sat down on a chair and commenced to
+cry.
+
+"Why, Hannah!" said Aggie. "What in the world has happened?"
+
+"She's off again!" sniveled Hannah; "and she's worse this time than she's
+ever been. No sugar, no tea, only nuts and fruit, and her windows open
+all night, with the curtains getting black. I wisht I had Mr. Charlie by
+the neck."
+
+I suppose it came over both of us at the same time--the "Young
+Woodsman," and the "Camper Craft," and no stays, and all that. I reached
+for Charlie Sands's letter, which was always sent to Tish and meant for
+all of us. He wrote:--
+
+ _Dear Three of a Kind_: Well, the French President has came and went,
+ and London has taken down all the brilliant flags which greeted him,
+ such tactful bits as bore Cressy and Agincourt, and the pretty little
+ smallpox and "plague here" banners, and has gone back to such innocent
+ diversions as baiting cabinet ministers, blowing up public buildings, or
+ going out into the woods seeking the Simple Life.
+
+ The Simple Lifers travel in bands--and little else. They go barefooted,
+ barearmed, bareheaded and barenecked. They wear one garment, I believe,
+ let their hair hang and their beards grow, eat only what Nature
+ provides, such as nuts and fruits, sleep under the stars, and drink
+ from Nature's pools. Rather bully, isn't it? They're a handsome lot
+ generally, brown as nuts. And I saw a girl yesterday--well, if you do
+ not hear from me for a time it will be because I have discarded the
+ pockets in which I carry my fountain pen and my stamps and am wandering
+ barefoot through the Elysian fields.
+
+ Yours for the Simple Life,
+
+ CHARLIE SANDS.
+
+
+As I finished reading the letter aloud, I looked at Aggie in dismay.
+"That settles it," I said hopelessly. "She had some such idea before,
+and now this young idiot--" I stopped and stared across the table at
+Aggie. She was sitting rapt, her eyes fixed on the smouldering wicks of
+Mr. Wiggins's candles.
+
+"Barefoot through the Elysian fields!" she said.
+
+
+
+
+II
+
+
+I am not trying to defend myself. I never had the enthusiasm of the
+other two, but I rather liked the idea. And I did restrain them. It was
+my suggestion, for instance, that we wear sandals without stockings,
+instead of going in our bare feet, which was a good thing, for the first
+day out Aggie stepped into a hornet's nest. And I made out the lists.
+
+The idea, of course, is not how much one can carry, but how little. The
+"Young Woodsman" told exactly how to manage in the woods if one were
+lost there and had nothing in the world but a bootlace and a wire
+hairpin.
+
+With the hairpin one could easily make a fair fish-hook--and with a
+bootlace or a good hemp cord one could make a rabbit snare.
+
+"So you see," Tish explained, "there's fish and meat with no trouble at
+all. And there will be berries and nuts. That's a diet for a king."
+
+I was making a list of the necessaries at the time and under bootlaces
+and hairpins I put down "spade."
+
+"What in Heaven's name is the spade for?" Tish demanded.
+
+"You've got to dig bait, haven't you?"
+
+Tish eyed me with disgust.
+
+"Grasshoppers!" she said tersely.
+
+There was really nothing Tish was not prepared for. I should never have
+thought of grasshoppers.
+
+"The idea is simply this," observed Tish: "We have surrounded ourselves
+with a thousand and one things we do not need and would be better
+without--houses, foolish clothing, electric light, idiotic
+servants--Hannah, get away from that door!--rich foods, furniture and
+crowds of people. We've developed and cared for our bodies instead of
+our souls. What we want is to get out into the woods and think; to
+forget those pampered bodies of ours and to let our souls grow and
+assert themselves."
+
+We decided finally to take a blanket apiece, rolled on our shoulders,
+and Tish and I each took a strong knife. Aggie, instead of the knife,
+took a pair of scissors. We took a small bottle of blackberry cordial
+for emergencies, a cake of soap, a salt-cellar for seasoning the fish
+and rabbits, two towels, a package of court-plaster, Aggie's hay-fever
+remedy, a bottle of oil of pennyroyal to use against mosquitoes, and
+a large piece of canvas, light but strong, cut like the diagram.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+Tish said it was the regulation Indian tepee, and that a squaw could set
+one up in an hour and have dinner cooked inside it in thirty minutes
+after. She said she guessed we could do it if an Indian squaw could, and
+that after we'd cut the poles once, we could carry them with us if we
+wished to move. She said the tent ought to be ornamented, but she had
+had no time, and we could paint designs on it with colored clay in the
+woods when we had nothing more important to do!
+
+It made a largish bundle, but we did not intend to travel much. We
+thought we could find a good place by a lake somewhere and put up the
+tent, and set a few snares, and locate the nearest berry-bushes and
+mushroom-patches, and then, while the rabbits were catching themselves,
+we should have time to get acquainted with our souls again.
+
+Tish put it in her terse manner most intelligently. "We intend to
+prove," she stated to Mrs. Ostermaier, the minister's wife, who came to
+call and found us all sitting on the floor trying to get used to it, for
+of course there would be no chairs, "we shall prove that the trappings
+of civilization are a delusion and a snare. We shall bring back 'Mens
+sana in corpore sano'."
+
+The minister's wife thought this was a disease, for she said, "I hope
+not, I'm sure," very hastily.
+
+"We shall make our own fire and our own shelter," said Tish from the
+floor. "We shall wear one garment, loose enough to allow entire freedom
+of movement. We shall bathe in Nature's pools and come out cleansed. On
+the Sabbath we shall attend divine service under the Gothic arches of
+the trees, read sermons in stones, and instead of that whining tenor in
+the choir we shall listen to the birds singing praise, overhead."
+
+Mrs. Ostermaier looked rather bewildered. "I'm sure I hope so," she said
+vaguely. "I don't like camping myself. There are so many bugs."
+
+As Tish said, some ideas are so large that the average person cannot see
+them at all.
+
+We had fixed on Maine. It seemed to combine all the necessary qualities:
+woods and lakes, rabbits, game and fish, and--solitude. Besides,
+Aggie's hay fever is better the farther north she gets. On the day we
+were leaving, Mr. Ostermaier came to see us.
+
+"I--I really must protest, ladies," he said. "That sort of thing may be
+all right for savages, but--"
+
+"Are we not as intelligent as savages?" Tish demanded.
+
+"Primitive people are inured to hardships, and besides, they have
+methods of their own. They can make fire--" "So can I," retorted Tish.
+"Any fool can make a fire with a rubbing-stick. It's been done in
+thirty-one seconds."
+
+"If you would only take some matches," he wailed, "and a good revolver,
+Miss Letitia. And--you must pardon this, but I have your well-being at
+heart--if I could persuade you to take along some--er--flannels and warm
+clothing!"
+
+"Clothing," said Tish loftily, "is a matter of habit, Mr. Ostermaier."
+
+I think he got the idea from this that we intended to discard clothing
+altogether, for he went away almost immediately, looking rather upset,
+and he preached on the following Sunday from "Consider the lilies of the
+field.... Even Solomon in all his glory was not arrayed like one of
+these."
+
+We left on Monday evening, and by Tuesday at noon we were at our
+destination, as far as the railroad was concerned. Tish had a map with
+the lake we'd picked out, and we had figured that we'd drive out to
+within ten miles or so of it and then send the driver back. The lake was
+in an uninhabited neighborhood, with the nearest town twenty-five miles
+away. We had one suitcase containing our blankets, sandals, short
+dresses, soap, hairpins, salt-box, knives, scissors, and a compass, and
+the leather thongs for rabbit snares that we had had cut at a harness
+shop. In the other suitcase was the tepee.
+
+We ate a substantial breakfast at Tish's suggestion, because we expected
+to be fairly busy the first day, and there would be no time for hunting.
+We had to walk ten miles, set up the tent, make a fire and gather nuts
+and berries. It was about that time, I think, that I happened to recall
+that it was early for nuts. Still there would be berries, and Tish had
+added mushrooms to our menu.
+
+We found a man with a spring wagon to drive us out and Tish showed him
+the map.
+
+"I guess I can get you out that way," he said, "but I ain't heard of no
+camp up that direction."
+
+"Who said anything about a camp?" snapped Tish. "How much to drive us
+fifteen miles in that direction?"
+
+"Fifteen miles! Well, about five dollars, but I think--"
+
+"How much to drive us fifteen miles without thinking?"
+
+"Ten dollars," said the man; and as he had the only wagon in the town we
+had to pay it.
+
+It was a lovely day, although very warm. The morning sun turned the
+woods to fairylike glades. Tish sat on the front seat, erect and staring
+ahead.
+
+Aggie bent over and touched my arm lightly. "Isn't she wonderful!" she
+whispered; "like some adventurer of old--Balboa discovering the Pacific
+Ocean, or Joan of Arc leading the what-you-call-'ems."
+
+But somehow my enthusiasm was dying. The sun was hot and there were no
+berry-bushes to be seen. Aggie's fairy glades in the woods were filled,
+not with dancing sprites, but with gnats. I wanted a glass of iced tea,
+and some chicken salad, and talcum powder down my neck. The road was
+bad, and the driver seemed to have a joke to himself, for every now and
+then he chuckled, and kept his eyes on the woods on each side, as if he
+expected to see something. His manner puzzled us all.
+
+"You can trust me not to say anything, ladies," he said at last, "but
+don't you think you're playing it a bit low down? This ain't quite up to
+contract, is it?"
+
+"You've been drinking!" said Tish shortly.
+
+After that he let her alone, but soon after he turned round to me and
+made another venture.
+
+"In case you need grub, lady," he said,"--and them two suitcases don't
+hold a lot,--I'll bring out anything you say: eggs and butter and garden
+truck at market prices. I'm no phylanthropist," he said, glaring at
+Tish, "but I'd be glad to help the girl, and that's the truth. I been
+married to this here wife o' mine quite a spell, and to my first one for
+twenty years, and I'm a believer in married life."
+
+"What girl?" I asked.
+
+He turned right round in the seat and winked at me.
+
+"All right," he said. "I'll not butt in unless you need me. But I'd like
+to know one thing: He hasn't got a mother, he says, so I take it you're
+his aunts. Am I on, ladies?"
+
+We didn't know what he was talking about, and we said so. But he only
+smiled. A mile or so from our destination the horse scared up a rabbit,
+and Tish could hardly be restrained from running after it with a leather
+thong. Aggie, however, turned a little pale.
+
+"I'll never be able to eat one, never!" she confided to me. "Did you see
+its eyes? Lizzie, do you remember Mr. Wiggins's eyes? and the way he
+used to move his nose, just like that?"
+
+At the end of fifteen miles the driver drew up his horses and took a
+fresh chew of tobacco.
+
+"I guess this is about right," he said. "That trail there'll take you to
+the lake. How long do you reckon it'll be before you'll need some fresh
+eggs?"
+
+"We are quite able to look after ourselves," said Tish with hauteur, and
+got out of the wagon. She paid him off at once and sat down on her
+suitcase until he had driven out of sight. He drove slowly, looking back
+every now and then, and his last view of us must have been
+impressive--three middle-aged and determined women ready to conquer the
+wilderness, as Tish put it, and two suitcases.
+
+It was as solitary a place as we could have wished. We had not seen a
+house in ten miles, and when the last creak of the wagon had died away
+there was a silence that made our city-broke ears fairly ache. Tish
+waited until the wagon was out of sight; then she stood up and threw out
+her arms.
+
+"At last!" she said. "Free to have a lodge in some vast wilderness--to
+think, to breathe, to expand! Lizzie, do you suppose if we go back we
+can get that rabbit?"
+
+I looked at my watch. It was one o'clock and there was not a berry-bush
+in sight. The drive had made me hungry, and I'd have eaten a rabbit that
+looked like Mr. Wiggins and called me by name if I'd had it. But there
+was absolutely no use going back for the one we'd seen on our drive.
+
+Aggie was opening her suitcase and getting out her costume, which was a
+blue calico with short sleeves and a shoe-top skirt.
+
+"Where'll I put it on?" she asked, looking about her.
+
+"Right here!" Tish replied. "For goodness sake, Aggie, try to discard
+false modesty and false shame. We're here to get close to the great
+beating heart of Nature. Take off your switch before you do another
+thing."
+
+None of us looked particularly well, I admit; but it was wonderful how
+much more comfortable we were. Aggie, who is very thin, discarded a part
+of her figure, and each of us parted with some pet hypocrisy. But I
+don't know that I have ever felt better. Only, of course we were hungry.
+
+We packed our things in the suitcases and hid them in a hollow tree, and
+Tish suggested looking for a spring. She said water was always the first
+requisite and fire the second.
+
+"Fire!" said Aggie. "What for? We've nothing to cook."
+
+Well, that was true enough, so we sent Aggie to look for water and Tish
+and I made a rabbit snare. We made a good many snares and got to be
+rather quick at it. They were all made like this illustration.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+First Tish, with her book open in front of her, made a running noose out
+of one of the buckskin thongs. Next we bent down a sapling and tied the
+noose to it, and last of all we bound the free part of the thong round a
+snag and thus held the sapling down. The idea is that a rabbit, bounding
+along, presumably with his eyes shut, will stick his head through the
+noose, kick the line clear of the snag and be drawn violently into the
+air. Tish figured that by putting up half a dozen snares we'd have
+three or four rabbits at least each day.
+
+It was about three when we finished, and we drew off to a safe distance
+to watch the rabbit bound to his doom. But no rabbits came along.
+
+I was very empty and rather faint, but Tish said she had never been able
+to think so clearly, and that we were all overfed and stodgy and would
+be better for fasting.
+
+Aggie came in at three-thirty with a hornet sting and no water. She said
+there were no springs, but that she had found a place where a spring had
+existed before the dry spell, and there was a naked footprint in the
+mud, quite fresh! We all went to look at it, and Tish was quite positive
+it was not a man's footprint at all, but only a bear's.
+
+"A bear!" said Aggie.
+
+"What of it?" Tish demanded. "The 'Young Woodsman' says that no bear
+attacks a human unless he is hungry, and at this time of the year with
+the woods full of food--"
+
+"Humph!"--I could not restrain myself--"I wish you would show me a
+little of it. If no rabbit with acute melancholia comes along to commit
+suicide by hanging on that gallows of yours, I think we'll starve to
+death."
+
+"There will be a rabbit," Tish said tersely; and we started back to the
+snare.
+
+I was never so astonished in my life. There was a rabbit! It seems we
+had struck a runway without knowing it, although Tish said afterward
+that she had recognized it at once from the rabbit tracks. Anyhow,
+whether it died of design or curiosity, our supper was kicking at the
+top of the sapling, and Tish pretended to be calm and to have known all
+along that we'd get one. But it was not dead.
+
+We got it down somehow or other and I held it by the ears while it
+kicked and scratched. I was hungry enough to have eaten it alive, but
+Aggie began to cry.
+
+"You'll be murderers, nothing else," she wailed. "Look at his little
+white tail and pitiful baby eyes!"
+
+"Good gracious, Aggie," Tish snapped, "get a knife and cut its throat
+while I make a fire. If it's any help to you, we're not going to eat
+either its little white tail or its pitiful baby eyes."
+
+As a matter of fact Aggie wouldn't touch the rabbit and I did not care
+much about it myself. I do not like to kill things. My Aunt Sarah
+Mackintosh once killed a white hen that lived twenty minutes without its
+head; two weeks later she dreamed that that same hen, without a head,
+was sitting on the footboard of the bed, and the next day she got word
+that her cousin's husband in Sacramento had died of the hiccoughs.
+
+It ended with Tish giving me the fire-making materials and stalking off
+into the woods with the rabbit in one hand and the knife in the other.
+
+[Illustration: It ended with Tish stalking off into the woods with the
+rabbit in one hand and the knife in the other]
+
+Tish is nothing if not thorough, but she seemed to me inconsistent. She
+brought blankets and a canvas tepee and sandals and an aluminum kettle,
+but she disdained matches. I rubbed with that silly drill and a sort of
+bow arrangement until my wrists ached, but I did not get even a spark of
+fire. When Tish came back with the rabbit there was no fire, and Aggie
+had taken out her watch crystal and was holding it in the sun over a
+pile of leaves.
+
+Tish got out the "Young Woodsman" from the suitcase. It seems I had
+followed cuts I and II, but had neglected cut III, which is: Hold the
+left wrist against the left shin, and the left foot on the fireblock. I
+had got my feet mixed and was trying to hold my left wrist against my
+right shin, which is exceedingly difficult. Tish got a fire in fourteen
+minutes and thirty-one seconds by Aggie's watch, and had to wear a
+bandage on her hand for a week.
+
+But we had a fire. We cooked the rabbit, which proved to be much older
+than Aggie had thought, and ate what we could. Personally I am not fond
+of rabbit, and our enjoyment was rather chastened by the fear that some
+mushrooms Tish had collected and added to the stew were toadstools
+_incognito_. To make things worse, Aggie saw some goldenrod nearby and
+began to sneeze.
+
+It was after five o'clock, but it seemed wisest to move on toward the
+lake.
+
+"Even if we don't make it," said Tish, "we'll be on our way, and while
+that bear is likely harmless we needn't thrust temptation in his way."
+
+We carried the fire with us in the kettle and we took turns with the
+tepee, which was heavy. Our suitcases with our city clothes in them we
+hid in a hollow tree, and one after the other, with Aggie last, we
+started on.
+
+The trail, which was a sort of wide wagon road at first, became a
+footpath; as we went on even that disappeared at times under fallen
+leaves. Once we lost it entirely, and Aggie, falling over a hidden root,
+stilled the fire. She became exceedingly disagreeable at about that
+time, said she was sure Tish's mushrooms were toadstools because she
+felt very queer, and suddenly gave a yell and said she had seen
+something moving in the bushes.
+
+We all looked, and the bushes were moving.
+
+
+
+
+III
+
+
+It was dusk by that time and the path was only a thread between masses
+of undergrowth. Tish said if it was the bear he would be afraid of the
+fire, so we put dry leaves in the kettle and made quite a blaze. By its
+light Tish read that bears in the summer are full fed and really
+frolicsome and that they are awful cowards. We felt quite cheered and
+brave, and Tish said if he came near to throw the fire kettle at him and
+he'd probably die of fright.
+
+It was too late to put up the tepee, so we found a clearing near the
+path and decided to spend the night there. Aggie still watched the
+bushes and wanted to spend the night in a tree; but Tish's calmness was
+a reproach to us both, and after we had emptied the kettle and made
+quite a fire to keep off animals, we unrolled our blankets and prepared
+for sleep. I could have slept anywhere, although I was still rather
+hungry. My last view was of Tish in the firelight grimly bending down a
+sapling and fastening a rabbit snare to it.
+
+During the night I was wakened by somebody clutching my arm. It was
+Aggie who lay next to me. When I raised my head she pointed off into the
+woods to our left. At a height of perhaps four feet from the ground a
+ghastly red glow was moving rapidly away from us. It was not a torch; it
+was more a radiance, and it moved not evenly, but jerkily. I could feel
+the very hair rising on my head and it was all I could do to call Tish.
+When we had roused her, however, the glow had faded entirely and she
+said we had had a nightmare.
+
+The snare the next morning contained a skunk, and we moved on as quickly
+as possible, without attempting to secure the thong, of which we had
+several. We gathered some puffballs to soak for breakfast and in a
+clearing I found some blackberry bushes. We were very cheerful that
+morning, for if we could capture rabbits and skunks, we were sure of
+other things, also, and soon we would be able to add fish to our menu.
+True, we had not had much time to commune with our souls, and Aggie's
+arms were so sunburned that she could not bend them at the elbows. But,
+as Tish said, we had already proved our contention that we could get
+along without men or houses or things. Things, she said, were the curse
+of modern life; we filled our lives with things instead of thoughts.
+
+It was when we were ready to cook the puffballs that we missed the
+kettle! Tish was very angry; she said it was evident that the bear was
+mischievous and that all bears were thieves. (See the "Young Woodsman.")
+But I recalled the glow of the night before, and more than once I caught
+Aggie's eyes on me, filled with consternation. For we had seen that
+kettle leaving the camp with some of our fire in it, and bears are
+afraid of fire!
+
+We reached the lake at noon and it seemed as if we might soon have time
+to sit down and rest. But there was a great deal to do. Aggie was of no
+assistance on account of her arms, so Tish and I put up the tent. The
+"Young Woodsman" said it was easy. First you tied three long poles
+together near the top and stood them up so they made a sort of triangle.
+Then you cut about a dozen and filled in between the three. That looked
+easy, but it took an afternoon, and our first three looked like this
+first cut.
+
+[Illustration:
+ AS THE FIRST THREE LOOKED
+ AS THEY SHOULD HAVE LOOKED]
+
+We had caught a rabbit by noon, and Aggie being unfit for other work,
+and the kettle being gone, Tish set her to roasting it. It was not
+very good, but we ate some, being ravenous. The method was simplicity
+itself--two forked sticks in the ground, one across to hang the rabbit
+to and a fire beneath. It tasted rather smoky.
+
+In the afternoon we finished putting up the tepee, and Tish made a
+fishhook out of a hairpin and tied it to a strong creeper I had found.
+But we caught no fish. We had more rabbit for supper, with some
+puffballs smoked and a few huckleberries. But by that time the very
+sight of a rabbit sickened me, and Aggie began to talk about broiled
+beefsteak and fried spring chicken.
+
+We had seen no sign of the bear, or whatever it was, all day, and it
+seemed likely we were not to be again disturbed. But a most mysterious
+thing occurred that very night.
+
+As I have said, we had caught no fish. The lake was full of them. We sat
+on a bank that evening and watched them playing leapfrog, and talked
+about frying them on red-hot stones, but nothing came near the hairpin.
+At last Tish made a suggestion.
+
+"We need worms," she said. "A grasshopper loses all his spirit after
+he's been immersed for an hour, but a worm will keep on wriggling and
+attracting attention for half a day."
+
+"I wanted to bring a spade," said I.
+
+But Tish had read of a scheme for getting worms that she said the game
+warden of some place or other had guaranteed officially.
+
+"You stick a piece of wood about two feet into the ground in a likely
+spot," she said, "and rub a rough piece of bark or plank across the top.
+This man claims, and it sounds reasonable, that the worms think it is
+raining and come up for water. All you have to do is to gather them up."
+
+Tish found a pole for the purpose on the beach and set to work, while
+Aggie and I prepared several hooks and lines. The fish were jumping
+busily, and it seemed likely we should have more than we could do to
+haul them in.
+
+The experiment, however, failed entirely, for not a single worm
+appeared. Tish laid it to the fact that it was very late and that the
+worms were probably settled down for the night. It may have been that,
+or it may have been the wrong kind of wood.
+
+The mysterious happening was this: We rose quite early because the tepee
+did not seem to be well anchored and fell down on us at daybreak. Tish
+went down to the beach to examine the lines that had been out all night,
+and found nothing. She was returning rather dispirited to tell us that
+it would be rabbit again for breakfast, when she saw lying on a flat
+stone half a dozen beautiful fish, one or two still gasping, in our lost
+kettle!
+
+Tish said she stood there, opening and shutting her mouth like the fish.
+Then she gave a whoop and we came running. At first we thought they
+might have been jumping and leaped out on to the beach by accident, but,
+as Tish said, they would hardly have landed all together and into a
+kettle that had been lost for two nights and a day. The queer thing was
+that they had not been caught with a hook at all. They hadn't a mark on
+them.
+
+We were so hungry that we ate every one of them for breakfast. It was
+only when we had eaten, and were sitting gorged and not caring whether
+the tent was set up again or not, that we fell to wondering about the
+fish. Tish fancied it might have been the driver of the spring wagon,
+but decided he'd have sold us the fish at thirty cents a pound live
+weight.
+
+All day long we watched for a sign of our benefactor, but we saw
+nothing. Tish set up more rabbit snares; not that she wanted rabbits,
+but it had become a mania with her, and there were so many of them that
+as they grew accustomed to us they sat round our camp in a ring and
+criticized our housekeeping. She thought if she got a good many skins
+she could have a fur robe made for her automobile. As a matter of fact
+she found another use for them.
+
+It was that night, then, that we were sitting round the camp-fire on
+stones that we had brought up from the beach. We had seen nothing more
+of the bear, and if we had been asked we should have said that the
+nearest human being was twenty-five miles away.
+
+Suddenly a voice came out of the woods just behind us, a man's voice.
+
+"Please don't be alarmed," said the voice. "But may I have a little of
+your fire? Mine has gone out again."
+
+"G-g-g-good gracious!" said Aggie. "T-Tish, get your revolver!"
+
+This was for effect. Tish had no revolver.
+
+All of us had turned and were staring into the woods behind, but we
+could see no one. After Aggie's speech about the revolver it was some
+time before the voice spoke again.
+
+"Never mind, Aggie," Tish observed, very loud. "The revolver is here and
+loaded--as nice a little thirty-six as any one needs here in the woods."
+
+She said afterward that she knew all the time there was no thirty-six
+caliber revolver, but in the excitement she got it mixed with her bust
+measure. Having replied to Aggie, Tish then turned in the direction of
+the voice.
+
+"Don't skulk back there," she called. "Come out, where we can see you.
+If you look reliable, we'll give you some fire, of course."
+
+There was another pause, as if the stranger were hesitating. Then:--
+
+"I think I'd better not," he said with reluctance in his voice. "Can't
+you toss a brand this way?"
+
+By that time we had grown accustomed to the darkness, and I thought I
+could see in the shadow of a tree a lightish figure. Aggie saw it at the
+same instant and clutched my arm.
+
+"Lizzie!" she gasped.
+
+It was at that moment that Tish tossed the brand. It fell far short, but
+her movement caught the stranger unawares. He ducked behind the tree,
+but the flare of light had caught him. With the exception of what looked
+like a pair of bathing-trunks he was as bare as my hand!
+
+There was a sort of astonished silence. Then the voice called out:--"Why
+in the world didn't you warn me?" it said, aggrieved. "I didn't know you
+were going to throw the blamed thing."
+
+We had all turned our backs at once and Tish's face was awful.
+
+"Take it and go," she said, without turning. "Take it and go."
+
+From the crackling of leaves and twigs we judged that he had come out
+and got the brand, and when he spoke again it was from farther back in
+the woods.
+
+"You know," he said, "I don't like this any more than you do. I've got
+forty-two mosquito bites on my left arm."
+
+He waited, as if for a reply; but getting none he evidently retreated.
+The sound of rustling leaves and crackling twigs grew fainter, fainter
+still, died away altogether. We turned then with one accord and gazed
+through the dark arches of the forest. A glowing star was retreating
+there--a smouldering fire, that seemed to move slowly and with an
+appearance of dejection.
+
+It was the second time Aggie and I had seen fire thus carried through
+the wood; but whereas about the kettle there had been a glow and
+radiance that was almost triumphant, the brand we now watched seemed
+smouldering, dejected, ashamed. Even Tish felt it.
+
+"The wretch!" she exclaimed. "Daring to come here like that! No wonder
+he's ashamed."
+
+But Aggie, who is very romantic, sat staring after the distant torch.
+
+"Mr. Wiggins suffered so from mosquitoes," she said softly.
+
+
+
+
+IV
+
+
+The next morning we found more fish awaiting us, and on the smooth sand
+of the beach was a message written with a stick:--
+
+ If you will leave a wire hairpin or two on this stone I can get
+ bigger fish. What do you mean to do with all those rabbit skins?
+
+ (Signed) P.
+
+
+Tish was touched by the fish, I think. She smoothed off the sand
+carefully and wrote a reply:--
+
+ Here are the hairpins. Thank you. Do you want the rabbit skins?
+
+ L.C.
+
+
+All day we were in a state of expectancy. The mosquitoes were very bad,
+and had it not been for the excitement of the P---- person I should have
+given up and gone home. I wanted mashed potatoes and lima beans with
+butter dressing, and a cup of hot tea, and muffins, and ice--in fact,
+I cannot think of anything I did not want, except rabbits and fish and
+puffballs and such blackberries as the birds did not fancy. Although we
+were well enough--almost too well--the better I felt the hungrier I got.
+
+Tish thought the time had now come to rest and invite our souls. She
+set the example that day by going out on a flat rock in the lake and
+preparing to think all the things she'd been waiting most of her life
+to consider.
+
+"I am ready to form my own opinions about some things," she said.
+"I realize now that all my life the newspapers and stupid people and
+books have formed my opinions. Now I'm going to think along my own
+lines. Is there another life after this? Do I really desire the
+suffrage? Why am I a Baptist?"
+
+Aggie said she would like to invite her soul that day also, not to form
+any opinions,--Tish always does that for her,--but she had to get some
+clothes in September and she might as well think them out.
+
+So it happened that I was alone when I met the P---- person's young
+woman.
+
+I had intended to wander only a short way along the trail, but after I
+had gone a mile or two it occurred to me as likely that the spring-wagon
+driver would come back that way before long out of curiosity, and I
+thought I might leave a message for him to bring out some fresh eggs and
+leave them there. I could tell Tish I had found a nest, or perhaps,
+since that would be lying, I could put them in a nest and let her find
+them. I'd have ordered tea, too, if I could have thought of any way to
+account for it.
+
+"I'm going to do some meditating myself to-day," I remarked, "but I
+think better when I'm moving. If I don't come back in an hour or so
+don't imagine I've been kidnaped."
+
+Tish turned on her stone and looked at me.
+
+"You will not be kidnaped," she said shortly. "I cannot imagine any one
+safer than you are in that costume."
+
+Well, I made my way along the trail as rapidly as I could. It was twenty
+miles there and back and I've seen the day when two city blocks would
+send me home to soak my feet in hot water. But the sandals were easy to
+walk in and my calico skirt was short and light.
+
+I had no paper to write my message on, of course, but on the way I
+gathered a large white fungus and I scraped a note on it with a pin.
+With the fungus under my arm I walked briskly along, planning an omelet
+with the eggs, if we got any, and gathering mushrooms here and there. It
+was the mushrooms that led me to the discovery of a camping-place that
+was prehistoric in its primitiveness--a clearing, surrounded by low
+bushes, and in the center a fireplace of stones with a fire smouldering.
+At one side a heap of leaves and small twigs for a bed, a stump for a
+seat, and lying on top of it a sort of stone axe, made by inserting a
+sharp stone into the cleft of a sapling and tying it into place with a
+wild-grape tendril. Pegged out on the ground to cure was a rabbit skin,
+indifferently scraped. It made our aluminum kettle and canvas tepee look
+like a marble-vestibuled apartment on Riverside Drive.
+
+The whole thing looked pitiful, hungry. I thought of Tish sitting on a
+stone inviting her soul, while rabbits came from miles round to stick
+their heads through our nooses and hang themselves for our dinner; and
+it seemed to me that we should share our plenty. I thought it probable
+that the gentleman of the woods lived here, and from the appearance of
+the place he carried all his possessions with him when he wore his
+bathing-trunks. If I had been in any doubt, the sight of Aggie's wire
+hairpin, sharpened and bent into a serviceable fishhook, decided me. I
+scratched a message for him on another fungus and left it:--
+
+ If you need anything come to the Indian tepee at the lake. We have
+ no clothing to spare, but are always glad to help in time of trouble.
+
+ (Signed) ONE OF THE SIMPLE LIFERS.
+
+
+I went on after that and about noon reached our point of exodus from the
+wagon. I was tired and hot and I kept thinking of my little dining-room
+at home, with the electric fan going, and iced cantaloupe, and nobody
+worrying about her soul or thinking her own thoughts, and no rabbits.
+
+Our suitcases were safe enough in the hollow tree, and I thought the
+spring wagon had been back already, for there were fresh tracks. This
+discouraged me and I sat down on a log to rest. It was then that I heard
+the girl crying.
+
+She was crying softly, but in the woods sounds travel. I found her on
+her face on the pine needles about twenty yards away, wailing her heart
+out into a pink automobile veil, and she was so absorbed in her misery
+that I had to stoop and touch her before she looked up.
+
+"Don't cry," I said. "If you are lost, I can direct you to a
+settlement."
+
+She looked up at me, and from being very red and suffused she went quite
+pale. It seems that with my bare legs and sandals and my hair down,
+which was Tish's idea for making it come in thick and not gray, and what
+with my being sunburned and stained with berries, she thought I was a
+wild woman. I realized what was wrong.
+
+"Don't be alarmed," I said somewhat grimly. "I'm rational enough; if I
+hop about instead of walking, it's because I'm the tomb of more rabbits
+than I care to remember, but aside from that I'm all right. Are you
+lost?"
+
+She sat up, still staring, and wiped her eyes.
+
+"No. I have a machine over there among the trees. Are there--are there
+plenty of rabbits in the woods?"
+
+"Thousands." She was a pretty little thing, very young, and dressed in a
+white motor coat with white shoes and hat.
+
+"And--and berries?"
+
+"There aren't many berries," I admitted. "The birds eat 'em. We get the
+ones they don't fancy."
+
+Now I didn't think for a moment that she was worried about my diet, but
+she was worried about the food supply in the woods, that was sure. So I
+sat down on a stump and told her about puffballs, and what Tish had read
+about ants being edible but acid, and that wood mice, roasted and not
+cooked too dry, were good food, but that Aggie had made us liberate the
+only ones we had caught, because a man she was once engaged to used to
+carry a pet mouse in his pocket.
+
+Nothing had really appealed to her until I mentioned Mr. Wiggins. Then
+unexpectedly she began to cry again. And after that I got the whole
+story.
+
+It seems she was in love with a young man who was everything a young man
+ought to be and had money as well. But the money was the barrier really,
+for the girl's father wouldn't believe that a youth who played polo, and
+did not have to work for a living, and led cotillons, and paid calls in
+the afternoon could have really good red blood in him. He had a man in
+view for her, she said, one who had made his money himself, and had to
+have his valet lay out his clothes for fear he'd make a mistake. Once
+the valet had to go to have a tooth pulled and the man had to decline
+a dinner.
+
+"Father said," finished the little girl tearfully, "that if
+Percy--that's his name, and it counted against him too--that if Percy
+was a real man he'd do something. And then he hap-happened on a book of
+my small brother's, telling how people used to live in the woods, and
+kill their own food and make their own fire--"
+
+"The 'Young Woodsman,' of course," I put in.
+
+"And how the strong survived, but the weak succumbed, and he said if
+Percy was a man, and not a t-tailor's dummy, he'd go out in the woods,
+j-just primitive man, without anything but a pair of bathing trunks,
+and keep himself alive for a month. If he s-stood the test father was
+willing to forget the 'Percy.' He said that he knew Mr. Willoughby could
+do it--that's the other man--and that he'd come in at the end of the
+time with a deed for the forest and mortgages on all the surrounding
+camps."
+
+"And Percy agreed?"
+
+"He didn't want to. He said it took mentality and physical endurance as
+well as some courage to play polo. Father said it did--on the part of
+the pony. Then s-some of the men heard of it, and there were bets on
+it--ten to one he wouldn't do it and twenty to one he couldn't do it. So
+Percy decided to try. Father was so afraid that some of the campers and
+guides would help him that he had notices sent out at Mr. Willoughby's
+suggestion offering a reward if Percy could be shown to have asked any
+assistance. Oh, I know he's sick in there somewhere, or starving
+or--dead!"
+
+I had had a great light break over me, and now I stooped and patted the
+girl on the shoulder.
+
+"Dead! Certainly not," I said. "I saw him last night."
+
+"Saw him!"
+
+"Well, not exactly saw him--there wasn't much light. But he's alive and
+well, and--do you really want him to win?"
+
+"Do I?" She sat up with shining eyes. "I don't care whether he owns
+anything in the world but the trunks. If I didn't think I'd add to his
+troubles I'd go into the woods this minute and find him and suffer with
+him."
+
+"You'd have to be married to him first," I objected, rather startled.
+
+But she looked at me with her cheeks as red strawberries. "Why?" she
+demanded. "Father's crazy about primitive man--did primitive man take
+his woman to church to be married, with eight bridesmaids and a
+reception after the ceremony? Of course not. He grabbed her and carried
+her off."
+
+"Good Heavens! You're not in earnest?" "I think I am," she said slowly.
+"I'd rather live in the woods with Percy and no ceremony than live
+without him anywhere in the world. And I'll bet primitive man would have
+been wiped off the earth if he hadn't had primitive woman to add her
+wits to his strength. If Percy only had a woman to help him!"
+
+"My dear," I said solemnly, "he has! He has, not one, but three!"
+
+It took me some time to explain that Percy was not supporting a harem in
+the Maine woods; but when at last she got my idea and that the other two
+classed with me in beauty and attractiveness, she was overjoyed.
+
+"But Percy promised not to ask for help," she said suddenly.
+
+"He needn't. My dear, go away and stop worrying about Percy--he's all
+right. When is the time up?"
+
+"In three weeks."
+
+"I suppose father and the Willoughby person will come to meet him?"
+
+"Yes, and all the fellows from the club who have put money up on him.
+We're going to motor over and father's bringing the physical director of
+the athletic club. He's not only got to survive, but he's got to be in
+good condition."
+
+"He'll be in good condition," I said grimly. "Does he drink and smoke?"
+
+"A little, not too much. Oh, yes, I had forgotten!" She opened up a
+little gold cigarette case, which she took from her pocket, and
+extracted a handful of cigarettes.
+
+"If you are going to see him," she said, "you might put them where he'll
+find them?"
+
+"Certainly not."
+
+"But that's not giving them to him."
+
+"My dear child," I said sternly, "Percy is going to come out of these
+woods so well and strong that he may not have to work, but he'll want
+to. And he'll not smoke anything stronger than corn-silk, if we're to
+take charge of this thing."
+
+She understood quickly enough and I must say she was grateful. She was
+almost radiant with joy when I told her how capable Tish was, and that
+she was sure to be interested, and about Aggie's hay fever and Mr.
+Wiggins and the rabbit snares. She leaned over and kissed me
+impulsively.
+
+"You dear old thing!" she cried. "I know you'll look after him and make
+him comfortable and--how old is Miss Letitia?"
+
+"Something over fifty and Aggie Pilkington's about the same, although
+she won't admit it."
+
+She kissed me again at that, and after looking at her wrist watch she
+jumped to her feet.
+
+"Heavens!" she said. "It's four o'clock and my engine has been running
+all this time!"
+
+She got a smart little car from somewhere up the road, and the last I
+saw of her she was smiling back over her shoulder and the car running on
+the edge of a ditch.
+
+"You are three darlings!" she called back. "And tell Percy I love
+him--love him--love him!"
+
+I thought I'd never get back to the lake. I was tired to begin with, and
+after I'd gone about four miles and was limping with a splinter in my
+heel and no needle to get it out with, I found I still had the fungus
+message to the spring-wagon person under my arm.
+
+It was dark when I got back and my nerves were rather unstrung, what
+with wandering from the path here and there, with nothing to eat since
+morning, and running into a tree and taking the skin off my nose. When I
+limped into camp at last, I didn't care whether Percy lived or died, and
+the thought of rabbit stew made my mouth water.
+
+It was not rabbit, however. Aggie was sitting alone by the fire, waving
+a brand round her head to keep off mosquitoes, and in front of her,
+dangling from the spit, were a dozen pairs of frogs' legs in a row.
+
+I ate six pairs without a question and then I asked for Tish.
+
+"Catching frogs," said Aggie laconically, and flourished the brand.
+
+"Where?"
+
+"Pulling them off the trees. Where do you think she gets them?" she
+demanded.
+
+A large mosquito broke through her guard at that moment and she flung
+the torch angrily at the fire.
+
+"I'm eaten alive!" she snapped. "I wish to Heaven I had smallpox or
+something they could all take and go away and die."
+
+The frogs' legs were heavenly, although in a restaurant I loathe the
+things. I left Aggie wondering if her hay fever wasn't contagious
+through the blood and hoping the mosquitoes would get it and sneeze
+themselves to death, and went to find Tish.
+
+She was standing in the margin of the lake up to her knees in water,
+with a blazing torch in one hand and one of our tent poles in the other.
+Tied to the end the pole was a grapevine line, and a fishing-hook made
+of a hairpin was attached to it.
+
+Her method, which it seems she'd heard from Charlie Sands and which was
+not in the "Young Woodsman," was simple and effectual.
+
+"Don't move," she said tensely when she heard me on the bank. "There's
+one here as big as a chicken!"
+
+She struck the flare forward, and I could see the frog looking at it and
+not blinking. He sat in a sort of heavenly ecstasy, like a dog about to
+bay at the moon, while the hook dangled just at his throat.
+
+"I'm half-ashamed to do it, Lizzie, it's so easy," she said calmly,
+still tickling the thing's throat with the hook. "Grab him as I throw
+him at you. They slip off sometimes."
+
+The next instant she jerked the hook up and caught the creature by the
+lower jaw. It was the neatest thing I have ever seen. Tish came wading
+over to where I stood and examined the frog.
+
+"If we only had some Tartare sauce!" she said regretfully. "I wish you'd
+look at my ankle, Lizzie. There's something stuck to it."
+
+The something was a leech. It refused to come off, and so she carried
+both frog and leech back to the camp. Aggie said on no account to pull a
+leech off, it left its teeth in and the teeth went on burrowing, or laid
+eggs or something. One must leave it on until it was full and round and
+couldn't hold any more, and then it dropped off.
+
+So all night Tish kept getting up and going to the fire to see if it was
+swelling. But toward morning she fell asleep and it dropped off, and we
+had a terrible feeling that it was somewhere in our blankets.
+
+But the leech caused less excitement that evening than my story of Percy
+and the little girl in the white coat. Aggie was entranced, and Tish had
+made Percy a suit of rabbit skin with a cap to match and outlined a set
+of exercises to increase his chest measure before I was half through
+with my story.
+
+But Percy did not appear, although we had an idea that he was not far
+off in the woods. We could hear a crackling in the undergrowth, but when
+we called there was no reply. Tish was eating a frog's leg when the idea
+came to her.
+
+"He'll never come out under ordinary circumstances in that--er--costume,"
+she said. "Suppose we call for help. He'll probably come bounding.
+Help!" she yelled, between bites, as one may say.
+
+"Help! Fire! Police!"
+
+"Help!" cried Aggie. "Percy, help!" It sounded like "Mercy, help!"
+
+It worked like a charm. The faint cracking became louder, nearer, turned
+from a suspicion to a certainty and from a certainty to a fact. The
+bushes parted and Percy stood before us. All he saw was three elderly
+women eating frogs' legs round a fire under a cloud of mosquitoes. He
+stopped, dumbfounded, and in that instant we saw that he didn't need the
+physical exercises, but that, of course, he did need the rabbit-skin
+suit.
+
+"Great Scott!" he panted. "I thought I heard you calling for help."
+
+"So we did," said Tish, "but we didn't need it. Won't you sit down?"
+
+He looked dazed and backed toward the bushes.
+
+"I--I think," he said, "if there's nothing wrong I'd better not--"
+
+"Fiddlesticks!" Tish snapped. "Are you ashamed of the body the Lord
+gave you? Don't you suppose we've all got skins? And didn't I thrash my
+nephew, Charlie Sands, when he was almost as big as you and had less on,
+for bathing in the river? Sit down, man, and don't be a fool."
+
+He edged toward the fire, looking rather silly, and Aggie passed him a
+frog's leg on a piece of bark.
+
+"Try this, Percy," she said, smiling.
+
+At the name he looked ready to run. "I guess you've seen the notices,"
+he said, "so you'll understand I cannot accept any food or assistance.
+I'm very grateful to you, anyhow."
+
+"You may take what food you find, surely," said Aggie. "If you find a
+roasted frog's leg on the ground--so--there's nothing to prevent you
+eating it, is there?"
+
+"Nothing at all," said Percy, and picked it up. "Unless, of course--"
+
+"It's not a trap, young man," said Tish. "Eat it and enjoy it. There are
+lots more where it came from."
+
+He relaxed at that, and on Tish's bringing out a blanket from the tent
+to throw over his shoulders he became almost easy. He was much surprised
+to learn that we knew his story, and when I repeated the "love him"
+message, he seemed to grow a foot taller and his eyes glowed.
+
+"I'm holding out all right," he said. "I'm fit physically. But the thing
+that gets my goat is that I'm to come out clothed. Dorothea's father
+says that primitive man, with nothing but his hands and perhaps a stone
+club, fed himself, made himself a shelter, and clothed himself in skins.
+Skins! I'm so big that two or three bears would hardly be enough. I did
+find a hole that I thought a bear or two might fall into, and got almost
+stung to death robbing a bee tree to bait the thing with honey. But
+there aren't any bears, and if there were how'd I kill 'em? Wait until
+they starve to death?"
+
+"Rabbits!" said Tish.
+
+He looked down at himself and he seemed very large in the firelight.
+"Dear lady," he said, "there aren't enough rabbits in the county to
+cover me, and how'd I put 'em together? I was a fool to undertake the
+thing, that's all."
+
+"But aren't you in love with her?" asked Aggie.
+
+"Well, I guess I am. It isn't that, you know. I'm a good bit worse than
+crazy about her. A man might be crazy about a mint julep or a power
+boat, but--he'd hardly go into the woods in his skin and live on fish
+until he's scaly for either of them. If I don't get her, I don't want to
+live. That's all."
+
+He looked so gloomy and savage that we saw he meant it, and Aggie was
+perceptibly thrilled. Trish, however, was thinking hard, her eyes on the
+leech. "Was there anything in the agreement to prevent your accepting
+any suggestions?"
+
+He pondered. "No, I was to be given no food, drink, shelter, or any
+weapon. The old man forgot fire--that's how I came to beg some."
+
+"Fire and brains," reflected Tish. "We've given you the first and we've
+plenty of the second to offer. Now, young man, this is my plan. We'll
+give you nothing but suggestions. If now and then you find a cooked meal
+under that tree, that's accident, not design, and you'd better eat it.
+Can you sew?"
+
+"I'm like the Irishman and the fiddle--I never tried, but I guess I
+can." He was much more cheerful.
+
+"Do you have to be alone?"
+
+"I believe he took that for granted, in this costume."
+
+"Will it take you long to move over here?"
+
+"I think I can move without a van," he said, grinning. "My sole worldly
+possessions are a stone hatchet and a hairpin fishhook."
+
+"Get them and come over," commanded Tish. "When you leave this forest at
+the end of the time you are going to be fed and clothed and carry a
+tent; you will have with you smoked meat and fish; you will carry under
+your arm an Indian clock or sundial; you will have a lamp--if we can
+find a clamshell or a broken bottle--and you will have a fire-making
+outfit with your monogram on it."
+
+"But, my dear friend," he said, "I am not supposed to have any
+assistance and--"
+
+"Assistance!" Tish snapped. "Who said assistance? I'm providing the
+brains, but you'll do it all yourself."
+
+He moved over an hour or so later and Tish and I went into the tent to
+bed. Somewhat later, when she limped to the fire to see how the leech
+was filling up, he and Aggie were sitting together talking, he of
+Dorothea and Aggie of Mr. Wiggins. Tish said they were both talking at
+the same time, neither one listening to the other, and that it sounded
+like this:--"She's so sweet and trusting and honest--well, I'd believe
+what she said if she--"
+
+"--fell off a roof on a rainy day and was picked up by a man with a
+horse and buggy quite unconscious."
+
+
+
+
+V
+
+
+The next three weeks were busy times for Percy. He wore Tish's blanket
+for two days, and then, finding it in the way, he discarded it
+altogether. Seen in daylight it was easy to understand why little
+Dorothea was in love with him. He was a handsome young giant, although
+much bitten by mosquitoes and scratched with briers.
+
+The arrangement was a good one all round. He knew of things in the wood
+we'd never heard of--wild onions and artichokes, and he had found a
+clump of wild cherry trees. He made snares of the fibers of tree bark,
+and he brought in turtles and made plates out of the shells. And all the
+time he was working on his outfit, curing rabbit skins and sewing them
+together with fibers under my direction.
+
+When he'd made one sleeve of his coat we had a sort of celebration.
+He'd found an empty bottle somewhere in the woods, and he had made a
+wild-cherry decoction that he declared was cherry brandy, keeping it in
+the sun to ferment. Well, he insisted on opening the brandy that day and
+passing it round. We had cups made of leaves and we drank to his sleeve,
+although the stuff was villainous. He had put the sleeve on, and it
+looked rather inadequate. "Here's fun," he said joyously. "If my English
+tailor could see this sleeve he'd die of envy. A sleeve's not all of a
+coat, but what's a coat without a sleeve? Look at it--grace, ease of
+line, and beauty of material."
+
+Aggie lifted her leaf.
+
+"To Dorothea!" she said. "And may the sleeve soon be about her."
+
+Tish thought this toast was not delicate, but Percy was enchanted with
+it.
+
+It was on the evening of the fourth day of Percy's joining our camp that
+the Willoughby person appeared. It happened at a most inauspicious time.
+We had eaten supper and were gathered round the camp-fire and Tish had
+put wet leaves on the blaze to make a smudge that would drive the
+mosquitoes away. We were sitting there, Tish and I coughing and Aggie
+sneezing in the smoke, when Percy came running through the woods and
+stopped at the foot of a tree near by.
+
+"Bring a club, somebody," he yelled. "I've treed the back of my coat."
+
+Tish ran with one of the tent poles. A tepee is inconvenient for that
+reason. Every time any one wants a fishing-pole or a weapon, the tent
+loses part of its bony structure and sags like the face of a stout woman
+who has reduced. And it turned out that Percy had treed a coon. He
+climbed up after it, taking Tish's pole with him to dislodge it, and it
+was at that moment that a man rode into the clearing and practically
+fell off his horse. He was dirty and scratched with brambles, and his
+once immaculate riding-clothes were torn. He was about to take off his
+hat when he got a good look at us and changed his mind.
+
+"Have you got anything to eat?" he asked. "I've been lost since noon
+yesterday and I'm about all in."
+
+The leaves caught fire suddenly and sent a glow into Percy's tree. I
+shall never forget Aggie's agonized look or the way Tish flung on more
+wet leaves in a hurry.
+
+"I'm sorry," she said, "but supper's over."
+
+"But surely a starving man--"
+
+"You won't starve inside of a week," Tish snapped. "You've got enough
+flesh on you for a month."
+
+He stared at her incredulously.
+
+"But, my good woman," he said, "I can pay for my food. Even you
+itinerant folk need money now and then, don't you? Come, now, cook me a
+fish; I'll pay for it. My name is Willoughby--J.K. Willoughby. Perhaps
+you've heard of me."
+
+Tish cast a swift glance into the tree. It was in shadow again and she
+drew a long breath. She said afterward that the whole plan came to her
+in the instant of that breath.
+
+"We can give you something," she said indifferently. "We have a stewed
+rabbit, if you care for it."
+
+There was a wild scramble in the tree at that moment, and we thought all
+was over. We learned later that Percy had made a move to climb higher,
+out of the firelight, and the coon had been so startled that he almost
+fell out. But instead of looking up to investigate, the stranger backed
+toward the fire.
+
+"Only a wildcat," said Tish. "They'll not come near the fire."
+
+"Near!" exclaimed Mr. Willoughby. "If they came any nearer, they'd have
+to get into it!"
+
+"I think," said Tish, "that if you are afraid of them--although you are
+safe enough if you don't get under the trees; they jump down, you
+know--that you would better stay by the fire to-night. In the morning
+we'll start you toward a road."
+
+All night with Percy in the tree! I gave her a savage glance, but she
+ignored me.
+
+The Willoughby looked up nervously, and of course there were trees all
+about.
+
+"I guess I'll stay," he agreed. "What about that rabbit?"
+
+I did not know Tish's plan at that time, and while Aggie was feeding the
+Willoughby person and he was grumbling over his food, I took Tish aside.
+
+"Are you crazy?" I demanded. "Just through your idiocy Percy will have
+to stay in that tree all night--and he'll go to sleep, likely, and fall
+out."
+
+Tish eyed me coldly.
+
+"You are a good soul, Lizzie," she observed, "but don't overwork your
+mind. Go back and do something easy--let the Willoughby cross your palm
+with silver, and tell his fortune. If he asks any questions I'm queen of
+the gypsies, and give him to understand that we're in temporary hiding
+from the law. The worse he thinks of us the better. Remember, we haven't
+seen Percy."
+
+"I'm not going to lie," I said sternly.
+
+"Pooh!" Tish sneered. "That wretch came into the woods to gloat over his
+rival's misery. The truth's too good for him."
+
+I did my best, and I still have the silver dollar he gave me. I told him
+I saw a small girl, who loved him but didn't realize it yet, and there
+was another man.
+
+"Good gracious," I said, "there must be something wrong with your palm.
+I see the other man, but he seems to be in trouble. His clothing has
+been stolen, for he has none, and he is hungry, very hungry."
+
+"Ha!" said Mr. Willoughby, looking startled. "You old gypsies beat the
+devil! Hungry, eh? Is that all?"
+
+The light flared up again and I could see clearly the pale spot in the
+tree, which was Percy. But Mr. Willoughby's eyes were on his palm.
+
+"He has about decided to give up something--I cannot see just what," I
+said loudly. "He seems to be in the air, in a tree, perhaps. If he
+wishes to be safe he should go higher."
+
+Percy took the hint and moved up, and I said that was all there was in
+the palm. Soon after that Mr. Willoughby stretched out on the ground by
+the fire, and before long he was asleep.
+
+During the night I heard Tish moving stealthily about in the tepee and
+she stepped on my ankle as she went out. I fell asleep again as soon as
+it stopped aching. Just at dawn Tish came back and touched me on the
+shoulder.
+
+"Where's the blackberry cordial?" she whispered I sat up instantly.
+
+"Has Percy fallen out of the tree?"
+
+"No. Don't ask any questions, Lizzie. I want it for myself. That dratted
+horse fell on me."
+
+She refused to say any more and lay down groaning. But I was too worried
+to sleep again. In the morning Percy was gone from the tree. Mr.
+Willoughby had more rabbit and prepared to leave the forest. He offered
+Tish a dollar for the two meals and a bed, and Tish, who was moving
+about stiffly, said that she and her people took no money for their
+hospitality. Telling fortunes was one thing, bread and salt was another.
+She looked quite haughty, and the Willoughby person apologized and went
+into the woods to get his horse.
+
+The horse was gone!
+
+It was rather disagreeable for a time. He plainly thought we'd taken it,
+although Tish showed him that the end of the strap had been chewed
+partly through and then jerked free.
+
+"If the creature smelled a wildcat," she said, "nothing would hold it.
+None of my people ever bring a horse into this part of the country."
+
+"Humph!" said Mr. Willoughby. "Well, I'll bet they take a few out!"
+
+He departed on foot shortly after, very disgusted and suspicious. We
+showed him the trail, and the last we saw of him he was striding along,
+looking up now and then for wildcats.
+
+When he was well on his way, Percy emerged from the bushes. I had
+thought that he had helped Tish to take the Willoughby horse, but it
+seems he had not, and he was much amazed when Tish came through the wood
+leading the creature by the broken strap.
+
+"I'll turn it loose," she said to Percy, "and you can capture it. It
+will make a good effect for you to emerge from the forest on horseback,
+and anyhow, what with the rabbit skin, the tent, and the sundial and the
+other things, you have a lot to carry. You can say you found it straying
+in the woods and captured it."
+
+Percy looked at her with admiration not unmixed with reverence. "Miss
+Letitia," he said solemnly, "if it were not for Dorothea, I should ask
+you to marry me. I'd like to have you in my family."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I am very nearly to the end of my narrative.
+
+Toward the last Percy was obliged to work far into the night, for of
+course we could not assist him. He made a full suit of rabbit skins
+sewed with fibers, and a cap and shoes of coonskin to match. The shoes
+were cut from a bedroom-slipper pattern that Tish traced in the sand on
+the beach, and the cap had an eagle feather in it. He made a birch-bark
+knapsack to hold the fish he smoked and a bow and arrow that looked well
+but would not shoot. When he had the outfit completed, he put it on,
+with the stone hatchet stuck into a grapevine belt and the bow and arrow
+over his shoulder, and he looked superb.
+
+"The question is," he reflected, trying to view himself in the edge of
+the lake: "Will Dorothea like it? She's very keen about clothes. And
+gee, how she hates a beard!"
+
+"You could shave as the Indians do," Tish said.
+
+"How?"
+
+"With a clamshell."
+
+He looked dubious, but Tish assured him it was feasible. So he hunted a
+clamshell, a double one, Tish requested, and brought it into camp.
+
+"I'd better do it for you," said Tish. "It's likely to be slow, but it
+is sure."
+
+He was eyeing the clamshell and looking more and more uneasy.
+
+"You're not going to scrape it off?" he asked anxiously. "You know,
+pumice would be better for that, but somehow I don't like the idea."
+
+"Nothing of the sort," said Tish. "The double clamshell merely forms a
+pair of Indian nippers. I'm going to pull it out."
+
+But he made quite a fuss about it, and said he didn't care whether the
+Indians did it or not, he wouldn't. I think he saw how disappointed Tish
+was and was afraid she would attempt it while he slept, for he threw the
+Indian nippers into the lake and then went over and kissed her hand.
+
+"Dear Miss Tish," he said; "no one realizes more than I your inherent
+nobility of soul and steadfastness of purpose. I admire them both. But
+if you attempt the Indian nipper business, or to singe me like a chicken
+while I sleep, I shall be--forgive me, but I know my impulsiveness of
+disposition--I shall be really vexed with you."
+
+Toward the last we all became uneasy for fear hard work was telling on
+him physically. He used to sit cross-legged on the ground, sewing for
+dear life and singing Hood's "Song of the Shirt" in a doleful tenor.
+
+"You know," he said, "I've thought once or twice I'd like to do
+something--have a business like other fellows. But somehow dressmaking
+never occurred to me. Don't you think the expression of this right pant
+is good? And shall I make this gore bias or on the selvage?"
+
+He wanted to slash one trouser leg.
+
+"Why not?" he demanded when Tish frowned him down. "It's awfully
+fetching, and beauty half-revealed, you know. Do you suppose my
+breastbone will ever straighten out again? It's concave from stooping."
+
+It was after this that Tish made him exercise morning and evening and
+then take a swim in the lake. By the time he was to start back, he was
+in wonderful condition, and even the horse looked saucy and shiny, owing
+to our rubbing him down each day with dried grasses.
+
+The actual leave-taking was rather sad. We'd grown to think a lot of the
+boy and I believe he liked us. He kissed each one of us twice, once for
+himself and once for Dorothea, and flushed a little over doing it, and
+Aggie's eyes were full of tears.
+
+He rode away down the trail like a mixture of Robinson Crusoe and Indian
+brave, his rubbing-fire stick, his sundial with burned figures, and his
+bow and arrow jingling, his eagle feather blowing back in the wind, and
+his moccasined feet thrust into Mr. Willoughby's stirrups, and left us
+desolate. Tish watched him out of sight with set lips and Aggie was
+whimpering on a bank.
+
+"Tish," she said brokenly, "does he recall anything to you?"
+
+"Only my age," said Tish rather wearily, "and that I'm an elderly
+spinster teaching children to defy their parents and committing larceny
+to help them."
+
+"To me," said Aggie softly, "he is young love going out to seek his
+mate. Oh, Tish, do you remember how Mr. Wiggins used to ride by taking
+his work horses to be shod!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+We went home the following day, which was the time the spring-wagon man
+was to meet us. We started very early and were properly clothed and
+hatted when we saw him down the road.
+
+The spring-wagon person came on without hurry and surveyed us as he
+came.
+
+"Well, ladies," he said, stopping before us, "I see you pulled it off
+all right."
+
+"We've had a very nice time, thank you," said Tish, drawing on her
+gloves. "It's been rather lonely, of course."
+
+The spring-wagon person did not speak again until he had reached the
+open road. Then he turned round.
+
+"The horse business was pretty good," he said. "You ought to hev seen
+them folks when he rode out of the wood. Flabbergasted ain't the word.
+They was ding-busted."
+
+Tish whispered to us to show moderate interest and to say as little as
+possible, except to protest our ignorance. And we got the story at last
+like this:--
+
+It seems the newspapers had been full of the attempt Percy was to make,
+and so on the day before quite a crowd had gathered to see him come out
+of the wood.
+
+"Ten of these here automobiles," said the spring-wagon person, "and a
+hay-wagon full of newspaper fellows from the city with cameras, and
+about half the village back home walked out or druv and brought their
+lunches--sort of a picnic. I kep' my eye on the girl and on a Mr.
+Willoughby.
+
+"The story is that Willoughby who was the father's choice--Willoughby
+was pale and twitching and kep' moving about all the time. But the girl,
+she just kep' her eyes on the trail and waited. Noon was the time set,
+or as near it as possible.
+
+"The father talked to the newspaper men mostly. 'I don't think he'll
+do it, boys!' he said. 'He's as soft as milk and he's surprised me by
+sticking it out as long as he has. But mark my words, boys,' he said,
+'he's been living on berries and things he could pick up off the ground,
+and if his physical condition's bad he loses all bets!"
+
+It seems that, just as he said it, somebody pulled out a watch and
+announced "noon." And on the instant Percy was seen riding down the
+trail and whistling. At first they did not know it was he, as they had
+expected him to arrive on foot, staggering with fatigue probably. He
+rode out into the sunlight, still whistling, and threw an unconcerned
+glance over the crowd.
+
+He looked at the trees, and located north by the moss on the trunks, the
+S.-W.P. said, and unslinging his Indian clock he held it in front of
+him, pointing north and south. It showed exactly noon. It was then, and
+not until then, that Percy addressed the astonished crowd.
+
+"Twelve o'clock, gentlemen," he said. "My watch is quite accurate."
+
+Nobody said anything, being, as the S.-W.P. remarked, struck dumb. But
+a moment afterward the hay-wagon started a cheer and the machines took
+it up. Even the father "let loose," as we learned, and the little girl
+sat back in her motor car and smiled through her tears.
+
+But Willoughby was furious. It seems he had recognized the horse.
+"That's my horse," he snarled. "You stole it from me."
+
+"As a matter of fact," Percy retorted, "I found the beast wandering
+loose among the trees and I'm perfectly willing to return him to you. I
+brought him out for a purpose."
+
+"To make a Garrison finish!"
+
+"Not entirely. To prove that you violated the contract by going into the
+forest to see if you could find me and gloat over my misery. Instead you
+found--By the way, Willoughby, did you see any wild-cats?"
+
+"Those three hags are in this!" said Willoughby furiously. "Are you
+willing to swear you made that silly outfit?"
+
+"I am, but not to you."
+
+"And at that minute, if you'll believe me," said the S.-W.P., "the girl
+got out of her machine and walked right up to the Percy fellow. I was
+standing right by and I heard what she said. It was curious, seeing
+he'd had no help and had gone in naked, as you may say, and came out
+clothed head to foot, with a horse and weapons and a watch, and able to
+make fire in thirty-one seconds, and a tent made of about a thousand
+rabbit skins."
+
+Tish eyed him coldly.
+
+"What did she say?" she demanded severely. "She said: 'Those three dear
+old things!'" replied the S.-W.P. "And she said: 'I hope you kissed
+them for me.'"
+
+"He did indeed," said Aggie dreamily, and only roused when Tish nudged
+her in a rage.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Charlie Sands came to have tea with us yesterday at Tish's. He is just
+back from England and full of the subject.
+
+"But after all," he said, "the Simple Lifers take the palm. Think of it,
+my three revered and dearly beloved spinster friends; think of the
+peace, the holy calm of it! Now, if you three would only drink less tea
+and once in a while would get back to Nature a bit, it would be good for
+you. You're all too civilized."
+
+"Probably," said Tish, pulling down her sleeves to hide her sunburned
+hands. "But do you think people have so much time in the--er--woods?"
+
+"Time!" he repeated. "Why, what is there to do?"
+
+Just then the doorbell rang and a huge box was carried in. Tish had a
+warning and did not wish to open it, but Charlie Sands insisted and cut
+the string. Inside were three sets of sable furs, handsomer than any in
+the church, Tish says, and I know I've never seen any like them.
+
+Tish and I hid the cards, but Aggie dropped hers and Charlie Sands
+pounced on it.
+
+"'The sleeve is now about Dorothea,'" he read aloud, and then, turning,
+eyed us all sternly.
+
+"Now, then," said Charlie Sands, "out with it! What have you been up to
+this time?"
+
+Tish returned his gaze calmly. "We have been in the Maine woods in the
+holy calm," she said. "As for those furs, I suppose a body may buy a set
+of furs if she likes." This, of course, was not a lie. "As for that
+card, it's a mistake." Which it was indeed.
+
+"But--Dorothea!" persisted Charlie Sands.
+
+"Never in my life knew anybody named Dorothea. Did you, Aggie?"
+
+"Never," said Aggie firmly.
+
+Charlie Sands apologized and looked thoughtful. On Tish's remaining
+rather injured, he asked us all out to dinner that night, and almost the
+first thing he ordered was frogs' legs. Aggie got rather white about the
+lips.
+
+"I--I think I'll not take any," she said feebly. "I--I keep thinking of
+Tish tickling their throats with the hairpin, and how Percy--"
+
+We glared at her, but it was too late. Charlie Sands drew up his chair
+and rested his elbows on the table.
+
+"So there was a Percy as well as a Dorothea!" he said cheerfully. "I
+might have known it. Now we'll have the story!"
+
+
+
+
+TISH'S SPY
+
+THE ADVENTURE OF THE RED-HEADED DETECTIVE, THE LADY CHAUFFEUR, AND THE
+MAN WHO COULD NOT TELL THE TRUTH
+
+I
+
+
+It is easy enough, of course, to look back on our Canadian experience
+and see where we went wrong. What I particularly resent is the attitude
+of Charlie Sands.
+
+I am writing this for his benefit. It seems to me that a clean statement
+of the case is due to Tish, and, in less degree, to Aggie and myself.
+
+It goes back long before the mysterious cipher. Even the incident of our
+abducting the girl in the pink tam-o'-shanter was, after all, the
+inevitable result of the series of occurrences that preceded it.
+
+It is my intention to give this series of occurrences in their proper
+order and without bias. Herbert Spencer says that every act of one's
+life is the unavoidable result of every act that has preceded it.
+
+Naturally, therefore, I begin with the engagement by Tish of a girl as
+chauffeur; but even before that there were contributing causes. There
+was the faulty rearing of the McDonald youth, for instance, and Tish's
+æsthetic dancing. And afterward there was Aggie's hay fever, which made
+her sneeze and let go of a rope at a critical moment. Indeed, Aggie's
+hay fever may be said to be one of the fundamental causes, being the
+reason we went to Canada.
+
+It was like this: Along in June of the year before last, Aggie suddenly
+announced that she was going to spend the summer in Canada.
+
+"It's the best thing in the world for hay fever," she said, avoiding
+Tish's eye. "Mrs. Ostermaier says she never sneezed once last year. The
+Northern Lights fill the air with ozone, or something like that."
+
+"Fill the air with ozone!" Tish scoffed. "Fill Mrs. Ostermaier's skull
+with ozone, instead of brains, more likely!"
+
+Tish is a good woman--a sweet woman, indeed; but she has a vein of
+gentle irony, which she inherited from her maternal grandfather, who was
+on the Supreme Bench of his country. However, that spring she was
+inclined to be irritable. She could not drive her car, and that was
+where the trouble really started.
+
+Tish had taken up æsthetic dancing in March, wearing no stays and a
+middy blouse and short skirt; and during a fairy dance, where she was to
+twirl on her right toes, keeping the three other limbs horizontal, she
+twisted her right lower limb severely. Though not incapacitated, she
+could not use it properly; and, failing one day to put on the brake
+quickly, she drove into an open-front butter-and-egg shop.
+
+[This was the time one of the newspapers headed the article: "Even the
+Eggs Scrambled."]
+
+When Tish decided to have a chauffeur for a time she advertised. There
+were plenty of replies, but all of the applicants smoked cigarettes--a
+habit Tish very properly deplores. The idea of securing a young woman
+was, I must confess, mine.
+
+"Plenty of young women drive cars," I said, "and drive well. And, at
+least, they don't light a cigarette every time one stops to let a train
+go by."
+
+"Huh!" Tish commented. "And have a raft of men about all the time!"
+
+Nevertheless, she acted on the suggestion, advertising for a young woman
+who could drive a car and had no followers. Hutchins answered.
+
+She was very pretty and not over twenty; but, asked about men, her face
+underwent a change, almost a hardening. "You'll not be bothered with
+men," she said briefly. "I detest them!"
+
+And this seemed to be the truth. Charlie Sands, for instance, for whose
+benefit this is being written, absolutely failed to make any impression
+on her. She met his overtures with cold disdain. She was also adamant
+to the men at the garage, succeeding in having the gasoline filtered
+through a chamois skin to take out the water, where Tish had for years
+begged for the same thing without success.
+
+Though a dashing driver, Hutchins was careful. She sat on the small of
+her back and hurled us past the traffic policemen with a smile.
+
+[Her name was really Hutchinson; but it took so long to say it at the
+rate she ran the car that Tish changed it to Hutchins.]
+
+Really the whole experiment seemed to be an undoubted success, when
+Aggie got the notion of Canada into her head. Now, as it happened,
+owing to Tish's disapproval, Aggie gave up the Canada idea in favor
+of Nantucket, some time in June; but she had not reckoned with Tish's
+subconscious self. Tish was interested that spring in the subconscious
+self.
+
+You may remember that, only a year or so before, it had been the fourth
+dimension.
+
+[She became convinced that if one were sufficiently earnest one could go
+through closed doors and see into solids. In the former ambition she was
+unsuccessful, obtaining only bruises and disappointment; but she did
+develop the latter to a certain extent, for she met the laundress going
+out one day and, without a conscious effort, she knew that she had the
+best table napkins pinned to her petticoat. She accused the woman
+sternly--and she had six!]
+
+"Nantucket!" said Tish. "Why Nantucket?"
+
+"I have a niece there, and you said you hated Canada."
+
+"On the contrary," Tish replied, with her eyes partly shut, "I find
+that my subconscious self has adopted and been working on the Canadian
+suggestion. What a wonderful thing is this buried and greater ego!
+Worms, rifles, fishing-rods, 'The Complete Angler,' mosquito netting,
+canned goods, and sleeping-bags, all in my mind and in orderly array!"
+
+"Worms!" I said, with, I confess, a touch of scorn in my voice. "If you
+will tell me, Tish Carberry--"
+
+"Life preservers," chanted Tish's subconscious self, "rubber blankets,
+small tent, folding camp-beds, a camp-stove, a meat-saw, a wood-saw,
+and some beads and gewgaws for placating the Indians." Then she opened
+her eyes and took up her knitting. "There are no worms in Canada,
+Lizzie, just as there are no snakes in Ireland. They were all destroyed
+during the glacial period."
+
+"There are plenty of worms in the United States," I said with spirit.
+"I dare say they could crawl over the border--unless, of course, they
+object to being British subjects."
+
+She ignored me, however, and, getting up, went to one of her bureau
+drawers. We saw then that her subconscious self had written down
+lists of various things for the Canadian excursion. There was one
+headed Foodstuffs. Others were: Necessary Clothing; Camp Outfit;
+Fishing-Tackle; Weapons of Defense; and Diversions. Under this last
+heading it had placed binoculars, yarn and needles, life preservers,
+a prayer-book, and a cribbage-board.
+
+"Boats," she said, "we can secure from the Indians, who make them, I
+believe, of hollow logs. And I shall rent a motor boat. Hutchins says
+she can manage one. When she's not doing that she can wash dishes."
+
+[We had been rather chary of motor boats, you may remember, since the
+time on Lake Penzance, when something jammed on our engine, and we had
+gone madly round the lake a number of times, with people on various
+docks trying to lasso us with ropes.]
+
+Considering that it was she who had started the whole thing, and got
+Tish's subconscious mind to working, Aggie was rather pettish.
+
+"Huh!" she said. "I can't swim, and you know it, Tish. Those canoe
+things turn over if you so much as sneeze in them."
+
+"You'll not sneeze," said Tish. "The Northern Lights fill the air with
+ozone."
+
+Aggie looked at me helplessly; but I could do nothing. Only the year
+before, Tish, as you may recall, had taken us out into the Maine woods
+without any outfit at all, and we had lived on snared rabbits, and
+things that no Christian woman ought to put into her stomach. This time
+we were at least to go provisioned and equipped.
+
+"Where are we going?" Aggie asked.
+
+"Far from a white man," said Tish. "Away from milk wagons and children
+on velocipedes and the grocer calling up every morning for an order.
+We'll go to the Far North, Aggie, where the red man still treads his
+native forests; we'll make our camp by some lake, where the deer come at
+early morning to drink and fish leap to see the sunset."
+
+Well, it sounded rather refreshing, though I confess that, until Tish
+mentioned it, I had always thought that fish leaped in the evening to
+catch mosquitoes.
+
+We sent for Hutchins at once. She was always respectful, but never
+subservient. She stood in the doorway while Tish explained.
+
+"How far north?" she said crisply. Tish told her. "We'll have no
+cut-and-dried destination," she said. "There's a little steamer goes up
+the river I have in mind. We'll get off when we see a likely place."
+
+"Are you going for trout or bass?"
+
+Tish was rather uncertain, but she said bass on a chance, and Hutchins
+nodded her approval.
+
+"If it's bass, I'll go," she said. "I'm not fond of trout-fishing."
+
+"We shall have a motor boat. Of course I shall not take the car."
+
+Hutchins agreed indifferently. "Don't you worry about the motor boat,"
+she said. "Sometimes they go, and sometimes they don't. And I'll help
+round the camp; but I'll not wash dishes."
+
+"Why not?" Tish demanded.
+
+"The reason doesn't really matter, does it? What really concerns you is
+the fact."
+
+Tish stared at her; but instead of quailing before Tish's majestic eye
+she laughed a little.
+
+"I've camped before," she said. "I'm very useful about a camp. I like to
+cook; but I won't wash dishes. I'd like, if you don't mind, to see the
+grocery order before it goes."
+
+Well, Aggie likes to wash dishes if there is plenty of hot water; and
+Hannah, Tish's maid, refusing to go with us on account of Indians, it
+seemed wisest to accept Hutchins's services.
+
+Hannah's defection was most unexpected. As soon as we reached our
+decision, Tish ordered beads for the Indians; and in the evenings we
+strung necklaces, and so on, while one of us read aloud from the works
+of Cooper. On the second evening thus occupied, Hannah, who is allowed
+to come into Tish's sitting-room in the evening and knit, suddenly
+burst into tears and refused to go.
+
+"My scalp's as good to me as it is to anybody, Miss Tish," she said
+hysterically; and nothing would move her.
+
+She said she would run no risk of being cooked over her own camp-fire;
+and from that time on she would gaze at Tish for long periods
+mournfully, as though she wanted to remember how she looked when she was
+gone forever.
+
+Except for Hannah, everything moved smoothly. Tish told Charlie Sands
+about the plan, and he was quite enthusiastic.
+
+"Great scheme!" he said. "Eat a broiled black bass for me. And take the
+advice of one who knows: don't skimp on your fishing-tackle. Get the
+best. Go light on the canned goods, if necessary; but get the best reels
+and lines on the market. Nothing in life hurts so much," he said
+impressively, "as to get a three-pound bass to the top of the water and
+have your line break. I've had a big fellow get away like that and chase
+me a mile with its thumb on its nose." This last, of course, was purely
+figurative.
+
+He went away whistling. I wish he had been less optimistic. When we came
+back and told him the whole story, and he sat with his mouth open and
+his hair, as he said, crackling at the roots, I reminded him with some
+bitterness that he had encouraged us. His only retort was to say that
+the excursion itself had been harmless enough; but that if three elderly
+ladies, church members in good standing, chose to become freebooters and
+pirates the moment they got away from a corner policeman, they need not
+blame him.
+
+The last thing he said that day in June was about fishing-worms.
+
+"Take 'em with you," he said. "They charge a cent apiece for them up
+there, assorted colors, and there's something stolid and British about a
+Canadian worm. The fish aren't crazy about 'em. On the other hand, our
+worms here are--er--vivacious, animated. I've seen a really brisk and
+on-to-its-job United States worm reach out and clutch a bass by the
+gills."
+
+I believe it was the next day that Tish went to the library and read
+about worms. Aggie and I had spent the day buying tackle, according to
+Charlie Sands's advice. We got some very good rods with nickel-plated
+reels for two dollars and a quarter, a dozen assorted hooks for each
+person, and a dozen sinkers. The man wanted to sell us what he called a
+"landing net," but I took a good look at it and pinched Aggie.
+
+"I can make one out of a barrel hoop and mosquito netting," I whispered;
+so we did not buy it.
+
+Perhaps he thought we were novices, for he insisted on showing us all
+sorts of absurd things--trolling-hooks, he called them; gaff hooks for
+landing big fish and a spoon that was certainly no spoon and did not
+fool us for a minute, being only a few hooks and a red feather. He asked
+a dollar and a quarter for it!
+
+[I made one that night at home, using a bit of red feather from a
+duster. It cost me just three cents. Of that, as of Hutchins, more
+later.]
+
+Aggie, whose idea of Canada had been the Hotel Frontenac, had grown
+rather depressed as our preparations proceeded. She insisted that night
+on recalling the fact that Mr. Wiggins had been almost drowned in
+Canada.
+
+"He went with the Roof and Gutter Club, Lizzie," she said, "and he was a
+beautiful swimmer; but the water comes from the North Pole, freezing
+cold, and the first thing he knew--"
+
+The telephone bell rang just then. It was Tish.
+
+"I've just come from the library, Lizzie," she said. "We'd better raise
+the worms. We've got a month to do it in. Hutchins and I will be round
+with the car at eight o'clock to-night. Night is the time to get them."
+
+She refused to go into details, but asked us to have an electric flash
+or two ready and a couple of wooden pails. Also she said to wear
+mackintoshes and rubbers. Just before she rang off, she asked me to see
+that there was a package of oatmeal on hand, but did not explain. When I
+told Aggie she eyed me miserably.
+
+"I wish she'd be either more explicit or less," she said. "We'll be
+arrested again. I know it!"
+
+[Now and then Tish's enthusiasms have brought us into collision with the
+law--not that Tish has not every respect for law and order, but that she
+is apt to be hasty and at times almost unconventional.]
+
+"You remember," said Aggie, "that time she tried to shoot the sheriff,
+thinking he was a train robber? She started just like this--reading up
+about walking-tours, and all that. I--I'm nervous, Lizzie."
+
+I was staying with Aggie for a few days while my apartment was being
+papered. To soothe Aggie's nerves I read aloud from Gibbon's "Rome"
+until dinner-time, and she grew gradually calmer.
+
+"After all, Lizzie," she said, "she can't get us into mischief with two
+wooden pails and a package of oatmeal."
+
+Tish and Hutchins came promptly at eight and we got into the car. Tish
+wore the intent and dreamy look that always preceded her enterprises.
+There was a tin sprinkling-can, quite new, in the tonneau, and we placed
+our wooden pails beside it and the oatmeal in it. I confess I was
+curious, but to my inquiries Tish made only one reply:--
+
+"Worms!"
+
+Now I do not like worms. I do not like to touch them. I do not even like
+to look at them. As the machine went along I began to have a creepy
+loathing of them. Aggie must have been feeling the same way, for when my
+hand touched hers she squealed.
+
+Over her shoulder Tish told her plan. She said it was easy to get
+fishing-worms at night and that Hutchins knew of a place a few miles out
+of town where the family was away and where there would be plenty.
+
+"We'll put them in boxes of earth," she said, "and feed them coffee or
+tea grounds one day and oatmeal water the next. They propagate rapidly.
+We'll have a million to take with us. If we only have a hundred thousand
+at a cent apiece, that's a clear saving of a thousand dollars."
+
+"We could sell some," I suggested sarcastically; for Tish's enthusiasms
+have a way of going wrong.
+
+But she took me seriously. "If there are any fishing clubs about," she
+said, "I dare say they'll buy them; and we can turn the money over to
+Mr. Ostermaier for the new organ."
+
+Tish had bought the organ and had an evening concert with it before we
+turned off the main road into a private drive.
+
+"This is the place," Hutchins said laconically.
+
+Tish got out and took a survey. There was shrubbery all round and a very
+large house, quite dark, in the foreground.
+
+"Drive onto the lawn, Hutchins," she said. "When the worms come up, the
+lamps will dazzle them and they'll be easy to capture."
+
+We bumped over a gutter and came to a stop in the middle of the lawn.
+
+"It would be better if it was raining," Tish said. "You know, yourself,
+Lizzie, how they come up during a gentle rain. Give me the
+sprinkling-can."
+
+I do not wish to lay undue blame on Hutchins, who was young; but it was
+she who suggested that there would probably be a garden hose somewhere
+and that it would save time. I know she went with Tish round the corner
+of the house, and that they returned in ten minutes or so, dragging a
+hose.
+
+"I broke a tool-house window," Tish observed, "but I left fifty cents
+on the sill to replace it. It's attached at the other end. Run back,
+Hutchins, and turn on the water; but not too much. We needn't drown the
+little creatures."
+
+Well, I have never seen anything work better. Aggie, who had refused to
+put a foot out of the car, stood up in it and held the hose. As fast as
+she wet a bit of lawn, we followed with the pails. I spread my
+mackintosh out and knelt on it.
+
+[Illustration: As fast as she wet a bit of lawn, we followed with the
+pails]
+
+The thing took skill. The worms had a way of snapping back into their
+holes like lightning.
+
+Tish got about three to my one, and talked about packing them in moss
+and ice, and feeding them every other day. Hutchins, however, stood on
+the lawn, with her hands in her pockets, and watched the house.
+
+Suddenly, without warning, Aggie turned the hose directly on my left ear
+and held it there.
+
+"There's somebody coming!" she cried. "Merciful Heavens, what'll I do
+with the hose?"
+
+"You can turn it away from me!" I snapped.
+
+So she did, and at that instant a young man emerged from the shrubbery.
+
+He did not speak at once. Probably he could not. I happened to look at
+Hutchins, and, for all her usual _savoir-faire_, as Charlie Sands called
+it, she was clearly uncomfortable.
+
+Tish, engaged in a struggle at that moment and sitting back like a
+robin, did not see him at once.
+
+"Well!" said the young man; and again: "Well, upon my word!"
+
+He seemed out of breath with surprise; and he took off his hat and
+mopped his head with a handkerchief. And, of course, as though things
+were not already bad enough, Aggie sneezed at that instant, as she
+always does when she is excited; and for just a second the hose was
+on him.
+
+It was unexpected and he almost staggered. He looked at all of us,
+including Hutchins, and ran his handkerchief round inside his collar.
+Then he found his voice.
+
+"Really," he said, "this is awfully good of you. We do need rain--don't
+we?"
+
+Tish was on her feet by that time, but she could not think of anything
+to say.
+
+"I'm sorry if I startled you," said the young man. "I--I'm a bit
+startled myself."
+
+"There is nothing to make a fuss about!" said Hutchins crisply. "We are
+getting worms to go fishing."
+
+"I see," said the young man. "Quite natural, I'm sure. And where are you
+going fishing?"
+
+Hutchins surprised us all by rudely turning her back on him. Considering
+we were on his property and had turned his own hose on him, a little
+tact would have been better.
+
+Tish had found her voice by that time. "We broke a window in the
+tool-house," she said; "but I put fifty cents on the sill."
+
+"Thank you," said the young man.
+
+Hutchins wheeled at that and stared at him in the most disagreeable
+fashion; but he ignored her.
+
+"We are trespassing," said Tish; "but I hope you understand. We thought
+the family was away."
+
+"I just happened to be passing through," he explained. "I'm awfully
+attached to the place--for various reasons. Whenever I'm in town I spend
+my evenings wandering through the shrubbery and remembering--er--happier
+days."
+
+"I think the lamps are going out," said Hutchins sharply. "If we're to
+get back to town--"
+
+"Ah!" he broke in. "So you have come out from the city?"
+
+"Surely," said Hutchins to Tish, "it is unnecessary to give this
+gentleman any information about ourselves! We have done no damage--"
+
+"Except the window," he said.
+
+"We've paid for that," she said in a nasty tone; and to Tish: "How do we
+know this place is his? He's probably some newspaper man, and if you
+tell him who you are this whole thing will be in the morning paper, like
+the eggs."
+
+"I give you my word of honor," he said, "that I am nothing of the sort;
+in fact, if you will give me a little time I'd--I'd like to tell all
+about myself. I've got a lot to say that's highly interesting, if you'll
+only listen."
+
+Hutchins, however, only gave him a cold glance of suspicion and put the
+pails in the car. Then she got in and sat down.
+
+"I take it," he said to her, "that you decline either to give or to
+receive any information."
+
+"Absolutely!"
+
+He sighed then, Aggie declares.
+
+"Of course," he said, "though I haven't really the slightest curiosity,
+I could easily find out, you know. Your license plates--"
+
+"Are under the cushion I'm sitting on," said Hutchins, and started the
+engine.
+
+"Really, Hutchins," said Tish, "I don't see any reason for being so
+suspicious. I have always believed in human nature and seldom have I
+been disappointed. The young man has done nothing to justify rudeness.
+And since we are trespassing on his place--"
+
+"Huh!" was all Hutchins said.
+
+The young man sauntered over to the car, with his hands thrust into this
+coat pockets. He was nice-looking, especially then, when he was smiling.
+
+"Hutchins!" he said. "Well, that's a clue anyhow. It--it's an uncommon
+name. You didn't happen to notice a large 'No-Trespassing!' sign by the
+gate, did you?"
+
+Hutchins only looked ahead and ignored him. As Tish said afterward, we
+had a good many worms, anyhow; and, as the young man and Hutchins had
+clearly taken an awful dislike to each other at first sight, the best
+way to avoid trouble was to go home. So she got into the car. The young
+man helped her and took off his hat.
+
+"Come out any time you like," he said affably. "I'm not here at all in
+the daytime, and the grounds are really rather nice. Come out and get
+some roses. We've some pretty good ones--English importations. If you
+care to bring some children from the tenements out for a picnic, please
+feel free to do it. We're not selfish."
+
+Hutchins rudely started the car before he had finished; but he ignored
+her and waved a cordial farewell to the rest of us.
+
+"Bring as many as you like," he called. "Sunday is a good day. Ask
+Miss--Miss Hutchins to come out and bring some friends along."
+
+We drove back at the most furious rate. Tish was at last compelled to
+remonstrate with Hutchins.
+
+"Not only are we going too fast," she said, "but you were really rude to
+that nice young man."
+
+"I wish I had turned the hose on him and drowned him!" said Hutchins
+between her teeth.
+
+
+
+
+II
+
+
+Hutchins brought a newspaper to Tish the next morning at breakfast, and
+Tish afterwards said her expression was positively malevolent in such a
+young and pretty woman.
+
+The newspaper said that an attempt had been made to rob the Newcomb
+place the night before, but that the thieves had apparently secured
+nothing but a package of oatmeal and a tin sprinkling-can, which they
+had abandoned on the lawn. Some color, however, was lent to the fear
+that they had secured an amount of money, from the fact that a silver
+half-dollar had been found on the window sill of a tool-house. The
+Newcomb family was at its summer home on the Maine coast.
+
+"You see," Hutchins said to Tish, "that man didn't belong there at all.
+He was just impertinent and--laughing in his sleeve."
+
+Tish was really awfully put out, having planned to take the Sunday
+school there for a picnic. She was much pleased, however, at Hutchins's
+astuteness.
+
+"I shall take her along to Canada," she said to me. "The girl has
+instinct, which is better than reason. Her subconsciousness is unusually
+active."
+
+Looking back, as I must, and knowing now all that was in her small head
+while she whistled about the car, or all that was behind her smile,
+one wonders if women really should have the vote. So many of them are
+creatures of sex and guile. A word from her would have cleared up so
+much, and she never spoke it!
+
+Well, we spent most of July in getting ready to go. Charlie Sands said
+the mosquitoes and black flies would be gone by August, and we were in
+no hurry.
+
+We bought a good tent, with a diagram of how to put it up, some folding
+camp-beds, and a stove. The day we bought the tent we had rather a
+shock, for as we left the shop the suburban youth passed us. We ignored
+him completely, but he lifted his hat. Hutchins, who was waiting in
+Tish's car, saw him, too, and went quite white with fury.
+
+Shortly after that, Hannah came in one night and said that a man was
+watching Tish's windows. We thought it was imagination, and Tish gave
+her a dose of sulphur and molasses--her liver being sluggish.
+
+"Probably an Indian, I dare say," was Tish's caustic comment.
+
+In view of later developments, however, it is a pity we did not
+investigate Hannah's story; for Aggie, going home from Tish's late one
+night in Tish's car, had a similar experience, declaring that a small
+machine had followed them, driven by a heavy-set man with a mustache.
+She said, too, that Hutchins, swerving sharply, had struck the smaller
+machine a glancing blow and almost upset it.
+
+It was about the middle of July, I believe, that Tish received the
+following letter:--
+
+ _Madam_: Learning that you have decided to take a fishing-trip in
+ Canada, I venture to offer my services as guide, philosopher, and
+ friend. I know Canada thoroughly; can locate bass, as nearly as it
+ lies in a mortal so to do; can manage a motor launch; am thoroughly
+ at home in a canoe; can shoot, swim, and cook--the last indifferently
+ well; know the Indian mind and my own--and will carry water and chop
+ wood.
+
+ I do not drink, and such smoking as I do will, if I am engaged, be
+ done in the solitude of the woods.
+
+ I am young and of a cheerful disposition. My object is not money, but
+ only expenses paid and a chance to forget a recent and still poignant
+ grief. I hope you will see the necessity for such an addition to your
+ party, and allow me to subscribe myself, madam,
+
+ Your most obedient servant,
+
+ J. UPDIKE.
+
+
+Tish was much impressed; but Hutchins, in whose judgment she began to
+have the greatest confidence, opposed the idea.
+
+"I wouldn't think of it," she said briefly.
+
+"Why? It's a frank, straightforward letter."
+
+"He likes himself too much. And you should always be suspicious of
+anything that's offered too cheap."
+
+So the Updike application was refused. I have often wondered since what
+would have been the result had we accepted it!
+
+The worms were doing well, though Tish found that Hannah neglected them,
+and was compelled to feed them herself. On the day before we started, we
+packed them carefully in ice and moss, and fed them. That was the day
+the European war was declared.
+
+"Canada is at war," Tish telephoned. "The papers say the whole country
+is full of spies, blowing up bridges and railroads."
+
+"We can still go to the seashore," I said. "The bead things will do for
+the missionary box to Africa."
+
+"Seashore nothing!" Tish retorted. "We're going, of course,--just as we
+planned. We'll keep our eyes open; that's all. I'm not for one side or
+the other, but a spy's a spy."
+
+Later that evening she called again to say there were rumors that the
+Canadian forests were bristling with German wireless outfits.
+
+"I've a notion to write J. Updike, Lizzie, and find out whether he knows
+anything about wireless telegraphy," she said, "only there's so little
+time. Perhaps I can find a book that gives the code."
+
+[This is only pertinent as showing Tish's state of mind. As a matter of
+fact, she did not write to Updike at all.]
+
+Well, we started at last, and I must say they let us over the border
+with a glance; but they asked us whether we had any firearms. Tish's
+trunk contained a shotgun and a revolver; but she had packed over the
+top her most intimate personal belongings, and they were not disturbed.
+
+"Have you any weapons?" asked the inspector.
+
+"Do we look like persons carrying weapons?" Tish demanded haughtily. And
+of course we did not. Still, there was an untruth of the spirit and none
+of us felt any too comfortable. Indeed, what followed may have been a
+punishment on us for deceit and conspiracy.
+
+Aggie had taken her cat along--because it was so fond of fish, she said.
+And, between Tish buying ice for the worms and Aggie getting milk for
+the cat, the journey was not monotonous; but on returning from one of
+her excursions to the baggage-car, Tish put a heavy hand on my shoulder.
+
+"That boy's on the train, Lizzie!" she said. "He had the impudence to
+ask me whether I still drive with the license plates under a cushion.
+English roses--importations!" said Tish, and sniffed. "You don't suppose
+he went into that tent shop and asked about us?"
+
+"He might," I retorted; "but, on the other hand, there's no reason why
+our going to Canada should keep the rest of the United States at home!"
+
+However, the thing did seem queer, somehow. Why had he told us things
+that were not so? Why had he been so anxious to know who we were? Why,
+had he asked us to take the Sunday-school picnic to a place that did not
+belong to him?
+
+"He may be going away to forget some trouble. You remember what he said
+about happier days," said Tish.
+
+"That was Updike's reason too," I relied. "Poignant grief!"
+
+For just a moment our eyes met. The same suspicion had occurred to us
+both. Well, we agreed to say nothing to Aggie or Hutchins, for fear of
+upsetting them, and the next hour or so was peaceful.
+
+Hutchins read and Aggie slept. Tish and I strung beads for the Indians,
+and watched the door into the next car. And, sure enough, about the
+middle of the afternoon he appeared and stared in at us. He watched us
+for quite a time, smoking a cigarette as he did so. Then he came in and
+bent down over Tish.
+
+"You didn't take the children out for the picnic, did you?" he said.
+
+"I did not!" Tish snapped.
+
+"I'm sorry. Never saw the place look so well!"
+
+"Look here," Tish said, putting down her beads; "what were you doing
+there that night anyhow? You don't belong to the family."
+
+He looked surprised and then grieved.
+
+"You've discovered that, have you?" he said. "I did, you know--word of
+honor! They've turned me off; but I love the old place still, and on
+summer nights I wander about it, recalling happier days."
+
+Hutchins closed her book with a snap, and he sighed.
+
+"I perceive that we are overheard," he said. "Some time I hope to tell
+you the whole story. It's extremely sad. I'll not spoil the beginning of
+your holiday with it."
+
+All the time he had been talking he held a piece of paper in his hand.
+When he left us Tish went back thoughtfully to her beads.
+
+"It just shows, Lizzie," she said, "how wrong we are to trust to
+appearances. That poor boy--"
+
+I had stooped into the aisle and was picking up the piece of paper which
+he had accidentally dropped as he passed Hutchins. I opened it and read
+aloud to Tish and Aggie, who had wakened:--
+
+"'Afraid you'll not get away with it! The red-haired man in the car
+behind is a plain-clothes man.'"
+
+Tish has a large fund of general knowledge, gained through Charlie
+Sands; so what Aggie and I failed to understand she interpreted at once.
+
+"A plain-clothes man," she explained, "is a detective dressed as a
+gentleman. It's as plain as pikestaff! The boy's received this warning
+and dropped it. He has done something he shouldn't and is escaping to
+Canada!"
+
+I do not believe, however, that we should have thought of his being a
+political spy but for the conductor of the train. He proved to be a very
+nice person, with eight children and a toupee; and he said that Canada
+was honeycombed with spies in the pay of the German Government.
+
+"They're sending wireless messages all the time, probably from remote
+places," he said. "And, of course, their play now is to blow up the
+transcontinental railroads. Of course the railroads have an army of
+detectives on the watch."
+
+"Good Heavens!" Aggie said, and turned pale.
+
+Well, our pleasure in the journey was ruined. Every time the whistle
+blew on the engine we quailed, and Tish wrote her will then and there on
+the back of an envelope. It was while she was writing that the truth
+came to her.
+
+"That boy!" she said. "Don't you see it all? That note was a warning to
+him. He's a spy and the red-haired man is after him."
+
+None of us slept that night though Tish did a very courageous thing
+about eleven o'clock, when she was ready for bed. I went with her. We
+had put our dressing-gowns over our nightrobes, and we went back to the
+car containing the spy.
+
+He had not retired, but was sitting alone, staring ahead moodily. The
+red-haired man was getting ready for bed, just opposite. Tish spoke
+loudly, so the detective should hear.
+
+"I have come back," Tish said, "to say that we know everything. A word
+to the wise, Mister Happier Days! Don't try any of your tricks!"
+
+He sat, with his mouth quite open, and stared at us: but the red-haired
+man pretended to hear nothing and took off his other shoe.
+
+None of us slept at all except Hutchins. Though we had told her nothing,
+she seemed inherently to distrust the spy. When, on arriving at the town
+where we were to take the boat, he offered to help her off with Aggie's
+cat basket, which she was carrying, she snubbed him.
+
+"I can do it myself," she said coldly; "and if you know when you're well
+off you'll go back to where you came from. Something might happen to you
+here in the wilderness."
+
+"I wish it would," he replied in quite a tragic manner.
+
+[As Tish said then, a man is probably often forced by circumstances into
+hateful situations. No spy can really want to be a spy with every brick
+wall suggesting, as it must, a firing-squad.]
+
+Well, to make a long story short, we took the little steamer that goes
+up the river three times a week to take groceries and mail to the
+logging-camps, and the spy and the red-haired detective went along. The
+spy seemed to have quite a lot of luggage, but the detective had only a
+suitcase.
+
+Tish, watching the detective, said his expression grew more and more
+anxious as we proceeded up the river. Cottages gave place to
+logging-camps and these to rocky islands, with no sign of life; still,
+the spy stayed on the steamer, and so, of course, did the detective.
+
+Tish went down and examined the luggage. She reported that the spy was
+traveling under the name of McDonald and that the detective's suitcase
+was unmarked. Mr. McDonald had some boxes and a green canoe. The
+detective had nothing at all. There were no other passengers.
+
+We let Aggie's cat out on the boat and he caught a mouse almost
+immediately, and laid it in the most touching manner at the detective's
+feet; but he was in a very bad humor and flung it over the rail. Shortly
+after that he asked Tish whether she intended to go to the Arctic
+Circle.
+
+"I don't know that that's any concern of yours," Tish said. "You're not
+after me, you know."
+
+He looked startled and muttered something into his mustache.
+
+"It's perfectly clear what's wrong with him," Tish said. "He's got to
+stick to Mr. McDonald, and he hasn't got a tent in that suitcase, or
+even a blanket. I don't suppose he knows where his next meal's coming
+from."
+
+She was probably right, for I saw the crew of the boat packing a box or
+two of crackers and an old comfort into a box; and Aggie overheard the
+detective say to the captain that if he would sell him some fishhooks he
+would not starve anyhow.
+
+Tish found an island that suited her about three o'clock that afternoon,
+and we disembarked. Mr. McDonald insisted on helping the crew with our
+stuff, which they piled on a large flat rock; but the detective stood on
+the upper deck and scowled down at us. Tish suggested that he was a
+woman-hater.
+
+"They know so many lawbreaking women," she said, "it's quite natural."
+
+Having landed us, the boat went across to another island and deposited
+Mr. McDonald and the green canoe. Tish, who had talked about a lodge in
+some vast wilderness, complained at that; but when the detective got off
+on a little tongue of the mainland, in sight of both islands, she said
+the place was getting crowded and she had a notion to go farther.
+
+The first thing she did was to sit on a box and open a map. The Canadian
+Pacific was only a few miles away through the woods!
+
+Hutchins proved herself a treasure. She could work all round the three
+of us; she opened boxes and a can of beans for supper with the same
+hatchet, and had tea made and the beans heated while Tish was selecting
+a site for the tent.
+
+But--and I remembered this later--she watched the river at intervals,
+with her cheeks like roses from the exertion. She was really a pretty
+girl--only, when no one was looking, her mouth that day had a way of
+setting itself firmly, and she frowned at the water.
+
+We, Hutchins and I, set up the stove against a large rock, and when the
+teakettle started to boil it gave the river front a homey look. Sitting
+on my folding-chair beside the stove, with a cup of tea in my hand and
+a plate of beans on a doily on a packing-box beside me, I was entirely
+comfortable. Through the glasses I could see the red-haired man on
+the other shore sitting on a rock, with his head in his hands; but Mr.
+McDonald had clearly located on the other side of his island and was
+not in sight.
+
+Aggie and Tish were putting up the tent, and Hutchins was feeding the
+tea grounds to the worms, which had traveled comfortably, when I saw a
+canoe coming up the river. I called to Tish about it.
+
+"An Indian!" she said calmly. "Get the beads, Aggie; and put my shotgun
+on that rock, where he can see it." She stood and watched him.
+"Primitive man, every inch of him!" she went on. "Notice his uncovered
+head. Notice the freedom, almost the savagery, of the way he uses that
+paddle. I wish he would sing. You remember, in Hiawatha, how they sing
+as they paddle along?"
+
+She got the beads and went to the water's edge; but the Indian stooped
+just then and, picking up a Panama hat, put it on his head.
+
+"I have called," he said, "to see whether I can interest you in a set of
+books I am selling. I shall detain you only a moment. Sixty-three steel
+engravings by well-known artists; best hand-made paper; and the work
+itself is of high educational value."
+
+Tish suddenly put the beads behind her back and said we did not expect
+to have any time to read. We had come into the wilderness to rest our
+minds.
+
+"You are wrong, I fear," said the Indian. "Personally I find that I can
+read better in the wilds than anywhere else. Great thoughts in great
+surroundings! I take Nietzsche with me when I go fishing."
+
+Tish had the wretched beads behind her all the time; and, to make
+conversation, more than anything else, she asked about venison. He
+shrugged his shoulders. J. Fenimore Cooper had not prepared us for an
+Indian who shrugged his shoulders.
+
+"We Indians are allowed to kill deer," he said; "but I fear you are
+prohibited. I am not even permitted to sell it."
+
+"I should think," said Tish sharply, "that, since we are miles from a
+game warden, you could safely sell us a steak or two."
+
+He gazed at her disapprovingly. "I should not care to break the law,
+madam," he said.
+
+Then he picked up his paddle and took himself and his scruples and his
+hand-made paper and his sixty-three steel engravings down the river.
+
+"Primitive man!" I said to Tish, from my chair. "Notice the freedom,
+almost the savagery, with which he swings that paddle."
+
+We had brought a volume of Cooper along, not so much to read as to
+remind us how to address the Indians. Tish said nothing, but she got the
+book and flung it far out into the river.
+
+There were a number of small annoyances the first day or two. Hutchins
+was having trouble with the motor launch, which the steamer had towed up
+the day we came, and which she called the "Mebbe." And another civilized
+Indian, with a gold watch and a cigarette case, had rented us a leaky
+canoe for a dollar a day.
+
+[We patched the leak with chewing gum, which Aggie always carried for
+indigestion; and it did fairly well, so long as the gum lasted.]
+
+Then, on the second night, there was a little wind, and the tent
+collapsed on us, the ridgepole taking Aggie across the chest. It was
+that same night, I think, when Aggie's cat found a porcupine in the
+woods, and came in looking like a pincushion.
+
+What with chopping firewood for the stove, and carrying water, and
+bailing out the canoe, and with the motor boat giving one gasp and then
+dying for every hundred times somebody turned over the engine, we had no
+time to fish for two days.
+
+The police agent fished all day from a rock, for, of course, he had
+no boat; but he seemed to catch nothing. At times we saw him digging
+frantically, as though for worms. What he dug with I do not know; but,
+of course, he got no worms. Tish said if he had been more civil she
+would have taken something to him and a can of worms; but he had been
+rude, especially to Aggie's cat, and probably the boat would bring him
+things.
+
+What with getting settled and everything, we had not much time to think
+about the spy. It was on the third day, I believe, that he brought his
+green canoe to the open water in front of us and anchored there, just
+beyond earshot.
+
+He put out a line and opened a book; and from that time on he was a part
+of the landscape every day from 10 A.M. to 4 P.M. At noon he would eat
+some sort of a lunch, reading as he ate.
+
+He apparently never looked toward us, but he was always there. It was
+the most extraordinary thing. At first we thought he had found a
+remarkable fishing-place; but he seemed to catch very few fish. It was
+Tish, I think, who found the best explanation.
+
+"He's providing himself with an alibi," she stated. "How can he be a spy
+when we see him all day long? Don't you see how clever it is?"
+
+It was the more annoying because we had arranged a small cove for
+soap-and-water bathing, hanging up a rod for bath-towels and suspending
+a soap-dish and a sponge-holder from an overhanging branch. The cove was
+well shielded by brush and rocks from the island, but naturally was open
+to the river.
+
+It was directly opposite this cove that Mr. McDonald took up his
+position.
+
+This compelled us to bathe in the early morning, while the water was
+still cold, and resulted in causing Aggie a most uncomfortable half-hour
+on the fourth morning of our stay.
+
+She was the last one in the pool, and Tish absent-mindedly took her
+bathrobe and slippers back to the camp when she went. Tish went out
+in the canoe shortly after. She was learning to use one, with a life
+preserver on--Tish, of course, not the canoe. And Mr. McDonald arriving
+soon after, Aggie was compelled to sit in the water for two hours and
+twenty minutes. When Hutchins found her she was quite blue.
+
+This was the only disagreement we had all summer: Aggie's refusing to
+speak to Tish that entire day. She said Mr. McDonald had seen her head
+and thought it was some sort of swimming animal, and had shot at her.
+
+Mr. McDonald said afterward he knew her all the time, and was uncertain
+whether she was taking a cure for something or was trying to commit
+suicide. He said he spent a wretched morning. At five o'clock that
+evening we began to hear a curious tapping noise from the spy's island.
+It would last for a time, stop, and go on.
+
+Hutchins said it was woodpeckers; but Tish looked at me significantly.
+
+"Wireless!" she said. "What did I tell you?"
+
+That decided her next move, for that evening she put some tea and canned
+corn and a rubber blanket into the canoe; and in fear and trembling I
+went with her.
+
+"It's going to rain, Lizzie," she said, "and after all, that detective
+may be surly; but he's doing his duty by his country. It's just as
+heroic to follow a spy up here, and starve to death watching him, as it
+is to storm a trench--and less showy. And I've something to tell him."
+
+The canoe tilted just then, and only by heroic effort, were we able to
+calm it.
+
+"Then why not go comfortably in the motor boat?"
+
+Tish stopped, her paddle in the air. "Because I can't make that dratted
+engine go," she said, "and because I believe Hutchins would drown us all
+before she'd take any help to him. It's my belief that she's known him
+somewhere. I've seen her sit on a rock and look across at him with
+murder in her eyes."
+
+A little wind had come up, and the wretched canoe was leaking, the
+chewing gum having come out. Tish was paddling; so I was compelled to
+sit over the aperture, thus preventing water from coming in. Despite my
+best efforts, however, about three inches seeped in and washed about me.
+It was quite uncomfortable.
+
+The red-haired man was asleep when we landed. He had hung the comfort
+over a branch, like a tent, and built a fire at the end of it. He had
+his overcoat on, buttoned to the chin, and his head was on his
+suit-case. He sat up and looked at us, blinking.
+
+"We've brought you some tea and some canned corn," Tish said; "and a
+rubber blanket. It's going to rain."
+
+He slid out of the tent, feet first, and got up; but when he tried to
+speak he sneezed. He had a terrible cold.
+
+"I might as well say at once," Tish went on, "that we know why you are
+here--"
+
+"The deuce you do!" he said hoarsely.
+
+"We do not particularly care about you, especially since the way you
+acted to a friendly and innocent cat--one can always judge a man by the
+way he treats dumb animals; but we sympathize with your errand. We'll
+even help if we can."
+
+"Then the--the person in question has confided in you?"
+
+"Not at all," said Tish loftily. "I hope we can put two and two
+together. Have you got a revolver?"
+
+He looked startled at that. "I have one," he said; "but I guess I'll not
+need it. The first night or two a skunk hung round; two, in fact--mother
+and child--but I think they're gone."
+
+"Would you like some fish?"
+
+"My God, no!"
+
+This is a truthful narrative. That is exactly what he said.
+
+"I'll tell you what I do need, ladies," he went on: "If you've got
+a spare suit of underwear over there, I could use it. It'd stretch,
+probably. And I'd like a pen and some ink. I must have lost my fountain
+pen out of my pocket stooping over the bank to wash my face."
+
+"Do you know the wireless code?" Tish asked suddenly.
+
+"Wireless?"
+
+"I have every reason to believe," she said impressively, "that one of
+the great trees on that island conceals a wireless outfit."
+
+"I see!" He edged back a little from us both.
+
+"I should think," Tish said, eyeing him, "that a knowledge of the
+wireless code would be essential to you in your occupation."
+
+"We--we get a smattering of all sorts of things," he said; but he was
+uneasy--you could see that with half an eye.
+
+He accompanied us down to the canoe; but once, when Tish turned
+suddenly, he ducked back as though he had been struck and changed color.
+He thanked us for the tea and corn, and said he wished we had a spare
+razor--but, of course, he supposed not. Then:--
+
+"I suppose the--the person in question will stay as long as you do?" he
+asked, rather nervously.
+
+"It looks like it," said Tish grimly. "I've no intention of being driven
+away, if that's what you mean. We'll stay as long as the fishing's
+good."
+
+He groaned under his breath. "The whole d--d river is full of fish," he
+said. "They crawled up the bank last night and ate all the crackers I'd
+saved for to-day. Oh, I'll pay somebody out for this, all right! Good
+gracious, ladies, your boat's full of water!"
+
+"It has a hole in it," Tish replied and upturned it to empty it.
+
+When he saw the hole his eyes stuck out. "You can't go out in that leaky
+canoe! It's suicidal!"
+
+"Not at all," Tish assured him. "My friend here will sit on the leak.
+Get in quick, Lizzie. It's filling."
+
+The last we saw of the detective that night he was standing on the bank,
+staring after us. Afterward, when a good many things were cleared up, he
+said he decided that he'd been asleep and dreamed the whole thing--the
+wireless, and my sitting on the hole in the canoe, and the wind tossing
+it about, and everything--only, of course, there was the tea and the
+canned corn!
+
+We did our first fishing the next day. Hutchins had got the motor boat
+going, and I put over the spoon I had made from the feather duster.
+After going a mile or so slowly I felt a tug, and on drawing my line in
+I found I had captured a large fish. I wrapped the line about a part of
+the engine and Tish put the barrel hoop with the netting underneath it.
+The fish was really quite large--about four feet, I think--and it broke
+through the netting. I wished to hit it with the oar, but Hutchins said
+that might break the fin and free it. Unluckily we had not brought
+Tish's gun, or we might have shot it.
+
+At last we turned the boat round and went home, the fish swimming
+alongside, with its mouth open. And there Aggie, who is occasionally
+almost inspired, landed the fish by the simple expedient of getting out
+of the boat, taking the line up a bank and wrapping it round a tree. By
+all pulling together we landed the fish successfully. It was forty-nine
+inches by Tish's tape measure.
+
+Tish did not sleep well that night. She dreamed that the fish had a red
+mustache and was a spy in disguise. When she woke she declared there was
+somebody prowling round the tent.
+
+She got her shotgun and we all sat up in bed for an hour or so.
+
+Nothing happened, however, except that Aggie cried out that there was a
+small animal just inside the door of the tent. We could see it, too,
+though faintly. Tish turned the shotgun on it and it disappeared; but
+the next morning she found she had shot one of her shoes to pieces.
+
+
+
+
+III
+
+
+It was the day Tish began her diary that we discovered the red-haired
+man's signal. Tish was compelled to remain at home most of the day,
+breaking in another pair of shoes, and she amused herself by watching
+the river and writing down interesting things. She had read somewhere of
+the value of such records of impressions:--
+
+ 10 A.M. Gull on rock. Very pretty. Frightened away by the McDonald
+ person, who has just taken up his customary position. Is he reading
+ or watching this camp?
+
+ 10.22. Detective is breakfasting--through glasses, he is eating canned
+ corn. Aggie--pickerel, from bank.
+
+ 10.40. Aggie's cat, beside her, has caught a small fish. Aggie declares
+ that the cat stole one of her worms and held it in the water. I think
+ she is mistaken.
+
+ 11. Most extraordinary thing--Hutchins has asked permission to take pen
+ and ink across to the detective! Have consented.
+
+ 11.20. Hutchins is still across the river. If I did not know differently
+ I should say she and the detective are quarreling. He is whittling
+ something. Through glasses, she appears to stamp her foot.
+
+ 11.30. Aggie has captured a small sunfish. Hutchins is still across the
+ river. He seems to be appealing to her for something--possibly the
+ underwear. We have none to spare.
+
+ 11.40. Hutchins is an extraordinary girl. She hates men, evidently. She
+ has had some sort of quarrel with the detective and has returned flushed
+ with battle. Mr. McDonald called to her as she passed, but she ignored
+ him.
+
+ 12, noon. Really, there is something mysterious about all this. The
+ detective was evidently whittling a flagpole. He has erected it now,
+ with a red silk handkerchief at end. It hangs out over the water.
+ Aggie--bass, but under legal size.
+
+ 1.15 P.M. The flag puzzles Hutchins. She is covertly watching it. It is
+ evidently a signal--but to whom? Are the secret-service men closing in
+ on McDonald?
+
+ 1. Aggie--pike!
+
+ 2. On consulting map find unnamed lake only a few miles away. Shall
+ investigate to-morrow.
+
+ 3. Steamer has just gone. Detective now has canoe, blue in color. Also
+ food. He sent off his letter.
+
+ 4. Fed worms. Lizzie thinks they know me. How kindness is its own
+ reward! Mr. McDonald is drawing in his anchor, which is a large stone
+ fastened to a rope. Shall take bath.
+
+
+Tish's notes ended here. She did not take the bath after all, for Mr.
+McDonald made us a call that afternoon.
+
+He beached the green canoe and came up the rocks calmly and smilingly.
+Hutchins gave him a cold glance and went on with what she was doing,
+which was chopping a plank to cook the fish on. He bowed cheerfully to
+all of us and laid a string of fish on a rock.
+
+"I brought a little offering," he said, looking at Hutchins's back.
+"The fishing isn't what I expected but if the young lady with the hatchet
+will desist, so I can make myself heard, I've found a place where there
+are fish! This biggest fellow is three and a quarter pounds."
+
+Hutchins chopped harder than ever, and the plank flew up, striking her
+in the chest; but she refused all assistance, especially from Mr.
+McDonald, who was really concerned. He hurried to her and took the
+hatchet out of her hand, but in his excitement he was almost uncivil.
+
+"You obstinate little idiot!" he said. "You'll kill yourself yet."
+
+To my surprise, Hutchins, who had been entirely unemotional right along,
+suddenly burst into tears and went into the tent. Mr. McDonald took a
+hasty step or two after her, realizing, no doubt, that he had said more
+than he should to a complete stranger; but she closed the fly of the
+tent quite viciously and left him standing, with his arms folded,
+staring at it.
+
+It was at that moment he saw the large fish, hanging from a tree. He
+stood for a moment staring at it and we could see that he was quite
+surprised.
+
+"It is a fish, isn't it?" he said after a moment. "I--I thought for a
+moment it was painted on something."
+
+He sat down suddenly on one of our folding-chairs and looked at the
+fish, and then at each of us in turn.
+
+"You know," he said, "I didn't think there were such fish! I--you
+mustn't mind my surprise." He wiped his forehead with his handkerchief.
+"Just kick those things I brought into the river, will you? I apologize
+for them."
+
+"Forty-nine inches," Tish said. "We expect to do better when we really
+get started. This evening we shall go after its mate, which is probably
+hanging round."
+
+"Its mate?" he said, rather dazed. "Oh, I see. Of course!"
+
+He still seemed to doubt his senses, for he went over and touched it
+with his finger. "Ladies," he said, "I'm not going after the--the mate.
+I couldn't land it if I did get it. I am going to retire from the
+game--except for food; but I wish, for the sake of my reason, you'd tell
+me what you caught it with."
+
+Well, you may heartily distrust a person; but that is no reason why you
+should not answer a simple question. So I showed him the thing I had
+made--and he did not believe me!
+
+"You're perfectly right," he said. "Every game has its secrets. I had no
+business to ask. But you haven't caught me with that feather-duster
+thing any more than you caught that fish with it. I don't mind your not
+telling me. That's your privilege. But isn't it rather rubbing it in to
+make fun of me?"
+
+"Nothing of the sort!" Aggie said angrily. "If you had caught it--"
+
+"My dear lady," he said, "I couldn't have caught it. The mere shock of
+getting such a bite would have sent me out of my boat in a swoon." He
+turned to Tish. "I have only one disappointment," he said, "that it
+wasn't one of _our_ worms that did the work."
+
+Tish said afterward she was positively sorry for him, he looked so
+crestfallen. So, when he started for his canoe she followed him.
+
+"Look here," she said; "you're young, and I don't want to see you get
+into trouble. Go home, young man! There are plenty of others to take
+your place."
+
+He looked rather startled. "That's it exactly," he said, after a moment.
+"As well as I can make out there are about a hundred. If you think," he
+said fiercely, raising his voice, "that I'm going to back out and let
+somebody else in, I'm not. And that's flat."
+
+"It's a life-and-death matter," said Tish.
+
+"You bet it's a life-and-death matter."
+
+"And--what about the--the red-headed man over there?"
+
+His reply amazed us all. "He's harmless," he said. "I don't like him,
+naturally; but I admire the way he holds on. He's making the best of a
+bad business."
+
+"Do you know why he's here?"
+
+He looked uneasy for once.
+
+"Well, I've got a theory," he replied; but, though his voice was calm,
+he changed color.
+
+"Then perhaps you'll tell me what that signal means?"
+
+Tish gave him the glasses and he saw the red flag. I have never seen a
+man look so unhappy.
+
+"Holy cats!" he said, and almost dropped the glasses. "Why, he--he must
+be expecting somebody!"
+
+"So I should imagine," Tish commented dryly. "He sent a letter by the
+boat to-day."
+
+"The h--l he did!" And then: "That's ridiculous! You're mistaken. As
+a--as a matter of fact, I went over there the other night and
+commandeered his fountain pen."
+
+So it had not fallen out of his pocket!
+
+"I'll be frank, ladies," he said. "It's my object just now to keep that
+chap from writing letters. It doesn't matter why, but it's vital."
+
+He was horribly cast down when we told him about Hutchins and the pen
+and ink.
+
+"So that's it!" he said gloomily. "And the flag's a signal, of course.
+Ladies, you have done it out of the kindness of your hearts, I know; but
+I think you have wrecked my life."
+
+He took a gloomy departure and left us all rather wrought up. Who were
+we, as Tish said, to imperil a fellow man? And another thing--if there
+was a reward on him, why should we give it to a red-haired detective,
+who was rude to harmless animals and ate canned corn for breakfast?
+
+With her customary acumen Tish solved the difficulty that very evening.
+
+"The simplest thing," she said, "of course, would be to go over
+during the night and take the flag away; but he may have more red
+handkerchiefs. Then, too, he seems to be a light sleeper, and it would
+be awkward to have him shoot at us."
+
+She sat in thought for quite a while. Hutchins was watching the sunset,
+and seemed depressed and silent. Tish lowered her voice.
+
+"There's no reason why we shouldn't have a red flag, too," she said. "It
+gives us an even chance to get in on whatever is about to happen. We can
+warn Mr. McDonald, for one thing, if any one comes here. Personally I
+think he is unjustly suspected."
+
+[But Tish was to change her mind very soon.]
+
+We made the flag that night, by lantern light, out of Tish's red silk
+petticoat. Hutchins was curious, I am sure; but we explained nothing.
+And we fastened it obliquely over the river, like the one on the other
+side.
+
+Tish's change of heart, which occurred the next morning, was due
+to a most unfortunate accident that happened to her at nine o'clock.
+Hutchins, who could swim like a duck, was teaching Tish to swim, and
+she was learning nicely. Tish had put a life-preserver on, with a
+clothes-line fastened to it, and Aggie was sitting on the bank holding
+the rope while she went through the various gestures.
+
+Having completed the lesson Hutchins went into the woods for red
+raspberries, leaving Tish still practicing in the water with Aggie
+holding the rope. Happening to sneeze, the line slipped out of her hand,
+and she had the agonizing experience of seeing Tish carried away by the
+current.
+
+I was washing some clothing in the river a few yards down the stream
+when Tish came floating past. I shall never forget her expression or my
+own sense of absolute helplessness.
+
+"Get the canoe," said Tish, "and follow. I'm heading for Island Eleven."
+
+[Illustration: "Get the canoe and follow. I'm heading for Island Eleven"]
+
+She was quite calm, though pale; but, in her anxiety to keep well above
+the water, she did what was almost a fatal thing--she pushed the
+life-preserver lower down round her body. And having shifted the
+floating center, so to speak, without warning her head disappeared and
+her feet rose in the air.
+
+For a time it looked as though she would drown in that position; but
+Tish rarely loses her presence of mind. She said she knew at once what
+was wrong. So, though somewhat handicapped by the position, she replaced
+the cork belt under her arms and emerged at last.
+
+Aggie had started back into the woods for Hutchins; but, with one thing
+and another, it was almost ten before they returned together. Tish by
+that time was only a dot on the horizon through the binocular, having
+missed Island Eleven, as she explained later, by the rope being caught
+on a submerged log, which deflected her course.
+
+We got into the motor boat and followed her, and, except for a most
+unjust sense of irritation that I had not drowned myself by following
+her in the canoe, she was unharmed. We got her into the motor boat and
+into a blanket, and Aggie gave her some blackberry cordial at once. It
+was some time before her teeth ceased chattering so she could speak.
+When she did it was to announce that she had made a discovery.
+
+"He's a spy, all right!" she said. "And that Indian is another. Neither
+of them saw me as I floated past. They were on Island Eleven. Mr.
+McDonald wrote something and gave it to the Indian. It wasn't a letter
+or he'd have sent it by the boat. He didn't even put it in an envelope,
+so far as I could see. It's probably in cipher."
+
+Well, we took her home, and she had a boiled egg at dinner.
+
+The rest of us had fish. It is one of Tish's theories that fish should
+only be captured for food, and that all fish caught must be eaten. I do
+not know when I have seen fish come as easy. Perhaps it was the worms,
+which had grown both long and fat, so that one was too much for a hook;
+and we cut them with scissors, like tape or ribbon. Aggie and I finally
+got so sick of fish that while Tish's head was turned we dropped in our
+lines without bait. But, even at that, Aggie, reeling in her line to go
+home, caught a three-pound bass through the gills and could not shake
+it off.
+
+We tried to persuade Tish to lie down that afternoon, but she refused.
+
+"I'm not sick," she said, "even if you two idiots did try to drown me.
+And I'm on the track of something. If that was a letter, why didn't he
+send it by the boat?"
+
+Just then her eye fell on the flagpole, and we followed her horrified
+gaze. The flag had been neatly cut away!
+
+Tish's eyes narrowed. She looked positively dangerous; and within five
+minutes she had cut another flag out of the back breadth of the
+petticoat and flung it defiantly in the air. Who had cut away the
+signal--McDonald or the detective? We had planned to investigate the
+nameless lake that afternoon, Tish being like Colonel Roosevelt in her
+thirst for information, as well as in the grim pugnacity that is her
+dominant characteristic; but at the last minute she decided not to go.
+
+"You and Aggie go, Lizzie," she said. "I've got something on hand."
+
+"Tish!" Aggie wailed. "You'll drown yourself or something."
+
+"Don't be a fool!" Tish snapped. "There's a portage, but you and Lizzie
+can carry the canoe across on your heads. I've seen pictures of it. It's
+easy. And keep your eyes open for a wireless outfit. There's one about,
+that's sure!"
+
+"Lots of good it will do to keep our eyes open," I said with some
+bitterness, "with our heads inside the canoe!"
+
+We finally started and Hutchins went with us. It was Hutchins, too, who
+voiced the way we all felt when we had crossed the river and were
+preparing for what she called the portage.
+
+"She wants to get us out of the way, Miss Lizzie," she said. "Can you
+imagine what mischief she's up to?"
+
+"That is not a polite way to speak of Miss Tish, Hutchins," I said
+coldly. Nevertheless, my heart sank.
+
+Hutchins and I carried the canoe. It was a hot day and there was no
+path. Aggie, who likes a cup of hot tea at five o'clock, had brought
+along a bottle filled with tea, and a small basket containing sugar and
+cups.
+
+Personally I never had less curiosity about a lake. As a matter of fact
+I wished there was no lake. Twice--being obliged, as it were, to walk
+blindly and the canoe being excessively heavy--I, who led the way, ran
+the front end of the thing against the trunk of a tree, and both
+Hutchins and I sat down violently, under the canoe as a result of the
+impact.
+
+To add to the discomfort of the situation Aggie declared that we were
+being followed by a bear, and at the same instant stepped into a swamp
+up to her knees. She became calm at once, with the calmness of despair.
+
+"Go and leave me, Lizzie!" she said. "He is just behind those bushes. I
+may sink before he gets me--that's one comfort."
+
+Hutchins found a log and, standing on it, tried to pull her up; but she
+seemed firmly fastened. Aggie went quite white; and, almost beside
+myself, I poured her a cup of hot tea, which she drank. I remember she
+murmured Mr. Wiggins's name, and immediately after she yelled that the
+bear was coming.
+
+It was, however, the detective who emerged from the bushes. He got Aggie
+out with one good heave, leaving both her shoes gone forever; and while
+she collapsed, whimpering, he folded his arms and stared at all of us
+angrily.
+
+"What sort of damnable idiocy is this?" he demanded in a most unpleasant
+tone.
+
+Aggie revived and sat upright.
+
+"That's our affair, isn't it?" said Hutchins curtly.
+
+"Not by a blamed sight!" was his astonishing reply.
+
+"The next time I am sinking in a morass, let me sink," Aggie said, with
+simple dignity.
+
+He did not speak another word, but gave each of us a glance of the most
+deadly contempt, and finished up with Hutchins.
+
+"What I don't understand," he said furiously, "is why you have to lend
+yourself to this senile idiocy. Because some old women choose to sink
+themselves in a swamp is no reason why you should commit suicide!"
+
+Aggie said afterward only the recollection that he had saved her life
+prevented her emptying the tea on him. I should hardly have known
+Hutchins.
+
+"Naturally," she said in a voice thick with fury, "you are in a position
+to insult these ladies, and you do. But I warn you, if you intend to
+keep on, this swamp is nothing. We like it here. We may stay for months.
+I hope you have your life insured."
+
+Perhaps we should have understood it all then. Of course Charlie Sands,
+for whom I am writing this, will by this time, with his keen mind,
+comprehend it all; but I assure you we suspected nothing.
+
+How simple, when you line it up: The country house and the garden hose;
+the detective, with no camp equipment; Mr. McDonald and the green
+canoe; the letter on the train; the red flag; the girl in the pink
+tam-o'-shanter--who has not yet appeared, but will shortly; Mr.
+McDonald's incriminating list--also not yet, but soon.
+
+How inevitably they led to what Charlie Sands has called our crime!
+
+The detective, who was evidently very strong, only glared at her. Then
+he swung the canoe up on his head and, turning about, started back the
+way we had come. Though Hutchins and Aggie were raging, I was resigned.
+My neck was stiff and my shoulders ached. We finished our tea in silence
+and then made our way back to the river.
+
+I have now reached Tish's adventure. It is not my intention in this
+record to defend Tish. She thought her conclusions were correct. Charlie
+Sands says she is like Shaw--she has got a crooked point of view, but
+she believes she is seeing straight. And, after a while, if you look her
+way long enough you get a sort of mental astigmatism.
+
+So I shall confess at once that, at the time, I saw nothing immoral in
+what she did that afternoon while we were having our adventure in the
+swamp.
+
+I was putting cloths wrung out of arnica and hot water on my neck when
+she came home, and Hutchins was baking biscuit--she was a marvelous
+cook, though Aggie, who washed the dishes, objected to the number of
+pans she used.
+
+Tish ignored both my neck and the biscuits, and, marching up the bank,
+got her shotgun from the tent and loaded it.
+
+"We may be attacked at any time," she said briefly; and, getting the
+binocular, she searched the river with a splendid sweeping glance. "At
+any time. Hutchins, take these glasses, please, and watch that we are
+not disturbed."
+
+"I'm baking biscuit, Miss Letitia."
+
+"Biscuit!" said Tish scornfully. "Biscuit in times like these?"
+
+She walked up to the camp stove and threw the oven door open; but,
+though I believe she had meant to fling them into the river, she changed
+her mind when she saw them.
+
+"Open a jar of honey, Hutchins," she said, and closed the oven; but
+her voice was abstracted. "You can watch the river from the stove,
+Hutchins," she went on. "Miss Aggie and Miss Lizzie and I must confer
+together."
+
+So we went into the tent, and Tish closed and fastened it.
+
+"Now," she said, "I've got the papers."
+
+"Papers?"
+
+"The ones Mr. McDonald gave that Indian this morning. I had an idea he'd
+still have them. You can't hurry an Indian. I waited in the bushes until
+he went in swimming. Then I went through his pockets."
+
+"Tish Carberry!" cried Aggie.
+
+"These are not times to be squeamish," Tish said loftily. "I'm neutral;
+of course; but Great Britain has had this war forced on her and I'm
+going to see that she has a fair show. I've ordered all my stockings
+from the same shop in London, for twenty years, and squarer people never
+lived. Look at these--how innocent they look, until one knows!"
+
+She produced two papers from inside her waist. I must confess that, at
+first glance, I saw nothing remarkable.
+
+"The first one looks," said Tish, "like a grocery order. It's meant to
+look like that. It's relieved my mind of one thing--McDonald's got no
+wireless or he wouldn't be sending cipher messages by an Indian."
+
+It was written on a page torn out of a pocket notebook and the page was
+ruled with an inch margin at the left. This was the document:--
+
+ 1 Dozen eggs.
+ 20 Yards fishing-line.
+ 1 pkg. Needles--anything to sew a button on.
+ 1 doz. A B C bass hooks.
+ 3 lbs. Meat--anything so it isn't fish.
+ 1 bot. Ink for fountain pen.
+ 3 Tins sardines.
+ 1 Extractor.
+
+
+Well, I could not make anything of it; but, of course, I have not Tish's
+mind. Aggie was almost as bad.
+
+"What's an extractor?" she asked.
+
+"Exactly!" said Tish. "What is an extractor? Is the fellow going to pull
+teeth? No! He needed an _e_; so he made up a word."
+
+She ran her finger down the first letters of the second column.
+"D-y-n-a-m-i-t-e!" she said triumphantly. "Didn't I tell you?"
+
+
+
+
+IV
+
+
+Well, there it was--staring at us. I felt positively chilled. He looked
+so young and agreeable, and, as Aggie said, he had such nice teeth. And
+to know him for what he was--it was tragic! But that was not all.
+
+"Add the numbers!" said Tish. "Thirty-one tons, perhaps, of dynamite!
+And that's only part," said Tish. "Here's the most damning thing of
+all--a note to his accomplice!"
+
+"Damning" is here used in the sense of condemnatory. We are none of us
+addicted to profanity.
+
+We read the other paper, which had been in a sealed envelope, but
+without superscription. It is before me as I write, and I am copying it
+exactly:--
+
+ I shall have to see you. I'm going crazy! Don't you realize that this
+ is a matter of life and death to me? Come to Island Eleven to-night,
+ won't you? And give me a chance to talk, anyhow. Something has got to
+ be done and done soon. I'm desperate!
+
+
+Aggie sneezed three times in sheer excitement; for anyone can see how
+absolutely incriminating the letter was. It was not signed, but it was
+in the same writing as the list.
+
+Tish, who knows something about everything, said the writing denoted an
+unscrupulous and violent nature.
+
+"The _y_ is especially vicious," she said. "I wouldn't trust a man who
+made a _y_ like that to carry a sick child to the doctor!"
+
+The thing, of course, was to decide at once what measures to take. The
+boat would not come again for two days, and to send a letter by it to
+the town marshal or sheriff, or whatever the official is in Canada who
+takes charge of spies, would be another loss of time.
+
+"Just one thing," said Tish. "I'll plan this out and find some way to
+deal with the wretch; but I wouldn't say anything to Hutchins. She's a
+nice little thing, though she is a fool about a motor boat. There's no
+use in scaring her."
+
+For some reason or other, however, Hutchins was out of spirits that
+night.
+
+"I hope you're not sick, Hutchins?" said Tish.
+
+"No, indeed, Miss Tish."
+
+"You're not eating your fish."
+
+"I'm sick of fish," she said calmly. "I've eaten so much fish that when
+I see a hook I have a mad desire to go and hang myself on it."
+
+"Fish," said Tish grimly, "is good for the brain. I do not care to
+boast, but never has my mind been so clear as it is to-night."
+
+Now certainly, though Tish's tone was severe, there was nothing in it to
+hurt the girl; but she got up from the cracker box on which she was
+sitting, with her eyes filled with tears.
+
+"Don't mind me. I'm a silly fool," she said; and went down to the river
+and stood looking out over it.
+
+It quite spoiled our evening. Aggie made her a hot lemonade and, I
+believe, talked to her about Mr. Wiggins, and how, when he was living,
+she had had fits of weeping without apparent cause. But if the girl was
+in love, as we surmised, she said nothing about it. She insisted that it
+was too much fish and nervous strain about the Mebbe.
+
+"I never know," she said, "when we start out whether we're going to get
+back or be marooned and starve to death on some island."
+
+Tish said afterward that her subconscious self must have taken the word
+"marooned" and played with it; for in ten minutes or so her plan popped
+into her head.
+
+"'Full-panoplied from the head of Jove,' Lizzie," she said. "Really, it
+is not necessary to think if one only has faith. The supermind does it
+all without effort. I do not dislike the young man; but I must do my
+duty."
+
+Tish's plan was simplicity itself. We were to steal his canoe.
+
+"Then we'll have him," she finished. "The current's too strong there for
+him to swim to the mainland."
+
+"He might try it and drown," Aggie objected. "Spy or no spy, he's
+somebody's son."
+
+"War is no time to be chicken-hearted," Tish replied.
+
+I confess I ate little all that day. At noon Mr. McDonald came and
+borrowed two eggs from us.
+
+"I've sent over to a store across country, by my Indian guide,
+philosopher, and friend," he said, "for some things I needed; but I dare
+say he's reading Byron somewhere and has forgotten it."
+
+"Guide, philosopher, and friend!" I caught Tish's eye. McDonald had
+written the Updike letter! McDonald had meant to use our respectability
+to take him across the border!
+
+We gave him the eggs, but Tish said afterward she was not deceived for a
+moment.
+
+"The Indian has told him," she said, "and he's allaying our suspicions.
+Oh, he's clever enough! 'Know the Indian mind and my own!'" she quoted
+from the Updike letter. "'I know Canada thoroughly.' 'My object is not
+money.' I should think not!"
+
+Tish stole the green canoe that night. She put on the life preserver and
+we tied the end of the rope that Aggie had let slip to the canoe. The
+life-preserver made it difficult to paddle, Tish said, but she felt
+more secure. If she struck a rock and upset, at least she would not
+drown; and we could start after her at dawn with the Mebbe.
+
+"I'll be somewhere down the river," she said, "and safe enough, most
+likely, unless there are falls."
+
+Hutchins watched in a puzzled way, for Tish did not leave until dusk.
+
+"You'd better let me follow you with the launch, Miss Tish," she said.
+"Just remember that if the canoe sinks you're tied to it."
+
+"I'm on serious business to-night, Hutchins," Tish said ominously. "You
+are young, and I refuse to trouble your young mind; but your ears are
+sharp. If you hear any shooting, get the boat and follow me."
+
+The mention of shooting made me very nervous. We watched Tish as long as
+we could see her; then we returned to the tent, and Aggie and I
+crocheted by the hanging lantern. Two hours went by. At eleven o'clock
+Tish had not returned and Hutchins was in the motor boat, getting it
+ready to start.
+
+"I like courage, Miss Lizzie," she said to me; "but this thing of
+elderly women, with some sort of bug, starting out at night in canoes is
+too strong for me. Either she's going to stay in at night or I'm going
+home."
+
+"Elderly nothing!" I said, with some spirit. "She is in the prime of
+life. Please remember, Hutchins, that you are speaking of your employer.
+Miss Tish has no bug, as you call it."
+
+"Oh, she's rational enough," Hutchins retorted: "but she is a woman of
+one idea and that sort of person is dangerous."
+
+I was breathless at her audacity.
+
+"Come now, Miss Lizzie," she said, "how can I help when I don't know
+what is being done? I've done my best up here to keep you comfortable
+and restrain Miss Tish's recklessness; but I ought to know something."
+
+She was right; and, Tish or no Tish, then and there I told her. She was
+more than astonished. She sat in the motor boat, with a lantern at her
+feet, and listened.
+
+"I see," she said slowly. "So the--so Mr. McDonald is a spy and has sent
+for dynamite to destroy the railroad! And--and the red-haired man is a
+detective! How do you know he is a detective?"
+
+I told her then about the note we had picked up from beside her in the
+train, and because she was so much interested she really seemed quite
+thrilled. I brought the cipher grocery list and the other note down to
+her.
+
+"It's quite convincing, isn't it?" she said. "And--and exciting! I don't
+know when I've been so excited."
+
+She really was. Her cheeks were flushed. She looked exceedingly pretty.
+
+"The thing to do," she said, "is to teach him a lesson. He's young. He
+mayn't always have had to stoop to such--such criminality. If we can
+scare him thoroughly, it might do him a lot of good."
+
+I said I was afraid Tish took a more serious view of things and would
+notify the authorities. And at that moment there came two or three
+shots--then silence.
+
+I shall never forget the ride after Tish and how we felt when we failed
+to find her; for there was no sign of her. The wind had come up, and,
+what with seeing Tish tied to that wretched canoe and sinking with it or
+shot through the head and lying dead in the bottom of it, we were about
+crazy. As we passed Island Eleven we could see the spy's camp-fire and
+his tent, but no living person.
+
+At four in the morning we gave up and started back, heavy-hearted.
+What, therefore, was our surprise to find Tish sitting by the fire in
+her bathrobe, with a cup of tea in her lap and her feet in a foot-tub of
+hot water! Considering all we had gone through and that we had obeyed
+orders exactly, she was distinctly unjust. Indeed, at first she quite
+refused to speak to any of us.
+
+"I do think, Tish," Aggie said as she stood shivering by the fire, "that
+you might at least explain where you have been. We have been going up
+and down the river for hours, burying you over and over."
+
+Tish took a sip of tea, but said nothing.
+
+"You said," I reminded her, "that if there was shooting, we were to
+start after you at once. When we heard the shots, we went, of course."
+
+Tish leaned over and, taking the teakettle from the fire, poured more
+water into the foot-tub. Then at last she turned to speak.
+
+"Bring some absorbent cotton and some bandages, Hutchins," she said. "I
+am bleeding from a hundred wounds. As for you"--she turned fiercely on
+Aggie and me--"the least you could have done was to be here when I
+returned, exhausted, injured, and weary; but, of course, you were
+gallivanting round the lake in an upholstered motor boat."
+
+Here she poured more water into the foot-tub and made it much too hot.
+This thawed her rather, and she explained what was wrong. She was
+bruised, scratched to the knees, and with a bump the size of an egg on
+her forehead, where she had run into a tree.
+
+The whole story was very exciting. It seems she got the green canoe
+without any difficulty, the spy being sound asleep in his tent; but
+about that time the wind came up and Tish said she could not make an
+inch of progress toward our camp.
+
+The chewing gum with which we had repaired our canoe came out at that
+time and the boat began to fill, Tish being unable to sit over the leak
+and paddle at the same time. So, at last, she gave up and made for the
+mainland.
+
+"The shooting," Tish said with difficulty, "was by men from the Indian
+camp firing at me. I landed below the camp, and was making my way as
+best I could through the woods when they heard me moving. I believe they
+thought it was a bear."
+
+I think Tish was more afraid of the Indians, in spite of their
+sixty-three steel engravings and the rest of it, than she pretended,
+though she said she would have made herself known, but at that moment
+she fell over a fallen tree and for fifteen minutes was unable to speak
+a word. When at last she rose the excitement was over and they had gone
+back to their camp.
+
+"Anyhow," she finished, "the green canoe is hidden a couple of miles
+down the river, and I guess Mr. McDonald is safe for a time. Lizzie, you
+can take a bath to-morrow safely."
+
+Tish sat up most of the rest of the night composing a letter to the
+authorities of the town, telling them of Mr. McDonald and enclosing
+careful copies of the incriminating documents she had found.
+
+During the following morning the river was very quiet. Through the
+binocular we were able to see Mr. McDonald standing on the shore of his
+island and looking intently in our direction, but naturally we paid no
+attention to him.
+
+The red-haired man went in swimming that day and necessitated our
+retiring to the tent for an hour and a half; but at noon Aggie's
+naturally soft heart began to assert itself.
+
+"Spy or no spy," she said to Tish, "we ought to feed him."
+
+"Huh!" was Tish's rejoinder. "There is no sense is wasting good food on
+a man whose hours are numbered."
+
+We were surprised, however, to find that Hutchins, who had detested Mr.
+McDonald, was rather on Aggie's side.
+
+"The fact that he has but a few more hours," she said to Tish, "is an
+excellent reason for making those hours as little wretched as possible."
+
+It was really due to Hutchins, therefore, that Mr. McDonald had a
+luncheon. The problem of how to get it to him was a troublesome one, but
+Tish solved it with her customary sagacity.
+
+"We can make a raft," she said, "a small one, large enough to hold a
+tray. By stopping the launch some yards above the island we can float
+his luncheon to him quite safely."
+
+That was the method we ultimately pursued and it worked most
+satisfactorily.
+
+Hutchins baked hot biscuits; and, by putting a cover over the pan, we
+were enabled to get them to him before they cooled.
+
+We prepared a really appetizing luncheon of hot biscuits, broiled ham,
+marmalade, and tea, adding, at Aggie's instructions, a jar of preserved
+peaches, which she herself had put up.
+
+Tish made the raft while we prepared the food, and at exactly half-past
+twelve o'clock we left the house. Mr. McDonald saw us coming and was
+waiting smilingly at the upper end of the island.
+
+"Great Scott!" he said. "I thought you were never going to hear me.
+Another hour and I'd have made a swim for it, though it's suicidal with
+this current. I'll show you where you can come in so you won't hit a
+rock."
+
+Hutchins had stopped the engine of the motor boat and we threw out the
+anchor at a safe distance from the shore.
+
+"We are not going to land," said Tish, "and I think you know perfectly
+well the reason why."
+
+"Oh, now," he protested; "surely you are going to land! I've had an
+awfully uncomfortable accident--my canoe's gone."
+
+"We know that," Tish said calmly. "As a matter of fact, we took it."
+
+Mr. McDonald sat down suddenly on a log at the water's edge and looked
+at us.
+
+"Oh!" he said.
+
+"You may not believe it," Tish said, "but we know everything--your
+dastardly plot, who the red-haired man is, and all the destruction and
+wretchedness you are about to cause."
+
+"Oh, I say!" he said feebly. "I wouldn't go as far as that. I'm--I'm
+not such a bad sort."
+
+"That depends on the point of view," said Tish grimly.
+
+Aggie touched her on the arm then and reminded her that the biscuits
+were getting cold; but Tish had a final word with him.
+
+"Your correspondence has fallen into my hands, young man," she said,
+"and will be turned over to the proper authorities."
+
+"It won't tell them anything they don't know," he said doggedly. "Look
+here, ladies: I am not ashamed of this thing. I--I am proud of it. I am
+perfectly willing to yell it out loud for everybody to hear. As a matter
+of fact, I think I will."
+
+Mr. McDonald stood up suddenly and threw his head back; but here
+Hutchins, who had been silent, spoke for the first time.
+
+"Don't be an idiot!" she said coldly. "We have something here for you to
+eat if you behave yourself."
+
+He seemed to see her then for the first time, for he favored her with a
+long stare.
+
+"Ah!" he said. "Then you are not entirely cold and heartless?"
+
+She made no reply to this, being busy in assisting Aggie to lower the
+raft over the side of the boat.
+
+"Broiled ham, tea, hot biscuits, and marmalade," said Aggie gently. "My
+poor fellow, we are doing what we consider our duty; but we want you to
+know that it is hard for us--very hard."
+
+When he saw our plan, Mr. McDonald's face fell; but he stepped out into
+the water up to his knees and caught the raft as it floated down.
+
+Before he said "Thank you" he lifted the cover of the pan and saw the
+hot biscuits underneath.
+
+"Really," he said, "it's very decent of you. I sent off a grocery order
+yesterday, but nothing has come."
+
+Tish had got Hutchins to start the engine by that time and we were
+moving away. He stood there, up to his knees in water, holding the tray
+and looking after us. He was really a pathetic figure, especially in
+view of the awful fate we felt was overtaking him.
+
+He called something after us. On account of the noise of the engine, we
+could not be certain, but we all heard it the same way.
+
+"Send for the whole d--d outfit!" was the way it sounded to us. "It
+won't make any difference to me."
+
+
+
+
+V
+
+
+The last thing I recall of Mr. McDonald that day is seeing him standing
+there in the water, holding the tray, with the teapot steaming under his
+nose, and gazing after us with an air of bewilderment that did not
+deceive us at all.
+
+As I look back, there is only one thing we might have noticed at the
+time. This was the fact that Hutchins, having started the engine, was
+sitting beside it on the floor of the boat and laughing in the cruelest
+possible manner. As I said to Aggie at the time: "A spy is a spy and
+entitled to punishment if discovered; but no young woman should laugh
+over so desperate a situation."
+
+I come now to the denouement of this exciting period. It had been Tish's
+theory that the red-haired man should not be taken into our confidence.
+If there was a reward for the capture of the spy, we ourselves intended
+to have it.
+
+The steamer was due the next day but one. Tish was in favor of not
+waiting, but of at once going in the motor boat to the town, some thirty
+miles away, and telling of our capture; but Hutchins claimed there was
+not sufficient gasoline for such an excursion. That afternoon we went in
+the motor launch to where Tish had hidden the green canoe and, with a
+hatchet, rendered it useless.
+
+The workings of the subconscious mind are marvelous. In the midst of
+chopping, Tish suddenly looked up.
+
+"Have you noticed," she said, "that the detective is always watching our
+camp?"
+
+"That's all he has to do," Aggie suggested.
+
+"Stuff and nonsense! Didn't he follow you into the swamp? Does Hutchins
+ever go out in the canoe that he doesn't go out also? I'll tell you what
+has happened: She's young and pretty, and he's fallen in love with her."
+
+I must say it sounded reasonable. He never bothered about the motor
+boat, but the instant she took the canoe and started out he was hovering
+somewhere near.
+
+"She's noticed it," Tish went on. "That's what she was quarreling about
+with him yesterday."
+
+"How are we to know," said Aggie, who was gathering up the scraps of the
+green canoe and building a fire under them--"how are we to know they are
+not old friends, meeting thus in the wilderness? Fate plays strange
+tricks, Tish. I lived in the same street with Mr. Wiggins for years, and
+never knew him until one day when my umbrella turned wrong side out in a
+gust of wind."
+
+"Fate fiddlesticks!" said Tish. "There's no such thing as fate in
+affairs of this sort. It's all instinct--the instinct of the race to
+continue itself."
+
+This Aggie regarded as indelicate and she was rather cool to Tish the
+balance of the day.
+
+Our prisoner spent most of the day at the end of the island toward us,
+sitting quietly, as we could see through the glasses. We watched
+carefully, fearing at any time to see the Indian paddling toward him.
+
+[Tish was undecided what to do in such an emergency, except to intercept
+him and explain, threatening him also with having attempted to carry the
+incriminating papers. As it happened, however, the entire camp had gone
+for a two-days' deer hunt, and before they returned the whole thing had
+come to its surprising end.]
+
+Late in the afternoon Tish put her theory of the red-haired man to the
+test.
+
+"Hutchins," she said, "Miss Lizzie and I will cook the dinner if you
+want to go in the canoe to Harvey's Bay for water-lilies."
+
+Hutchins at once said she did not care a rap for water-lilies; but,
+seeing a determined glint in Tish's eye, she added that she would go for
+frogs if Tish wanted her out of the way.
+
+"Don't talk like a child!" Tish retorted. "Who said I wanted you out of
+the way?"
+
+It is absolutely true that the moment Hutchins put her foot into the
+canoe the red-haired man put down his fishing-rod and rose. And she had
+not taken three strokes with the paddle before he was in the blue canoe.
+
+Hutchins saw him just then and scowled. The last we saw of her she was
+moving rapidly up the river and the detective was dropping slowly
+behind. They both disappeared finally into the bay and Tish drew a long
+breath.
+
+"Typical!" she said curtly. "He's sent here to watch a dangerous man and
+spends his time pursuing the young woman who hates the sight of him.
+When women achieve the suffrage they will put none but married men in
+positions of trust."
+
+Hutchins and the detective were still out of sight when supper-time
+came. The spy's supper weighed on us, and at last Tish attempted to
+start the motor launch. We had placed the supper and the small raft
+aboard, and Aggie was leaning over the edge untying the painter,--not a
+man, but a rope,--when unexpectedly the engine started at the first
+revolution of the wheel.
+
+It darted out to the length of the rope, where it was checked abruptly,
+the shock throwing Aggie entirely out and into the stream. Tish caught
+the knife from the supper tray to cut us loose, and while Tish cut I
+pulled Aggie in, wet as she was. The boat was straining and panting,
+and, on being released, it sprang forward like a dog unleashed.
+
+Aggie had swallowed a great deal of water and was most disagreeable; but
+the Mebbe was going remarkably well, and there seemed to be every
+prospect that we should get back to the camp in good order. Alas, for
+human hopes! Mr. McDonald was not very agreeable.
+
+"You know," he said as he waited for his supper to float within reach,
+"you needn't be so blamed radical about everything you do! If you object
+to my hanging round, why not just say so? If I'm too obnoxious I'll
+clear out."
+
+"Obnoxious is hardly the word," said Tish.
+
+"How long am I to be a prisoner?"
+
+"I shall send letters off by the first boat."
+
+He caught the raft just then and examined the supper with interest.
+
+"Of course things might be worse," he said; "but it's dirty treatment,
+anyhow. And it's darned humiliating. Somebody I know is having a good
+time at my expense. It's heartless! That's what it is--heartless!"
+
+Well, we left him, the engine starting nicely and Aggie being wrapped in
+a tarpaulin; but about a hundred yards above the island it began to slow
+down, and shortly afterward it stopped altogether. As the current caught
+us, we luckily threw out the anchor, for the engine refused to start
+again. It was then we saw the other canoes.
+
+The girl in the pink tam-o'-shanter was in the first one.
+
+They glanced at us curiously as they passed, and the P.T.S.--that is the
+way we grew to speak of the pink tam-o'-shanter--raised one hand in the
+air, which is a form of canoe greeting, probably less upsetting to the
+equilibrium than a vigorous waving of the arm.
+
+It was just then, I believe, that they saw our camp and headed for it.
+The rest of what happened is most amazing. They stopped at our landing
+and unloaded their canoes. Though twilight was falling, we could see
+them distinctly. And what we saw was that they calmly took possession
+of the camp.
+
+"Good gracious!" Tish cried. "The girls have gone into the tent! And
+somebody's working at the stove. The impertinence!"
+
+Our situation was acutely painful. We could do nothing but watch. We
+called, but our voices failed to reach them. And Aggie took a chill,
+partly cold and partly fury. We sat there while they ate the entire
+supper!
+
+They were having a very good time. Now and then somebody would go into
+the tent and bring something out, and there would be shrieks of
+laughter.
+
+[We learned afterward that part of the amusement was caused by Aggie's
+false front, which one of the wretches put on as a beard.]
+
+It was while thus distracted that Aggie suddenly screamed, and a moment
+later Mr. McDonald climbed over the side and into the boat, dripping.
+
+"Don't be alarmed!" he said. "I'll go back and be a prisoner again just
+as soon as I've fired the engine. I couldn't bear to think of the lady
+who fell in sitting here indefinitely and taking cold." He was examining
+the engine while he spoke. "Have visitors, I see," he observed, as
+calmly as though he were not dripping all over the place.
+
+"Intruders, not visitors!" Tish said angrily. "I never saw them before."
+
+"Rather pretty, the one with the pink cap. May I examine the gasoline
+supply?" There was no gasoline. He shrugged his shoulders. "I'm afraid
+no amount of mechanical genius I intended to offer you will start her,"
+he said; "but the young lady--Hutchins is her name, I believe?--will
+see you here and come after you, of course."
+
+Well, there was no denying that, spy or no spy, his presence was a
+comfort. He offered to swim back to the island and be a prisoner again,
+but Tish said magnanimously that there was no hurry. On Aggie's offering
+half of her tarpaulin against the wind, which had risen, he accepted.
+
+"Your Miss Hutchins is reckless, isn't she?" he said when he was
+comfortably settled. "She's a strong swimmer; but a canoe is uncertain
+at the best."
+
+"She's in no danger," said Tish. "She has a devoted admirer watching out
+for her."
+
+"The deuce she has!" His voice was quite interested. "Why, who on
+earth--"
+
+"Your detective," said Aggie softly. "He's quite mad about her. The way
+he follows her and the way he looks at her--it's thrilling!"
+
+Mr. McDonald said nothing for quite a while. The canoe party had
+evidently eaten everything they could find, and somebody had brought out
+a banjo and was playing.
+
+Tish, unable to vent her anger, suddenly turned on Mr. McDonald. "If you
+think," she said, "that the grocery list fooled us, it didn't!"
+
+"Grocery list?"
+
+"That's what I said."
+
+"How did you get my grocery list?"
+
+So she told him, and how she had deciphered it, and how the word
+"dynamite" had only confirmed her early suspicions.
+
+His only comment was to say, "Good Heavens!" in a smothered voice.
+
+"It was the extractor that made me suspicious," she finished. "What were
+you going to extract? Teeth?"
+
+"And so, when my Indian was swimming, you went through his things! It's
+the most astounding thing I ever--My dear lady, an extractor is used to
+get the hooks out of fish. It was no cipher, I assure you. I needed an
+extractor and I ordered it. The cipher you speak of is only a remarkable
+coincidence."
+
+"Huh!" said Tish. "And the paper you dropped in the train--was that a
+coincidence?"
+
+"That's not my secret," he said, and turned sulky at once.
+
+"Don't tell me," Tish said triumphantly, "that any young man comes here
+absolutely alone without a purpose!"
+
+"I had a purpose, all right; but it was not to blow up a railroad
+train."
+
+Apparently he thought he had said too much, for he relapsed into silence
+after that, with an occasional muttering.
+
+It was eight o'clock when Hutchins's canoe came into sight. She was
+paddling easily, but the detective was far behind and moving slowly.
+
+She saw the camp with its uninvited guests, and then she saw us. The
+detective, however, showed no curiosity; and we could see that he made
+for his landing and stumbled exhaustedly up the bank. Hutchins drew up
+beside us. "He'll not try that again, I think," she said in her crisp
+voice. "He's out of training. He panted like a motor launch. Who are our
+visitors?"
+
+Here her eyes fell on Mr. McDonald and her face set in the dusk.
+
+"You'll have to go back and get some gasoline, Hutchins."
+
+"What made you start out without looking?"
+
+"And send the vandals away. If they wait until I arrive, I'll be likely
+to do them some harm. I have never been so outraged."
+
+"Let me go for gasoline in the canoe," said Mr. McDonald. He leaned over
+the thwart and addressed Hutchins. "You're worn out," he said. "I
+promise to come back and be a perfectly well-behaved prisoner again."
+
+"Thanks, no."
+
+"I'm wet. The exercise will warm me."
+
+"Is it possible," she said in a withering tone that was lost on us at
+the time, "that you brought no dumb-bells with you?"
+
+If we had had any doubts they should have been settled then; but we
+never suspected. It is incredible, looking back.
+
+The dusk was falling and I am not certain of what followed. It was,
+however, something like this: Mr. McDonald muttered something angrily
+and made a motion to get into the canoe. Hutchins replied that she would
+not have help from him if she died for it. The next thing we knew she
+was in the launch and the canoe was floating off on the current. Aggie
+squealed; and Mr. McDonald, instead of swimming after the thing, merely
+folded his arms and looked at it.
+
+"You know," he said to Hutchins, "you have so unpleasant a disposition
+that somebody we both know of is better off than he thinks he is!"
+
+Tish's fury knew no bounds, for there we were marooned and two of us wet
+to the skin. I must say for Hutchins, however, that when she learned
+about Aggie she was bitterly repentant, and insisted on putting her own
+sweater on her. But there we were and there we should likely stay.
+
+It was quite dark by that time, and we sat in the launch, rocking
+gently. The canoeing party had lighted a large fire on the beach, using
+the driftwood we had so painfully accumulated.
+
+We sat in silence, except that Tish, who was watching our camp, said
+once bitterly that she was glad there were three beds in the tent. The
+girls of the canoeing party would be comfortable.
+
+After a time Tish turned on Mr. McDonald sharply. "Since you claim to be
+no spy," she said, "perhaps you will tell us what brings you alone to
+this place? Don't tell me it's fish--I've seen you reading, with a line
+out. You're no fisherman."
+
+He hesitated. "No," he admitted. "I'll be frank, Miss Carberry. I did
+not come to fish."
+
+"What brought you?"
+
+"Love," he said, in a low tone. "I don't expect you to believe me, but
+it's the honest truth."
+
+"Love!" Tish scoffed.
+
+"Perhaps I'd better tell you the story," he said. "It's long and--and
+rather sad."
+
+"Love stories," Hutchins put in coldly, "are terribly stupid, except to
+those concerned."
+
+"That," he retorted, "is because you have never been in love. You are
+young and--you will pardon the liberty?--attractive; but you are totally
+prosaic and unromantic."
+
+"Indeed!" she said, and relapsed into silence.
+
+"These other ladies," Mr. McDonald went on, "will understand the
+strangeness of my situation when I explain that the--the young lady I
+care for is very near; is, in fact, within sight."
+
+"Good gracious!" said Aggie. "Where?"
+
+"It is a long story, but it may help to while away the long night hours;
+for I dare say we are here for the night. Did any one happen to notice
+the young lady in the first canoe, in the pink tam-o'-shanter?"
+
+We said we had--all except Hutchins, who, of course, had not seen her.
+Mr. McDonald got a wet cigarette from his pocket and, finding a box of
+matches on the seat, made an attempt to dry it over the flames; so his
+story was told in the flickering light of one match after another.
+
+
+
+
+VI
+
+
+"I am," Mr. McDonald said, as the cigarette steamed, "the son of poor
+but honest parents. All my life I have been obliged to labor. You may
+say that my English is surprisingly pure, under such conditions. As a
+matter of fact, I educated myself at night, using a lantern in the top
+of my father's stable."
+
+"I thought you said he was poor," Hutchins put in nastily. "How did he
+have a stable?"
+
+"He kept a livery stable. Any points that are not clear I will explain
+afterward. Once the thread of a narrative is broken, it is difficult to
+resume, Miss Hutchins. Near us, in a large house, lived the lady of my
+heart."
+
+"The pink tam-o'-shanter girl!" said Aggie. "I begin to understand."
+
+"But," he added, "near us also lived a red-headed boy. She liked him
+very much, and even in the long-ago days I was fiercely jealous of him.
+It may surprise you to know that in those days I longed--fairly
+longed--for red hair and a red mustache."
+
+"I hate to interrupt," said Hutchins; "but did he have a mustache as a
+boy?"
+
+He ignored her. "We three grew up together. The girl is
+beautiful--you've probably noticed that--and amiable. The one thing I
+admire in a young woman is amiability. It would not, for instance, have
+occurred to her to isolate an entire party on the bosom of a northern
+and treacherous river out of pure temper."
+
+"To think," said Aggie softly, "that she is just over there by the
+camp-fire! Don't you suppose, if she loves you, she senses your
+nearness?"
+
+"That's it exactly," he replied in a gloomy voice, "if she loves me! But
+does she? In other words, has she come up the river to meet me or to
+meet my rival? She knows we are here. Both of us have written her. The
+presence of one or the other of us is the real reason for this excursion
+of hers. But again the question is--which?"
+
+Here the match he was holding under the cigarette burned his fingers and
+he flung it overboard with a violent gesture.
+
+"The detective, of course," said Tish. "I knew it from the beginning of
+your story."
+
+"The detective," he assented. "You see his very profession attracts.
+There's an element of romance in it. I myself have kept on with my
+father and now run the--er--livery stable. My business is a handicap
+from a romantic point of view.
+
+"I am aware," Mr. McDonald went on, "that it is not customary to speak
+so frankly of affairs of this sort; but I have two reasons. It hurts me
+to rest under unjust suspicion. I am no spy, ladies. And the second
+reason is even stronger. Consider my desperate position: In the morning
+my rival will see her; he will paddle his canoe to the great rock below
+your camp and sing his love song from the water. In the morning I shall
+sit here helpless--ill, possibly--and see all that I value in life slip
+out of my grasp. And all through no fault of my own! Things are so
+evenly balanced, so little will shift the weight of her favor, that
+frankly the first one to reach her will get her."
+
+I confess I was thrilled. And even Tish was touched; but she covered her
+emotion with hard common sense.
+
+"What's her name?" she demanded.
+
+"Considering my frankness I must withhold that. Why not simply refer to
+her as the pink tam-o'-shanter--or, better still and more briefly, the
+P.T.S.? That may stand for pink tam-o'-shanter, or the Person That
+Smiles,--she smiles a great deal,--or--or almost anything."
+
+"It also stands," said Hutchins, with a sniff, "for Pretty Tall Story."
+
+Tish considered her skepticism unworthy in one so young, and told her
+so; on which she relapsed into a sulky silence.
+
+In view of what we knew, the bonfire at our camp and the small figure
+across the river took on a new significance.
+
+As Aggie said, to think of the red-haired man sleeping calmly while his
+lady love was so near and his rival, so to speak, _hors de combat!_
+Shortly after finishing his story, Mr. McDonald went to the stern of the
+boat and lifted the anchor rope.
+
+"It is possible," he said, "that the current will carry us to my island
+with a little judicious management. Even though we miss it, we'll hardly
+be worse off than we are."
+
+It was surprising we had not thought of it before, for the plan
+succeeded admirably. By moving a few feet at a time and then anchoring,
+we made slow but safe progress, and at last touched shore. We got out,
+and Mr. McDonald built a large fire, near which we put Aggie to steam.
+His supper, which he had not had time to eat, he generously divided, and
+we heated the tea. Hutchins, however, refused to eat.
+
+Warmth and food restored Tish's mind to its usual keenness. I recall now
+the admiration in Mr. McDonald's eyes when she suddenly put down the
+sandwich she was eating and exclaimed:--
+
+"The flags, of course! He told her to watch for a red flag as she came
+up the river; so when the party saw ours they landed. Perhaps they still
+think it is his camp and that he is away overnight."
+
+"That's it, exactly," he said. "Think of the poor wretch's excitement
+when he saw your flag!"
+
+Still, on looking back, it seems curious that we overlooked the way the
+red-headed man had followed Hutchins about. True, men are polygamous
+animals, Tish says, and are quite capable of following one woman about
+while they are sincerely in love with somebody else. But, when you think
+of it, the detective had apparently followed Hutchins from the start,
+and had gone into the wilderness to be near her, with only a suitcase
+and a mackintosh coat; which looked like a mad infatuation.
+
+[Tish says she thought of this at the time, and that, from what she had
+seen of the P.T.S., Hutchins was much prettier. But she says she decided
+that men often love one quality in one girl and another in another; that
+he probably loved Hutchins's beauty and the amiability of the P.T.S.
+Also, she says, she reflected that the polygamy of the Far East is
+probably due to this tendency in the male more than to a preponderance
+of women.]
+
+Tish called me aside while Mr. McDonald was gathering firewood. "I'm a
+fool and a guilty woman, Lizzie," she said. "Because of an unjust
+suspicion I have possibly wrecked this poor boy's life."
+
+I tried to soothe her. "They might have been wretchedly unhappy
+together, Tish," I said; "and, anyhow, I doubt whether he is able to
+support a wife. There's nothing much in keeping a livery stable
+nowadays."
+
+"There's only one thing that still puzzles me," Tish observed: "granting
+that the grocery order was a grocery order, what about the note?"
+
+We might have followed this line of thought, and saved what occurred
+later, but that a new idea suddenly struck Tish. She is curious in that
+way; her mind works very rapidly at times, and because I cannot take her
+mental hurdles, so to speak, she is often impatient.
+
+"Lizzie," she said suddenly, "did you notice that when the anchor was
+lifted, we drifted directly to this island? Don't stare at me like that.
+Use your wits."
+
+When I failed instantly to understand, however, she turned abruptly and
+left me, disappearing in the shadows.
+
+For the next hour nothing happened. Tish was not in sight and Aggie
+slept by the fire. Hutchins sat with her chin cupped in her hands, and
+Mr. McDonald gathered driftwood.
+
+Hutchins only spoke once. "I'm awfully sorry about the canoe, Miss
+Lizzie," she said; "it was silly and--and selfish. I don't always act
+like a bad child. The truth is, I'm rather upset and nervous. I hate to
+be thwarted--I'm sorry I can't explain any further."
+
+I was magnanimous. "I'm sure, until to-night, you've been perfectly
+satisfactory," I said; "but it seems extraordinary that you should
+dislike men the way you do."
+
+She only eyed me searchingly.
+
+It is my evening custom to prepare for the night by taking my switch off
+and combing and braiding my hair; so, as we seemed to be settled for the
+night, I asked Mr. McDonald whether the camp afforded an extra comb. He
+brought out a traveling-case at once from the tent and opened it.
+
+"Here's a comb," he said. "I never use one. I'm sorry this is all I can
+supply."
+
+My eyes were glued to the case. It was an English traveling-case, with
+gold-mounted fittings. He saw me staring at it and changed color.
+
+"Nice bag, isn't it?" he said. "It was a gift, of course. The--the
+livery stable doesn't run much to this sort of thing."
+
+But the fine edge of suspicion had crept into my mind again.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Tish did not return to the fire for some time. Before she came back we
+were all thoroughly alarmed. The island was small, and a short search
+convinced us that she was not on it!
+
+We wakened Aggie and told her, and the situation was very painful. The
+launch was where we had left it. Mr. McDonald looked more and more
+uneasy.
+
+"My sane mind tells me she's perfectly safe," he said. "I don't know
+that I've ever met a person more able to take care of herself; but it's
+darned odd--that's all I can say."
+
+Just as he spoke a volley of shots sounded from up the river near our
+camp, two close together and then one; and somebody screamed.
+
+It was very dark. We could see lanterns flashing at our camp and
+somebody was yelling hoarsely. One lantern seemed to run up and down the
+beach in mad excitement, and then, out of the far-off din, Aggie, whose
+ears are sharp, suddenly heard the splash of a canoe paddle.
+
+I shall tell Tish's story of what happened as she told it to Charlie
+Sands two weeks or so later.
+
+"It is perfectly simple," she said, "and it's stupid to make such a fuss
+over it. Don't talk to me about breaking the law! The girl came; I
+didn't steal her."
+
+Charlie Sands, I remember, interrupted at that moment to remind her that
+she had shot a hole in the detective's canoe; but this only irritated
+her.
+
+"Certainly I did," she snapped; "but it's perfectly idiotic of him to
+say that it took off the heel of his shoe. In that stony country it's
+always easy to lose a heel."
+
+But to return to Tish's story:--
+
+"It occurred to me," she said, "that, if the launch had drifted to Mr.
+McDonald's island, the canoe might have done so too; so I took a look
+round. I'd been pretty much worried about having called the boy a spy
+when he wasn't, and it worried me to think that he couldn't get away
+from the place. I never liked the red-haired man. He was cruel to
+Aggie's cat--but we've told you that.
+
+"I knew that in the morning the detective would see the P.T.S., as we
+called her, and he could get over and propose before breakfast. But when
+I found the canoe--yes, I found it--I didn't intend to do anything more
+than steal the detective's boat."
+
+"Is that all?" said Charlie Sands sarcastically. "You disappoint me,
+Aunt Letitia! With all the chances you had--to burn his pitiful little
+tent, for instance, or steal his suitcase--"
+
+"But on my way," Tish went on with simple dignity, "it occurred to me
+that I could move things a step farther by taking the girl to Mr.
+McDonald and letting him have his chance right away. Things went well
+from the start, for she was standing alone, looking out over the river.
+It was dark, except for the starlight, and I didn't know it was she. I
+beached the canoe and she squealed a little when I spoke to her."
+
+"Just what," broke in Charlie Sands, "does one say under such
+circumstances? Sometime I may wish to abduct a young woman and it is
+well to be prepared."
+
+"I told her the young man she had expected was on Island Eleven and had
+sent me to get her. She was awfully excited. She said they'd seen his
+signal, but nothing of him. And when they'd found a number of feminine
+things round they all felt a little--well, you can understand. She went
+back to get a coat, and while she was gone I untied the canoes and
+pushed them out into the river. I'm thorough, and I wasn't going to have
+a lot of people interfering before we got things fixed."
+
+It was here, I think, that Charlie Sands gave a low moan and collapsed
+on the sofa. "Certainly!" he said in a stifled voice. "I believe in
+being thorough. And, of course, a few canoes more or less do not
+matter."
+
+"Later," Tish said, "I knew I'd been thoughtless about the canoes; but,
+of course, it was too late then."
+
+"And when was it that you assaulted the detective?"
+
+"He fired first," said Tish. "I never felt more peaceable in my life.
+It's absurd for him to say that he was watching our camp, as he had
+every night we'd been there. Who asked him to guard us? And the idea of
+his saying he thought we were Indians stealing things, and that he fired
+into the air! The bullets sang past me. I had hardly time to get my
+revolver out of my stocking."
+
+"And then?" asked Charlie Sands.
+
+"And then," said Tish, "we went calmly down the river to Island Eleven.
+We went rapidly, for at first the detective did not know I had shot a
+hole in his canoe, and he followed us. It stands to reason that if I'd
+shot his heel off he'd have known there was a hole in the boat. Luckily
+the girl was in the bottom of the canoe when she fainted or we might
+have been upset."
+
+It was at this point, I believe, that Charlie Sands got his hat and
+opened the door.
+
+"I find," he said, "that I cannot stand any more at present, Aunt Tish.
+I shall return when I am stronger."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+So I shall go back to my own narrative. Really my justification is
+almost complete. Any one reading to this point will realize the
+injustice of the things that have been said about us.
+
+We were despairing of Tish, as I have said, when we heard the shots and
+then the approach of a canoe. Then Tish hailed us.
+
+"Quick, somebody!" she said. "I have a cramp in my right leg."
+
+[The canoeing position, kneeling as one must, had been always very
+trying for her. She frequently developed cramps, which only a hot
+footbath relieved.]
+
+Mr. McDonald waded out into the water. Our beach fire illuminated the
+whole scene distinctly, and when he saw the P.T.S. huddled in the canoe
+he stopped as though he had been shot.
+
+"How interesting!" said Hutchins from the bank, in her cool voice.
+
+I remember yet Tish, stamping round on her cramped limb and smiling
+benevolently at all of us. The girl, however, looked startled and
+unhappy, and a little dizzy. Hutchins helped her to a fallen tree.
+
+"Where--where is he?" said the P.T.S.
+
+Tish stared at her. "Bless the girl!" she said. "Did you think I meant
+the other one?"
+
+"I--What other one?"
+
+Tish put her hand on Mr. McDonald's arm. "My dear girl," she said, "this
+young man adores you. He's all that a girl ought to want in the man she
+loves. I have done him a grave injustice and he has borne it nobly. Come
+now--let me put your hand in his and say you will marry him."
+
+"Marry him!" said the P.T.S. "Why, I never saw him in my life before!"
+
+We had been so occupied with this astounding scene that none of us had
+noticed the arrival of the detective. He limped rapidly up the
+bank--having lost his heel, as I have explained--and, dripping with
+water, confronted us. When a red-haired person is pale, he is very pale.
+And his teeth showed.
+
+He ignored all of us but the P.T.S., who turned and saw him, and went
+straight into his arms in the most unmaidenly fashion.
+
+"By Heaven," he said, "I thought that elderly lunatic had taken you off
+and killed you!"
+
+He kissed her quite frantically before all of us; and then, with one arm
+round her, he confronted Tish.
+
+"I'm through!" he said. "I'm done! There isn't a salary in the world
+that will make me stay within gunshot of you another day." He eyed her
+fiercely. "You are a dangerous woman, madam," he said. "I'm going to
+bring a charge against you for abduction and assault with intent to
+kill. And if there's any proof needed I'll show my canoe, full of water
+to the gunwale."
+
+Here he kissed the girl again.
+
+"You--you know her?" gasped Mr. McDonald, and dropped on a tree-trunk,
+as though he were too weak to stand.
+
+"It looks like it, doesn't it?"
+
+Here I happened to glance at Hutchins, and she was convulsed with mirth!
+Tish saw her, too, and glared at her; but she seemed to get worse. Then,
+without the slightest warning, she walked round the camp-fire and kissed
+Mr. McDonald solemnly on the top of his head.
+
+"I give it up!" she said. "Somebody will have to marry you and take care
+of you. I'd better be the person."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"But why was the detective watching Hutchins?" said Charlie Sands. "Was
+it because he had heard of my Aunt Letitia's reckless nature? I am still
+bewildered."
+
+"You remember the night we got the worms?"
+
+"I see. The detective was watching all of you because you stole the
+worms."
+
+"Stole nothing!" Tish snapped. "That's the girl's house. She's the Miss
+Newcomb you read about in the papers. Now do you understand?"
+
+"Certainly I do. She was a fugitive from justice because the cat found
+dynamite in the woods. Or--perhaps I'm a trifle confused, but--Now I
+have it! She had stolen a gold-mounted traveling-bag and given it to
+McDonald. Lucky chap! I was crazy about Hutchins myself. You might tip
+her the word that I'm badly off for a traveling-case myself. But what
+about the P.T.S.? How did she happen on the scene?"
+
+"She was engaged to the detective, and she was camping down the river.
+He had sent her word where he was. The red flag was to help her find
+him."
+
+Tish knows Charlie Sands, so she let him talk. Then:--
+
+"Mr. McDonald was too wealthy, Charlie," she said; "so when she wanted
+him to work and be useful, and he refused, she ran off and got a
+situation herself to teach him a lesson. She could drive a car. But her
+people heard about it, and that wretched detective was responsible for
+her safety. That's why he followed her about."
+
+"I should like to follow her about myself," said Charlie Sands. "Do you
+think she's unalterably decided to take McDonald, money and all? He's
+still an idler. Lend me your car, Aunt Tish. There's a theory there;
+and--who knows?"
+
+"He is going to work for six months before she marries him," Tish said.
+"He seems to like to work, now he has started."
+
+She rang the bell and Hannah came to the door.
+
+"Hannah," said Tish calmly, "call up the garage and tell McDonald to
+bring the car round. Mr. Sands is going out."
+
+
+
+
+MY COUNTRY TISH OF THEE--
+
+
+We had meant to go to Europe this last summer, and Tish would have gone
+anyhow, war or no war, if we had not switched her off onto something
+else. "Submarines fiddlesticks!" she said. "Give me a good life
+preserver, with a bottle of blackberry cordial fastened to it, and the
+sea has no terrors for me."
+
+She said the proper way to do, in case the ship was torpedoed, was to go
+up on an upper deck, and let the vessel sink under one.
+
+"Then without haste," she explained, "as the water rises about one,
+strike out calmly. The life-belt supports one, but swim gently for the
+exercise. It will prevent chilling. With a waterproof bag of crackers,
+and mild weather, one could go on comfortably for a day or two."
+
+I still remember the despairing face Aggie turned to me. It was December
+then, and very cold.
+
+However, she said nothing more until January. Early in that month
+Charlie Sands came to Tish's to Sunday dinner, and we were all there.
+The subject came up then.
+
+It was about the time Tish took up vegetarianism, I remember that,
+because the only way she could induce Charlie Sands to come to dinner
+was to promise to have two chops for him. Personally I am not a
+vegetarian. I am not and never will be. I took a firm stand except when
+at Tish's home. But Aggie followed Tish's lead, of course, and I believe
+lived up to it as far as possible, although it is quite true that,
+stopping in one day unexpectedly to secure a new crochet pattern, I
+smelled broiling steak. But Aggie explained that she merely intended to
+use the juice from a small portion, having had one of her weak spells,
+the balance to go to the janitor's dog.
+
+However, this is a digression.
+
+"Europe!" said Charlie Sands. "Forget it! What in the name of the
+gastric juice is this I'm eating?"
+
+It was a mixture of bran, raisins, and chopped nuts, as I recall it,
+moistened with water and pressed into a compact form. It was Tish's own
+invention. She called it "Bran-Nut," and was talking of making it in
+large quantities for sale.
+
+Charlie Sands gave it up with a feeble gesture. "I'm sorry, Aunt
+Letitia," he said at last; "I'm a strong man ordinarily, but by the time
+I've got it masticated I'm too weak to swallow it. If--if one could
+have a stream of water playing on it while working, it would facilitate
+things."
+
+"The Ostermaiers," said Aggie, "are going West."
+
+"Good for the Ostermaiers," said Charlie Sands. "Great idea. See America
+first. 'My Country Tish of Thee,' etc. Why don't you three try it?"
+
+Tish relinquished Europe slowly.
+
+"One would think," Charlie Sands said, "that you were a German being
+asked to give up Belgium."
+
+"What part of the West?" she demanded. "It's all civilized, isn't it?"
+
+"The Rocky Mountains," said Charlie Sands, "will never be civilized."
+
+Tish broke off a piece of Bran-Nut, and when she thought no one was
+looking poured a little tea over it. There was a gleam in her eye that
+Aggie and I have learned to know.
+
+"Mountains!" she said. "That ought to be good for Aggie's hay fever."
+
+"I'd rather live with hay fever," Aggie put in sharply, "than cure it by
+falling over a precipice."
+
+"You'll have to take a chance on that, of course," Charlie Sands said.
+"I'm not sure it will be safe, but I am sure it will be interesting."
+
+Oh, he knew Tish well enough. Tell her a thing was dangerous, and no
+power could restrain her.
+
+I do not mind saying that I was not keen about the thing. I had my
+fortune told years ago, and the palmist said that if a certain line had
+had a bend in it I should have been hanged. But since it did not, to be
+careful of high places.
+
+"It's a sporting chance," said Charlie Sands, although I was prodding
+him under the table. "With some good horses and a bag of
+this--er--concentrated food, you would have the time of your young
+lives."
+
+This was figurative. We are all of us round fifty.
+
+"The--the Bran-Nut," he said, "would serve for both food and ammunition.
+I can see you riding along, now and then dropping a piece of it on the
+head of some unlucky mountain goat, and watching it topple over into
+eternity. I can see--"
+
+"Riding!" said Aggie. "Then I'm not going. I have never been on a horse
+and I never intend to be."
+
+"Don't be a fool," Tish snapped. "If you've never been on a horse, it's
+time and to spare you got on one."
+
+Hannah had been clearing the table with her lips shut tight. Hannah is
+an old and privileged servant and has a most unfortunate habit of
+speaking her mind. So now she stopped beside Tish.
+
+"You take my advice and go, Miss Tish," she said. "If you ride a horse
+round some and get an appetite, you'll go down on your knees and
+apologize to your Maker for the stuff we've been eating the last four
+weeks." She turned to Charlie Sands, and positively her chin was
+quivering. "I'm a healthy woman," she said, "and I work hard and need
+good nourishing food. When it's come to a point where I eat the cat's
+meat and let it go hungry," she said, "it's time either I lost my
+appetite or Miss Tish went away."
+
+Well, Tish dismissed Hannah haughtily from the room, and the
+conversation went on. None of us had been far West, although Tish has a
+sister-in-law in Toledo, Ohio. But owing to a quarrel over a pair of
+andirons that had been in the family for a time, she had never visited
+her.
+
+"You'll like it, all of you," Charlie Sands said as we waited for the
+baked apples. "Once get started with a good horse between your knees,
+and--"
+
+"I hope," Tish interrupted him, "that you do not think we are going to
+ride astride!"
+
+"I'm darned sure of it."
+
+That was Charlie Sands's way of talking. He does not mean to be rude,
+and he is really a young man of splendid character. But, as Tish says,
+contact with the world, although it has not spoiled him, has roughened
+his speech.
+
+"You see," he explained, "there are places out there where the horses
+have to climb like goats. It's only fair to them to distribute your
+weight equally. A side saddle is likely to turn and drop you a mile or
+two down a crack."
+
+Aggie went rather white and sneezed violently.
+
+But Tish looked thoughtful. "It sounds reasonable," she said. "I've felt
+for a long time that I'd be glad to discard skirts. Skirts," she said,
+"are badges of servitude, survivals of the harem, reminders of a time
+when nothing was expected of women but parasitic leisure."
+
+I tried to tell her that she was wrong about the skirts. Miss
+MacGillicuddy, our missionary in India, had certainly said that the
+women in harems wore bloomers. But Tish left the room abruptly,
+returning shortly after with a volume of the encyclopædia, and looked up
+the Rocky Mountains.
+
+I remember it said that the highest ranges were, as compared with the
+size and shape of the earth, only as the corrugations on the skin of an
+orange. Either the man who wrote that had never seen an orange or he had
+never seen the Rocky Mountains. Orange, indeed! If he had said the upper
+end of a pineapple it would have been more like it. I wish the man who
+wrote it would go to Glacier Park. I am not a vindictive woman, but I
+know one or two places where I would like to place him and make him
+swallow that orange. I'd like to see him on a horse, on the brink of a
+cañon a mile deep, and have his horse reach over the edge for a stray
+plant or two, or standing in a cloud up to his waist, so that, as Aggie
+so plaintively observed, "The lower half of one is in a snowstorm while
+the upper part is getting sunburned."
+
+For we went. Oh, yes, we went. It is not the encyclopædia's fault that
+we came back. But now that we are home, and nothing wrong except a touch
+of lumbago that Tish got from sleeping on the ground, and, of course,
+Aggie's unfortunate experience with her teeth, I look back on our
+various adventures with pleasure. I even contemplate a return next year,
+although Aggie says she will die first. But even that is not to be taken
+as final. The last time I went to see her, she had bought a revolver
+from the janitor and was taking lessons in loading it.
+
+The Ostermaiers went also. Not with us, however. The congregation made
+up a purse for the purpose, and Tish and Aggie and I went further, and
+purchased a cigar-case for Mr. Ostermaier and a quantity of cigars.
+Smoking is the good man's only weakness.
+
+I must say, however, that it is absurd to hear Mrs. Ostermaier boasting
+of the trip. To hear her talk, one would think they had done the whole
+thing, instead of sitting in an automobile and looking up at the
+mountains. I shall never forget the day they were in a car passing along
+a road, and we crossed unexpectedly ahead of them and went on straight
+up the side of a mountain.
+
+Tish had a sombrero on the side of her head, and was resting herself in
+the saddle by having her right leg thrown negligently over the horse's
+neck. With the left foot she was kicking our pack-horse, a creature so
+scarred with brands that Tish had named her Jane, after a cousin of hers
+who had had so many operations that Tish says she is now entirely
+unfurnished.
+
+Mr. Ostermaier's face was terrible, and only two days ago Mrs.
+Ostermaier came over to ask about putting an extra width in the skirt to
+her last winter's suit. But it is my belief that she came to save Tish's
+soul, and nothing else.
+
+"I'm so glad wide skirts have come in," she said. "They're so modest,
+aren't they, Miss Tish?"
+
+"Not in a wind," Tish said, eying her coldly.
+
+"I do think, dear Miss Tish," she went on with her eyes down, "that
+to--to go about in riding-breeches before a young man is--well, it is
+hardly discreet, is it?"
+
+I saw Tish glancing about the room. She was pretty angry, and I knew
+perfectly well what she wanted. I put my knitting-bag over Charlie
+Sands's tobacco-pouch.
+
+Tish had learned to roll cigarettes out in Glacier Park. Not that she
+smoked them, of course, but she said she might as well know how. There
+was no knowing when it would come in handy. And when she wishes to calm
+herself she reaches instinctively for what Bill used to call, strangely,
+"the makings."
+
+"If," she said, her eye still roving,--"if it was any treat to a
+twenty-four-year-old cowpuncher to see three elderly women in
+riding-breeches, Mrs. Ostermaier,--and it's kind of you to think
+so,--why, I'm not selfish."
+
+Mrs. Ostermaier's face was terrible. She gathered up her skirt and rose.
+"I shall not tell Mr. Ostermaier what you have just said," she observed
+with her mouth set hard. "We owe you a great deal, especially the return
+of my earrings. But I must request, Miss Tish, that you do not voice
+such sentiments in the Sunday school."
+
+Tish watched her out. Then she sat down and rolled eleven cigarettes for
+Charlie Sands, one after the other. At last she spoke.
+
+"I'm not sure," she said tartly, "that if I had it to do over again I'd
+do it. That woman's not a Christian. I was thinking," she went on, "of
+giving them a part of the reward to go to Asbury Park with. But she'd
+have to wear blinders on the bathing-beach, so I'll not do it."
+
+However, I am ahead of my recital.
+
+For a few days Tish said nothing more, but one Sunday morning, walking
+home from church, she turned to me suddenly and said:--
+
+"Lizzie, you're fat."
+
+"I'm as the Lord made me," I replied with some spirit.
+
+"Fiddlesticks!" said Tish. "You're as your own sloth and overindulgence
+has made you. Don't blame the Good Man for it."
+
+Now, I am a peaceful woman, and Tish is as my own sister, and indeed
+even more so. But I was roused to anger by her speech.
+
+"I've been fleshy all my life," I said. "I'm no lazier than most, and
+I'm a dratted sight more agreeable than some I know, on account of
+having the ends of my nerves padded."
+
+But she switched to another subject in her characteristic manner.
+
+"Have you ever reflected, either of you," she observed, "that we know
+nothing of this great land of ours? That we sing of loving 'thy rocks
+and rills, thy woods and templed hills'--although the word 'templed'
+savors of paganism and does not belong in a national hymn? And that it
+is all balderdash?"
+
+Aggie took exception to this and said that she loved her native land,
+and had been south to Pinehurst and west to see her niece in
+Minneapolis, on account of the baby having been named for her.
+
+But Tish merely listened with a grim smile. "Travel from a car window,"
+she observed, "is no better than travel in a nickelodeon. I have done
+all of that I am going to. I intend to become acquainted with my native
+land, closely acquainted. State by State I shall wander over it,
+refreshing soul and body and using muscles too long unused."
+
+"Tish!" Aggie quavered. "You are not going on another walking-tour?"
+
+Only a year or two before Tish had read Stevenson's "Travels with a
+Donkey," and had been possessed to follow his example. I have elsewhere
+recorded the details of that terrible trip. Even I turned pale, I fear,
+and cast a nervous eye toward the table where Tish keeps her
+reading-matter.
+
+Tish is imaginative, and is always influenced by the latest book she has
+read. For instance, a volume on "Nursing at the Front" almost sent her
+across to France, although she cannot make a bed and never could, and
+turns pale at the sight of blood; and another time a book on flying
+machines sent her up into the air, mentally if not literally. I shall
+never forget the time she secured some literature on the Mormon Church,
+and the difficulty I had in smuggling it out under my coat.
+
+Tish did not refute the walking-tour at once, but fell into a deep
+reverie.
+
+It is not her custom to confide her plans to us until they are fully
+shaped and too far on to be interfered with, which accounts for our
+nervousness.
+
+On arriving at her apartment, however, we found a map laid out on the
+table and the Rocky Mountains marked with pins. We noticed that whenever
+she straightened from the table she grunted.
+
+"What we want," Tish said, "is isolation. No people. No crowds. No
+servants. If I don't get away from Hannah soon I'll murder her."
+
+"It wouldn't hurt to see somebody now and then, Tish," Aggie objected.
+
+"Nobody," Tish said firmly. "A good horse is companion enough." She
+forgot herself and straightened completely, and she groaned.
+
+"We might meet some desirable people, Tish," I put in firmly. "If we do,
+I don't intend to run like a rabbit."
+
+"Desirable people!" Tish scoffed. "In the Rocky Mountains! My dear
+Lizzie, every desperado in the country takes refuge in the Rockies. Of
+course, if you want to take up with that class--"
+
+Aggie sneezed and looked wretched. As for me, I made up my mind then and
+there that if Letitia Carberry was going to such a neighborhood, she was
+not going alone. I am not much with a revolver, but mighty handy with a
+pair of lungs.
+
+Well, Tish had it all worked out. "I've found the very place," she said.
+"In the first place, it's Government property. When our country puts
+aside a part of itself as a public domain we should show our
+appreciation. In the second place, it's wild. I'd as soon spend a
+vacation in Central Park near the Zoo as in the Yellowstone. In the
+third place, with an Indian reservation on one side and a national
+forest on the other, it's bound to be lonely. Any tourist," she said
+scornfully, "can go to the Yosemite and be photographed under a redwood
+tree."
+
+"Do the Indians stay on the reservation?" Aggie asked feebly.
+
+"Probably not," Tish observed coldly. "Once for all, Aggie--if you are
+going to run like a scared deer every time you see an Indian or a bear,
+I wish you would go to Asbury Park."
+
+She forgot herself then and sat down quickly, an action which was
+followed by an agonized expression.
+
+"Tish," I said sharply, "you have been riding a horse!
+
+"Only in a cinder ring," she replied with unwonted docility. "The
+teacher said I would be a trifle stiff."
+
+"How long did you ride?"
+
+"Not more than twenty minutes," she said. "The lesson was to be an hour,
+but somebody put a nickel in a mechanical piano, and the creature I was
+on started going sideways."
+
+Well, she had fallen off and had to be taken home in a taxicab. When
+Aggie heard it she simply took the pins out of the map and stuck them in
+Tish's cushion. Her mouth was set tight.
+
+"I didn't really fall," Tish said. "I sat down, and it was cinders, and
+not hard. It has made my neck stiff, that's all."
+
+"That's enough," said Aggie. "If I've got to seek pleasure by ramming my
+spinal column up into my skull and crowding my brains, I'll stay at
+home."
+
+"You can't fall out of a Western saddle," Tish protested rather
+bitterly. "And if I were you, Aggie, I wouldn't worry about crowding my
+brains."
+
+However, she probably regretted this speech, for she added more gently:
+"A high altitude will help your hay fever, Aggie."
+
+Aggie said with some bitterness that her hay fever did not need to be
+helped. That, as far as she could see, it was strong and flourishing. At
+that matters rested, except for a bit of conversation just before we
+left. Aggie had put on her sweater vest and her muffler and the jacket
+of her winter suit and was getting into her fur coat, when Tish said:
+"Soft as mush, both of you!"
+
+"If you think, Tish Carberry," I began, "that I--"
+
+"Apple dumplings!" said Tish. "Sofa pillows! Jellyfish! Not a muscle to
+divide between you!"
+
+I drew on my woolen tights angrily.
+
+"Elevators!" Tish went on scornfully. "Street cars and taxicabs! No
+wonder your bodies are mere masses of protoplasm, or cellulose, or
+whatever it is."
+
+"Since when," said Aggie, "have you been walking to develop yourself,
+Tish? I must say--"
+
+Here anger brought on one of her sneezing attacks, and she was unable to
+finish.
+
+Tish stood before us oracularly. "After next September," she said, "you
+will both scorn the sloth of civilization. You will move about for the
+joy of moving about. You will have cast off the shackles of the flesh
+and be born anew. That is, if a plan of mine goes through. Lizzie, you
+will lose fifty pounds!"
+
+Well, I didn't want to lose fifty pounds. After our summer in the Maine
+woods I had gone back to find that my new tailor-made coat, which had
+fitted me exactly, and being stiffened with haircloth kept its shape off
+and looked as if I myself were hanging to the hook, had caved in on me
+in several places. Just as I had gone to the expense of having it taken
+in I began to put on flesh again, and had to have it let out. Besides,
+no woman over forty should ever reduce, at least not violently. She
+wrinkles. My face that summer had fallen into accordion plaits, and I
+had the curious feeling of having enough skin for two.
+
+Aggie had suggested at that time that I have my cheeks filled out with
+paraffin, which I believe cakes and gives the appearance of youth. But
+Mrs. Ostermaier knew a woman who had done so, and being hit on one side
+by a snowball, the padding broke in half, one part moving up under her
+eye and the second lodging at the angle of her jaw. She tried lying on a
+hot-water bottle to melt the pieces and bring them together again, but
+they did not remain fixed, having developed a wandering habit and
+slipping unexpectedly now and then. Mrs. Ostermaier says it is painful
+to watch her holding them in place when she yawns.
+
+Strangely enough, however, a few weeks later Tish's enthusiasm for the
+West had apparently vanished. When several weeks went by and the atlas
+had disappeared from her table, and she had given up vegetarianism for
+Swedish movements, we felt that we were to have a quiet summer after
+all, and Aggie wrote to a hotel in Asbury Park about rooms for July and
+August.
+
+There was a real change in Tish. She stopped knitting abdominal bands
+for the soldiers in Europe, for one thing, although she had sent over
+almost a dozen very tasty ones. In the evenings, when we dropped in to
+chat with her, she said very little and invariably dozed in her chair.
+
+On one such occasion, Aggie having inadvertently stepped on the rocker
+of her chair while endeavoring by laying a hand on Tish's brow to
+discover if she was feverish, the chair tilted back and Tish wakened
+with a jerk.
+
+She immediately fell to groaning and clasped her hands to the small of
+her back, quite ignoring poor Aggie, whom the chair had caught in the
+epigastric region, and who was compelled for some time to struggle for
+breath.
+
+"Jumping Jehoshaphat!" said Tish in an angry tone. It is rare for Tish
+to use the name of a Biblical character in this way, but she was clearly
+suffering. "What in the world are you doing, Aggie?"
+
+"T-t-trying to breathe," poor Aggie replied.
+
+"Then I wish," Tish said coldly, "that you would make the effort some
+place else than on the rocker of my chair. You jarred me, and I am in no
+state to be jarred."
+
+But she refused to explain further, beyond saying, in reply to a
+question of mine, that she was not feverish and that she had not been
+asleep, having merely closed her eyes to rest them. Also she affirmed
+that she was not taking riding-lessons. We both noticed however, that
+she did not leave her chair during the time we were there, and that she
+was sitting on the sofa cushion I had made her for the previous
+Christmas, and on which I had embroidered the poet Moore's beautiful
+words: "Come, rest in this bosom."
+
+As Aggie was still feeling faint, I advised her to take a mouthful of
+blackberry cordial, which Tish keeps for emergencies in her bathroom
+closet. Immediately following her departure the calm of the evening was
+broken by a loud shriek.
+
+It appeared, on my rushing to the bathroom, while Tish sat heartlessly
+still, that Aggie, not seeing a glass, had placed the bottle to her lips
+and taken quite a large mouthful of liniment, which in color resembled
+the cordial. I found her sitting on the edge of the bathtub in a state
+of collapse.
+
+"I'm poisoned!" she groaned. "Oh, Lizzie, I am not fit to die!"
+
+I flew with the bottle to Tish, who was very calm and stealthily rubbing
+one of her ankles.
+
+"Do her good," Tish said. "Take some of the stiffness out of her liver,
+for one thing. But you might keep an eye on her. It's full of alcohol."
+
+"What's the antidote?" I asked, hearing Aggie's low groans.
+
+"The gold cure is the only thing I can think of at the moment," said
+Tish coldly, and started on the other ankle.
+
+I merely record this incident to show the change in Tish. Aggie was not
+seriously upset, although dizzy for an hour or so and very talkative,
+especially about Mr. Wiggins.
+
+Tish was changed. Her life, which mostly had been an open book to us,
+became filled with mystery. There were whole days when she was not to be
+located anywhere, and evenings, as I have stated, when she dozed in her
+chair.
+
+As usual when we are worried about Tish, we consulted her nephew,
+Charlie Sands. But like all members of the masculine sex he refused to
+be worried.
+
+"She'll be all right," he observed. "She takes these spells. But trust
+the old lady to come up smiling."
+
+"It's either Christian Science or osteopathy," Aggie said dolefully.
+"She's not herself. The fruit cake she sent me the other day tasted very
+queer, and Hannah thinks she put ointment in instead of butter."
+
+"Ointments!" observed Charlie thoughtfully. "And salves! By George, I
+wonder--I'll tell you," he said: "I'll keep an eye open for a few days.
+The symptoms sound like--But never mind. I'll let you know."
+
+We were compelled to be satisfied with this, but for several days we
+lingered in anxiety. During that painful interval nothing occurred to
+enlighten us, except one conversation with Tish.
+
+We had taken dinner with her, and she seemed to be all right again and
+more than usually active. She had given up the Bran-Nut after breaking
+a tooth on it, and was eating rare beef, which she had heard was
+digested in the spleen or some such place, thus resting the stomach for
+a time. She left us, however, immediately after the meal, and Hannah,
+her maid, tiptoed into the room.
+
+"I'm that nervous I could scream," she said. "Do you know what she's
+doing now?
+
+"No, Hannah," I said with bitter sarcasm. "Long ago I learned never to
+surmise what Miss Tish is doing."
+
+"She's in the bathroom, standing on one foot and waving the other in the
+air. She's been doing it," Hannah said, "for weeks. First one foot, then
+the other. And that ain't all."
+
+"You've been spying on Miss Tish," Aggie said. "Shame on you, Hannah!"
+
+"I have, Miss Aggie. Spy I have and spy I will, while there's breath in
+my body. Twenty years have I--Do you know what she does when she come
+home from these sneakin' trips of hers? She sits in a hot bath until the
+wonder is that her blood ain't turned to water. And after that she uses
+liniment. Her underclothes is that stained up with it that I'm ashamed
+to hang 'em out."
+
+Here Tish returned and, after a suspicious glance at Hannah, sat down.
+Aggie and I glanced at each other. She did not, as she had for some time
+past, line the chair with pillows, and there was an air about her almost
+of triumph.
+
+She did not, however, volunteer any explanation. Aggie and I were driven
+to speculation, in which we indulged on our way home, Aggie being my
+guest at the time, on account of her janitor's children having measles,
+and Aggie never having had them, although recalling a severe rash as a
+child, with other measly symptoms.
+
+"She has something in mind for next summer," said Aggie apprehensively,
+"and she is preparing her strength for it. Tish is forehanded if nothing
+else."
+
+"Well," I remarked with some bitterness, "if we are going along it might
+be well to prepare us too."
+
+"Something," Aggie continued, "that requires landing on one foot with
+the other in the air."
+
+"Don't drivel," said I. "She's not likely going into the Russian ballet.
+She's training her muscles, that's all."
+
+But the mystery was solved the following morning when Charlie Sands
+called me up.
+
+"I've got it, beloved aunt," he said.
+
+"Got what?" said I.
+
+"What the old lady is up to. She's a wonder, and no mistake. Only I
+think it was stingy of her not to let you and Aunt Aggie in."
+
+He asked me to get Aggie and meet him at the office as soon as possible,
+but he refused to explain further. And he continued to refuse until we
+had arrived at our destination, a large brick building in the center of
+the city.
+
+"Now," he said, "take a long breath and go in. And mind--no excitement."
+
+We went in. There was a band playing and people circling at a mile a
+minute. In the center there was a cleared place, and Tish was there on
+ice skates. An instructor had her by the arm, and as we looked she waved
+him off, gave herself a shove forward with one foot, and then, with her
+arms waving, she made a double curve, first on one foot and then on the
+other.
+
+"The outside edge, by George!" said Charlie Sands. "The old sport!"
+
+Unluckily at that moment Tish saw us, and sat down violently on the ice.
+And a quite nice-looking young man fell over her and lay stunned for
+several seconds. We rushed round the arena, expecting to see them both
+carried out, but Tish was uninjured, and came skating toward us with her
+hands in her pockets. It was the young man who had to be assisted out.
+
+"Well," she said, fetching up against the railing with a bang, "of
+course you had to come before I was ready for you! In a week I'll really
+be skating."
+
+We said nothing, but looked at her, and I am afraid our glances showed
+disapproval, for she straightened her hat with a jerk.
+
+"Well?" she said. "You're not tongue-tied all of a sudden, are you?
+Can't a woman take a little exercise without her family and friends
+coming snooping round and acting as if she'd broken the Ten
+Commandments?"
+
+"Breaking the Ten Commandments!" I said witheringly. "Breaking a leg
+more likely. If you could have seen yourself, Tish Carberry, sprawled on
+that ice at your age, and both your arteries and your bones brittle, as
+the specialist told you,--and I heard him myself,--you'd take those
+things off your feet and go home and hide your head."
+
+"I wish I had your breath, Lizzie," Tish said. "I'd be a submarine
+diver."
+
+Saying which she skated off, and did not come near us again. A young
+gentleman went up to her and asked her to skate, though I doubt if she
+had ever seen him before. And as we left the building in disapproval
+they were doing fancy turns in the middle of the place, and a crowd was
+gathering round them.
+
+Owing to considerable feeling being roused by the foregoing incident,
+we did not see much of Tish for a week. If a middle-aged woman wants to
+make a spectacle of herself, both Aggie and I felt that she needed to be
+taught a lesson. Besides, we knew Tish. With her, to conquer a thing is
+to lose interest.
+
+On the anniversary of the day Aggie became engaged to Mr. Wiggins, Tish
+asked us both to dinner, and we buried the hatchet, or rather the
+skates. It was when dessert came that we realized how everything that
+had occurred had been preparation for the summer, and that we were not
+going to Asbury Park, after all.
+
+"It's like this," said Tish. "Hannah, go out and close the door, and
+don't stand listening. I have figured it all out," she said, when Hannah
+had slammed out. "The muscles used in skating are the ones used in
+mountain-climbing. Besides, there may be times when a pair of skates
+would be handy going over the glaciers. It's not called Glacier Park for
+nothing, I dare say. When we went into the Maine woods we went
+unprepared. This time I intend to be ready for any emergency."
+
+But we gave her little encouragement. We would go along, and told her
+so. But further than that I refused to prepare. I would not skate, and
+said so.
+
+"Very well, Lizzie," she said. "Don't blame me if you find yourself
+unable to cope with mountain hardships. I merely felt this way: if each
+of us could do one thing well it might be helpful. There's always snow,
+and if Aggie would learn to use snowshoes it might be valuable."
+
+"Where could I practice?" Aggie demanded.
+
+But Tish went on, ignoring Aggie's sarcastic tone. "And if you, Lizzie,
+would learn to throw a lasso, or lariat,--I believe both terms are
+correct,--it would be a great advantage, especially in case of meeting
+ferocious animals. The park laws will not allow us to kill them, and it
+would be mighty convenient, Lizzie. Not to mention that it would be an
+accomplishment few women possess."
+
+I refused to make the attempt, although Tish sent for the clothesline,
+and with the aid of the encyclopædia made a loop in the end of it.
+Finally she became interested herself, and when we left rather
+downhearted at ten o'clock she had caught the rocking-chair three times
+and broken the clock.
+
+Aggie and I prepared with little enthusiasm, I must confess. We had as
+much love for the rocks and rills of our great country as Tish, but, as
+Aggie observed, there were rocks and rocks, and one could love them
+without climbing up them or falling off them.
+
+The only comfort we had was that Charlie Sands said that we should ride
+ponies, and not horses. My niece's children have a pony which is very
+gentle and not much larger than a dog, which comes up on the porch for
+lumps of sugar. We were lured to a false sense of security, I must say.
+
+As far as we could see, Tish was making few preparations for the trip.
+She said we could get everything we needed at the park entrance, and
+that the riding was merely sitting in a saddle and letting the pony do
+the rest. But on the 21st of June, the anniversary of the day Aggie was
+to have been married, we went out to decorate Mr. Wiggins's last
+resting-place, and coming out of the cemetery we met Tish.
+
+She was on a horse, astride!
+
+She was not alone. A gentleman was riding beside her, and he had her
+horse by a long leather strap.
+
+She pretended not to see us, and Aggie unfortunately waved her red
+parasol at her. The result was most amazing. The beast she was on jerked
+itself free in an instant, and with the same movement, apparently,
+leaped the hedge beside the road. One moment there was Tish, in a derby
+hat and breeches, and the next moment there was only the gentleman, with
+his mouth open.
+
+Aggie collapsed, moaning, in the road, and beyond the hedge we could
+hear the horse leaping tombstones in the cemetery.
+
+"Oh, Tish!" Aggie wailed.
+
+I broke my way through the hedge to find what was left of her, while the
+riding-master bolted for the gate. But to my intense surprise Tish was
+not on the ground. Then I saw her. She was still on the creature, and
+she was coming back along the road, with her riding-hat on the back of
+her head and a gleam in her eye that I knew well enough was a gleam of
+triumph.
+
+She halted the thing beside me and looked down with a patronizing air.
+
+"He's a trifle nervous this morning," she said calmly. "Hasn't been
+worked enough. Good horse, though,--very neat jump."
+
+Then she rode on and out through the gates, ignoring Aggie's pitiful
+wail and scorning the leading-string the instructor offered.
+
+We reached Glacier Park without difficulty, although Tish insisted on
+talking to the most ordinary people on the train, and once, losing her,
+we found her in the drawing-room learning to play bridge, although not a
+card-player, except for casino. Though nothing has ever been said, I
+believe she learned when too late that they were playing for money, as
+she borrowed ten dollars from me late in the afternoon and was looking
+rather pale.
+
+"What do you think?" she said, while I was getting the money from the
+safety pocket under my skirt. "The young man who knocked me down on the
+ice that day is on the train. I've just exchanged a few words with him.
+He was not much hurt, although unconscious for a short time. His name is
+Bell--James C. Bell."
+
+Soon after that Tish brought him to us, and we had a nice talk. He said
+he had not been badly hurt on the ice, although he got a cut on the
+forehead from Tish's skate, requiring two stitches.
+
+After a time he and Aggie went out on the platform, only returning when
+Aggie got a cinder in her eye.
+
+"Just think," she said as he went for water to use in my eye-cup, "he
+is going to meet the girl he is in love with out at the park. She has
+been there for four weeks. They are engaged. He is very much in love. He
+didn't talk of anything else."
+
+She told him she had confided his tender secret to us, and instead of
+looking conscious he seemed glad to have three people instead of one to
+talk to about her.
+
+"You see, it's like this," he said: "She is very good looking, and in
+her town a moving-picture company has its studio. That part's all right.
+I suppose we have to have movies. But the fool of a director met her at
+a party, and said she would photograph well and ought to be with them.
+He offered her a salary, and it went to her head. She's young," he
+added, "and he said she could be as great a hit as Mary Pickford."
+
+"How sad!" said Aggie. "But of course she refused?"
+
+"Well, no, she liked the idea. It got me worried. Worried her people
+too. Her father's able to give her a good home, and I'm expecting to
+take that job off his hands in about a year. But girls are queer. She
+wanted to try it awfully."
+
+It developed that he had gone to her folks about it, and they'd offered
+her a vacation with some of her school friends in Glacier Park.
+
+"It's pretty wild out there," he went on, "and we felt that the air, and
+horseback riding and everything, would make her forget the movies. I
+hope so. She's there now. But she's had the bug pretty hard. Got so she
+was always posing, without knowing it."
+
+But he was hopeful that she would be cured, and said she was to meet him
+at the station.
+
+"She's an awfully nice girl, you understand," he finished. "It's only
+that this thing got hold of her and needed driving out."
+
+Well, we were watching when the train drew in at Glacier Park Station,
+and she was there. She was a very pretty girl, and it was quite touching
+to see him look at her. But Aggie observed something and remarked on it.
+
+"She's not as glad to see him as he is to see her," she said. "He was
+going to kiss her, and she moved back."
+
+In the crowd we lost sight of them, but that evening, sitting in the
+lobby of the hotel, we saw Mr. Bell wandering round alone. He looked
+depressed, and Aggie beckoned to him.
+
+"How is everything?" she asked. "Is the cure working?"
+
+He dropped into a chair and looked straight ahead.
+
+"Not so you could notice it!" he said bitterly. "Would you believe that
+there's a moving-picture outfit here, taking scenes in the park?"
+
+"No!"
+
+"There is. They've taken two thousand feet of her already, dressed like
+an Indian," he said in a tone of suppressed fury. "It makes me sick. I
+dare say if we tied her in a well some fool would lower a camera on a
+rope."
+
+Just at that moment she sauntered past us with a reddish-haired young
+man. Mr. Bell ignored her, although I saw her try to catch his eye.
+
+"That's the moving-picture man with her," he said in a low, violent tone
+when they had passed. "Name's Oliver." He groaned. "He's told her she
+ought to go in for the business. She'd be a second Mary Pickford! I'd
+like to kill him!" He rose savagely and left us.
+
+We spent the night in the hotel at the park entrance, and I could not
+get to sleep. Tish was busy engaging a guide and going over our
+supplies, and at eleven o'clock Aggie came into my room and sat down on
+the bed.
+
+"I can't sleep, Lizzie," she said. "That poor Mr. Bell is on my mind.
+Besides, did you see those ferocious Indians hanging round?"
+
+Well, I had seen them, but said nothing.
+
+"They would scalp one as quick as not," Aggie went on. "And who's to
+know but that our guide will be in league with them? I've lost my
+teeth," she said with a flash of spirit, "but so far I've kept my hair,
+and mean to if possible. That old Indian has a scalp tied to the end of
+a stick. Lizzie, I'm nervous."
+
+"If it is only hair they want, I don't mind their taking my switch," I
+observed, trying to be facetious, although uneasy. As to the switch, it
+no longer matched my hair, and I would have parted from it without a
+pang.
+
+"And another thing," said Aggie: "Tish can talk about ponies until she
+is black in the face. The creatures are horses. I've seen them."
+
+Well, I knew that, too, by that time. As we walked to the hotel from the
+train I had seen one of them carrying on. It was arching its back like a
+cat that's just seen a strange dog, and with every arch it swelled its
+stomach. At the third heave it split the strap that held the saddle on,
+and then it kicked up in the rear and sent saddle and rider over its
+head. So far as I had seen, no casualty had resulted, but it had set me
+thinking. Given a beast with an India-rubber spine and no sense of
+honor, I felt I would be helpless.
+
+Tish came in just then and we confronted her.
+
+[Illustration: "It's well enough for you, Tish Carberry, to talk about
+gripping a horse with your knees"]
+
+"Ponies!" I said bitterly. "They are horses, if I know a horse. And,
+moreover, it's well enough for you, Tish Carberry, to talk about
+gripping a horse with your knees. I'm not built that way, and you know
+it. Besides, no knee grip will answer when a creature begins to act like
+a cat in a fit."
+
+Aggie here had a bright idea. She said that she had seen pictures of
+pneumatic jackets to keep people from drowning, and that Mr. McKee, a
+buyer at one of the stores at home, had taken one, fully inflated, when
+he crossed to Paris for autumn suits.
+
+"I would like to have one, Tish," she finished. "It would break the
+force of a fall anyhow, even if it did puncture."
+
+Tish, who was still dressed, went out to the curio shop in the lobby,
+and returned with the sad news that there was nothing of the sort on
+sale.
+
+We were late in getting started the next morning owing partly to Aggie's
+having put her riding-breeches on wrong, and being unable to sit down
+when once in the saddle. But the main reason was the guide we had
+engaged. Tish heard him using profane language to one of the horses and
+dismissed him on the spot.
+
+The man who was providing our horses and outfit, however, understood,
+and in a short time returned with another man.
+
+"I've got a good one for you now, Miss Carberry," he said. "Safe and
+perfectly gentle, and as mild as milk. Only has one fault, and maybe you
+won't mind that. He smokes considerably."
+
+"I don't object, as long as it's in the open air," Tish said.
+
+So that was arranged. But I must say that the new man did not look mild.
+He had red hair, although a nice smile with a gold tooth, and his
+trousers were of white fur, which looked hot for summer.
+
+"You are sure that you don't use strong language?" Tish asked.
+
+"No, ma'am," he said. "I was raised strict, and very particular as to
+swearing. Dear, dear now, would you look at that cinch! Blow up their
+little tummies, they do, when they're cinched, and when they breathe it
+out, the saddle's as loose as the tongues of some of these here
+tourists."
+
+Tish swung herself up without any trouble, but owing to a large canvas
+bag on the back of my saddle I was unable to get my leg across, and
+was compelled to have it worked over, a little at a time. At last,
+however, we were ready. A white pack-horse, carrying our tents and
+cooking-utensils, was led by Bill, which proved to be the name of our
+cowboy guide.
+
+Mr. Bell came to say good-bye and to wish us luck. But he looked
+unhappy, and there was no sign whatever of the young lady, whose name we
+had learned was Helen.
+
+"I may see you on the trail," he said sadly. "I'm about sick of this
+place, and I'm thinking of clearing out."
+
+Aggie reminded him that faint heart never won fair lady, but he only
+shook his head.
+
+"I'm not so sure that I want to win," he said. "Marriage is a serious
+business, and I don't know that I'd care to have a wife that followed a
+camera like a street kid follows a brass band. It wouldn't make for a
+quiet home."
+
+We left him staring wistfully into the distance.
+
+Tish sat in her saddle and surveyed the mountain peaks that rose behind
+the hotel.
+
+"Twenty centuries are looking down upon us!" she said. "The crest of our
+native land lies before us. We will conquer those beetling crags, or die
+trying. All right, Bill. Forward!"
+
+Bill led off, followed by the pack-horse, then Tish, Aggie and myself.
+We kept on in this order for some time, which gave me a chance to
+observe Aggie carefully. I am not much of a horsewoman myself, having
+never been on a horse before. But my father was fond of riding, and I
+soon adapted myself to the horse's gait, especially when walking. On
+level stretches, however, where Bill spurred his horse to a trot, I was
+not so comfortable, and Aggie appeared to strike the saddle in a
+different spot every time she descended.
+
+Once, on her turning her profile to me in a glance of despair, I was
+struck by the strange and collapsed appearance of her face. This was
+explained, however, when my horse caught up to hers on a wider stretch
+of road, and I saw that she had taken out her teeth and was holding them
+in her hand.
+
+"Al-almost swallowed them," she gasped. "Oh, Lizzie, to think of a
+summer of this!"
+
+At last we left the road and turned onto a footpath, which instantly
+commenced to rise. Tish called back something about the beauties of
+nature and riding over a carpet of flowers, but my horse was fording a
+small stream at the time and I was too occupied to reply. The path--or
+trail, which is what Bill called it--grew more steep, and I let go of
+the lines and held to the horn of my saddle. The horses were climbing
+like goats.
+
+"Tish," Aggie called desperately, "I can't stand this. I'm going back!
+I'm--Lordamighty!"
+
+Fortunately Tish did not hear this. We had suddenly emerged on the brink
+of a precipice. A two-foot path clung to the cliff, and along the very
+edge of this the horses walked, looking down in an interested manner now
+and then. My blood turned to water and I closed my eyes.
+
+"Tish!" Aggie shrieked.
+
+But the only effect of this was to start her horse into a trot. I had
+closed my eyes, but I opened them in time to see Aggie give a wild
+clutch and a low moan.
+
+In a few moments the trail left the edge, and Aggie turned in her saddle
+and looked back at me.
+
+"I lost my lower set back there," she said. "They went over the edge. I
+suppose they're falling yet."
+
+"It's a good thing it wasn't the upper set," I said, to comfort her. "As
+far as appearance goes--"
+
+"Appearance!" she said bitterly. "Do you suppose we'll meet anybody but
+desperadoes and Indians in a place like this? And not an egg with us, of
+course."
+
+The eggs referred to her diet, as at different times, when having her
+teeth repaired, she can eat little else.
+
+"Ham," she called back in a surly tone, "and hard tack, I suppose! I'll
+starve, Lizzie, that's all. If only we had brought some junket tablets!"
+
+With the exception of this incident the morning was quiet. Tish and Bill
+talked prohibition, which he believed in, and the tin pans on the
+pack-horse clattered, and we got higher all the time, and rode through
+waterfalls and along the edge of death. By noon I did not much care if
+the horses fell over or not. The skin was off me in a number of places,
+and my horse did not like me, and showed it by nipping back at my leg
+here and there.
+
+At eleven o'clock, riding through a valley on a trail six inches wide,
+Bill's horse stepped on a hornets' nest. The insects were probably dazed
+at first, but by the time Tish's horse arrived they were prepared, and
+the next thing we knew Tish's horse was flying up the mountain-side as
+if it had gone crazy, and Bill was shouting to us to stop.
+
+The last we saw of Tish for some time was her horse leaping a mountain
+stream, and jumping like a kangaroo, and Bill was following.
+
+"She'll be killed!" Aggie cried. "Oh, Tish, Tish!"
+
+"Don't yell," I said. "You'll start the horses. And for Heaven's sake,
+Aggie," I added grimly, "remember that this is a pleasure trip."
+
+It was a half-hour before Tish and Bill returned. Tish was a chastened
+woman. She said little or nothing, but borrowed some ointment from me
+for her face, where the branches of trees had scraped it, while Bill led
+the horses round the fatal spot. I recall, however, that she said she
+wished now that we had brought the other guide.
+
+"Because I feel," she observed, "that a little strong language would be
+a relief."
+
+We had luncheon at noon in a sylvan glade, and Aggie was pathetic. She
+dipped a cracker in a cup of tea, and sat off by herself under a tree.
+Tish, however, had recovered her spirits.
+
+"Throw out your chests, and breathe deep of this pure air unsullied by
+civilization," she cried. "Aggie, fill yourself with ozone."
+
+"Humph!" said Aggie. "It's about all I will fill myself with."
+
+"Think," Tish observed, "of the fools and dolts who are living under
+roofs, struggling, contending, plotting, while all Nature awaits them."
+
+"With stings," Aggie said nastily, "and teeth, and horns, and claws, and
+every old thing! Tish, I want to go back. I'm not happy, and I don't
+enjoy scenery when I'm not happy. Besides, I can't eat the landscape."
+
+As I look back, I believe it would have been better if we had returned.
+I think of that day, some time later, when we made the long descent from
+the Piegan Pass under such extraordinary circumstances, and I realize
+that, although worse for our bodies, which had grown strong and agile,
+so that I have, later on, seen Aggie mount her horse on a run, it would
+have been better for our nerves had we returned.
+
+We were all perfectly stiff after luncheon, and Aggie was sulking also.
+Bill was compelled to lift us into our saddles, and again we started up
+and up. The trail was now what he called a "switchback." Halfway up
+Aggie refused to go farther, but on looking back decided not to return
+either.
+
+"I shall not go another step," she called. "Here I am, and here I stay
+till I die."
+
+"Very well," Tish said from overhead. "I suppose you don't expect us all
+to stay and die with you. I'll tell your niece when I see her."
+
+Aggie thought better of it, however, and followed on, with her eyes
+closed and her lips moving in prayer. She happened to open them at a bad
+place, although safe enough, according to Bill, and nothing to what we
+were coming to a few days later. Opening them as she did on a ledge of
+rock which sloped steeply for what appeared to be several miles down
+on each side, she uttered a piercing shriek, followed by a sneeze. As
+before, her horse started to run, and Aggie is, I believe Bill said,
+the only person in the world who ever took that place at a canter.
+
+We were to take things easy the first day, Bill advised. "Till you get
+your muscles sort of eased up, ladies," he said. "If you haven't been
+riding astride, a horse's back seems as wide as the roof of a church.
+But we'll get a rest now. The rest of the way is walking."
+
+"I can't walk," Aggie said. "I can't get my knees together."
+
+"Sorry, ma'am," said Bill. "We're going down now, and the animals has to
+be led. That's one of the diversions of a trip like this. First you ride
+and than you walk. And then you ride again. This here's one of the show
+places, although easy of access from the entrance. Be a good place for a
+holdup, I've always said."
+
+"A holdup?" Tish asked. Her enthusiasm seemed to have flagged somewhat,
+but at this she brightened up.
+
+"Yes'm. You see, we're near the Canadian border, and it would be easy
+for a gang to slip over and back again. Don't know why we've never had
+one. Yellowstone can boast of a number."
+
+I observed tartly that I considered it nothing to boast of, but Bill did
+not agree with me.
+
+"It doesn't hurt a neighborhood none," he observed. "Adds romance, as
+you might say."
+
+He went on and, happening to slide on a piece of shale at that moment, I
+sat down unexpectedly and the horse put its foot on me.
+
+I felt embittered and helpless, but the others kept on.
+
+"Very well," I said, "go on. Don't mind me. If this creature wants to
+sit in my lap, well and good. I expect it's tired."
+
+But as they went on callously, I was obliged to shove the creature off
+and to hobble on. Bill was still babbling about holdups, and Aggie was
+saying that he was sunstruck, but of course it did not matter.
+
+We made very slow progress, owing to taking frequent rests, and late in
+the afternoon we were overtaken by Mr. Bell, on foot and carrying a
+pack. He would have passed on without stopping, but Aggie hailed him.
+
+"Not going to hike, are you?" she said pleasantly. Aggie is fond of
+picking up the vernacular of a region.
+
+"No," he said in a surly tone quite unlike his former urbane manner,
+"I'm merely taking this pack out for a walk."
+
+But he stopped and mopped his face.
+
+"To tell you the truth, ladies," he said, "I'm working off a little
+steam, that's all. I was afraid, if I stayed round the hotel, I'd do
+something I'd be sorry for. There are times when I am not a fit
+companion for any one, and this is one of them."
+
+We invited him to join us, but he refused.
+
+"No, I'm better alone," he said. "When things get too strong for me on
+the trail I can sling things about. I've been throwing boulders down the
+mountain every now and then. I'd just as soon they hit somebody as not.
+Also," he added, "I'm safer away from any red-headed men."
+
+We saw him glance at Bill, and understood. Mr. Oliver was red-headed.
+
+"Love's an awful thing," said Bill as the young man went on, kicking
+stones out of his way. "I'm glad I ain't got it."
+
+Tish turned and eyed him. "True love is a very beautiful thing," she
+rebuked him. "Although a single woman myself, I believe in it. 'Come
+live with me and be my love,'" she quoted, sitting down to shake a stone
+out of her riding-boot.
+
+Bill looked startled. "I might say," he said hastily, "that I may have
+misled you, ladies. I'm married."
+
+"You said you had never been in love," Tish said sharply.
+
+"Well, not to say real love," he replied. "She was the cook of an outfit
+I was with and it just came about natural. She was going to leave, which
+meant that I'd have to do the cooking, which I ain't much at, especially
+pastry. So I married her."
+
+Tish gave him a scornful glance but said nothing and we went on.
+
+We camped late that afternoon beside Two Medicine Lake, and while Bill
+put up the tents the three of us sat on a log and soaked our aching feet
+in the water which was melted glacier, and naturally cold.
+
+What was our surprise, on turning somewhat, to see the angry lover
+fishing on a point near by. While we stared he pulled out a large trout,
+and stalked away without a glance in our direction. As Tish, with her
+usual forethought, had brought a trout rod, she hastily procured it, but
+without result.
+
+"Of course," Aggie said, "no fish! I could eat a piece of broiled fish.
+I dare say I shall be skin and bone at the end of this trip--and not
+much skin."
+
+Bill had set up the sleeping-tent and built a fire, and it looked cozy
+and comfortable. But Tish had the young man on her mind, and after
+supper she put on a skirt which she had brought along and went to see
+him.
+
+"I'd take him some supper, Bill," she said, "but you are correct: you
+are no cook."
+
+She disappeared among the bushes, only to return in a short time,
+jerking off her skirt as she came.
+
+"He says all he wants is to be let alone," she said briefly. "I must say
+I'm disappointed in him. He was very agreeable before."
+
+I pass without comment over the night. Bill had put up the tent over the
+root of a large tree, and we disposed ourselves about it as well as we
+could. In the course of the night one of the horses broke loose and put
+its head inside the tent. Owing to Aggie's thinking it was a bear, Tish
+shot at it, fortunately missing it.
+
+But the frightened animal ran away, and Bill was until noon the next day
+finding it. We cooked our own breakfast, and Tish made some gems, having
+brought the pan along. But the morning dragged, although the scenery was
+lovely.
+
+At twelve Bill brought the horse back and came over to us.
+
+"If you don't mind my saying it, Miss Carberry," he observed, "you're a
+bit too ready with that gun. First thing you know you'll put a hole
+through me, and then where will you be?"
+
+"I've got along without men most of my life," Tish said sharply. "I
+reckon we'd manage."
+
+"Well," he said, "there's another angle to it. Where would I be?"
+
+"That's between you and your Creator," Tish retorted.
+
+We went on again that afternoon, and climbed another precipice. We saw
+no human being except a mountain goat, although Bill claimed to have
+seen a bear. Tish was quite calm at all times, and had got so that she
+could look down into eternity without a shudder. But Aggie and I were
+still nervous, and at the steepest places we got off and walked.
+
+The unfortunate part was that the exercise and the mountain air made
+Aggie hungry, and there was little that she could eat.
+
+"If any one had told me a month ago," she said, mopping her forehead,
+"that I would be scaling the peaks of my country on crackers and tea, I
+wouldn't have believed it. I'm done out, Lizzie. I can't climb another
+inch."
+
+Bill was ahead with the pack horse, and Tish, overhearing her, called
+back some advice.
+
+"Take your horse's tail and let him pull you up, Aggie," she said. "I've
+read it somewhere."
+
+Aggie, although frequently complaining, always does as Tish suggests. So
+she took the horse's tail, when a totally unexpected thing happened.
+Docile as the creature generally was, it objected at once, and kicked
+out with both rear feet. In a moment, it seemed to me, Aggie was gone,
+and her horse was moving on alone.
+
+"Aggie!" I called in a panic.
+
+Tish stopped, and we both looked about. Then we saw her, lying on a
+ledge about ten feet below the trail. She was flat on her back, and her
+riding-hat was gone. But she was uninjured, although shaken, for as we
+looked she sat up, and an agonized expression came over her face.
+
+"Aggie!" I cried. "Is anything broken?"
+
+"Damnation!" said Aggie in an awful voice. "The upper set is gone!"
+
+I have set down exactly what Aggie said. I admit that the provocation
+was great. But Tish was not one to make allowances, and she turned and
+went on, leaving us alone. She is not without feeling, however, for from
+the top of the pass she sent Bill down with a rope, and we dragged poor
+Aggie to the trail again. Her nerves were shaken and she was repentant
+also, for when she found that her hat was gone she said nothing,
+although her eyes took on a hunted look.
+
+At the top of the pass Tish was sitting on a stone. She had taken her
+mending-box from the saddle, where she always kept it handy, and was
+drawing up a hole in her stocking. I observed to her pleasantly that it
+was a sign of scandal to mend clothing while still on, but she ignored
+me, although, as I reflected bitterly, I had not been kicked over the
+cliff.
+
+It was a subdued and speechless Aggie who followed us that afternoon
+along the trail. As her hat was gone, I took the spare dish towel and
+made a turban for her, with an end hanging down to protect the back of
+her neck. But she expressed little gratitude, beyond observing that as
+she was going over the edge piecemeal, she'd better have done it all at
+once and be through with it.
+
+The afternoon wore away slowly. It seemed a long time until we reached
+our camping-place, partly because, although a small eater ordinarily,
+the air and exercise had made me feel famished. But the disagreement
+between Tish and Aggie, owing to the latter's unfortunate exclamation
+while kicked over the cliff, made the time seem longer. There was not
+the usual exchange of pleasant nothings between us.
+
+But by six o'clock Tish was more amiable, having seen bear scratches on
+trees near the camp, and anticipating the sight of a bear. She mixed up
+a small cup cake while Bill was putting up our tent, and then, taking
+her rod, proceeded to fish, while Aggie and I searched for grasshoppers.
+These were few, owing to the altitude, but we caught four, which we
+imprisoned in a match-box.
+
+With them Tish caught four trout and, broiling them nicely, she offered
+one to poor Aggie. It was a peace offering, and taken as such, so that
+we were soon on our former agreeable footing, and all forgotten.
+
+The next day it rained, and we were obliged to sit in the tent. Bill sat
+with us, and talked mainly of desperadoes.
+
+"As I observed before," he said, "there hasn't been any tourist holdup
+yet. But it's bound to come. Take the Yellowstone, now,--one holdup a
+year's the average, and it's full of soldiers at that."
+
+"It's a wonder people keep on going," I observed, moving out of a puddle.
+
+"Oh, I don't know," he said. "In one way it's good business. I take it
+this way: When folks come West they want the West they've read about.
+What do they care for irrigation and apple orchards? What they like is
+danger and a little gunplay, the sort of thing they see in these here
+moving pictures."
+
+"I'm sure I don't," Aggie remarked. It was growing dusk, and she peered
+out into the forest round us. "There is something crackling out there
+now," she said.
+
+"Only a bear, likely," Bill assured her. "We have a sight of bears here.
+No, ma'am, they want danger. And every holdup's an advertisement. You
+see, the Government can't advertise these here parks; not the way it
+should, anyhow. But a holdup's news, so the papers print it, and it sets
+people to thinking about the park. Maybe they never thought of the place
+and are arranging to go elsewhere. Then along comes a gang and raises
+h--, raises trouble, and the park's in every one's mouth, so to speak.
+We'd get considerable business if there was one this summer."
+
+At that moment the crackling outside increased, and a shadowy form
+emerged from the bushes. Even Bill stood up, and Aggie screamed.
+
+It was, however, only poor Mr. Bell.
+
+"Mind if I borrow some matches?" he said gruffly.
+
+"We can't lend matches," Tish replied. "At least, I don't see the use of
+sending them back after they've been lighted. We can give you some."
+
+"My mistake," he said.
+
+That was all he said, except the word "Thanks" when I reached him a box.
+
+"He's a surly creature," Tish observed as he crackled through the brush
+again. "More than likely that girl's better off without him."
+
+"He looks rather downhearted," Aggie remarked. "Much that we think is
+temper is due to unhappiness."
+
+"Much of your charitable view is due to a good dinner too," Tish said.
+"Here we are, in the center of the wilderness, with great peaks on every
+hand, and we meet a fellow creature who speaks nine words, and begrudges
+those. If he's as stingy with money as with language she's had a narrow
+escape."
+
+"He's had kind of a raw deal," Bill put in. "The girl was stuck on him
+all right, until this moving-picture chap came along. He offered to take
+some pictures with her in them, and it was all off. They're making up a
+play now, and she's to be in it."
+
+"What sort of a play?" Tish demanded.
+
+"Sorry not to oblige," Bill replied. "Can't say the nature of it."
+
+But all of us felt that Bill knew and would not say.
+
+Tish, to whom a mystery is a personal affront, determined to find out
+for herself; and when later in the evening we saw the light of Bell's
+camp-fire, it was Tish herself who suggested that we go over and visit
+with him.
+
+"We can converse about various things," she said, "and take his mind
+from his troubles. But it would be better not to mention affairs of the
+heart. He's probably sensitive."
+
+So we left Bill to look after things, and went to call on Mr. Bell. It
+was farther to his camp than it had appeared, and Tish unfortunately ran
+into a tree and bruised her nose badly. When it had stopped bleeding,
+however, we went on, and at last arrived.
+
+He was sitting on a log by the fire, smoking a pipe and looking very
+sad. Behind him was a bit of a tent not much larger than an umbrella.
+
+Aggie touched my arm. "My heart aches for him," she said. "There is
+despair in his very eyes."
+
+I do not believe that at first he was very glad to see us, but he
+softened somewhat when Tish held out the cake she had brought.
+
+"That's very nice of you," he said, rising. "I'm afraid I can't ask you
+to sit down. The ground's wet and there is only this log."
+
+"I've sat on logs before," Tish replied. "We thought we'd call, seeing
+we are neighbors. As the first comers it was our place to call first, of
+course."
+
+"I see," he said, and poked up the fire with a piece of stick.
+
+"We felt that you might be lonely," said Aggie.
+
+"I came here to be lonely," he replied gloomily. "I want to be lonely."
+
+Tish, however, was determined to be cheerful, and asked him, as a safe
+subject, how he felt about the war.
+
+"War?" he said. "That's so, there is a war. To tell the truth, I had
+forgotten about it. I've been thinking of other things."
+
+We saw that it was going to be difficult to cheer him. Tish tried the
+weather, which brought us nowhere, as he merely grunted. But Aggie
+broached the subject of desperadoes, and he roused somewhat.
+
+"There are plenty of shady characters in the park," he said shortly.
+"Wolves in sheep's clothing, that's what they are."
+
+"Bill, our guide, says there may be a holdup at any time."
+
+"Sure there is," he said calmly. "There's one going to be pulled off in
+the next day or two."
+
+We sat petrified, and Aggie's eyes were starting out of her head.
+
+"All the trimmings," he went on, staring at the fire. "Innocent and
+unsuspecting tourists, lunch, laughter, boiled coffee, and cold ham.
+Ambush. The whole business--followed by highwaymen in flannel shirts and
+revolvers. Dead tourist or two, desperate resistance--everything."
+
+Aggie rose, pale as an aspen. "You--you are joking!" she cried.
+
+"Do I look like it?" he demanded fiercely. "I tell you there is going to
+be the whole thing. At the end the lovely girl will escape on horseback
+and ride madly for aid. She will meet the sheriff and a posse, who are
+out for a picnic or some such damfool nonsense, and--"
+
+"Young man," Tish said coldly, "if you know all this, why are you
+sitting here and not alarming the authorities?"
+
+"Pooh!" he said disagreeably. "It's a put-up scheme, to advertise the
+park. Yellowstone's got ahead of them this year, and has had its
+excitement, with all the papers ringing with it. That was a gag, too,
+probably."
+
+"Do you mean--"
+
+"I mean considerable," he said. "That red-headed movie idiot will be on
+a rise, taking the tourists as they ride through. Of course he doesn't
+expect the holdup--not in the papers anyhow. He happens to have the
+camera trained on the party, and gets it all. Result--a whacking good
+picture, revolvers firing blank cartridges, everything which people will
+crowd to see. Oh, it's good business all right. I don't mind admitting
+that."
+
+Tish's face expressed the greatest rage. She rose, drawing herself to
+her full height.
+
+"And the tourists?" she demanded. "They lend themselves to this
+imposition? To this infamy? To this turpitude?"
+
+"Certainly not. They think it's the real thing. The whole business hangs
+on that. And as the sheriff, or whoever it is in the fool plot, captures
+the bandits, the party gets its money back, and has material for
+conversation for the next twenty years."
+
+"To think," said Tish, "of our great National Government lending itself
+to such a scheme!"
+
+"Wrong," said the young man. "It's a combination of Western railroads
+and a movie concern acting together."
+
+"I trust," Tish observed, setting her lips firmly, "that the tourists
+will protest."
+
+"The more noise, the better." The young man, though not more cheerful as
+to appearance, was certainly more talkative. "Trust a clergyman for
+yelling when his pocket's picked."
+
+With one voice the three of us exclaimed: "Mr. Ostermaier!"
+
+He was not sure of the name, but "Helen" had pointed the clergyman out
+to him, and it was Mr. Ostermaier without a doubt.
+
+We talked it over with Bill when we got back, and he was not as
+surprised as we'd expected.
+
+"Knew they were cooking up something. They've got some Indians in it
+too. Saw them rehearsing old Thunder Mountain the other day in nothing
+but a breech-clout."
+
+Tish reproved him for a lack of delicacy of speech, and shortly
+afterward we went to bed. Owing to the root under the tent, and puddles
+here and there, we could not go to sleep for a time, and we discussed
+the "nefarious deed," as Tish aptly termed it, that was about to take
+place.
+
+"Although," Tish observed, "Mr. Ostermaier has been receiving for so
+many years that it might be a good thing, for his soul's sake, to have
+him give up something, even if to bandits." I dozed off after a time,
+but awakened to find Tish sitting up, wide awake.
+
+"I've been thinking that thing over, Lizzie," she said in a low tone. "I
+believe it's our duty to interfere."
+
+"Of course," I replied sarcastically; "and be shown all over the country
+in the movies making fools of ourselves."
+
+"Did you notice that that young man said they would be firing blank
+cartridges?"
+
+Well, even a blank cartridge can be a dangerous thing. Then and there I
+reminded her of my niece's boy, who was struck on the Fourth of July by
+a wad from one, and had to be watched for lockjaw for several weeks.
+
+It was at that moment that we heard Bill, who had no tent, by choice,
+and lay under a tree, give a loud whoop, followed by what was
+unmistakably an oath.
+
+"Bear!" he yelled. "Watch out, he's headed for the tent! It's a
+grizzly."
+
+Tish felt round wildly for her revolver, but it was gone! And the bear
+was close by. We could hear it snuffing about, and to add to the
+confusion Aggie wakened and commenced to sneeze with terror.
+
+"Bill!" Tish called. "I've lost my revolver!"
+
+"I took it, Miss Carberry. But I've been lying in a puddle, and it won't
+go off."
+
+All hope seemed gone. The frail walls of our tent were no protection
+whatever, and as we all knew, even a tree was no refuge from a bear,
+which, as we had seen in the Zoological Garden at home, can climb like a
+cat, only swifter. Besides, none of us could climb a tree.
+
+It was at that moment that Tish had one of those inspirations that make
+her so dependable in emergencies. Feeling round in the tent for a
+possible weapon, she touched a large ham, from which we had broiled a
+few slices at supper. In her shadowy form there was both purpose and
+high courage. With a single sweeping gesture she flung the ham at the
+bear so accurately that we heard the thud with which it struck.
+
+"What the hell are you doing?" Bill called from a safe distance. Even
+then we realized that his restraint of speech was a pose, pure and
+simple. "If you make him angry he'll tear up the whole place."
+
+But Tish did not deign to answer. The rain had ceased, and suddenly the
+moon came out and illuminated the whole scene. We saw the bear sniffing
+at the ham, which lay on the ground. Then he picked it up in his jaws
+and stood looking about.
+
+Tish said later that the moment his teeth were buried in the ham she
+felt safe. I can still see the majestic movement with which she walked
+out of the tent and waved her arms.
+
+"Now, scat with you!" she said firmly. "Scat!"
+
+He "scatted." Snarling through his nose, for fear of dropping the ham,
+he turned and fled up the mountainside. In the open space Tish stood the
+conqueror. She yawned and glanced about.
+
+"Going to be a nice night, after all," she said. "Now, Bill, bring me
+that revolver, and if I catch you meddling with it again I'll put that
+pair of fur rugs you are so proud of in the fire."
+
+Bill, who was ignorant of the ham, emerged sheepishly into the open.
+"Where the--where the dickens did you hit him, Miss Tish?" he asked.
+
+"In the stomach," Tish replied tartly, and taking her revolver went back
+to the tent.
+
+All the next day Tish was quiet. She rode ahead, hardly noticing the
+scenery, with her head dropped on her chest. At luncheon she took a
+sardine sandwich and withdrew to a tree, underneath which she sat, a
+lonely and brooding figure.
+
+When luncheon was over and Aggie and I were washing the dishes and
+hanging out the dish towels to dry on a bush, Tish approached Bill, who
+was pouring water on the fire to extinguish it.
+
+"Bill," she stated, "you came to us under false pretenses. You swear,
+for one thing."
+
+"Only under excitement, Miss Tish," he said. "And as far as that goes,
+Miss Aggie herself said--"
+
+"Also," Tish went on hastily, "you said you could cook. You cannot
+cook."
+
+"Now, look here, Miss Tish," he said in a pleading tone, "I can cook. I
+didn't claim to know the whole cookbook. I can make coffee and fry
+bacon. How'd I know you ladies wanted pastry? As for them canned salmon
+croquettes with white sauce, I reckon to make them with a little
+showing, and--"
+
+"Also," said Tish, cutting in sternly, "you took away my revolver, and
+left us helpless last night, and in peril of wild beasts."
+
+"Tourists ain't allowed to carry guns."
+
+He attempted to look injured, but Tish ignored him.
+
+"Therefore," she said, "if I am not to send you back--which I have been
+considering all day, as I've put up a tent myself before this, and you
+are only an extra mouth to feed, which, as we are one ham short, is
+inconvenient--you will have to justify my keeping you."
+
+"If you will just show me once about them gems, Miss Tish--" he began.
+
+But Tish cut him off. "No," she said firmly, "you are too casual about
+cooking. And you are no dish-washer. Setting a plate in a river and
+letting the current wash it may satisfy cow-punchers. It doesn't go with
+me. The point is this: You know all about the holdup that is going to
+take place. Don't lie. I know you know. Now, you take us there and tell
+us all you know about it."
+
+He scratched his head reflectively. "I'll tell you," he said. "I'm a
+slow thinker. Give me about twenty minutes on it, will you? It's a sort
+of secret, and there's different ways of looking at it."
+
+Tish took out her watch. "Twenty minutes," she said. "Start thinking
+now."
+
+He wandered off and rolled a cigarette. Later on, as I have said, he
+showed Tish how to do it--not, of course, that she meant to smoke, but
+Tish is fond of learning how to do things. She got so she could roll
+them with one hand, and she does it now in the winter evenings, instead
+of rolling paper spills as formerly. When Charlie Sands comes, she
+always has a supply ready for him, although occasionally somewhat dry
+from waiting for a few weeks.
+
+At the end of twenty minutes Tish snapped her watch shut.
+
+"Time!" she called, and Bill came back.
+
+"Well, I'll do it," he said. "I don't know as they'll put you in the
+picture, but I'll see what I can do."
+
+"Picture nothing!" Tish snapped. "You take us there and hide us. That's
+the point. There must be caves round to put us in, although I don't
+insist on a cave. They're damp usually."
+
+Well, he looked puzzled, but he agreed. I caught Aggie's eye, and we
+exchanged glances. There was trouble coming, and we knew it. Our long
+experience with Tish had taught us not to ask questions. "Ours but to do
+and die," as Aggie later said. But I confess to a feeling of uneasiness
+during the remainder of that day.
+
+We changed our course that afternoon, turning off at Saint Mary's and
+spending the night near the Swiss Chalet at Going-to-the-Sun. Aggie and
+I pleaded to spend the night in the chalet, but Tish was adamant.
+
+"When I am out camping, I camp," she said. "I can have a bed at home,
+but I cannot sleep under the stars, on a bed of pine needles, and be
+lured to rest by the murmur of a mountain stream."
+
+Well, we gave it up and went with her. I must say that the trip had
+improved us already. Except when terrified or kicked by a horse, Aggie
+was not sneezing at all, and I could now climb into the saddle
+unassisted. My waistbands were much looser, too, and during a short rest
+that afternoon I put a dart in my riding-breeches, during the absence
+of Bill after the pack-horse, which had strayed.
+
+It was on that occasion that Tish told us as much of her plan as she
+thought it wise for us to know.
+
+"The holdup," she explained, "is to be the day after to-morrow on the
+Piegan Pass. Bill says there is a level spot at the top with rocks all
+about. That is the spot. The Ostermaiers and their party leave the
+automobiles at Many Glaciers and take horses to the pass. It will be
+worth coming clear to Montana to see Mrs. Ostermaier on a horse."
+
+"I still don't see," Aggie observed in a quavering voice, "what we have
+to do with it."
+
+"Naturally not," said Tish. "You'll know as soon as is good for you."
+
+"I don't believe it will ever be good for me," said poor Aggie. "It
+isn't good for anybody to be near a holdup. And I don't want to be in a
+moving picture with no teeth. I'm not a vain woman," she said, "but I
+draw the line at that."
+
+But Tish ignored her. "The only trouble," she said, "is having one
+revolver. If we each had one--Lizzie, did you bring any ink?"
+
+Well, I had, and said so, but that I needed it for postcards when we
+struck a settlement.
+
+Tish waved my objection aside. "I guess it can be managed," she
+observed. "Bill has a knife. Yes, I think it can be done."
+
+She and Bill engaged in an earnest conference that afternoon. At first
+Bill objected. I could see him shaking his head. Then Tish gave him
+something which Aggie said was money. I do not know. She had been short
+of cash on the train, but she may have had more in her trunk. Then I saw
+Bill start to laugh. He laughed until he had to lean against a tree,
+although Tish was quite stern and serious.
+
+We reached Piegan Pass about three that afternoon, and having inspected
+it and the Garden Wall, which is a mile or two high at that point, we
+returned to a "bench" where there were some trees, and dismounted.
+
+Here, to our surprise, we found Mr. Bell again. As Tish remarked, he was
+better at walking than at talking. He looked surprised at seeing us, and
+was much more agreeable than before.
+
+"I'm afraid I was pretty surly the other night," he said. "The truth is,
+I was so blooming unhappy that I didn't give a damn for anything."
+
+But when he saw that Bill was preparing to take the pack off the horse
+he looked startled.
+
+"I say," he said, "you don't mean to camp here, do you?"
+
+"Such is my intention," Tish observed grimly.
+
+"But look here. Just beyond, at the pass, is where the holdup is to take
+place to-morrow."
+
+"So I believe," said Tish. "What has that to do with us? What are you
+going to do?"
+
+"Oh, I'm going to hang round."
+
+"Well, we intend to hang round also."
+
+He stood by and watched our preparations for camp. Tish chose a small
+grove for the tent, and then left us, clambering up the mountain-side.
+She finally disappeared. Aggie mixed some muffins for tea, and we
+invited the young man to join us. But he was looking downhearted again
+and refused.
+
+However, when she took them out of the portable oven, nicely browned,
+and lifting the tops of each one dropped in a teaspoonful of grape
+jelly, he changed his mind.
+
+"I'll stay, if you don't mind," he said. "Maybe some decent food will
+make me see things clearer."
+
+When Tish descended at six o'clock, she looked depressed. "There is no
+cave," she said, "although I have gone where a mountain goat would get
+dizzy. But I have found a good place to hide the horses, where we can
+get them quickly when we need them."
+
+Aggie was scooping the inside out of her muffin, being unable to eat the
+crust, but she went quite pale.
+
+"Tish," she said, "you have some desperate plan in view, and I am not
+equal to it. I am worn with travel and soft food, and am not as young as
+I once was."
+
+"Desperate nothing!" said Tish, pouring condensed milk into her tea. "I
+am going to teach a lot of idiots a lesson, that's all. There should be
+one spot in America free from the advertising man and his schemes, and
+this is going to be it. Commercialism," she went on, growing oratorical,
+"does not belong here among these mighty mountains. Once let it start,
+and these towering cliffs will be defaced with toothpowder and
+intoxicating-liquor signs."
+
+The young man knew the plans for the holdup even better than Bill. He
+was able to show us the exact spot which had been selected, and to tell
+us the hour at which the Ostermaier party was to cross the pass.
+
+"They'll lunch on the pass," he said, "and, of course, they suspect
+nothing. The young lady of whom I spoke to you will be one of their
+party. She, however, knows what is coming, and is, indeed, a party to
+it. The holdup will take place during luncheon."
+
+Here his voice broke, and he ate an entire muffin before he went on:
+"The holdup will take place on the pass, the bandits having been hidden
+on this 'bench' right here. Then the outlaws, having robbed the
+tourists, will steal the young lady and escape down the trail on the
+other side. The guide, who is in the plot, will ride ahead in this
+direction and raise the alarm. You understand," he added, "that as it's
+a put-up job, the tourists will get all their stuff back. I don't know
+how that's to be arranged."
+
+"But the girl?" Tish asked.
+
+"She's to make her escape later," Mr. Bell said grimly, "and will be
+photographed galloping down the trail, by another idiot with a camera,
+who, of course, just happens to be on the spot. She'll do it too," he
+added with a pathetic note of pride in his voice. "She's got nerve
+enough for anything."
+
+He drew a long breath, and Aggie poured him a third cup of tea.
+
+"I dare say this will finish everything," he said dejectedly. "I can't
+offer her any excitement like this. We live in a quiet suburb, where
+nobody ever fires a revolver except on the Fourth of July."
+
+"What she needs," Tish said, bending forward, "is a lesson, Mr.
+Bell--something to make her hate the very thought of a moving picture
+and shudder at the sound of a shot."
+
+"Exactly," said Mr. Bell. "I've thought of that. Something to make her
+gun-shy and camera-shy. It's curious about her. In some ways she's a
+timid girl. She's afraid of thunder, for one thing."
+
+Tish bent forward. "Do you know," she said, "the greatest weapon in the
+world?"
+
+"Weapon? Well, I don't know. These new German guns--"
+
+"The greatest weapon in the world," Tish explained, "is ridicule. Man is
+helpless against it. To be absurd is to be lost. When the bandits take
+the money, where do they go?"
+
+"Down the other side from the pass. A photographer will photograph them
+there, making their escape with the loot."
+
+"And the young lady?"
+
+"I've told you that," he said bitterly. "She is to be captured by the
+attacking party."
+
+"They will all be armed?"
+
+"Sure, with blanks. The Indians have guns and arrows, but the arrows
+have rubber tips."
+
+Tish rose majestically. "Mr. Bell," she said, "you may sleep to-night
+the sleep of peace. When I undertake a thing, I carry it through. My
+friends will agree with me. I never fail, when my heart is set on it. By
+the day after to-morrow the young lady in the case will hate the sight
+of a camera."
+
+Although not disclosing her plan, she invited the young man to join us.
+But his face fell and he shook his head.
+
+Tish said that she did not expect to need him, but that, if the time
+came, she would blow three times on a police whistle, which she had,
+with her usual foresight, brought along. He agreed to that, although
+looking rather surprised, and we parted from him.
+
+"I would advise," Tish said as he moved away, "that you conceal yourself
+in the valley below the pass on the other side."
+
+He agreed to this, and we separated for the night. But long after Aggie
+and I had composed ourselves to rest Tish sat on a stone by the
+camp-fire and rolled cigarettes.
+
+At last she came into the tent and wakened us by prodding us with her
+foot.
+
+"Get all the sleep you can," she said. "We'll leave here at dawn
+to-morrow, and there'll be little rest for any of us to-morrow night."
+
+At daylight next morning she roused us. She was dressed, except that she
+wore her combing-jacket, and her hair was loose round her face.
+
+"Aggie, you make an omelet in a hurry, and, Lizzie, you will have to get
+the horses."
+
+"I'll do nothing of the sort," I said, sitting up on the ground. "We've
+got a man here for that. Besides, I have to set the table."
+
+"Very well," Tish replied, "we can stay here, I dare say. Bill's busy at
+something I've set him to doing."
+
+"Whose fault is it," I demanded, "that we are here in 'Greenland's Icy
+Mountains'? Not mine. I'd never heard of the dratted place. And those
+horses are five miles away by now, most likely."
+
+"Go and get a cup of tea. You'll have a little sense then," said Tish,
+not unkindly. "And as for what Bill's doing, he's making revolvers.
+Where's your writing ink?"
+
+_I had none!_ I realized it that moment. I had got it out at the first
+camp to record in my diary the place, weather, temperature, and my own
+pulse rate, which I had been advised to watch, on account of the effect
+of altitude on the heart, and had left the bottle sitting on a stone.
+
+When I confessed this to Tish, she was unjustly angry and a trifle
+bitter.
+
+"It's what I deserve, most likely, for bringing along two incompetents,"
+was her brief remark. "Without ink we are weaponless."
+
+But she is a creature of resource, and a moment later she emerged from
+the tent and called to Bill in a cheerful tone.
+
+"No ink, Bill," she said, "but we've got blackberry cordial, and by
+mixing it with a little soot we may be able to manage."
+
+Aggie demurred loudly, as there are occasions when only a mouthful of
+the cordial enables her to keep doing. But Tish was firm. When I went to
+the fire, I found Bill busily carving wooden revolvers, copying Tish's,
+which lay before him. He had them done well enough, and could have gone
+for the horses as easy as not, but he insisted on trimming them up.
+Mine, which I still have, has a buffalo head carved on the handle, and
+Aggie's has a wreath of leaves running round the barrel.
+
+In spite of Aggie's wails Tish poured a large part of the blackberry
+cordial into a biscuit pan, and put in a chip of wood.
+
+"It makes it red," she said doubtfully. "I never saw a red revolver,
+Bill."
+
+"Seems like an awful waste," Bill said. But having now completed the
+wreath he placed all three weapons--he had made one for himself--in the
+pan. The last thing I saw, as I started for the horses, was the three of
+them standing about, looking down, and Aggie's face was full of misery.
+
+I was gone for a half-hour. The horses had not wandered far, and having
+mounted mine, although without a saddle, I copied as well as I could the
+whoop Bill used to drive them in, and rounded them up. When I returned,
+driving them before me, the pack was ready, and on Tish's face was a
+look of intense satisfaction. I soon perceived the reason.
+
+Lying on a stone by the fire were three of the shiniest black revolvers
+any one could want. I eyed Tish and she explained.
+
+"Stove polish," she said. "Like a fool I'd forgot it. Gives a true
+metallic luster, as it says on the box."
+
+Tish is very particular about a stove, and even on our camping-trips we
+keep the portable stove shining and clean.
+
+"Does it come off?"
+
+"Well, more or less," she admitted. "We can keep the box out and renew
+when necessary. It is a great comfort," she added, "to feel that we are
+all armed. We shall need weapons."
+
+"In an emergency," I observed rather tartly, "I hope you will not depend
+on us too much. While I don't know what you intend to do, if it is
+anything desperate, just remember that the only way Aggie or I can do
+any damage with these things is to thrust them down somebody's throat
+and strangle him to death."
+
+She ignored my remark, however, and soon we were on our horses and
+moving along the trail toward the pass.
+
+
+
+
+II
+
+
+It will be unnecessary to remind those familiar with Glacier Park of the
+trail which hugs the mountain above timber-line, and extends toward the
+pass for a mile or so, in a long semicircle which curves inward.
+
+At the end it turns to the right and mounts to an acre or so of level
+ground, with snow and rocks but no vegetation. This is the Piegan Pass.
+Behind it is the Garden Wall, that stupendous mass of granite rising to
+incredible heights. On the other side the trail drops abruptly, by means
+of stepladders which I have explained.
+
+Tish now told us of her plan.
+
+"The unfortunate part is," she said, "that the Ostermaiers will not see
+us. I tried to arrange it so they could, but it was impossible. We must
+content ourselves with the knowledge of a good deed done."
+
+Her plan, in brief, was this: The sham attacking party was to turn and
+ride away down the far side of the pass, up which the Ostermaiers had
+come. They were, according to the young man, to take the girl with them,
+with the idea of holding her for ransom. She was to escape, however,
+while they were lunching in some secluded fastness, and, riding back to
+the pass, was to meet there a rescue party, which the Ostermaiers were
+to meet on the way down to Gunsight Chalet.
+
+Tish's idea was this: We would ride up while they were lunching, pretend
+to think them real bandits, paying no attention to them if they fired at
+us, as we knew they had only blank cartridges, and, having taken them
+prisoners, make them walk in ignominy to the nearest camp, some miles
+farther.
+
+"Then," said Tish, "either they will confess the ruse, and the country
+will ring with laughter, or they will have to submit to arrest and much
+unpleasantness. It will be a severe lesson."
+
+We reached the pass safely, and on the way down the other side we passed
+Mr. Oliver, the moving-picture man, with his outfit on a horse. He
+touched his hat politely and moved out on a ledge to let us by.
+
+"Mind if I take you as you go down the mountain?" he called. "It's a
+bully place for a picture." He stared at Aggie, who was muffled in a
+cape and had the dish towel round her head. "I'd particularly like to
+get your Arab," he said. "The Far East and the Far West, you know."
+
+Aggie gave him a furious glance. "Arab nothing!" she snapped. "If you
+can't tell a Christian lady from a heathen, on account of her having
+lost her hat, then you belong in the dirty work you're doing."
+
+"Aggie, be quiet!" Tish said in an awful voice.
+
+But wrath had made Aggie reckless. "'Dirty work' was what I said," she
+repeated, staring at the young man.
+
+"I beg your pardon. I'm sure I--"
+
+"Don't think," Aggie went on, to Tish's fury, "that we don't know a few
+things. We do."
+
+"I see," he said slowly. "All right. Although I'd like to know--"
+
+"Good-morning," said Aggie, and kicked her horse to go on.
+
+I shall never forget Tish's face. Round the next bend she got off her
+horse and confronted Aggie.
+
+[Illustration: "The older I get, Aggie Pilkington, the more I realize
+that to take you anywhere means ruin."]
+
+"The older I get, Aggie Pilkington," she said, "the more I realize that
+to take you anywhere means ruin. We are done now. All our labor is for
+nothing. There will be no holdup, no nothing. They are scared off."
+
+But Aggie was still angry. "Just let some one take you for a lousy
+Bedouin, Tish," she said, "and see what you would do. I'm not sorry
+anyhow. I never did like the idea."
+
+But Tish dislikes relinquishing an idea, once it has taken hold. And,
+although she did not speak to Aggie again for the next hour, she went
+ahead with her preparations.
+
+"There's still a chance, Lizzie," she said. "It's not likely they'll
+give up easy, on account of hiring the Indians and everything."
+
+About a mile and a half down the trail, she picked out a place to hide.
+This time there was a cave. We cleared our saddles for action, as Tish
+proposed to let them escape past us with the girl, and then to follow
+them rapidly, stealing upon them if possible while they were at
+luncheon, and covering them with the one real revolver and the three
+wooden ones.
+
+The only thing that bothered us was Bill's attitude. He kept laughing to
+himself and muttering, and when he was storing things in the cave, Tish
+took me aside.
+
+"I don't like his attitude, Lizzie," she said. "He's likely to giggle or
+do something silly, just at the crucial moment. I cannot understand why
+he thinks it is funny, but he does. We'd be much better without him."
+
+"You'd better talk to him, Tish," I said. "You can't get rid of him
+now."
+
+But to tell Tish she cannot do a thing is to determine her to do it.
+
+It was still early, only half-past eight, when she came to me with an
+eager face.
+
+"I've got it, Lizzie," she said. "I'll send off Mona Lisa, and he will
+have to search for her. The only thing is, she won't move unless she's
+driven. If we could only find a hornet's nest again, we could manage. It
+may be cruel, but I understand that a hornet's sting is not as painful
+to a horse as to a human being."
+
+Mona Lisa, I must explain, was the pack-horse. Tish had changed her name
+from Jane to Mona Lisa because in the mornings she was constantly
+missing, and having to be looked for.
+
+Tish disappeared for a time, and we settled down to our long wait. Bill
+put another coat of stove polish on the weapons, and broke now and then
+into silent laughter. On my giving him a haughty glance, however, he
+became sober and rubbed with redoubled vigor.
+
+In a half-hour, however, I saw Tish beckoning to me from a distance, and
+I went to her. I soon saw that she was holding her handkerchief to one
+cheek, but when I mentioned the fact she ignored me.
+
+"I have found a nest, Lizzie," she cried. "Slip over and unfasten Mona
+Lisa. She's not near the other horses, which is fortunate."
+
+I then perceived that Tish's yellow slicker was behind her on the ground
+and tied into a bundle, from which emerged a dull roaring. I was
+wondering how Tish expected to open it, when she settled the question by
+asking me to cut a piece from the mosquito netting which we put in the
+doorway of the tent at night, and to bring her riding-gloves.
+
+Aggie was darning a hole in the tablecloth when I went back and Bill was
+still engaged with the weapons. Having taken what she required to Tish,
+under pretense of giving Mona Lisa a lump of sugar, I untied her. What
+followed was exactly as Tish had planned. Mona Lisa, not realizing her
+freedom, stood still while Tish untied the slicker and freed its furious
+inmates. She then dropped the whole thing under the unfortunate animal,
+and retreated, not too rapidly, for fear of drawing Bill's attention.
+For possibly sixty seconds nothing happened, except that Mona Lisa
+raised her head and appeared to listen. Then, with a loud scream, she
+threw up her head and bolted. By the time Bill had put down the stove
+brush she was out of sight among the trees, but we could hear her
+leaping and scrambling through the wood.
+
+"Jumping cats!" said Bill, and ran for his horse. "Acts as though she'd
+started for the Coast!" he yelled to me, and flung after her.
+
+When he had disappeared, Tish came out of the woods, and, getting a
+kettle of boiling water, poured it over the nest. In spite of the
+netting, however, she was stung again, on the back of the neck, and
+spent the rest of the morning holding wet mud to the affected parts.
+
+Her brain, however, was as active as ever, and by half-past eleven,
+mounting a boulder, she announced that she could see the Ostermaier
+party far down the trail, and that in an hour they would probably be at
+the top. She had her field-glasses, and she said that Mrs. Ostermaier
+was pointing up to the pass and shaking her head, and that the others
+were arguing with her.
+
+[Illustration: "It would be just like the woman, to refuse to come any
+farther and spoil everything"]
+
+"It would be just like the woman," Tish said bitterly, "to refuse to
+come any farther and spoil everything."
+
+But a little later she announced that the guide was leading Mrs.
+Ostermaier's horse and that they were coming on.
+
+We immediately retreated to the cave and waited, it being Tish's
+intention to allow them to reach the pass without suspecting our
+presence, and only to cut off the pseudo-bandits in their retreat, as I
+have explained.
+
+It was well that we had concealed the horses also, for the party stopped
+near the cave, and Mrs. Ostermaier was weeping. "Not a step farther!"
+she said. "I have a family to consider, and Mr. Ostermaier is a man of
+wide usefulness and cannot be spared."
+
+We did not dare to look out, but we heard the young lady speaking, and
+as Aggie remarked later, no one would have thought, from the sweetness
+of her voice, that she was a creature of duplicity.
+
+"But it is perfectly safe, dear Mrs. Ostermaier," she said "And think,
+when you go home, of being able to say that you have climbed a mountain
+pass."
+
+"Pass!" sniffed Mrs. Ostermaier. "Pass nothing! I don't call a wall a
+mile high a pass."
+
+"Think," said the girl, "of being able to crow over those three old
+women who are always boasting of the things they do. Probably you are
+right, and they never do them at all, but you--there's a moving-picture
+man waiting, remember, and you can show the picture before the Dorcas
+Society. No one can ever doubt that you have done a courageous thing.
+You'll have the proof."
+
+"George," said Mrs. Ostermaier in a small voice, "if anything happens, I
+have told you how I want my things divided."
+
+"Little devil!" whispered Aggie, referring to the girl. "If that young
+man knows when he is well off, he'll let her go."
+
+But beyond rebuking her for the epithet, Tish made no comment, and the
+party moved on. We lost them for a time among the trees, but when they
+moved out above timber-line we were able to watch them, and we saw that
+Mrs. Ostermaier got off her horse, about halfway up, and climbed slowly
+on foot. Tish, who had the glasses, said that she looked purple and
+angry, and that she distinctly saw the guide give her something to drink
+out of a bottle. It might, however, have been vichy or some similar
+innocent beverage, and I believe in giving her the benefit of the doubt.
+
+When at last they vanished over the edge of the pass, we led out our
+horses and prepared for what was to come. Bill had not returned, and,
+indeed, we did not see him until the evening of the second day after
+that, when, worn but triumphant, we emerged from the trail at the Many
+Glaciers Hotel. That, however, comes later in this narrative.
+
+With everything prepared, Tish judged it best to have luncheon. I made a
+few mayonnaise-and-lettuce sandwiches, beating the mayonnaise in the
+cool recesses of the cave, and we drank some iced tea, to which Aggie
+had thoughtfully added sliced lemon and a quantity of ginger ale.
+Feeling much refreshed, we grasped our weapons and waited.
+
+At half-past twelve we heard a loud shriek on the pass, far overhead,
+followed almost immediately by a fusillade of shots. Then a silence,
+followed by more shots. Then a solitary horseman rode over the edge of
+the pass and, spurring his horse, rode recklessly down the precipitous
+trail. Aggie exclaimed that it was Mr. Ostermaier, basely deserting his
+wife in her apparent hour of need. But Tish, who had the glasses,
+reported finally that it was the moving-picture man.
+
+We were greatly surprised, as it had not occurred to us that this would
+be a part of the program.
+
+As he descended, Tish announced that there must be another photographer
+on top, as he was "registering" signs of terror--a moving-picture
+expression which she had acquired from Charlie Sands--and looking back
+frequently over his shoulder.
+
+We waited until he reached timber-line, and then withdrew to a group of
+trees. It was not our intention to allow him to see us and spoil
+everything. But when he came near, through the woods, and his horse
+continued at unabated speed, Tish decided that the animal, frightened by
+the shots, was running away.
+
+She therefore placed herself across the trail to check its headlong
+speed, but the animal merely rushed round her. Mr. Oliver yelled
+something at us, which we were, however, unable to hear, and kept madly
+on.
+
+Almost immediately four men, firing back over their shoulders, rode into
+sight at the pass and came swiftly down toward us.
+
+"Where's the girl?" Tish cried with her glasses to her eyes. "The idiots
+have got excited and have forgotten to steal her."
+
+That was plainly what had happened, but she was determined to be stolen
+anyhow, for the next moment she rode into view, furiously following the
+bandits.
+
+"She's kept her head anyhow," Tish observed with satisfaction. "Trust a
+lot of men to go crazy and do the wrong thing. But they'll have to
+change the story and make her follow them."
+
+At timber-line the men seemed to realize that she was behind them, and
+they turned and looked up. They seemed to be at a loss to know what to
+do, in view of the picture. But they were quick thinkers, too, we
+decided. Right then and there they took her prisoner, surrounding her.
+
+She made a desperate resistance, even crying out, as we could plainly
+see. But Tish was irritated. She said she could not see how the story
+would hold now. Either the girl should have captured them, they being
+out of ammunition, or the whole thing should have been done again,
+according to the original plan. However, as she said, it was not our
+affair. Our business was to teach them a lesson not to impose on
+unsuspecting tourists, for although not fond of Mrs. Ostermaier, we had
+been members of Mr. Ostermaier's church, and liked him, although his
+sermons were shorter than Tish entirely approved of.
+
+We withdrew again to seclusion until they had passed, and Tish gave them
+ten minutes to get well ahead. Then we rode out.
+
+Tish's face was stern as she led off. The shriek of Mrs. Ostermaier was
+still, as she said in a low tone, ringing in her ears. But before we had
+gone very far, Tish stopped and got off her horse. "We've got to pad the
+horses' feet," she said. "How can we creep up on them when on every
+stony place we sound like an artillery engagement?"
+
+Here was a difficulty we had not anticipated. But Tish overcame it with
+her customary resource, by taking the blanket from under her saddle and
+cutting it into pieces with her scissors, which always accompany her. We
+then cut the leather straps from our saddles at her direction, and each
+of us went to work. Aggie, however, protested.
+
+"I never expected," she said querulously, "to be sitting on the Rocky
+Mountains under a horse, tying a piece of bed quilt on his feet. I
+wouldn't mind," she added, "if the creature liked me. But the way he
+feels toward me he's likely to haul off and murder me at any moment."
+
+However, it was done at last, and it made a great change. We moved along
+silently, and all went well except that, having neglected to draw the
+cinch tight, and the horse's back being slippery without the padding, my
+saddle turned unexpectedly, throwing me off into the trail. I bruised my
+arm badly, but Tish only gave me a glance of scorn and went on.
+
+Being above carelessness herself, she very justly resents it in others.
+
+We had expected, with reason, that the so-called highwaymen, having
+retreated to a certain distance, would there pause and very possibly
+lunch before returning. It was, therefore, a matter of surprise to find
+that they had kept on.
+
+Moreover, they seemed to have advanced rapidly, and Tish, who had read a
+book on signs of the trail, examined the hoofprints of their horses in a
+soft place beside a stream, and reported that they had been going at a
+lope.
+
+"Now, remember," she said as she prepared to mount again, "to all
+intents and purposes these are real bandits and to be treated
+accordingly. Our motto is 'No quarter.' I shall be harsh, and I expect
+no protest from either of you. They deserve everything they get."
+
+But when, after another mile or two, we came to a side trail, leading,
+by Tish's map, not to Many Glaciers, but up a ravine to another pass,
+and Tish saw that they had taken that direction, we were puzzled.
+
+But not for long.
+
+"I understand now," she said. "It is all clear. The photographer was
+riding ahead to get them up this valley somewhere. They've probably got
+a rendezvous all ready, with another camera in place. I must say," she
+observed, "that they are doing it thoroughly."
+
+We rode for two hours, and no sign of them. The stove polish had come
+off the handles of our revolvers by that time, and Aggie, having rubbed
+her face ever and anon to remove perspiration, presented under her
+turban a villainous and ferocious expression quite at variance with her
+customary mildness.
+
+I urged her to stop and wash, but Tish, after a glance, said to keep on.
+
+"Your looking like that's a distinct advantage, Aggie," she said. "Like
+as not they'll throw up their hands the minute they see you. I know I
+should. You'd better ride first when we get near."
+
+"Like as not they'll put a hole in me," Aggie objected. "And as to
+riding first, I will not. This is your doing, Tish Carberry, and as for
+their having blank cartridges--how do we know someone hasn't made a
+mistake and got a real one?"
+
+Tish reflected on that. "It's a possibility," she agreed. "If we find
+that they're going to spend the night out, it might be better to wait
+until they've taken off all the hardware they're hung with."
+
+But we did not come up with them. We kept on finding traces of the party
+in marshy spots, and once Tish hopped off her horse and picked up a
+small handkerchief with a colored border and held it up to us.
+
+"It's hers," she said. "Anybody would know she is the sort to use
+colored borders. They're ahead somewhere."
+
+But it seemed strange that they would go so far, and I said so.
+
+"We're far enough off the main trail, Tish," I said. "And it's getting
+wilder every minute. There's nothing I can see to prevent a mountain
+lion dropping on us most any time."
+
+"Not if it gets a good look at Aggie!" was Tish's grim response.
+
+It began to grow dark in the valley, and things seemed to move on either
+side of the trail. Aggie called out once that we had just passed a
+grizzly bear, but Tish never faltered. The region grew more and more
+wild. The trail was broken with mudholes and crossed by fallen logs.
+With a superb disdain Tish rode across all obstacles, not even glancing
+at them. But Aggie and I got off at the worst places and led our horses.
+At one mudhole I was unfortunate enough to stumble. A horse with a
+particle of affection for a woman who had ridden it and cared for it for
+several days would have paused.
+
+Not so my animal. With a heartlessness at which I still shudder the
+creature used me as a bridge, and stepped across, dryfoot, on my back.
+Owing to his padded feet and to the depth of the mud--some eight feet, I
+believe--I was uninjured. But it required ten minutes of hard labor on
+the part of both Tish and Aggie to release me from the mud, from which I
+was finally raised with a low, hissing sound.
+
+"Park!" said Aggie as she scraped my obliterated features with a small
+branch. "Park, indeed! It's a howling wilderness. I'm fond of my native
+land," she went on, digging out my nostrils, so I could breathe, "but I
+don't calculate to eat it. As for that unfeeling beast of yours, Lizzie,
+I've never known a horse to show such selfishness. Never."
+
+Well, we went on at last, but I was not so enthusiastic about teaching
+people lessons as I had been. It seemed to me that we might have kept on
+along the trail and had a mighty good time, getting more and more nimble
+and stopping now and then to bake a pie and have a decent meal, and
+putting up our hair in crimps at night, without worrying about other
+folks' affairs.
+
+Late in the afternoon of that day, when so far as I could see Tish was
+lost, and not even her gathering a bunch of wild flowers while the
+horses rested could fool me, I voiced my complaint.
+
+"Let me look at the map, Tish," I suggested. "I'm pretty good at maps.
+You know how I am at charades and acrostics. At the church supper--"
+
+"Nonsense, Lizzie," she returned. "You couldn't make head or tail of
+this map. It's my belief that the man who made it had never been here.
+Either that or there has been an earthquake since. But," she went on,
+more cheerfully, "if we are lost, so are the others."
+
+"If we even had Bill along!"
+
+"Bill!" Tish said scornfully. "It's my belief Bill is in the whole
+business, and that if we hadn't got rid of him we'd have been the next
+advertising dodge. As far as that goes," she said thoughtfully, "it
+wouldn't surprise me a particle to find that we've been taken, without
+our knowing it, most any time. Your horse just now, walking across that
+bridge of size, for one thing."
+
+Tish seldom makes a pun, which she herself has said is the lowest form
+of humor. The dig at my figure was unkind, also, and unworthy of her. I
+turned and left her.
+
+At last, well on in the evening, I saw Tish draw up her horse and point
+ahead.
+
+"The miscreants!" she said.
+
+True enough, up a narrow side cañon we could see a camp-fire. It was a
+small one, and only noticeable from one point. But Tish's keen eye had
+seen it. She sat on her horse and gazed toward it.
+
+"What a shameful thing it is," she said, "to prostitute the beauties of
+this magnificent region to such a purpose. To make of these beetling
+crags a joke! To invade these vast gorges with the spirit of
+commercialism and to bring a pack of movie actors to desecrate the
+virgin silence with ribald jests and laughter! Lizzie, I wish you
+wouldn't wheeze!"
+
+"You would wheeze, too, Tish Carberry," I retorted, justly indignant,
+"if a horse had just pressed your spinal column into your breast bone.
+Goodness knows," I said, "where my lungs are. I've missed them ever
+since my fall."
+
+However, she was engrossed with larger matters, and ignored my
+petulance. She is a large-natured woman and above pettiness.
+
+We made our way slowly up the cañon. The movie outfit was securely
+camped under an overhanging rock, as we could now see. At one point
+their position commanded the trail, which was hardly more than a track
+through the wilderness, and before we reached this point we dismounted
+and Tish surveyed the camp through her glasses.
+
+"We'd better wait until dark," Tish said. "Owing to the padding they
+have not heard us, but it looks to me as if one of them is on a rock,
+watching."
+
+It seemed rather strange to me that they were keeping a lookout, but
+Tish only shrugged her shoulders.
+
+"If I know anything of that red-headed Oliver man," she said, "he hates
+to let a camera rest. Like as not he's got it set up among the trees
+somewhere, taking flashlights of wild animals. It's rather a pity," she
+said, turning and surveying Aggie and myself, "that he cannot get you
+two. If you happen to see anything edible lying on the ground, you'd
+better not pick it up. It's probably attached to the string that sets
+off the flash."
+
+We led our horses into the woods, which were very thick at that point,
+and tied them. My beast, however, lay down and rolled, saddle and all,
+thus breaking my mirror--a most unlucky omen--and the bottle of olive
+oil which we had brought along for mayonnaise dressing. Tish is fond of
+mayonnaise, and, besides, considers olive oil most strengthening.
+However, it was gone, and although Aggie comforted me by suggesting that
+her boiled salad dressing is quite tasty, I was disconsolate.
+
+It was by that time seven o'clock and almost dark. We held a conference.
+Tish was of the opinion that we should first lead off their horses, if
+possible.
+
+"I intend," she said severely, "to make escape impossible. If they fire,
+when taken by surprise, remember that they have only blank cartridges. I
+must say," she added with a confession of unusual weakness, "that I am
+glad the Indians escaped the other way. I would hardly know what to do
+with Indians, even quite tame ones. While I know a few letters of the
+deaf-and-dumb language, which I believe all tribes use in common, I fear
+that in a moment of excitement I would forget what I know."
+
+The next step, she asserted, was to secure their weapons.
+
+"After all," she said, "the darkness is in our favor. I intend to fire
+once, to show them that we are armed and dangerous. And if you two will
+point the guns Bill made, they cannot possibly tell that they are not
+real."
+
+"But we will know it," Aggie quavered. Now that the quarry was in sight
+she was more and more nervous, sneezing at short intervals in spite of
+her menthol inhaler. "I am sorry, Tish, but I cannot feel the same about
+that wooden revolver as I would about a real one. And even when I try to
+forget that it is only wood the carving reminds me."
+
+But Tish silenced her with a glance. She had strangely altered in the
+last few minutes. All traces of fatigue had gone, and when she struck a
+match and consulted her watch I saw in her face that high resolve, that
+stern and matchless courage, which I so often have tried to emulate and
+failed.
+
+"Seven o'clock," she announced. "We will dine first. There is nothing
+like food to restore failing spirits."
+
+But we had nothing except our sandwiches, and Tish suggested snaring
+some of the stupid squirrels with which the region abounded.
+
+"Aggie needs broth," she said decidedly. "We have sandwiches, but Aggie
+is frail and must be looked to."
+
+Aggie was pathetically grateful, although sorry for the squirrels, which
+were pretty and quite tame. But Tish was firm in her kindly intent, and
+proceeded at once to set a rabbit snare, a trick she had learned in the
+Maine woods. Having done this, and built a small fire, well hidden, we
+sat down to wait.
+
+In a short time we heard terrible human cries proceeding from the snare,
+and, hurrying thither, found in it a young mountain lion. It looked
+dangerous, and was biting in every direction. I admit that I was
+prepared to leave in haste, but not so Tish. She fetched her umbrella,
+without which she never travels, and while the animal set its jaws in
+it--a painful necessity, as it was her best umbrella--Tish hit it on the
+head--not the umbrella, but the lion--with a large stone.
+
+Tish's satisfaction was unbounded. She stated that the flesh of the
+mountain lion was much like veal, and so indeed it proved. We made a
+nourishing soup of it, with potatoes and a can of macédoine vegetables,
+and within an hour and a half we had dined luxuriously, adding to our
+repast what remained of the sandwiches, and a tinned plum pudding of
+English make, very nutritious and delicious.
+
+For twenty minutes after the meal we all stood. Tish insists on this, as
+aiding digestion. Then we prepared for the night's work.
+
+I believe that our conduct requires no defense. But it may be well again
+to explain our position. These people, whose camp-fire glowed so
+brazenly against the opposite cliff, had for purely mercenary motives
+committed a cruel hoax. They had posed as bandits, and as bandits they
+deserved to be treated. They had held up our own clergyman, of a nervous
+temperament, on a mountain pass, and had taken from him a part of his
+stipend. It was heartless. It was barbarous. It was cruel.
+
+My own courage came back with the hot food, which I followed by a
+charcoal tablet. And the difference in Aggie was marked. Possibly some
+of the courage of the mountain lion, that bravest of wild creatures, had
+communicated itself to her through the homely medicine of digestion.
+
+"I can hardly wait to get after them," she said.
+
+However, it was still too early for them to have settled for the night.
+We sat down, having extinguished our fire, and I was just dozing off
+when Tish remembered the young man who was to have listened for the
+police whistle.
+
+"I absolutely forgot him," she said regretfully. "I suppose he is
+hanging round the foot of Piegan's Pass yet. I'm sorry to have him miss
+this. I shall tell him, when I see him, that no girl worth having would
+be sitting over there at supper with four moving-picture actors without
+a chaperon. The whole proceeding is scandalous. I have noticed," she
+added, "that it is the girls from quiet suburban towns who are really
+most prone to defy the conventions when the chance comes."
+
+We dozed for a short time.
+
+Then Tish sat up suddenly. "What's that?" she said.
+
+We listened and distinctly heard the tramp of horses' feet. We started
+up, but Tish was quite calm.
+
+"They've turned their horses out," she said. "Fortune is with us. They
+are coming this way."
+
+But at first it did not seem so fortunate, for we heard one of the men
+following them, stumbling along, and, I regret to say, using profane
+language. They came directly toward us, and Aggie beside me trembled.
+But Tish was equal to the emergency.
+
+She drew us behind a large rock, where, spreading out a raincoat to
+protect us from the dampness, we sat down and waited.
+
+When one of the animals loomed up close to the rock Aggie gave a low
+cry, but Tish covered her mouth fiercely with an ungentle hand.
+
+"Be still!" she hissed.
+
+It was now perfectly dark, and the man with the horses was not far off.
+We could not see him, but at last he came near enough so that we could
+see the flare of a match when he lighted a cigarette. I put my hand on
+Aggie, and she was shaking with nervousness.
+
+"I am sure I am going to sneeze, Lizzie," she gasped.
+
+And sneeze she did. She muffled it considerably, however, and we were
+not discovered. But, Tish, I knew, was silently raging.
+
+The horses came nearer.
+
+One of them, indeed, came quite close, and took a nip at the toe of my
+riding-boot. I kicked at it sharply, however, and it moved away.
+
+The man had gone on. We watched the light of his cigarette, and thus, as
+he now and then turned his head, knew where he was. It was now that I
+felt, rather than heard, that Tish was crawling out from the shelter of
+the rock. At the same time we heard, by the crunching of branches, that
+the man had sat down near at hand.
+
+Tish's progress was slow but sure. For a half-hour we sat there. Then
+she returned, still crawling, and on putting out my hand I discovered
+that she had secured the lasso from her saddle and had brought it back.
+How true had been her instinct when she practiced its use! How my own
+words, that it was all foolishness, came back and whispered lessons of
+humility in my ear!
+
+At this moment a deep, resonant sound came from the tree where the movie
+actor sat. At the same moment a small creature dropped into my lap from
+somewhere above, and ran up my sleeve. I made frantic although
+necessarily silent efforts to dislodge it, and it bit me severely.
+
+The necessity for silence taxed all my strength, but managing finally to
+secure it by the tail, I forcibly withdrew it and flung it away.
+Unluckily it struck Aggie in the left eye and inflicted a painful
+bruise.
+
+Tish had risen to her feet and was standing, a silent and menacing
+figure, while this event transpired. The movements of the horses as they
+grazed, the soft breeze blowing through the pines, were the only sounds.
+Now she took a step forward.
+
+"He's asleep!" she whispered. "Aggie, sit still and watch the horses.
+Lizzie, come with me."
+
+As I advanced to her she thrust her revolver into my hand.
+
+"When I give the word," she said in a whisper, "hold it against his
+neck. But keep your finger off the trigger. It's loaded."
+
+We advanced slowly, halting now and then to listen. Although brush
+crackled under our feet, the grazing horses were making a similar
+disturbance, and the man slept on. Soon we could see him clearly,
+sitting back against a tree, his head dropped forward on his breast.
+Tish surveyed the scene with her keen and appraising eye, and raised
+the lasso.
+
+The first result was not good. The loaded end struck a branch, and,
+being deflected, the thing wrapped itself perhaps a dozen times round my
+neck. Tish, being unconscious of what had happened, drew it up with a
+jerk, and I stood helpless and slowly strangling. At last, however, she
+realized the difficulty and released me. I was unable to breathe
+comfortably for some time, and my tongue felt swollen for several hours.
+
+Through all of this the movie actor had slept soundly. At the second
+effort Tish succeeded in lassoing him without difficulty. We had feared
+a loud outcry before we could get to him, but owing to Tish's swiftness
+in tightening the rope he was able to make, at first, only a low,
+gurgling sound. I had advanced to him, and was under the impression that
+I was holding the revolver to his neck. On discovering, however, that I
+was pressing it to the trunk of the tree, to which he was now secured by
+the lariat, I corrected the error and held it against his ear.
+
+He was now wide awake and struggling violently. Then, I regret to say,
+he broke out into such language as I have never heard before. At Tish's
+request I suppress his oaths, and substitute for them harmless
+expressions in common use.
+
+"Good gracious!" he said. "What in the world are you doing anyhow?
+Jimminy crickets, take that thing away from my neck! Great Scott and
+land alive, I haven't done anything! My word, that gun will go off if
+you aren't careful!"
+
+I am aware that much of the strength of what he said is lost in this
+free translation. But it is impossible to repeat his real language.
+
+"Don't move," Tish said, "and don't call out. A sound, and a bullet goes
+crashing through your brain."
+
+"A woman!" he said in most unflattering amazement. "Great Jehoshaphat, a
+woman!"
+
+This again is only a translation of what he said.
+
+"Exactly," Tish observed calmly. She had cut the end off the lasso with
+her scissors, and was now tying his feet together with it. "My friend,
+we know the whole story, and I am ashamed, ashamed," she said
+oratorically, "of your sex! To frighten a harmless and well-meaning
+preacher and his wife for the purpose of publicity is not a joke. Such
+hoaxes are criminal. If you must have publicity, why not seek it in some
+other way?"
+
+"Crazy!" he groaned to himself. "In the hands of lunatics! Oh, my
+goodness!" Again these were not exactly his words.
+
+Having bound him tightly, hand and foot, and taken a revolver from his
+pocket, Tish straightened herself.
+
+"Now we'll gag him, Lizzie," she said. "We have other things to do
+to-night than to stand here and converse." Then she turned to the man
+and told him a deliberate lie. I am sorry to record this. But a tendency
+to avoid the straight and narrow issues of truth when facing a crisis is
+one of Tish's weaknesses, the only flaw in an otherwise strong and
+perfect character.
+
+"We are going to leave you here," she said. "But one of our number,
+fully armed, will be near by. A sound from you, or any endeavor to call
+for succor, will end sadly for you. A word to the wise. Now, Lizzie,
+take that bandanna off his neck and tie it over his mouth."
+
+Tish stood, looking down at him, and her very silhouette was scornful.
+
+"Think, my friend," she said, "of the ignominy of your position! Is any
+moving picture worth it? Is the pleasure of seeing yourself on the
+screen any reward for such a shameful position as yours now is? No. A
+thousand times no."
+
+He made a choking sound in his throat and writhed helplessly. And so we
+left him, a hopeless and miserable figure, to ponder on his sins.
+
+"That's one," said Tish briskly. "There are only three left. Come,
+Aggie," she said cheerfully--"to work! We have made a good beginning."
+
+It is with modesty that I approach that night's events, remembering
+always that Tish's was the brain which conceived and carried out the
+affair. We were but her loyal and eager assistants. It is for this
+reason that I thought, and still think, that the money should have been
+divided so as to give Tish the lion's share. But she, dear, magnanimous
+soul, refused even to hear of such a course, and insisted that we share
+it equally.
+
+Of that, however, more anon.
+
+We next proceeded to capture their horses and to tie them up. We
+regretted the necessity for this, since the unfortunate animals had
+traveled far and were doubtless hungry. It went to my heart to drag them
+from their fragrant pasture and to tie them to trees. But, as Tish said,
+"Necessity knows no law," not even kindness. So we tied them up. Not,
+however, until we had moved them far from the trail.
+
+Tish stopped then, and stared across the cañon to the enemy's camp-fire.
+
+"No quarter, remember," she said. "And bring your weapons."
+
+We grasped our wooden revolvers and, with Tish leading, started for the
+camp. Unluckily there was a stream between us, and it was necessary to
+ford it. It shows Tish's true generalship that, instead of removing her
+shoes and stockings, as Aggie and I were about to do, she suggested
+getting our horses and riding across. This we did, and alighted on the
+other side dryshod.
+
+It was, on consulting my watch, nine o'clock and very dark. A few drops
+of rain began to fall also, and the distant camp-fire was burning low.
+Tish gave us each a little blackberry cordial, for fear of dampness, and
+took some herself. The mild glow which followed was very comforting.
+
+It was Tish, naturally, who went forward to reconnoiter. She returned in
+an hour, to report that the three men were lying round the fire, two
+asleep and one leaning on his elbow with a revolver handy. She did not
+see Mr. Oliver, and it was possible that it was he we had tied to the
+tree. The girl, she said, was sitting on a log, with her chin propped in
+her hands.
+
+"She looked rather low-spirited," Tish said. "I expect she liked the
+first young man better than she thought she did. I intend to give her a
+piece of my mind as soon as I get a chance. This playing hot and cold
+isn't maidenly, to say the least."
+
+We now moved slowly forward, after tying our horses. Toward the last,
+following Tish's example, we went on our hands and knees, and I was
+thankful then for no skirts. It is wonderful the freedom a man has. I
+was never one to approve of Doctor Mary Walker, but I'm not so sure she
+isn't a wise woman and the rest of us fools. I haven't put on a skirt
+braid since that time without begrudging it.
+
+Well, as I have stated, we advanced, and at last we were in full sight
+of the camp. I must say I'd have thought they'd have a tent. We expected
+something better, I suppose, because of the articles in the papers about
+movie people having their own limousines, and all that. But there they
+were, open to the wrath of the heavens, and deserving it, if I do say
+so.
+
+The girl was still sitting, as Tish had described her. Only now she was
+crying. My heart was downright sore for her. It is no comfort, having
+made a wrong choice, to know that it is one's own fault.
+
+Having now reached the zone of firelight Tish gave the signal, and we
+rose and pointed our revolvers at them. Then Tish stepped forward and
+said:--
+
+"Hands up!"
+
+I shall never forget the expression on the man's face.
+
+He shouted something, but he threw up his hands also, with his eyes
+popping out of his head. The others scrambled to their feet, but he
+warned them.
+
+"Careful, boys!" he yelled. "They're got the drop on us."
+
+Just then his eyes fell on Aggie, and he screeched:--
+
+"Two women and a Turk, by ----." The blank is mine.
+
+"Lizzie," said Tish sternly, as all of them, including the girl, held
+their hands up, "just give me your weapon and go over them."
+
+"Go over them?" I said, not understanding.
+
+"Search them," said Tish. "Take everything out of their pockets. And
+don't move," she ordered them sternly. "One motion, and I fire. Go on,
+Lizzie."
+
+Now I have never searched a man's pockets, and the idea was repugnant to
+me. I am a woman of delicate instincts. But Tish's face was stern. I did
+as commanded, therefore, the total result being:--
+
+Four revolvers.
+
+Two large knives.
+
+One small knife.
+
+One bunch of keys.
+
+One plug of chewing-tobacco.
+
+Four cartridge belts.
+
+Two old pipes.
+
+Mr. Ostermaier's cigar-case, which I recognized at once, being the one
+we had presented to him.
+
+Mrs. Ostermaier's wedding-ring and gold bracelet, which her sister gave
+her on her last birthday.
+
+A diamond solitaire, unknown, as Mrs. Ostermaier never owned one,
+preferring instead earrings as more showy.
+
+And a considerable sum of money, which I kept but did not count.
+
+There were other small articles, of no value.
+
+"Is that all the loot you secured during the infamous scene on Piegan
+Pass?" Tish demanded. "You need not hide anything from us. We know the
+facts, and the whole story will soon be public."
+
+"That's all, lady," whined one of the men. "Except a few boxes of lunch,
+and that's gone. Lady, lemme take my hands down. I've got a stiff
+shoulder, and I--"
+
+"Keep them up," Tish snapped. "Aggie, see that they keep them up."
+
+Until that time we had been too occupied to observe the girl, who merely
+stood and watched in a disdainful sort of way. But now Tish turned and
+eyed her sternly.
+
+"Search her, Lizzie," she commanded.
+
+"Search me!" the girl exclaimed indignantly. "Certainly not!"
+
+"Lizzie," said Tish in her sternest manner, "go over that girl. Look in
+her riding-boots. I haven't come across Mrs. Ostermaier's earrings yet."
+
+At that the girl changed color and backed off.
+
+"It's an outrage," she said. "Surely I have suffered enough."
+
+"Not as much," Tish observed, "as you are going to suffer. Go over her,
+Lizzie."
+
+While I searched her, Tish was lecturing her.
+
+"You come from a good home, I understand," she said, "and you ought
+to know better. Not content with breaking an honest heart, you join a
+moving-picture outfit and frighten a prominent divine--for Mr. Ostermaier
+is well known--into what may be an illness. You cannot deny," she
+accused her, "that it was you who coaxed them to the pass. At least you
+needn't. We heard you."
+
+"How was I to know--" the girl began sullenly.
+
+But at that moment I found Mrs. Ostermaier's chamois bag thrust into her
+riding-boot, and she suddenly went pale.
+
+Tish held it up before her accusingly. "I dare say you will not deny
+this," she exclaimed, and took Mrs. Ostermaier's earrings out of it.
+
+The men muttered, but Aggie was equal to the occasion. "Silence!" she
+said, and pointed the revolver at each in turn.
+
+The girl started to speak. Then she shrugged her shoulders. "I could
+explain," she said, "but I won't. If you think I stole those hideous
+earrings you're welcome to."
+
+"Of course not," said Tish sarcastically. "No doubt she gave them to
+you--although I never knew her to give anything away before."
+
+The girl stood still, thinking. Suddenly she said "There's another one,
+you know. Another man."
+
+"We have him. He will give no further trouble," Tish observed grimly. "I
+think we have you all, except your Mr. Oliver."
+
+"He is not my Mr. Oliver," said the girl. "I never want to see him
+again. I--I hate him."
+
+"You haven't got much mind or you couldn't change it so quickly."
+
+She looked sulky again, and said she'd thank us for the ring, which was
+hers and she could prove it.
+
+But Tish sternly refused. "It's my private opinion," she observed, "that
+it is Mrs. Ostermaier's, and she has not worn it openly because of the
+congregation talking quite considerably about her earrings, and not
+caring for jewelry on the minister's wife. That's what I think."
+
+Shortly after that we heard a horse loping along the road. It came
+nearer, and then left the trail and came toward the fire. Tish picked up
+one of the extra revolvers and pointed it. It was Mr. Oliver!
+
+"Throw up your hands!" Tish called. And he did it. He turned a sort of
+blue color, too, when he saw us, and all the men with their hands up.
+But he looked relieved when he saw the girl.
+
+"Thank Heaven!" he said. "The way I've been riding this country--"
+
+"You rode hard enough away from the pass," she replied coldly.
+
+We took a revolver away from him and lined him up with the others. All
+the time he was paying little attention to us and none at all to the
+other men. But he was pleading with the girl.
+
+"Honestly," he said, "I thought I could do better for everybody by doing
+what I did. How did I know," he pleaded, "that you were going to do such
+a crazy thing as this?"
+
+But she only stared at him as if she hated the very ground he stood on.
+
+"It's a pity," Tish observed, "that you haven't got your camera along.
+This would make a very nice picture. But I dare say you could hardly
+turn the crank with your hands in the air."
+
+We searched him carefully, but he had only a gold watch and some money.
+On the chance, however, that the watch was Mr. Ostermaier's, although
+unlikely, we took it.
+
+I must say he was very disagreeable, referring to us as highwaymen and
+using uncomplimentary language. But, as Tish observed, we might as well
+be thorough while we were about it.
+
+For the nonce we had forgotten the other man. But now I noticed that the
+pseudo-bandits wore a watchful and not unhopeful air. And suddenly one
+of them whistled--a thin, shrill note that had, as Tish later remarked,
+great penetrative power without being noisy.
+
+"That's enough of that," she said. "Aggie, take another of these guns
+and point them both at these gentlemen. If they whistle again, shoot.
+As to the other man, he will not reply, nor will he come to your
+assistance. He is gagged and tied, and into the bargain may become at
+any time the victim of wild beasts."
+
+The moment she had said it, Tish realized that it was but too true, and
+she grew thoughtful. Aggie, too, was far from comfortable. She said
+later that she was uncertain what to do. Tish had said to fire if they
+whistled again. The question in her mind was, had it been said purely
+for effect or did Tish mean it? After all, the men were not real
+bandits, she reflected, although guilty of theft, even if only for
+advertising purposes. She was greatly disturbed, and as agitation always
+causes a return of her hay fever, she began to sneeze violently.
+
+Until then the men had been quiet, if furious. But now they fell into
+abject terror, imploring Tish, whom they easily recognized as the
+leader, to take the revolvers from her.
+
+But Tish only said: "No fatalities, Aggie, please. Point at an arm or a
+leg until the spasm subsides."
+
+Her tone was quite gentle.
+
+Heretofore this has been a plain narrative, dull, I fear, in many
+places. But I come now to a not unexciting incident--which for a time
+placed Tish and myself in an unpleasant position.
+
+I refer to the escape of the man we had tied.
+
+We held a brief discussion as to what to do with our prisoners until
+morning, a discussion which Tish solved with her usual celerity by
+cutting from the saddles which lay round the fire a number of those
+leather thongs with which such saddles are adorned and which are used in
+case of necessity to strap various articles to the aforesaid saddles.
+
+With these thongs we tied them, not uncomfortably, but firmly, their
+hands behind them and their feet fastened together. Then, as the night
+grew cold, Tish suggested that we shove them near the fire, which we
+did.
+
+The young lady, however, offered a more difficult problem. We
+compromised by giving her her freedom, but arranging for one of our
+number to keep her covered with a revolver.
+
+"You needn't be so thoughtful," she said angrily, and with a total lack
+of appreciation of Tish's considerate attitude. "I'd rather be tied,
+especially if the Moslem with the hay fever is going to hold the gun."
+
+It was at that moment that we heard a whistle from across the stream,
+and each of the prostrate men raised his head eagerly. Before Tish could
+interfere one of them had whistled three times sharply, probably a
+danger signal.
+
+Without a word Tish turned and ran toward the stream, calling to me to
+follow her.
+
+"Tish!" I heard Aggie's agonized tone. "Lizzie! Come back. Don't leave
+me here alone. I--"
+
+Here she evidently clutched the revolver involuntarily, for there was a
+sharp report, and a bullet struck a tree near us.
+
+Tish paused and turned. "Point that thing up into the air, Aggie," she
+called back. "And stay there. I hold you responsible."
+
+I heard Aggie give a low moan, but she said nothing, and we kept on.
+
+The moon had now come up, flooding the valley with silver radiance. We
+found our horses at once, and Tish leaped into the saddle. Being heavier
+and also out of breath from having stumbled over a log, I was somewhat
+slower.
+
+Tish was therefore in advance of me when we started, and it was she who
+caught sight of him first.
+
+"He's got a horse, Lizzie," she called back to me. "We can get him, I
+think. Remember, he is unarmed."
+
+Fortunately he had made for the trail, which was here wider than
+ordinary and gleamed white in the moonlight. We had, however, lost some
+time in fording the stream, and we had but the one glimpse of him as the
+trail curved.
+
+Tish lashed her horse to a lope, and mine followed without urging.
+I had, unfortunately, lost a stirrup early in the chase, and was
+compelled, being unable to recover it, to drop the lines and clutch
+the saddle.
+
+Twice Tish fired into the air. She explained afterward that she did this
+for the moral effect on the fugitive, but as each time it caused my
+horse to jump and almost unseat me, at last I begged her to desist.
+
+We struck at last into a straight piece of trail, ending in a wall of
+granite, and up this the trail climbed in a switchback. Tish turned to
+me.
+
+"We have him now," she said. "When he starts up there he is as much gone
+as a fly on the wall. As a matter of fact," she said as calmly as though
+we had been taking an afternoon stroll, "his taking this trail shows
+that he is a novice and no real highwayman. Otherwise he would have
+turned off into the woods."
+
+At that moment the fugitive's horse emerged into the moonlight and Tish
+smiled grimly.
+
+"I see why now," she exclaimed. "The idiot has happened on Mona Lisa,
+who must have returned and followed us. And no pack-horse can be made to
+leave the trail unless by means of a hornet. Look, he's trying to pull
+her off and she won't go."
+
+It was true, as we now perceived. He saw his danger, but too late. Mona
+Lisa, probably still disagreeable after her experience with the hornets,
+held straight for the cliff.
+
+The moon shone full on it, and when he was only thirty feet up its face
+Tish fired again, and the fugitive stopped.
+
+"Come down," said Tish quietly.
+
+He said a great many things which, like his earlier language, I do not
+care to repeat. But after a second shot he began to descend slowly.
+
+Tish, however, approached him warily, having given her revolver to me.
+
+"He might try to get it from me, Lizzie," she observed. "Keep it pointed
+in our direction, but not at us. I'm going to tie him again."
+
+This she proceeded to do, tying his hands behind him and fastening his
+belt also to the horn of the saddle, but leaving his feet free. All this
+was done to the accompaniment of bitter vituperation. She pretended to
+ignore this, but it made an impression evidently, for at last she
+replied.
+
+"You have no one to blame but yourself," she said. "You deserve your
+present humiliating position, and you know it. I've made up my mind to
+take you all in and expose your cruel scheme, and I intend to do it. I'm
+nothing if I am not thorough," she finished.
+
+He made no reply to this, and, in fact, he made only one speech on the
+way back, and that, I am happy to say, was without profanity.
+
+"It isn't being taken in that I mind so much," he said pathetically.
+"It's all in the game, and I can stand up as well under trouble as any
+one. It's being led in by a crowd of women that makes it painful."
+
+I have neglected to say that Tish was leading Mona Lisa, while I
+followed with the revolver.
+
+It was not far from dawn when we reached the camp again. Aggie was as we
+had left her, but in the light of the dying fire she looked older and
+much worn. As a matter of fact, it was some weeks before she looked like
+her old self.
+
+The girl was sitting where we had left her, and sulkier than ever. She
+had turned her back to Mr. Oliver, and Aggie said afterward that the way
+they had quarreled had been something terrible.
+
+Aggie said she had tried to make conversation with the girl, and had,
+indeed, told her of Mr. Wiggins and her own blasted life. But she had
+remained singularly unresponsive.
+
+The return of our new prisoner was greeted by the other men with brutal
+rage, except Mr. Oliver, who merely glanced at him and then went back to
+his staring at the fire. It appeared that they had been counting on him
+to get assistance, and his capture destroyed their last hope. Indeed,
+their language grew so unpleasant that at last Tish hammered sharply on
+a rock with the handle of her revolver.
+
+"Please remember," she said, "that you are in the presence of ladies!"
+
+They jeered at her, but she handled the situation with her usual
+generalship.
+
+"Lizzie," she said calmly, "get the tin basin that is hanging to my
+saddle, and fill it with the water from that snowbank. On the occasion
+of any more unseemly language, pour it over the offender without mercy."
+
+It became necessary to do it, I regret to state. They had not yet
+learned that Tish always carries out her threats. It was the one who we
+felt was the leader who offended, and I did as I had been requested to.
+But Aggie, ever tender-hearted, feared that it would give the man a
+severe cold, and got Tish's permission to pour a little blackberry
+cordial down his throat.
+
+Far from this kindness having a salubrious effect, it had the contrary.
+They all fell to bad language again, and, realizing that they wished the
+cordial, and our supply being limited, we were compelled to abandon the
+treatment.
+
+It had been an uncomfortable night, and I confess to a feeling of relief
+when "the rift of dawn" broke the early skies.
+
+We were, Tish calculated, some forty miles from breakfast, and Aggie's
+diet for some days had been light at the best, even the mountain-lion
+broth having been more stimulating than staying. We therefore
+investigated the camp, and found behind a large stone some flour,
+baking-powder, and bacon. With this equipment and a frying-pan or two we
+were able to make some very fair pancakes--or flapjacks, as they are
+called in the West.
+
+Tish civilly invited the girl to eat with us, but she refused curtly,
+although, on turning once, I saw her eyeing us with famished eyes. I
+think, however, that on seeing us going about the homely task of getting
+breakfast, she realized that we were not the desperate creatures she had
+fancied during the night, but three gentlewomen on a holiday--simple
+tourists, indeed.
+
+"I wish," she said at last almost wistfully--"I wish that I could
+understand it all. I seem to be all mixed up. You don't suppose I want
+to be here, do you?"
+
+But Tish was not in a mood to make concessions. "As for what you want,"
+she said, "how are we to know that? You are here, aren't you?--here as
+a result of your own cold-heartedness. Had you remained true to the very
+estimable young man you jilted you would not now be in this position."
+
+"Of course he would talk about it!" said the girl darkly.
+
+"I am convinced," Tish went on, dexterously turning a pancake by a swift
+movement of the pan, "that sensational movies are responsible for much
+that is wrong with the country to-day. They set false standards.
+Perfectly pure-minded people see them and are filled with thoughts of
+crime."
+
+Although she had ignored him steadily, the girl turned now to Mr.
+Oliver.
+
+"They don't believe anything I tell them. Why don't you explain?" she
+demanded.
+
+"Explain!" he said in a furious voice. "Explain to three lunatics?
+What's the use?"
+
+"You got me into this, you know."
+
+"I did! I like that! What in the name of Heaven induced you to ride off
+the way you did?"
+
+Tish paused, with the frying-pan in the air. "Silence!" she commanded.
+"You are both only reaping what you have sowed. As far as quarreling
+goes, you can keep that until you are married, if you intend to be. I
+don't know but I'd advise it. It's a pity to spoil two houses."
+
+But the girl said that she wouldn't marry him if he was the last man on
+earth, and he fell back to sulking again.
+
+As Aggie observed later, he acted as if he had never cared for her,
+while Mr. Bell, on the contrary, could not help his face changing when
+he so much as mentioned her name.
+
+We made some tea and ate a hearty breakfast, while the men watched us.
+And as we ate, Tish held the moving-picture business up to contumely and
+scorn.
+
+"Lady," said one of the prostrate men, "aren't you going to give us
+anything to eat?"
+
+"People," Tish said, ignoring him, "who would ordinarily cringe at the
+sight of a wounded beetle sit through bloody murders and go home with
+the obsession of crime."
+
+"I hope you won't take it amiss," said the man again, "if I say that,
+seeing it's our flour and bacon, you either ought to feed us or take it
+away and eat it where we can't see you."
+
+"I take it," said Tish to the girl, pouring in more batter, "that you
+yourself would never have thought of highway robbery had you not been
+led to it by an overstimulated imagination."
+
+"I wish," said the girl rudely, "that you wouldn't talk so much. I've
+got a headache."
+
+When we had finished Tish indicated the frying-pan and the batter.
+"Perhaps," she said, "you would like to bake some cakes for these
+friends of yours. We have a long trip ahead of us."
+
+But the girl replied heartlessly that she hoped they would starve to
+death, ignoring their pitiful glances. In the end it was our own
+tender-hearted Aggie who baked pancakes for them and, loosening their
+hands while I stood guard, saw that they had not only food but the
+gentle refreshment of fresh tea. Tish it was, however, who, not to be
+outdone in magnanimity, permitted them to go, one by one, to the stream
+to wash. Escape, without horses or weapons, was impossible, and they
+realized it.
+
+By nine o'clock we were ready to return. And here a difficulty presented
+itself. There were six prisoners and only three of us. The men, fed now,
+were looking less subdued, although they pretended to obey Tish's
+commands with alacrity.
+
+Aggie overheard a scrap of conversation, too, which seemed to indicate
+that they had not given up hope. Had Tish not set her heart on leading
+them into the great hotel at Many Glaciers, and there exposing them to
+the taunts of angry tourists, it would have been simpler for one of us
+to ride for assistance, leaving the others there.
+
+In this emergency Tish, putting her hand into her pocket for her
+scissors to trim a hangnail, happened to come across the policeman's
+whistle.
+
+"My gracious!" she said. "I forgot my promise to that young man!"
+
+She immediately put it to her lips and blew three shrill blasts. To our
+surprise they were answered by a halloo, and a moment later the young
+gentleman himself appeared on the trail. He was no longer afoot, but was
+mounted on a pinto pony, which we knew at once for Bill's.
+
+He sat on his horse, staring as if he could not believe his eyes. Then
+he made his way across the stream toward us.
+
+"Good Heavens!" he said. "What in the name of--" Here his eyes fell on
+the girl, and he stiffened.
+
+"Jim!" cried the girl, and looked at him with what Aggie afterward
+characterized as a most touching expression.
+
+But he ignored her. "Looks as though you folks have been pretty busy,"
+he observed, glancing at our scowling captives. "I'm a trifle surprised.
+You don't mind my being rather breathless, do you?"
+
+"My only regret," Tish said loftily, "is that we have not secured the
+Indians. They too should be taught a lesson. I am sure that the red man
+is noble until led away by civilized people who might know better."
+
+It was at this point that Mr. Bell's eyes fell on Mr. Oliver, who with
+his hands tied behind him was crouching over the fire.
+
+"Well!" he said. "So you're here too! But of course you would be." This
+he said bitterly.
+
+"For the love of Heaven, Bell," Mr. Oliver said, "tell those mad women
+that I'm not a bandit."
+
+"We know that already," Tish observed.
+
+"And untie my hands. My shoulders are about broken."
+
+But Mr. Bell only looked at him coldly. "I can't interfere with these
+ladies," he said. "They're friends of mine. If they think you are better
+tied, it's their business. They did it."
+
+"At least," Mr. Oliver said savagely, "you can tell them who I am, can't
+you?"
+
+"As to that," Mr. Bell returned, "I can only tell them what you say you
+are. You must remember that I know nothing about you. Helen knows much
+more than I do."
+
+"Jim," cried the girl, "surely you are going to tell these women that we
+are not highway robbers. Tell them the truth. Tell them I am not a
+highway robber. Tell them that these men are not my accomplices, that I
+never saw them before."
+
+"You must remember," he replied in an icy tone, "that I no longer know
+your friends. It is some days since you and I parted company. And you
+must admit that one of them is a friend of yours--as well as I can
+judge, a very close friend."
+
+She was almost in tears, but she persisted. "At least," she said, "you
+can tell them that I did not rob that woman on the pass. They are going
+to lead us in to Many Glaciers, and--Jim, you won't let them, will you?
+I'll die of shame."
+
+But he was totally unmoved. As Aggie said afterward, no one would have
+thought that, but a day or two before, he had been heartbroken because
+she was in love with someone else.
+
+"As to that," he said, "it is questionable, according to Mrs.
+Ostermaier, that nothing was taken from you, and that as soon as the
+attack was over you basely deserted her and followed the bandits. A full
+description of you, which I was able to correct in one or two trifling
+details, is now in the hands of the park police."
+
+She stared at him with fury in her eyes. "I hope you will never speak to
+me again," she cried.
+
+"You said that the last time I saw you, Helen. If you will think, you
+will remember that you addressed me first just now."
+
+She stamped her foot.
+
+"Of course," he said politely, "you can see my position. You maintain
+and possibly believe that these--er--acquaintances of yours"--he
+indicated the men--"are not members of the moving-picture outfit. Also
+that your being with them is of an accidental nature. But, on the other
+hand--"
+
+She put her fingers in her ears and turned her back on him.
+
+"On the other hand," he went on calmly, "I have the word of these three
+respectable ladies that they are the outfit, or part of it, that they
+have just concluded a cruel hoax on unsuspecting tourists, and that they
+justly deserve to be led in as captives and exposed to the full ignominy
+of their position."
+
+Here she faced him again, and this time she was quite pale. "Ask
+those--those women where they found my engagement ring," she said. "One
+of those wretches took it from me. That ought to be proof enough that
+they are not from the moving-picture outfit."
+
+Tish at once produced the ring and held it out to him. But he merely
+glanced at it and shook his head.
+
+"All engagement rings look alike," he observed. "I cannot possibly say,
+Helen, but I think it is unlikely that it is the one I gave you, as you
+told me, you may recall, that you had thrown it into a crack in a
+glacier. It may, of course, be one you have recently acquired."
+
+He glanced at Mr. Oliver, but the latter only shrugged his shoulders.
+
+Well, she shed a few tears, but he was adamant, and helped us saddle the
+horses, ignoring her utterly. It was our opinion that he no longer cared
+for her, and that, having lost him, she now regretted it. I know that
+she watched him steadily when he was not looking her way. But he went
+round quite happily, whistling a bit of tune, and not at all like the
+surly individual we had at first thought him.
+
+The ride back was without much incident. Our prisoners rode with their
+hands tied behind them, except the young lady.
+
+"We might as well leave her unfastened," the young man said casually.
+"While I dare say she would make her escape if possible, and
+particularly if there was any chance of getting filmed while doing it,
+I will make myself personally responsible."
+
+As a matter of fact she was exceedingly rude to all of us, and during
+our stop for luncheon, which was again bacon and pancakes, she made a
+dash for her horse. The young man saw her, however, in time, and brought
+her back. From that time on she was more civil, but I saw her looking at
+him now and then, and her eyes were positively terrified.
+
+It was Aggie, at last, who put in a plea for her with him, drawing him
+aside to do so. "I am sure," she said, "that she is really a nice girl,
+and has merely been led astray by the search for adventure. Naturally my
+friends, especially Miss Tish, have small sympathy with such a state of
+mind. But you are younger--and remember, you loved her once."
+
+"Loved her once!" he replied. "Dear lady, I'm so crazy about her at this
+minute that I can hardly hold myself in."
+
+"You are not acting much like it."
+
+"The fact is," he replied, "I'm afraid to let myself go. And if she's
+learned a lesson, I have too. I've been her doormat long enough. I tried
+it and it didn't work. She's caring more for me now, at this minute,
+than she has in eleven months. She needs a strong hand, and, by George!
+I've got it--two of them, in fact."
+
+We reached Many Glaciers late that afternoon, and Tish rode right up to
+the hotel. Our arrival created the most intense excitement, and Tish,
+although pleased, was rather surprised. It was not, however, until a
+large man elbowed his way through the crowd and took possession of the
+prisoners that we understood.
+
+"I'll take them now," he said. "Well, George, how are you?"
+
+This was to the leader, who merely muttered in reply.
+
+"I'd like to leave them here for a short time," Tish stated. "They
+should be taught a severe lesson and nothing stings like ridicule. After
+that you can turn them free, but I think they ought to be discharged."
+
+"Turn them free!" he said in a tone of amazement. "Discharged! My dear
+madam, they will get fifteen years' hard labor, I hope. And that's too
+good for them."
+
+Then suddenly the crowd began to cheer. It was some time before Tish
+realized that they were cheering us. And even then, I shall have to
+confess, we did not understand until the young man explained to me.
+
+"You see," he said, "I didn't like to say anything sooner, for fear of
+making you nervous. You'd done it all so well that I wanted you to
+finish it. You've been in the right church all along, but the wrong
+pew. Those fellows aren't movie actors, except Oliver, who will be
+freed now, and come after me with a gun, as like as not! They're real
+dyed-in-the-wool desperadoes and there's a reward of five thousand
+dollars for capturing them."
+
+Tish went rather white, but said nothing. Aggie, however, went into a
+paroxysm of sneezing, and did not revive until given aromatic ammonia
+to inhale.
+
+"I was fooled at first too," the young man said. "We'd been expecting a
+holdup and when it came we thought it was the faked one. But the
+person"--he paused and looked round--"the person who had the real jolt
+was Helen. She followed them, since they didn't take her for ransom, as
+had been agreed in the plot.
+
+"Then, when she found her mistake, they took her along, for fear she'd
+ride off and raise the alarm. All in all," he said reflectively, "it has
+been worth about a million dollars to me."
+
+We went into the hotel, with the crowd following us, and the first thing
+we saw was Mrs. Ostermaier, sitting dejectedly by the fire. When she saw
+us, she sprang to her feet and came to meet us.
+
+"Oh, Miss Tish, Miss Tish!" she said. "What I have been through!
+Attacked on a lonely mountain-top and robbed of everything. My reason is
+almost gone. And my earrings, my beautiful earrings!"
+
+Tish said nothing, but, reaching into her reticule, which she had taken
+from the horn of her saddle, she drew out a number of things.
+
+"Here," she said. "Are your earrings. Here also is Mr. Ostermaier's
+cigar-case, but empty. Here is some money too. I'll keep that, however,
+until I know how much you lost."
+
+"Tish!" screeched Mrs. Ostermaier. "You found them!"
+
+"Yes," Tish said somewhat wearily, "we found them. We found a number of
+things, Mrs. Ostermaier,--four bandits, and two lovers, or rather three,
+but so no longer, and your things, and a reward of five thousand
+dollars, and an engagement ring. I think," she said, "that I'd like a
+hot bath and something to eat."
+
+Mrs. Ostermaier was gloating over her earrings, but she looked up at
+Tish's tired and grimy face, at the mud encrusted on me from my accident
+the day before, at Aggie in her turban.
+
+"Go and wash, all of you," she said kindly, "and I'll order some hot
+tea."
+
+But Tish shook her head. "Tea nothing!" she said firmly. "I want a
+broiled sirloin steak and potatoes. And"--she looked Mrs. Ostermaier
+full in the eye--"I am going to have a cocktail. I need it."
+
+Late that evening Aggie came to Tish's room, where I was sitting with
+her. Tish was feeling entirely well, and more talkative than I can
+remember her in years. But the cocktail, which she felt, she said, in no
+other way, had gone to her legs.
+
+"It is not," she observed, "that I cannot walk. I can, perfectly well.
+But I am obliged to keep my eyes on my feet, and it might be noticed."
+
+"I just came in," Aggie said, "to say that Helen and her lover have made
+it up. They are down by the lake now, and if you will look out you can
+see them."
+
+I gave Tish an arm to the window, and the three of us stood and looked
+out. The moon was rising over the snow-capped peaks across the lake, and
+against its silver pathway the young people stood outlined. As we looked
+he stooped and kissed her. But it was a brief caress, as if he had just
+remembered the strong hand and being a doormat long enough.
+
+Tish drew a long breath.
+
+"What," she said, "is more beautiful than young love? It will be a
+comfort to remember that we brought them together. Let go of me now,
+Lizzie. If I keep my eye on the bedpost I think I can get back."
+
+
+
+
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+<div style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Tish, The Chronicle of Her Escapades and Excursions, by Mary Roberts Rinehart</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
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+</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: Tish, The Chronicle of Her Escapades and Excursions</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Mary Roberts Rinehart</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: February 16, 2005 [eBook #3464]<br />
+[Most recently updated: April 18, 2023]</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Produced by: Lynn Hill</div>
+<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK TISH ***</div>
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<div class="figure" style="width: 75%;">
+<img src="images/cover.jpg" width="100%"
+alt="TISH
+by
+Mary Roberts
+Rinehart" /><br />
+</div>
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<div class="figure">
+<a name="image-0000"></a>
+<img src="images/ill-01.jpg" width="100%"
+alt='"The outside edge, by George!" said Charlie Sands. "The old sport!"' /><br />
+"The outside edge, by George!" said Charlie Sands. "The old sport!"
+</div>
+
+<div style="height: 6em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<h1>
+ TISH
+</h1>
+<h2>
+The Chronicle of Her Escapades and Excursions
+</h2>
+<h3>
+By MARY ROBERTS RINEHART
+</h3>
+<h4>
+<i>With Illustrations<br />
+by May Wilson Preston</i>
+</h4>
+
+<h5>
+1916
+</h5>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+
+
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<h2><a name="h2H_TOC" id="h2H_TOC"></a>
+ CONTENTS
+</h2>
+
+<p>
+<a href="#h2H_4_0002">MIND OVER MOTOR</a>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;
+<a href="#h2H_4_0003">II</a>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;
+<a href="#h2H_4_0004">III</a>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;
+<a href="#h2H_4_0005">IV</a>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;
+<a href="#h2H_4_0006">V</a>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<a href="#h2H_4_0007">LIKE A WOLF ON THE FOLD</a>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;
+<a href="#h2H_4_0008">II</a>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;
+<a href="#h2H_4_0009">III</a>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;
+<a href="#h2H_4_0010">IV</a>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<a href="#h2H_4_0011">THE SIMPLE LIFERS</a>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;
+<a href="#h2H_4_0012">II</a>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;
+<a href="#h2H_4_0013">III</a>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;
+<a href="#h2H_4_0014">IV</a>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;
+<a href="#h2H_4_0015">V</a>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<a href="#h2H_4_0016">TISH'S SPY</a>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;
+<a href="#h2H_4_0017">II</a>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;
+<a href="#h2H_4_0018">III</a>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;
+<a href="#h2H_4_0019">IV</a>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;
+<a href="#h2H_4_0020">V</a>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;
+<a href="#h2H_4_0021">VI</a>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<a href="#h2H_4_0022">MY COUNTRY TISH OF THEE&mdash;</a>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;
+<a href="#h2H_4_0023">II</a>
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<h2><a name="h2H_ILL" id="h2H_ILL"></a>
+ ILLUSTRATIONS
+</h2>
+
+
+<p>
+<a href="#image-0000">"The outside edge, by George!" said Charlie Sands. "The old sport!"</a>
+</p>
+<p>
+<a href="#image-0001">Without cutting down her speed, bumped home the winner</a>
+</p>
+<p>
+<a href="#image-0002">The real meaning of what was occurring did not penetrate to any of us</a>
+</p>
+<p>
+<a href="#image-0005">It ended with Tish stalking off into the woods with the rabbit in one hand and the knife in the other</a>
+</p>
+<p>
+<a href="#image-0007">As fast as she wet a bit of lawn, we followed with the pails</a>
+</p>
+<p>
+<a href="#image-0008">"Get the canoe and follow. I'm heading for Island Eleven"</a>
+</p>
+<p>
+<a href="#image-0009">"It's well enough for you, Tish Carberry, to talk about gripping a horse with your knees"</a>
+</p>
+<p>
+<a href="#image-0010">"The older I get, Aggie Pilkington, the more I realize that to take you anywhere means ruin."</a>
+</p>
+<p>
+<a href="#image-0011">"It would be just like the woman, to refuse to come any farther and spoil everything"</a>
+</p>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+
+
+
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<h2><a name="h2H_4_0002" id="h2H_4_0002"></a>
+ MIND OVER MOTOR
+</h2>
+<h3>
+ HOW TISH BROKE THE LAW AND SOME RECORDS
+</h3>
+
+<h3>
+I
+</h3>
+
+<p>
+So many unkind things have been said of the affair at Morris Valley
+that I think it best to publish a straightforward account of everything.
+The ill nature of the cartoon, for instance, which showed Tish in a pair
+of khaki trousers on her back under a racing-car was quite uncalled
+for. Tish did not wear the khaki trousers; she merely took them along
+in case of emergency. Nor was it true that Tish took Aggie along as
+a mechanician and brutally pushed her off the car because she was not
+pumping enough oil. The fact was that Aggie sneezed on a curve and fell
+out of the car, and would no doubt have been killed had she not been
+thrown into a pile of sand.
+</p>
+<p>
+It was in early September that Eliza Bailey, my cousin, decided to go
+to London, ostensibly for a rest, but really to get some cretonne at
+Liberty's. Eliza wrote me at Lake Penzance asking me to go to Morris
+Valley and look after Bettina.
+</p>
+<p>
+I must confess that I was eager to do it. We three were very comfortable
+at Mat Cottage, "Mat" being the name Charlie Sands, Tish's nephew, had
+given it, being the initials of "Middle-Aged Trio." Not that I regard
+the late forties as middle-aged. But Tish, of course, is fifty. Charlie
+Sands, who is on a newspaper, calls us either the "M.A.T." or the
+"B.A.'s," for "Beloved Aunts," although Aggie and I are not related
+to him.
+</p>
+<p>
+Bettina's mother's note:&mdash;
+</p>
+<p class="quote">
+ Not that she will allow you to do it, or because she isn't entirely
+ able to take care of herself; but because the people here are a talky
+ lot. Bettina will probably look after you. She has come from college
+ with a feeling that I am old and decrepit and must be cared for. She
+ maddens me with pillows and cups of tea and woolen shawls. She thinks
+ Morris Valley selfish and idle, and is disappointed in the church,
+ preferring her Presbyterianism pure. She is desirous now of learning
+ how to cook. If you decide to come I'll be grateful if you can keep
+ her out of the kitchen.
+</p>
+<p class="quote">
+ Devotedly, ELIZA.
+</p>
+<p class="quote">
+ P.S. If you can keep Bettina from getting married while I'm away
+ I'll be very glad. She believes a woman should marry and rear a
+ large family!
+</p>
+<p class="quote">
+ E.
+</p>
+<p>
+We were sitting on the porch of the cottage at Lake Penzance when I
+received the letter, and I read it aloud. "Humph!" said Tish, putting
+down the stocking she was knitting and looking over her spectacles at
+me&mdash;"Likes her Presbyterianism pure and believes in a large family! How
+old is she? Forty?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Eighteen or twenty," I replied, looking at the letter. "I'm not anxious
+to go. She'll probably find me frivolous."
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish put on her spectacles and took the letter. "I think it's your duty,
+Lizzie," she said when she'd read it through. "But that young woman
+needs handling. We'd better all go. We can motor over in half a day."
+</p>
+<p>
+That was how it happened that Bettina Bailey, sitting on Eliza Bailey's
+front piazza, decked out in chintz cushions,&mdash;the piazza, of course,&mdash;saw
+a dusty machine come up the drive and stop with a flourish at the steps.
+And from it alight, not one chaperon, but three.
+</p>
+<p>
+After her first gasp Bettina was game. She was a pretty girl in a white
+dress and bore no traces in her face of any stern religious proclivities.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I didn't know&mdash;" she said, staring from one to the other of us. "Mother
+said&mdash;that is&mdash;won't you go right upstairs and have some tea and lie
+down?" She had hardly taken her eyes from Tish, who had lifted the
+engine hood and was poking at the carbureter with a hairpin.
+</p>
+<p>
+"No, thanks," said Tish briskly. "I'll just go around to the garage and
+oil up while I'm dirty. I've got a short circuit somewhere. Aggie, you
+and Lizzie get the trunk off."
+</p>
+<p>
+Bettina stood by while we unbuckled and lifted down our traveling trunk.
+She did not speak a word, beyond asking if we wouldn't wait until the
+gardener came. On Tish's saying she had no time to wait, because she
+wanted to put kerosene in the cylinders before the engine cooled,
+Bettina lapsed into silence and stood by watching us.
+</p>
+<p>
+Bettina took us upstairs. She had put Drummond's "Natural Law in the
+Spiritual World" on my table and a couch was ready with pillows and a
+knitted slumber robe. Very gently she helped us out of our veils and
+dusters and closed the windows for fear of drafts.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Dear mother is so reckless of drafts," she remarked. "Are you sure you
+won't have tea?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"We had some blackberry cordial with us," Aggie said, "and we all had a
+little on the way. We had to change a tire and it made us thirsty."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Change a tire!"
+</p>
+<p>
+Aggie had taken off her bonnet and was pinning on the small lace cap she
+wears, away from home, to hide where her hair is growing thin. In her
+cap Aggie is a sweet-faced woman of almost fifty, rather ethereal. She
+pinned on her cap and pulled her crimps down over her forehead.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Yes," she observed. "A bridge went down with us and one of the nails
+spoiled a new tire. I told Miss Carberry the bridge was unsafe, but she
+thought, by taking it very fast&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+Bettina went over to Aggie and clutched her arm. "Do you mean to say,"
+she quavered, "that you three women went through a bridge&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+"It was a small bridge," I put in, to relieve her mind; "and only a foot
+or two of water below. If only the man had not been so disagreeable&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Oh," she said, relieved, "you had a man with you!"
+</p>
+<p>
+"We never take a man with us," Aggie said with dignity. "This one was
+fishing under the bridge and he was most ungentlemanly. Quite refused
+to help, and tried to get the license number so he could sue us."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Sue you!"
+</p>
+<p>
+"He claimed his arm was broken, but I distinctly saw him move it."
+Aggie, having adjusted her cap, was looking at it in the mirror. "But
+dear Tish thinks of everything. She had taken off the license plates."
+</p>
+<p>
+Bettina had gone really pale. She seemed at a loss, and impatient at
+herself for being so. "You&mdash;you won't have tea?" she asked.
+</p>
+<p>
+"No, thank you."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Would you&mdash;perhaps you would prefer whiskey and soda."
+</p>
+<p>
+Aggie turned on her a reproachful eye. "My dear girl," she said, "with
+the exception of a little home-made wine used medicinally we drink
+nothing. I am the secretary of the Woman's Prohibition Party."
+</p>
+<p>
+Bettina left us shortly after that to arrange for putting up Letitia
+and Aggie. She gave them her mother's room, and whatever impulse she
+may have had to put the Presbyterian Psalter by the bed, she restrained
+it. By midnight Drummond's "Natural Law" had disappeared from my table
+and a novel had taken its place. But Bettina had not lost her air of
+bewilderment.
+</p>
+<p>
+That first evening was very quiet. A young man in white flannels called,
+and he and Letitia spent a delightful evening on the porch talking
+spark-plugs and carbureters. Bettina sat in a corner and looked at the
+moon. Spoken to, she replied in monosyllables in a carefully sweet tone.
+The young man's name was Jasper McCutcheon.
+</p>
+<p>
+It developed that Jasper owned an old racing-car which he kept in the
+Bailey garage, and he and Tish went out to look it over. They very
+politely asked us all to go along, but Bettina refusing, Aggie and I sat
+with her and looked at the moon.
+</p>
+<p>
+Aggie in her capacity as chaperon, or as one of an association of
+chaperons, used the opportunity to examine Bettina on the subject of
+Jasper.
+</p>
+<p>
+"He seems a nice boy," she remarked. Aggie's idea of a nice boy is one
+who in summer wears fresh flannels outside, in winter less conspicuously.
+"Does he live near?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Next door," sweetly but coolly.
+</p>
+<p>
+"He is very good-looking."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Ears spoil him&mdash;too large."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Does he come around&mdash;er&mdash;often?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Only two or three times a day. On Sunday, of course, we see more of
+him."
+</p>
+<p>
+Aggie looked at me in the moonlight. Clearly the young man from the next
+door needed watching. It was well we had come.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I suppose you like the same things?" she suggested. "Similar tastes
+and&mdash;er&mdash;all that?"
+</p>
+<p>
+Bettina stretched her arms over her head and yawned.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Not so you could notice it," she said coolly. "I can't thick of
+anything we agree on. He is an Episcopalian; I'm a Presbyterian. He
+approves of suffrage for women; I do not. He is a Republican; I'm a
+Progressive. He disapproves of large families; I approve of them, if
+people can afford them."
+</p>
+<p>
+Aggie sat straight up. "I hope you don't discuss that!" she exclaimed.
+</p>
+<p>
+Bettina smiled. "How nice to find that you are really just nice elderly
+ladies after all!" she said. "Of course we discuss it. Is it anything to
+be ashamed of?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"When I was a girl," I said tartly, "we married first and discussed
+those things afterward."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Of course you did, Aunt Lizzie," she said, smiling alluringly. She was
+the prettiest girl I think I have ever seen, and that night she was
+beautiful. "And you raised enormous families who religiously walked to
+church in their bare feet to save their shoes!"
+</p>
+<p>
+"I did nothing of the sort," I snapped.
+</p>
+<p>
+"It seems to me," Aggie put in gently, "that you make very little of
+love." Aggie was once engaged to be married to a young man named
+Wiggins, a roofer by trade, who was killed in the act of inspecting a
+tin gutter, on a rainy day. He slipped and fell over, breaking his neck
+as a result.
+</p>
+<p>
+Bettina smiled at Aggie. "Not at all," she said. "The day of blind love
+is gone, that's all&mdash;gone like the day of the chaperon."
+</p>
+<p>
+Neither of us cared to pursue this, and Tish at that moment appearing
+with Jasper, Aggie and I made a move toward bed. But Jasper not going,
+and none of us caring to leave him alone with Bettina, we sat down
+again.
+</p>
+<p>
+We sat until one o'clock.
+</p>
+<p>
+At the end of that time Jasper rose, and saying something about its
+being almost bedtime strolled off next door. Aggie was sound asleep in
+her chair and Tish was dozing. As for Bettina, she had said hardly a
+word after eleven o'clock.
+</p>
+<p>
+Aggie and Tish, as I have said, were occupying the same room. I went to
+sleep the moment I got into bed, and must have slept three or four hours
+when I was awakened by a shot. A moment later a dozen or more shots were
+fired in rapid succession and I sat bolt upright in bed. Across the
+street some one was raising a window, and a man called "What's the
+matter?" twice.
+</p>
+<p>
+There was no response and no further sound. Shaking in every limb, I
+found the light switch and looked at the time. It was four o'clock in
+the morning and quite dark.
+</p>
+<p>
+Some one was moving in the hall outside and whimpering. I opened the
+door hurriedly and Aggie half fell into the room.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Tish is murdered, Lizzie!" she said, and collapsed on the floor in a
+heap.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Nonsense!"
+</p>
+<p>
+"She's not in her room or in the house, and I heard shots!"
+</p>
+<p>
+Well, Aggie was right. Tish was not in her room. There was a sort of
+horrible stillness everywhere as we stood there clutching at each other
+and listening.
+</p>
+<p>
+"She's heard burglars downstairs and has gone down after them, and this
+is what has happened! Oh, Tish! brave Tish!" Aggie cried hysterically.
+</p>
+<p>
+And at that Bettina came in with her hair over her shoulders and asked
+us if we had heard anything. When we told her about Tish, she insisted
+on going downstairs, and with Aggie carrying her first-aid box and I
+carrying the blackberry cordial, we went down.
+</p>
+<p>
+The lower floor was quiet and empty. The man across the street had put
+down his window and gone back to bed, and everything was still. Bettina
+in her dressing-gown went out on the porch and turned on the light. Tish
+was not there, nor was there a body lying on the lawn.
+</p>
+<p>
+"It was back of the house by the garage," Bettina said. "If only
+Jasper&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+And at that moment Jasper came into the circle of light. He had a
+Norfolk coat on over his pajamas and a pair of slippers, and he was
+running, calling over his shoulder to some one behind as he ran.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Watch the drive!" he yelled. "I saw him duck round the corner."
+</p>
+<p>
+We could hear other footsteps now and somebody panting near us. Aggie
+was sitting huddled in a porch chair, crying, and Bettina, in the hall,
+was trying to get down from the wall a Moorish knife that Eliza Bailey
+had picked up somewhere.
+</p>
+<p>
+"John!" we heard Jasper calling. "John! Quick! I've got him!"
+</p>
+<p>
+He was just at the corner of the porch. My heart stopped and then rushed
+on a thousand a minute. Then:&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+"Take your hands off me!" said Tish's voice.
+</p>
+<p>
+The next moment Tish came majestically into the circle of light and
+mounted the steps. Jasper, with his mouth open, stood below looking up,
+and a hired man in what looked like a bed quilt was behind in the
+shadow.
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish was completely dressed in her motoring clothes, even to her
+goggles. She looked neither to the right nor left, but stalked across
+the porch into the house and up the stairway. None of us moved until we
+heard the door of her room slam above.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Poor old dear!" said Bettina. "She's been walking in her sleep!"
+</p>
+<p>
+"But the shots!" gasped Aggie. "Some one was shooting at her!"
+</p>
+<p>
+Conscious now of his costume, Jasper had edged close to the veranda and
+stood in its shadow.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Walking in her sleep, of course!" he said heartily. "The trip to-day was
+too much for her. But think of her getting into that burglar-proof
+garage with her eyes shut&mdash;or do sleep-walkers have their eyes
+shut?&mdash;and actually cranking up my racer!"
+</p>
+<p>
+Aggie looked at me and I looked at Aggie.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Of course," Jasper went on, "there being no muffler on it, the racket
+wakened her as well as the neighborhood. And then the way we chased
+her!"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Poor old dear!" said Bettina again. "I'm going in to make her some
+tea."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I think," said Jasper, "that I need a bit of tea too. If you will put
+out the porch lights I'll come up and have some."
+</p>
+<p>
+But Aggie and I said nothing. We knew Tish never walked in her sleep.
+She had meant to try out Jasper's racing-car at dawn, forgetting that
+racers have no mufflers, and she had been, as one may say, hoist with
+her own petard&mdash;although I do not know what a petard is and have never
+been able to find out.
+</p>
+<p>
+We drank our tea, but Tish refused to have any or to reply to our
+knocks, preserving a sulky silence. Also she had locked Aggie out and
+I was compelled to let her sleep in my room.
+</p>
+<p>
+I was almost asleep when Aggie spoke:&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+"Did you think there was anything queer about the way that Jasper boy
+said good-night to Bettina?" she asked drowsily.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I didn't hear him say good-night."
+</p>
+<p>
+"That was it. He didn't. I think"&mdash;she yawned&mdash;"I think he kissed her."
+</p>
+
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<h3><a name="h2H_4_0003" id="h2H_4_0003"></a>
+ II
+</h3>
+<p>
+Tish was down early to breakfast that morning and her manner forbade any
+mention of the night before. Aggie, however, noticed that she ate her
+cereal with her left hand and used her right arm only when absolutely
+necessary. Once before Tish had almost broken an arm cranking a car and
+had been driven to arnica compresses for a week; but this time we dared
+not suggest anything.
+</p>
+<p>
+Shortly after breakfast she came down to the porch where Aggie and I
+were knitting.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I've hurt my arm, Lizzie," she said. "I wish you'd come out and crank
+the car."
+</p>
+<p>
+"You'd better stay at home with an arm like that," I replied stiffly.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Very well, I'll crank it myself."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Where are you going?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"To the drug store for arnica."
+</p>
+<p>
+Bettina was not there, so I turned on Tish sharply. "I'll go, of
+course," I said; "but I'll not go without speaking my mind, Letitia
+Carberry. By and large, I've stood by you for twenty-five years, and
+now in the weakness of your age I'm not going to leave you. But I warn
+you, Tish, if you touch that racing-car again, I'll send for Charlie
+Sands."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I haven't any intention of touching it again," said Tish, meekly
+enough. "But I wish I could buy a second-hand racer cheap."
+</p>
+<p>
+"What for?" Aggie demanded.
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish looked at her with scorn. "To hold flowers on the dining-table,"
+she snapped.
+</p>
+<p>
+It being necessary, of course, to leave a chaperon with Bettina, because
+of the Jasper person's habit of coming over at any hour of the day, we
+left Aggie with instructions to watch them both.
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish and I drove to the drug store together, and from there to a garage
+for gasoline. I have never learned to say "gas" for gasoline. It seems
+to me as absurd as if I were to say "but" for butter. Considering that
+Aggie was quite sulky at being left, it is absurd for her to assume an
+air of virtue over what followed that day. Aggie was only like a lot of
+people&mdash;good because she was not tempted; for it was at the garage that
+we met Mr. Ellis.
+</p>
+<p>
+We had stopped the engine and Tish was quarreling with the man about
+the price of gasoline when I saw him&mdash;a nice-looking young man in a
+black-and-white checked suit and a Panama hat. He came over and stood
+looking at Tish's machine.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Nice lines to that car," he said. "Built for speed, isn't she? What do
+you get out of her?"
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish heard him and turned. "Get out of her?" she said. "Bills mostly."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Well, that's the way with most of them," he remarked, looking steadily
+at Tish. "A machine's a rich man's toy. The only way to own one is to
+have it endowed like a university. But I meant speed. What can you
+make?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Never had a chance to find out," Tish said grimly. "Between nervous
+women in the machine and constables outside I have the twelve-miles-an-hour
+habit. I'm going to exchange the speedometer for a vacuum bottle."
+</p>
+<p>
+He smiled. "I don't think you're fair to yourself. Mostly&mdash;if you'll
+forgive me&mdash;I can tell a woman's driving as far off as I can see the
+machine; but you are a very fine driver. The way you brought that car
+in here impressed me considerably."
+</p>
+<p>
+"She need not pretend she crawls along the road," I said with some
+sarcasm. "The bills she complains of are mostly fines for speeding."
+</p>
+<p>
+"No!" said the young man, delighted. "Good! I'm glad to hear it. So are
+mine!"
+</p>
+<p>
+After that we got along famously. He had his car there&mdash;a low gray thing
+that looked like an armored cruiser.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'd like you ladies to try her," he said. "She can move, but she is as
+gentle as a lamb. A lady friend of mine once threaded a needle as an
+experiment while going sixty-five miles an hour."
+</p>
+<p>
+"In this car?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"In this car."
+</p>
+<p>
+Looking back, I do not recall just how the thing started. I believe Tish
+expressed a desire to see the car go, and Mr. Ellis said he couldn't let
+her out on the roads, but that the race-track at the fair-ground was
+open and if we cared to drive down there in Tish's car he would show us
+her paces, as he called it.
+</p>
+<p>
+From that to going to the race-track, and from that to Tish's getting in
+beside him on the mechanician's seat and going round once or twice, was
+natural. I refused; I didn't like the look of the thing.
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish came back with a cinder in her eye and full of enthusiasm. "It was
+magnificent, Lizzie," she said. "The only word for it is sublime. You
+see nothing. There is just the rush of the wind and the roar of the
+engine and a wonderful feeling of flying. Here! See if you can find this
+cinder."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Won't you try it, Miss&mdash;er&mdash;Lizzie?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"No, thanks," I replied. "I can get all the roar and rush of wind I want
+in front of an electric fan, and no danger."
+</p>
+<p>
+He stood by, looking out over the oval track while I took three cinders
+from Tish's eye.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Great track!" he said. "It's a horse-track, of course, but it's in
+bully shape&mdash;the county fair is held there and these fellows make a big
+feature of their horse-races. I came up here to persuade them to hold an
+automobile meet, but they've got cold feet on the proposition."
+</p>
+<p>
+"What was the proposition?" asked Tish.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Well," he said, "it was something like this. I've been turning the
+trick all over the country and it works like a charm. The town's ahead
+in money and business, for an automobile race always brings a big crowd;
+the track owners make the gate money and the racing-cars get the prizes.
+Everybody's ahead. It's a clean sport too."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I don't approve of racing for money," Tish said decidedly.
+</p>
+<p>
+But Mr. Ellis shrugged his shoulders. "It's really hardly racing for
+money," he explained. "The prizes cover the expenses of the racing-cars,
+which are heavy naturally. The cars alone cost a young fortune."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I see," said Tish. "I hadn't thought of it in that light. Well, why
+didn't Morris Valley jump at the chance?"
+</p>
+<p>
+He hesitated a moment before he answered. "It was my fault really," he
+said. "They were willing enough to have the races, but it was a matter
+of money. I made them a proposition to duplicate whatever prize money
+they offered, and in return I was to have half the gate receipts and the
+betting privileges."
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish quite stiffened. "Clean sport!" she said sarcastically. "With
+betting privileges!"
+</p>
+<p>
+"You don't quite understand, dear lady," he explained. "Even in the
+cleanest sport we cannot prevent a man's having an opinion and backing
+it with his own money. What I intended to do was to regulate it.
+Regulate it."
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish was quite mollified. "Well, of course," she said, "I suppose since
+it must be, it is better&mdash;er,&mdash;regulated. But why haven't you
+succeeded?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"An unfortunate thing happened just as I had the deal about to close,"
+he replied, and drew a long breath. "The town had raised twenty-five
+hundred. I was to duplicate the amount. But just at that time a&mdash;a young
+brother of mine in the West got into difficulties, and I&mdash;but why go
+into family matters? It would have been easy enough for me to pay my
+part of the purse out of my share of the gate money; but the committee
+demands cash on the table. I haven't got it."
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish stood up in her car and looked out over the track.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Twenty-five hundred dollars is a lot of money, young man."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Not so much when you realize that the gate money will probably amount
+to twelve thousand."
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish turned and surveyed the grandstand.
+</p>
+<p>
+"That thing doesn't seat twelve hundred."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Two thousand people in the grandstand&mdash;that's four thousand dollars.
+Four thousand standing inside the ropes at a dollar each, four thousand
+more. And say eight hundred machines parked in the oval there at five
+dollars a car, four thousand more. That's twelve thousand for the gate
+money alone. Then there are the concessions to sell peanuts, toy
+balloons, lemonade and palm-leaf fans, the lunch-stands, merry-go-round
+and moving-picture permits. It's a bonanza! Fourteen thousand anyhow."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Half of fourteen thousand is seven," said Tish dreamily. "Seven
+thousand less twenty-five hundred is thirty-five hundred dollars
+profit."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Forty-five hundred, dear lady," corrected Mr. Ellis, watching her.
+"Forty-five hundred dollars profit to be made in two weeks, and nothing
+to do to get it but sit still and watch it coming!"
+</p>
+<p>
+I can read Tish like a book and I saw what was in her mind. "Letitia
+Carberry!" I said sternly. "You take my warning and keep clear of this
+foolishness. If money comes as easy as that it ain't honest."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Why not?" demanded Mr. Ellis. "We give them their money's worth,
+don't we? They'd pay two dollars for a theater seat without half
+the thrills&mdash;no chances of seeing a car turn turtle or break its
+steering-knuckle and dash into the side-lines. Two dollars' worth?
+It's twenty!"
+</p>
+<p>
+But Tish had had a moment to consider, and the turning-turtle business
+settled it. She shook her head. "I'm not interested, Mr. Ellis," she
+said coldly. "I couldn't sleep at night if I thought I'd been the cause
+of anything turning turtle or dashing into the side-lines."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Dear lady!" he said, shocked; "I had no idea of asking you to help
+me out of my difficulties. Anyhow, while matters are at a standstill
+probably some shrewd money-maker here will come forward before long and
+make a nice profit on a small investment."
+</p>
+<p>
+As we drove away from the fair grounds Tish was very silent; but just as
+we reached the Bailey place, with Bettina and young Jasper McCutcheon
+batting a ball about on the tennis court, Tish turned to me.
+</p>
+<p>
+"You needn't look like that, Lizzie," she said. "I'm not even thinking
+of backing an automobile race&mdash;although I don't see why I shouldn't, so
+far as that goes. But it's curious, isn't it, that I've got twenty-five
+hundred dollars from Cousin Angeline's estate not even earning four per
+cent?"
+</p>
+<p>
+I got out grimly and jerked at my bonnet-strings.
+</p>
+<p>
+"You put it in a mortgage, Tish," I advised her with severity in every
+tone. "It may not be so fast as an automobile race or so likely to turn
+turtle or break its steering-knuckle, but it's safe."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Huh!" said Tish, reaching for the gear lever. "And about as exciting as
+a cold pork chop."
+</p>
+<p>
+"And furthermore," I interjected, "if you go into this thing now that
+your eyes are open, I'll send for Charlie Sands!"
+</p>
+<p>
+"You and Charlie Sands," said Tish viciously, jamming at her gears,
+"ought to go and live in an old ladies' home away from this cruel
+world."
+</p>
+<p>
+Aggie was sitting under a sunshade in the broiling sun at the tennis
+court. She said she had not left Bettina and Jasper for a moment, and
+that they had evidently quarreled, although she did not know when,
+having listened to every word they said. For the last half-hour, she
+said, they had not spoken at all.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Young people in love are very foolish," she said, rising stiffly. "They
+should be happy in the present. Who knows what the future may hold?"
+</p>
+<p>
+I knew she was thinking of Mr. Wiggins and the icy roof, so I patted her
+shoulder and sent her up to put cold cloths on her head for fear of
+sunstroke. Then I sat down in the broiling sun and chaperoned Bettina
+until luncheon.
+</p>
+
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<h3><a name="h2H_4_0004" id="h2H_4_0004"></a>
+ III
+</h3>
+<p>
+Jasper took dinner with us that night. He came across the lawn, freshly
+shaved and in clean white flannels, just as dinner was announced, and
+said he had seen a chocolate cake cooling on the kitchen porch and that
+it was a sort of unwritten social law that when the Baileys happened to
+have a chocolate cake at dinner they had him also.
+</p>
+<p>
+There seemed to be nothing to object to in this. Evidently he was right,
+for we found his place laid at the table. The meal was quite cheerful,
+although Jasper ate the way some people play the piano, by touch, with
+his eyes on Bettina. And he gave no evidence at dessert of a fondness
+for chocolate cake sufficient to justify a standing invitation.
+</p>
+<p>
+After dinner we went out on the veranda, and under cover of showing me a
+sunset Jasper took me round the corner of the house. Once there, he
+entirely forgot the sunset.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Miss Lizzie," he began at once, "what have I done to you to have you
+treat me like this?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"I?" I asked, amazed.
+</p>
+<p>
+"All three of you. Did&mdash;did Bettina's mother warn you against me?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"The girl has to be chaperoned."
+</p>
+<p>
+"But not jailed, Miss Lizzie, not jailed! Do you know that I haven't had
+a word with Bettina alone since you came?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Why should you want to say anything we cannot hear?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Miss Lizzie," he said desperately, "do you want to hear me propose to
+her? For I've reached the point where if I don't propose to Bettina
+soon, I'll&mdash;I'll propose to somebody. You'd better be warned in time. It
+might be you or Miss Aggie."
+</p>
+<p>
+I weakened at that. The Lord never saw fit to send me a man I could care
+enough about to marry, or one who cared enough about me, but I couldn't
+look at the boy's face and not be sorry for him.
+</p>
+<p>
+"What do you want me to do?" I asked.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Come for a walk with us," he begged. "Then sprain your ankle or get
+tired, I don't care which. Tell us to go on and come back for you later.
+Do you see? You can sit down by the road somewhere."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I won't lie," I said firmly. "If I really get tired I'll say so. If I
+don't&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+"You will." He was gleeful. "We'll walk until you do! You see it's like
+this, Miss Lizzie. Bettina was all for me, in spite of our differing on
+religion and politics and&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+"I know all about your differences," I put in hastily.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Until a new chap came to town&mdash;a fellow named Ellis. Runs a sporty car
+and has every girl in the town lashed to the mast. He's a novelty and
+I'm not. So far I have kept him away from Bettina, but at any time they
+may meet, and it will be one-two-three with me."
+</p>
+<p>
+I am not defending my conduct; I am only explaining. Eliza Bailey
+herself would have done what I did under the circumstances. I went for a
+walk with Bettina and Jasper shortly after my talk with Jasper, leaving
+Tish with the evening paper and Aggie inhaling a cubeb cigarette, her
+hay fever having threatened a return. And what is more, I tired within
+three blocks of the house, where I saw a grassy bank beside the road.
+</p>
+<p>
+Bettina wished to stay with me, but I said, in obedience to Jasper's
+eyes, that I liked to sit alone and listen to the crickets, and for them
+to go on. The last I saw of them Jasper had drawn Bettina's arm through
+his and was walking beside her with his head bent, talking. I sat for
+perhaps fifteen minutes and was growing uneasy about dew and my
+rheumatism when I heard footsteps and, looking up, I saw Aggie coming
+toward me. She was not surprised to see me and addressed me coldly.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I thought as much!" she said. "I expected better of you, Lizzie. That
+boy asked me and I refused. I dare say he asked Tish also. For you, who
+pride yourself on your strength of mind&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+"I was tired," I said. "I was to sprain my ankle," she observed
+sarcastically. "I just thought as I was sitting there alone&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Where's Tish?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"A young man named Ellis came and took her out for a ride," said Aggie.
+"He couldn't take us both, as the car holds only two."
+</p>
+<p>
+I got up and stared at Aggie in the twilight. "You come straight home
+with me, Aggie Pilkington," I said sternly.
+</p>
+<p>
+"But what about Bettina and Jasper?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Let 'em alone," I said; "they're safe enough. What we need to keep an
+eye on is Letitia Carberry and her Cousin Angeline's legacy."
+</p>
+<p>
+But I was too late. Tish and Mr. Ellis whirled up to the door at
+half-past eight and Tish did not even notice that Bettina was absent.
+She took off her veil and said something about Mr. Ellis's having heard
+a grinding in the differential of her car that afternoon and that he
+suspected a chip of steel in the gears. They went out together to the
+garage, leaving Aggie and me staring at each other. Mr. Ellis was
+carrying a box of tools.
+</p>
+<p>
+Jasper and Bettina returned shortly after, and even in the dusk I knew
+things had gone badly for him. He sat on the steps, looking out across
+the dark lawn, and spoke in monosyllables. Bettina, however, was very
+gay.
+</p>
+<p>
+It was evident that Bettina had decided not to take her Presbyterianism
+into the Episcopal fold. And although I am a Presbyterian myself I felt
+sorry.
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish and Mr. Ellis came round to the porch about ten o'clock and he was
+presented to Bettina. From that moment there was no question in my mind
+as to how affairs were going, or in Jasper's either. He refused to move
+and sat doggedly on the steps, but he took little part in the
+conversation.
+</p>
+<p>
+Mr. Ellis was a good talker, especially about himself.
+</p>
+<p>
+"You'll be glad to know," he said to me, "that I've got this race matter
+fixed up finally. In two weeks from now we'll have a little excitement
+here."
+</p>
+<p>
+I looked toward Tish, but she said nothing.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Excitement is where I live," said Mr. Ellis. "If I don't find any
+waiting I make it."
+</p>
+<p>
+"If you are looking for excitement, we'll have to find you some," Jasper
+said pointedly.
+</p>
+<p>
+Mr. Ellis only laughed. "Don't put yourself out, dear boy," he said.
+"I have enough for present necessities. If you think an automobile race
+is an easy thing to manage, try it. Every man who drives a racing-car
+has a <i>coloratura</i> soprano beaten to death for temperament. Then every
+racing-car has quirky spells; there's the local committee to propitiate;
+the track to look after; and if that isn't enough, there's the promotion
+itself, the advertising. That's my stunt&mdash;the advertising."
+</p>
+<p>
+"It's a wonderful business, isn't it?" asked Bettina. "To take a mile
+or so of dirt track and turn it into a sort of stage, with drama every
+minute and sometimes tragedy!"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Wait a moment," said Mr. Ellis; "I want to put that down. I'll use it
+somewhere in the advertising." He wrote by the light of a match, while
+we all sat rather stunned by both his personality and his alertness.
+"Everything's grist that comes to my mill. I suppose you all remember
+when I completed the speedway at Indianapolis and had the Governor of
+Indiana lay a gold brick at the entrance? Great stunt that! But the best
+part of that story never reached the public."
+</p>
+<p>
+Bettina was leaning forward, all ears and thrills. "What was that?" she
+asked.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I had the gold brick stolen that night&mdash;did it myself and carried the
+brick away in my pocket&mdash;only gold-plated, you know. Cost eight or nine
+dollars, all told, and brought a million dollars in advertising. But the
+papers were sore about some passes and wouldn't use the story. Too bad
+we can't use the brick here. Still have it kicking about somewhere."
+</p>
+<p>
+It was then, I think, that Jasper yawned loudly, apologized, said
+good-night and lounged away across the lawn. Bettina hardly knew he was
+going. She was bending forward, her chin in her palms, listening to Mr.
+Ellis tell about a driver in a motor race breaking his wrist cranking a
+car, and how he&mdash;Ellis&mdash;had jumped into the car and driven it to
+victory. Even Aggie was enthralled. It seemed as if, in the last hour,
+the great world of stress and keen wits and endeavor and mad speed had
+sat down on our door-step.
+</p>
+<p>
+As Tish said when we were going up to bed, why shouldn't Mr. Ellis brag?
+He had something to brag about.
+</p>
+
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<h3><a name="h2H_4_0005" id="h2H_4_0005"></a>
+ IV
+</h3>
+<p>
+Although I felt quite sure that Tish had put up the prize money for Mr.
+Ellis, I could not be certain. And Tish's attitude at that time did not
+invite inquiry. She took long rides daily with the Ellis man in his gray
+car, and I have reason to believe that their objective point was always
+the same&mdash;the race-track.
+</p>
+<p>
+Mr. Ellis was the busiest man in Morris Valley. In the daytime he was
+superintending putting the track in condition, writing what he called
+"promotion stuff," securing entries and forming the center of excited
+groups at the drug store and one or other of the two public garages.
+In the evenings he was generally to be found at Bettina's feet.
+</p>
+<p>
+Jasper did not come over any more. He sauntered past, evening after
+evening, very much white-flanneled and carrying a tennis racket. And
+once or twice he took out his old racing-car, and later shot by the
+house with a flutter of veils and a motor coat beside him.
+</p>
+<p>
+Aggie was exceedingly sorry for him, and even went the length of having
+the cook bake a chocolate cake and put it on the window sill to cool. It
+had, however, no perceptible effect, except to draw from Mr. Ellis, who
+had been round at the garage looking at Jasper's old racer, a remark
+that he was exceedingly fond of cake, and if he were urged&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+That was, I believe, a week before the race. The big city papers had
+taken it up, according to Mr. Ellis, and entries were pouring in.
+</p>
+<p>
+"That's the trouble on a small track," he said&mdash;"we can't crowd 'em.
+A dozen cars will be about the limit. Even with using the cattle pens
+for repair pits we can't look after more than a dozen. Did I tell you
+Heckert had entered his Bonor?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"No!" we exclaimed. As far as Aggie and I were concerned, the Bonor
+might have been a new sort of dog.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Yes, and Johnson his Sampler. It's going to be some race&mdash;eh, what!"
+</p>
+<p>
+Jasper sauntered over that evening, possibly a late result of the cake,
+after all. He greeted us affably, as if his defection of the past week
+had been merely incidental, and sat down on the steps.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I've been thinking, Ellis," he said, "that I'd like to enter my car."
+</p>
+<p>
+"What!" said Ellis. "Not that&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+"My racer. I'm not much for speed, but there's a sort of feeling in the
+town that the locality ought to be represented. As I'm the only owner of
+a speed car&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Speed car!" said Ellis, and chuckled. "My dear boy, we've got Heckert
+with his ninety-horse-power Bonor!"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Never heard of him." Jasper lighted a cigarette. "Anyhow, what's that
+to me? I don't like to race. I've got less speed mania than any owner of
+a race car you ever met. But the honor of the town seems to demand a
+sacrifice, and I'm it."
+</p>
+<p>
+"You can try out for it anyhow," said Ellis. "I don't think you'll make
+it; but, if you qualify, all right. But don't let any other town people,
+from a sense of mistaken local pride, enter a street roller or a
+traction engine."
+</p>
+<p>
+Jasper colored, but kept his temper.
+</p>
+<p>
+Aggie, however, spoke up indignantly. "Mr. McCutcheon's car was a very
+fine racer when it was built."
+</p>
+<p>
+"<i>De mortuis nil nisi bonum</i>," remarked Mr. Ellis, and getting up said
+good-night.
+</p>
+<p>
+Jasper sat on the steps and watched him disappear. Then he turned to
+Tish.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Miss Letitia," he said, "do you think you are wise to drive that racer
+of his the way you have been doing?"
+</p>
+<p>
+Aggie gave a little gasp and promptly sneezed, as she does when she is
+excited.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I?" said Tish.
+</p>
+<p>
+"You!" he smiled. "Not that I don't admire your courage. I do. But the
+other day, now, when you lost a tire and went into the ditch&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Tish!" from Aggie.
+</p>
+<p>
+"&mdash;you were fortunate. But when a racer turns over the results are not
+pleasant."
+</p>
+<p>
+"As a matter of fact," said Tish coldly, "it was a wheat-field, not a
+ditch."
+</p>
+<p>
+Jasper got up and threw away his cigarette. "Well, our departing friend
+is not the only one who can quote Latin," he said. "<i>Verbum sap.</i>, Miss
+Tish. Good-night, everybody. Good-night, Bettina."
+</p>
+<p>
+Bettina's good-night was very cool. As I went up to bed that night, I
+thought Jasper's chances poor indeed. As for Tish, I endeavored to speak
+a few words of remonstrance to her, but she opened her Bible and began to
+read the lesson for the day and I was obliged to beat a retreat.
+</p>
+<p>
+It was that night that Aggie and I, having decided the situation was
+beyond us, wrote a letter to Charlie Sands asking him to come up. Just
+as I was sealing it Bettina knocked and came in. She closed the door
+behind her and stood looking at us both.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Where is Miss Tish?" she asked.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Reading her Bible," I said tartly. "When Tish is up to some mischief,
+she generally reads an extra chapter or two as atonement."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Is she&mdash;is she always like this?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"The trouble is," explained Aggie gently, "Miss Letitia is an
+enthusiast. Whatever she does, she does with all her heart."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I feel so responsible," said Bettina. "I try to look after her, but
+what can I do?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"There is only one thing to do," I assured her&mdash;"let her alone. If she
+wants to fly, let her fly; if she wants to race, let her race&mdash;and trust
+in Providence."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'm afraid Providence has its hands full!" said Bettina, and went to
+bed.
+</p>
+<p>
+For the remainder of that week nothing was talked of in Morris Valley
+but the approaching race. Some of Eliza Bailey's friends gave fancy-work
+parties for us, which Aggie and I attended. Tish refused, being now
+openly at the race-track most of the day. Morris Valley was much
+excited. Should it wear motor clothes, or should it follow the example
+of the English Derby and the French races and wear its afternoon
+reception dress with white kid gloves? Or&mdash;it being warm&mdash;wouldn't
+lingerie clothes and sunshades be most suitable?
+</p>
+<p>
+Some of the gossip I retailed to Jasper, oil-streaked and greasy, in the
+Baileys' garage where he was working over his car.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Tell 'em to wear mourning," he said pessimistically. "There's always a
+fatality or two. If there wasn't a fair chance of it nothing would make
+'em sit for hours watching dusty streaks going by."
+</p>
+<p>
+The race was scheduled for Wednesday. On Sunday night the cars began to
+come in. On Monday Tish took us all, including Bettina, to the track.
+There were half a dozen tents in the oval, one of them marked with a
+huge red cross.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Hospital tent," said Tish calmly. We even, on permission from Mr.
+Ellis, went round the track. At one spot Tish stopped the car and got
+out.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Nail," she said briefly. "It's been a horse-racing track for years, and
+we've gathered a bushel of horse-shoe nails."
+</p>
+<p>
+Aggie and I said nothing, but we looked at each other. Tish had said
+"we." Evidently Cousin Angeline's legacy was not going into a mortgage.
+</p>
+<p>
+The fair-grounds were almost ready. Peanut and lunch stands had sprung
+up everywhere. The oval, save by the tents and the repair pits, was
+marked off into parking-spaces numbered on tall banners. Groups of dirty
+men in overalls, carrying machine wrenches, small boys with buckets of
+water, onlookers round the tents and track-rollers made the place look
+busy and interesting. Some of the excitement, I confess, got into my
+blood. Tish, on the contrary, was calm and businesslike. We were sorry
+we had sent for Charlie Sands. She no longer went out in Mr. Ellis's
+car, and that evening she went back to the kitchen and made a boiled
+salad dressing.
+</p>
+<p>
+We were all deceived.
+</p>
+<p>
+Charlie Sands came the next morning. He was on the veranda reading a
+paper when we got down to breakfast. Tish's face was a study.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Who sent for you?" she demanded.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Sent for me! Why, who would send for me? I'm here to write up the race.
+I thought, if you haven't been out to the track, we'd go out this
+morning."
+</p>
+<p>
+"We've been out," said Tish shortly, and we went in to breakfast. Once
+or twice during the meal I caught her eye on me and on Aggie and she was
+short with us both. While she was upstairs I had a word with Charlie
+Sands.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Well," he said, "what is it this time? Is she racing?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Worse than that," I replied. "I think she's backing the thing!"
+</p>
+<p>
+"No!"
+</p>
+<p>
+"With her cousin Angeline's legacy." With that I told him about our
+meeting Mr. Ellis and the whole story. He listened without a word.
+</p>
+<p>
+"So that's the situation," I finished. "He has her hypnotized, Charlie.
+What's more, I shouldn't be surprised to see her enter the race under an
+assumed name."
+</p>
+<p>
+Charlie Sands looked at the racing list in the Morris Valley Sun.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Good cars all of them," he said. "She's not here among the drivers,
+unless she's&mdash;Who are these drivers anyhow? I never heard of any of
+them."
+</p>
+<p>
+"It's a small race," I suggested. "I dare say the big men&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Perhaps." He put away his paper and got up. "I'll just wander round the
+town for an hour or two, Aunt Lizzie," he said. "I believe there's a
+nigger in this woodpile and I'm a right nifty little nigger-chaser."
+</p>
+<p>
+When he came back about noon, however, he looked puzzled. I drew him
+aside.
+</p>
+<p>
+"It seems on the level," he said. "It's so darned open it makes me
+suspicious. But she's back of it all right. I got her bank on the
+long-distance 'phone."
+</p>
+<p>
+We spent that afternoon at the track, with the different cars doing what
+I think they called "trying out heats." It appeared that a car, to
+qualify, must do a certain distance in a certain time. It grew
+monotonous after a while. All but one entry qualified and Jasper just
+made it. The best showing was made by the Bonor car, according to
+Charlie Sands.
+</p>
+<p>
+Jasper came to our machine when it was over, smiling without any
+particular good cheer.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I've made it and that's all," he said. "I've got about as much chance
+as a watermelon at a colored picnic. I'm being slaughtered to make a
+Roman holiday."
+</p>
+<p>
+"If you feel that way why do you do it?" demanded Bettina coldly. "If
+you go in expecting to be slaughtered&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+He was leaning on the side of the car and looked up at her with eyes
+that made my heart ache, they were so wretched.
+</p>
+<p>
+"What does it matter?" he said. "I'll probably trail in at the last,
+sound in wind and limb. If I don't, what does it matter?"
+</p>
+<p>
+He turned and left us at that, and I looked at Bettina. She had her lips
+shut tight and was blinking hard. I wished that Jasper had looked back.
+</p>
+
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<h3><a name="h2H_4_0006" id="h2H_4_0006"></a>
+ V
+</h3>
+<p>
+Charlie Sands announced at dinner that he intended to spend the night at
+the track.
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish put down her fork and looked at him. "Why?" she demanded.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'm going to help the boy next door watch his car," he said calmly.
+"Nothing against your friend Mr. Ellis, Aunt Tish, but some enemy of
+true sport might take a notion in the night to slip a dope pill into
+the mouth of friend Jasper's car and have her go to sleep on the track
+to-morrow."
+</p>
+<p>
+We spent a quiet evening. Mr. Ellis was busy, of course, and so was
+Jasper. The boy came to the house to get Charlie Sands and, I suppose,
+for a word with Bettina, for when he saw us all on the porch he looked,
+as you may say, thwarted.
+</p>
+<p>
+When Charlie Sands had gone up for his pajamas and dressing-gown, Jasper
+stood looking up at us.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Oh, Association of Chaperons!" he said, "is it permitted that my lady
+walk to the gate with me&mdash;alone?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"I am not your lady," flashed Bettina.
+</p>
+<p>
+"You've nothing to say about that," he said recklessly. "I've selected
+you; you can't help it. I haven't claimed that you have selected me."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Anyhow, I don't wish to go to the gate," said Bettina.
+</p>
+<p>
+He went rather white at that, and Charlie Sands coming down at that
+moment with a pair of red-and-white pajamas under his arm and a
+toothbrush sticking out of his breast pocket, romance, as Jasper said
+later in referring to it, "was buried in Sands."
+</p>
+<p>
+Jasper went up to Bettina and held out his hand. "You'll wish me luck,
+won't you?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Of course." She took his hand. "But I think you're a bit of a coward,
+Jasper!"
+</p>
+<p>
+He eyed her. "Coward!" he said. "I'm the bravest man you know. I'm doing
+a thing I'm scared to death to do!"
+</p>
+<hr />
+<p>
+The race was to begin at two o'clock in the afternoon. There were small
+races to be run first, but the real event was due at three.
+</p>
+<p>
+From early in the morning a procession of cars from out of town poured
+in past Eliza Bailey's front porch, and by noon her cretonne cushions
+were thick with dust. And not only automobiles came, but hay-wagons,
+side-bar buggies, delivery carts&mdash;anything and everything that could
+transport the crowd.
+</p>
+<p>
+At noon Mr. Ellis telephoned Tish that the grand-stand was sold out and
+that almost all the parking-places that had been reserved were taken.
+Charlie Sands came home to luncheon with a curious smile on his face.
+</p>
+<p>
+"How are you betting, Aunt Tish?" he asked.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Betting!"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Yes. Has Ellis let you in on the betting?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"I don't know what you are talking about," Tish said sourly. "Mr. Ellis
+controls the betting so that it may be done in an orderly manner. I am
+sure I have nothing to do with it."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'd like to bet a little, Charlie," Aggie put in with an eye on Tish.
+"I'd put all I win on the collection plate on Sunday."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Very well." Charlie Sands took out his notebook. "On what car and how
+much?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Ten dollars on the Fein. It made the best time at the trial heats."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I wouldn't if I were you," said Charlie Sands. "Suppose we put it on
+our young friend next door."
+</p>
+<p>
+Bettina rather sniffed. "On Jasper!" she exclaimed.
+</p>
+<p>
+"On Jasper," said Charlie Sands gravely.
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish, who had hardly heard us, looked up from her plate.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Betting is betting," she snapped. "Putting it on the collection plate
+doesn't help any." But with that she caught Charlie Sands' eye and he
+winked at her. Tish colored. "Gambling is one thing, clean sport is
+another," she said hotly.
+</p>
+<p>
+I believe, however, that whatever Charlie Sands may have suspected, he
+really knew nothing until the race had started. By that time it was too
+late to prevent it, and the only way he could think of to avoid getting
+Tish involved in a scandal was to let it go on.
+</p>
+<p>
+We went to the track in Tish's car and parked in the oval. Not near the
+grandstand, however. Tish had picked out for herself a curve at one end
+of the track which Mr. Ellis had said was the worst bit on the course.
+"He says," said Tish, as we put the top down and got out the vacuum
+bottle&mdash;oh, yes, Mr. Ellis had sent Tish one as a present&mdash;"that if
+there are any smashups they'll occur here."
+</p>
+<p>
+Aggie is not a bloodthirsty woman ordinarily, but her face quite lit up.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Not really!" she said.
+</p>
+<p>
+"They'll probably turn turtle," said Tish. "There is never a race
+without a fatality or two. No racer can get any life insurance. Mr.
+Ellis says four men were killed at the last race he promoted."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Then I think Mr. Ellis is a murderer," Bettina cried. We all looked at
+her. She was limp and white and was leaning back among the cushions with
+her eyes shut. "Why didn't you tell Jasper about this curve?" she
+demanded of Tish.
+</p>
+<p>
+But at that moment a pistol shot rang out and the races were on.
+</p>
+<p>
+The Fein won two of the three small races. Jasper was entered only for
+the big race. In the interval before the race was on, Jasper went round
+the track slowly, looking for Bettina. When he saw us he waved, but did
+not stop. He was number thirteen.
+</p>
+<p>
+I shall not describe the race. After the first round or two, what with
+dust in my eyes and my neck aching from turning my head so rapidly, I
+just sat back and let them spin in front of me.
+</p>
+<p>
+It was after a dozen laps or so, with number thirteen doing as well as
+any of them, that Tish was arrested.
+</p>
+<p>
+Charlie Sands came up beside the car with a gentleman named Atkins, who
+turned out to be a county detective. Charlie Sands was looking stern and
+severe, but the detective was rather apologetic.
+</p>
+<p>
+"This is Miss Carberry," said Charlie Sands. "Aunt Tish, this gentleman
+wishes to speak to you."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Come around after the race," Tish observed calmly.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Miss Carberry," said the detective gently, "I believe you are back of
+this race, aren't you?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"What if I am?" demanded Tish.
+</p>
+<p>
+Charlie Sands put a hand on the detective's arm. "It's like this, Aunt
+Tish," he said; "you are accused of practicing a short-change game,
+that's all. This race is sewed up. You employ those racing-cars with
+drivers at an average of fifty dollars a week. They are hardly worth it,
+Aunt Tish. I could have got you a better string for twenty-five."
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish opened her mouth and shut it again without speaking.
+</p>
+<p>
+"You also control the betting privileges. As you own all the racers you
+have probably known for a couple of weeks who will win the race. Having
+made the Fein favorite, you can bet on a Brand or a Bonor, or whatever
+one you chance to like, and win out. Only I take it rather hard of you,
+Aunt Tish, not to have let the family in. I'm hard up as the dickens."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Charlie Sands!" said Tish impressively. "If you are joking&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Joking! Did you ever know a county detective to arrest a prominent
+woman at a race-track as a little jest between friends? There's no joke,
+Aunt Tish. You've financed a phony race. The permit is taken in your
+name&mdash;L. Carberry. Whatever car wins, you and Ellis take the prize
+money, half the gate receipts, and what you have made out of the
+betting&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish rose in the machine and held out both her hands to Mr. Atkins.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Officer, perform your duty," she said solemnly. "Ignorance is no
+defense and I know it. Where are the handcuffs?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"We'll not bother about them, Miss Carberry", he said. "If you like I'll
+get into the car and you can tell me all about it while we watch the
+race. Which car is to win?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"I may have been a fool, Mr. County Detective," she said coldly; "but
+I'm not a knave. I have not bet a dollar on the race."
+</p>
+<p>
+We were very silent for a time. The detective seemed to enjoy the race
+very much and ate peanuts out of his pocket. He even bought a
+red-and-black pennant, with "Morris Valley Races" on it, and fastened it
+to the car. Charlie Sands, however, sat with his arms folded, stiff and
+severe.
+</p>
+<p>
+Once Tish bent forward and touched his arm.
+</p>
+<p>
+"You&mdash;you don't think it will get in the papers, do you?" she quavered.
+</p>
+<p>
+Charlie Sands looked at her with gloom. "I shall have to send it myself,
+Aunt Tish," he said; "it is my duty to my paper. Even my family pride,
+hurt to the quick and quivering as it is, must not interfere with my
+duty."
+</p>
+<p>
+It was Bettina who suggested a way out&mdash;Bettina, who had sat back as
+pale as Tish and heard that her Mr. Ellis was, as Charlie Sands said
+later, as crooked as a pretzel.
+</p>
+<p>
+"But Jasper was not&mdash;not subsidized," she said. "If he wins, it's all
+right, isn't it?"
+</p>
+<p>
+The county detective turned to her.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Jasper?" he said.
+</p>
+<p>
+"A young man who lives here." Bettina colored.
+</p>
+<p>
+"He is&mdash;not to be suspected?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Certainly not," said Bettina haughtily; "he is above suspicion.
+Besides, he&mdash;he and Mr. Ellis are not friends."
+</p>
+<p>
+Well, the county detective was no fool. He saw the situation that
+minute, and smiled when he offered Bettina a peanut. "Of course," he
+said cheerfully, "if the race is won by a Morris Valley man, and not by
+one of the Ellis cars, I don't suppose the district attorney would care
+to do anything about it. In fact," he said, smiling at Bettina, "I don't
+know that I'd put it up to the district attorney at all. A warning to
+Ellis would get him out of the State."
+</p>
+<p>
+It was just at that moment that car number thirteen, coming round the
+curve, skidded into the field, threw out both Jasper McCutcheon and his
+mechanician, and after standing on two wheels for an appreciable moment
+of time, righted herself, panting, with her nose against a post.
+</p>
+<p>
+Jasper sat up almost immediately and caught at his shoulder. The
+mechanician was stunned. He got up, took a step or two and fell down,
+weak with fright.
+</p>
+<p>
+I do not recall very distinctly what happened next. We got out of the
+machine, I remember, and Bettina was cutting off Jasper's sweater with
+Charlie Sands' penknife, and crying as she did it. And Charlie Sands was
+trying to prevent Jasper from getting back into his car, while Jasper
+was protesting that he could win in two or more laps and that he could
+drive with one hand&mdash;he'd only broken his arm.
+</p>
+<p>
+The crowd had gathered round us, thick. Suddenly they drew back, and
+in a sort of haze I saw Tish in Jasper's car, with Aggie, as white as
+death, holding to Tish's sleeve and begging her not to get in. The next
+moment Tish let in the clutch of the racer and Aggie took a sort of
+flying leap and landed beside her in the mechanician's seat.
+</p>
+<p>
+Charlie Sands saw it when I did, but we were both too late. Tish was
+crossing the ditch into the track again, and the moment she struck level
+ground she put up the gasoline.
+</p>
+<p>
+It was just then that Aggie fell out, landing, as I have said before, in
+a pile of sand. Tish said afterward that she never missed her. She had
+just discovered that this was not Jasper's old car, which she knew
+something about, but a new racer with the old hood and seat put on in
+order to fool Mr. Ellis. She didn't know a thing about it.
+</p>
+<p>
+Well, you know the rest&mdash;how Tish, trying to find how the gears worked,
+side-swiped the Bonor car and threw it off the field and out of the
+race; how, with the grandstand going crazy, she skidded off the track
+into the field, turned completely round twice, and found herself on the
+track again facing the way she wanted to go; how, at the last lap, she
+threw a tire and, without cutting down her speed, bumped home the
+winner, with the end of her tongue nearly bitten off and her spine
+fairly driven up into her skull.
+</p>
+
+
+<div class="figure">
+<a name="image-0001"></a>
+<img src="images/ill-02.jpg" width="100%"
+alt="Without cutting down her speed, bumped home the winner" /><br />
+Without cutting down her speed, bumped home the winner
+</div>
+
+<p>
+All this is well known now, as is also the fact that Mr. Ellis
+disappeared from the judges' stand after a word or two with Mr. Atkins,
+and was never seen at Morris Valley again.
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish came out of the race ahead by half the gate money&mdash;six thousand
+dollars&mdash;by a thousand dollars from concessions, and a lame back that
+she kept all winter. Even deducting the twenty-five hundred she had put
+up, she was forty-five hundred dollars ahead, not counting the prize
+money. Charlie Sand brought the money from the track that night, after
+having paid off Mr. Ellis's racing-string and given Mr. Atkins a small
+present. He took over the prize money to Jasper and came back with it,
+Jasper maintaining that it belonged to Tish, and that he had only raced
+for the honor of Morris Valley. For some time the money went begging,
+but it settled itself naturally enough, Tish giving it to Jasper in the
+event of&mdash;but that came later.
+</p>
+<p>
+On the following evening&mdash;Bettina, in the pursuit of learning to cook,
+having baked a chocolate cake&mdash;we saw Jasper, with his arm in a sling,
+crossing the side lawn.
+</p>
+<p>
+Jasper stopped at the foot of the steps. "I see a chocolate cake cooling
+on the kitchen porch," he said. "Did you order it, Miss Lizzie?"
+</p>
+<p>
+I shook my head.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Miss Tish? Miss Aggie?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"I ordered it," said Bettina defiantly&mdash;"or rather I baked it."
+</p>
+<p>
+"And you did that, knowing what it entailed? He was coming up the steps
+slowly and with care.
+</p>
+<p>
+"What does it entail?" demanded Bettina.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Me."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Oh, that!" said Bettina. "I knew that."
+</p>
+<p>
+Jasper threw his head back and laughed. Then:&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+"Will the Associated Chaperons," he said, "turn their backs?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Not at all," I began stiffly. "If I&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+"She baked it herself!" said Jasper exultantly. "One&mdash;two. When I say
+three I shall kiss Bettina."
+</p>
+<p>
+And I have every reason to believe he carried out his threat.
+</p>
+<hr />
+<p>
+Eliza Bailey forwarded me this letter from London where Bettina had sent
+it to her:&mdash;
+</p>
+<p class="quote">
+ <i>Dearest Mother</i>: I hope you are coming home soon. I really think you
+ should. Aunt Lizzie is here and she brought two friends, and, mother,
+ I feel so responsible for them! Aunt Lizzie is sane enough, if somewhat
+ cranky; but Miss Tish is almost more than I can manage&mdash;I never know
+ what she is going to do next&mdash;and I am worn out with chaperoning her.
+ And Miss Aggie, although she is very sweet, is always smoking cubeb
+ cigarettes for hay fever, and it looks terrible! The neighbors do not
+ know they are cubeb, and, anyhow, that's a habit, mother. And yesterday
+ Miss Tish was arrested, and ran a motor race and won it, and to-day she
+ is knitting a stocking and reciting the Twenty-third Psalm. Please,
+ mother, I think you should come home.
+</p>
+<p class="quote">
+ Lovingly, BETTINA.
+</p>
+<p class="quote">
+ P.S. I think I shall marry Jasper after all. He says he likes the
+ Presbyterian service.
+</p>
+<p>
+I looked up from reading Eliza's letter. Tish was knitting quietly and
+planning to give the money back to the town in the shape of a library,
+and Aggie was holding a cubeb cigarette to her nose. Down on the tennis
+court Jasper and Bettina were idly batting a ball round.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'm glad the Ellis man did not get her," said Aggie. And then, after a
+sneeze, "How Jasper reminds me of Mr. Wiggins."
+</p>
+<p>
+The library did not get the money after all. Tish sent it, as a wedding
+present, to Bettina.
+</p>
+
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<h2><a name="h2H_4_0007" id="h2H_4_0007"></a>
+ LIKE A WOLF ON THE FOLD
+</h2>
+<h3>
+ I
+</h3>
+<p>
+Aggie has always been in the habit of observing the anniversary of Mr.
+Wiggins's death. Aggie has the anniversary habit, anyhow, and her life
+is a succession of small feast-days, on which she wears mental crape or
+wedding garments&mdash;depending on the occasion. Tish and I always remember
+these occasions appropriately, sending flowers on the anniversaries of
+the passing away of Aggie's parents; grandparents; a niece who died in
+birth; her cousin, Sarah Webb, who married a missionary and was
+swallowed whole by a large snake,&mdash;except her shoes, which the reptile
+refused and of which Aggie possesses the right, given her by the
+stricken husband; and, of course, Mr. Wiggins.
+</p>
+<p>
+For Mr. Wiggins Tish and I generally send the same things each
+year&mdash;Tish a wreath of autumn foliage and I a sheaf of wheat tied with a
+lavender ribbon. The program seldom varies. We drive to the cemetery in
+the afternoon and Aggie places the sheaf and the wreath on Mr. Wiggins's
+last resting-place, after first removing the lavender ribbon, of which
+she makes cap bows through the year and an occasional pin-cushion or
+fancy-work bag; then home to chicken and waffles, which had been Mr.
+Wiggins's favorite meal. In the evening Charlie Sands generally comes in
+and we play a rubber or two of bridge.
+</p>
+<p>
+On the thirtieth anniversary of Mr. Wiggins's falling off a roof and
+breaking his neck, Tish was late in arriving, and I found Aggie sitting
+alone, dressed in black, with a tissue-paper bundle in her lap. I put my
+sheaf on the table and untied my bonnet-strings.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Where's Tish?" I asked.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Not here yet."
+</p>
+<p>
+Something in Aggie's tone made me look at her. She was eyeing the bundle
+in her lap.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I got a paler shade of ribbon this time," I said, seeing she made no
+comment on the sheaf. "It's a better color for me if you're going to
+make my Christmas present out of it this year again. Where's Tish's
+wreath?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Here." Aggie pointed dispiritedly to the bundle in her lap and went on
+rocking.
+</p>
+<p>
+"That! That's no wreath."
+</p>
+<p>
+In reply Aggie lifted the tissue paper and shook out, with hands that
+trembled with indignation, a lace-and-linen centerpiece. She held it up
+before me and we eyed each other over it. Both of us understood.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Tish is changed, Lizzie," Aggie said hollowly. "Ask her for bread these
+days and she gives you a Cluny-lace fandangle. On mother's anniversary
+she sent me a set of doilies; and when Charlie Sands was in the hospital
+with appendicitis she took him a pair of pillow shams. It's that Syrian!"
+</p>
+<p>
+Both of us knew. We had seen Tish's apartment change from a sedate and
+spinsterly retreat to a riot of lace covers on the mantel, on the backs
+of chairs, on the stands, on the pillows&mdash;everywhere. We had watched
+her Marseilles bedspreads give way to hem-stitched covers, with bolsters
+to match. We had seen Tish go through a cold winter clad in a succession
+of sleazy silk kimonos instead of her flannel dressing-gown; terrible
+kimonos&mdash;green and yellow and red and pink, that looked like fruit
+salads and were just as heating.
+</p>
+<p>
+"It's that dratted Syrian!" cried Aggie&mdash;and at that Tish came in. She
+stood inside the door and eyed us.
+</p>
+<p>
+"What about him?" she demanded. "If I choose to take a poor starving
+Christian youth and assist him by buying from him what I need&mdash;what I
+need!&mdash;that's my affair, isn't it? Tufik was starving and I took him
+in."
+</p>
+<p>
+"He took you in, all right!" Aggie sniffed. "A great, mustached, dirty,
+palavering foreigner, who's probably got a harem at home and no respect
+for women!"
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish glanced at my sheaf and at the centerpiece. She was dressed as she
+always dressed on Mr. Wiggins's day&mdash;in black; but she had a new lace
+collar with a jabot, and we knew where she had got it. She saw our eyes
+on it and she had the grace to flush.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Once for all," she snapped, "I intend to look after this unfortunate
+Syrian! If my friends object, I shall be deeply sorry; but, so far as
+I care, they may object until they are purple in the face and their
+tongues hang out. I've been sending my money to foreign missions long
+enough; I'm doing my missionary work at home now."
+</p>
+<p>
+"He'll marry you!" This from Aggie.
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish ignored her. "His father is an honored citizen of Beirut, of the
+nobility. The family is impoverished, being Christian, and grossly
+imposed on by the Turks. Tufik speaks French and English as well as
+Mohammedan. They offered him a high government position if he would
+desert the Christian faith; but he refused firmly. He came to this
+country for religious freedom; at any moment they may come after him and
+take him back."
+</p>
+<p>
+A glint of hope came to me. I made a mental note to write to the mayor,
+or whatever they call him over there, and tell him where he could locate
+his wandering boy.
+</p>
+<p>
+"He loves the God of America," said Tish.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Money!" Aggie jeered.
+</p>
+<p>
+"And he is so pathetic, so grateful! I told Hannah at noon to-day&mdash;that's
+what delayed me&mdash;to give him his lunch. He was starving; I thought we'd
+never fill him. And when it was over, he stooped in the sweetest way,
+while she was gathering up the empty dishes, and kissed her hand. It was
+touching!"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Very!" I said dryly. "What did Hannah do?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"She's a fool! She broke a cup on his head."
+</p>
+<p>
+Mr. Wiggins's anniversary was not a success. Part of this was due to
+Tish, who talked of Tufik steadily&mdash;of his youth; of the wonderful
+bargains she secured from him; of his belief that this was the land of
+opportunity&mdash;Aggie sniffed; of his familiarity with the Bible and
+Biblical places; of the search the Turks were making for him. The
+atmosphere was not cleared by Aggie's taking the Cluny-lace centerpiece
+to the cemetery and placing it, with my sheaf, on Mr. Wiggins's grave.
+</p>
+<p>
+As we got into Tish's machine to go back, Aggie was undeniably peevish.
+She caught cold, too, and was sneezing&mdash;as she always does when she is
+irritated or excited.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Where to?" asked Tish from the driving-seat, looking straight ahead and
+pulling on her gloves. From where we sat we could still see the dot of
+white on the grass that was the centerpiece.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Back to the house," Aggie snapped, "to have some chicken and waffles
+and Tufik for dinner!"
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish drove home in cold silence. As well as we could tell from her back,
+she was not so much indignant as she was determined. Thus we do not
+believe that she willfully drove over every rut and thank-you-ma'am on
+the road, scattering us generously over the tonneau, and finally, when
+Aggie, who was the lighter, was tossed against the top and sprained her
+neck, eliciting a protest from us. She replied in an abstracted tone,
+which showed where her mind was.
+</p>
+<p>
+"It would be rougher on a camel," she said absently. "Tufik was telling
+me the other day&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+Aggie had got her head straight by that time and was holding it with
+both hands to avoid jarring. She looked goaded and desperate; and, as
+she said afterward, the thing slipped out before she knew she was more
+than thinking it.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Oh, damn Tufik!" she said.
+</p>
+<p>
+Fortunately at that moment we blew out a tire and apparently Tish did
+not hear her. While I was jacking up the car and Tish was getting the
+key of the toolbox out of her stocking, Aggie sat sullenly in her place
+and watched us.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I suppose," she gibed, "a camel never blows out a tire!"
+</p>
+<p>
+"It might," Tish said grimly, "if it heard an oath from the lips of a
+middle-aged Sunday-school teacher!"
+</p>
+<p>
+We ate Mr. Wiggins's anniversary dinner without any great hilarity.
+Aggie's neck was very stiff and she had turned in the collar of her
+dress and wrapped flannels wrung out of lamp oil round it. When she
+wished to address either Tish or myself she held her head rigid and
+turned her whole body in her chair; and when she felt a sneeze coming on
+she clutched wildly at her head with both hands as if she expected it to
+fly off.
+</p>
+<p>
+Tufik was not mentioned, though twice Tish got as far as Tu&mdash; and then
+thought better of it; but her mind was on him and we knew it. She worked
+the conversation round to Bible history and triumphantly demanded
+whether we knew that Sodom and Gomorrah are towns to-day, and that a
+street-car line is contemplated to them from some place or other&mdash;it
+developed later that she meant Tyre and Sidon. Once she suggested that
+Aggie's sideboard needed new linens, but after a look at Aggie's rigid
+head she let it go at that.
+</p>
+<p>
+No one was sorry when, with dinner almost over, and Aggie lifting her
+ice-cream spoon straight up in front of her and opening her mouth with
+a sort of lockjaw movement, the bell rang. We thought it was Charlie
+Sands. It was not. Aggie faced the doorway and I saw her eyes widen.
+Tish and I turned.
+</p>
+<p>
+A boy stood in the doorway&mdash;a shrinking, timid, brown-eyed young
+Oriental, very dark of skin, very white of teeth, very black of hair&mdash;a
+slim youth of eighteen, possibly twenty, in a shabby blue suit, broken
+shoes, and a celluloid collar. Twisting between nervous brown fingers,
+not as clean as they might have been, was a tissue-paper package.
+</p>
+<p>
+"My friends!" he said, and smiled.
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish is an extraordinary woman. She did not say a word. She sat still
+and let the smile get in its work. Its first effect was on Aggie's neck,
+which she forgot. Tufik's timid eyes rested for a moment on Tish and
+brightened. Then like a benediction they turned to mine, and came to a
+stop on Aggie. He took a step farther into the room.
+</p>
+<p>
+"My friend's friend are my friend," he said. "America is my friend&mdash;this
+so great God's country!"
+</p>
+<p>
+Aggie put down her ice-cream spoon and closed her mouth, which had been
+open.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Come in, Tufik," said Tish; "and I am sure Miss Pilkington would like
+you to sit down."
+</p>
+<p>
+Tufik still stood with his eyes fixed on Aggie, twisting his package.
+</p>
+<p>
+"My friend has said," he observed&mdash;he was quite calm and divinely
+trustful&mdash;"My friend has said that this is for Miss Pilk a sad day. My
+friend is my mother; I have but her and God. Unless&mdash;but perhaps I have
+two new friend also&mdash;no?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Of course we are your friends," said Aggie, feeling for the table-bell
+with her foot. "We are&mdash;aren't we, Lizzie?"
+</p>
+<p>
+Tufik turned and looked at me wistfully. It came over me then what an
+awful thing it must be to be so far from home and knowing nobody, and
+having to wear trousers and celluloid collars instead of robes and
+turbans, and eat potatoes and fried things instead of olives and figs
+and dates, and to be in danger of being taken back and made into a
+Mohammedan and having to keep a harem.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Certainly," I assented. "If you are good we will be your friends."
+</p>
+<p>
+He flashed a boyish smile at me.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I am good," he said calmly&mdash;"as the angels I am good. I have here a
+letter from a priest. I give it to you. Read!"
+</p>
+<p>
+He got a very dirty envelope from his pocket and brought it round the
+table to me. "See!" he said. "The priest says: 'Of all my children Tufik
+lies next my heart.'"
+</p>
+<p>
+He held the letter out to me; but it looked as if it had been copied
+from an Egyptian monument and was about as legible as an outbreak of
+measles.
+</p>
+<p>
+"This," he said gently, pointing, "is the priest's blessing. I carry
+it ever. It brings me friends." He put the paper away and drew a long
+breath; then surveyed us all with shining eyes. "It has brought me you."
+</p>
+<p>
+We were rather overwhelmed. Aggie's maid having responded to the bell,
+Aggie ordered ice cream for Tufik and a chair drawn to the table; but
+the chair Tufik refused with a little, smiling bow.
+</p>
+<p>
+"It is not right that I sit," he said. "I stand in the presence of my
+three mothers. But first&mdash;I forget&mdash;my gift! For the sadness, Miss
+Pilk!"
+</p>
+<p>
+He held out the tissue-paper package and Aggie opened it. Tufik's gift
+proved to be a small linen doily, with a Cluny-lace border!
+</p>
+<p>
+We were gone from that moment&mdash;I know it now, looking back. Gone! We
+were lost the moment Tufik stood in the doorway, smiling and bowing.
+Tish saw us going; and with the calmness of the lost sat there nibbling
+cake and watching us through her spectacles&mdash;and raised not a hand.
+</p>
+<p>
+Aggie looked at the doily and Tufik looked at her.
+</p>
+<p>
+"That's&mdash;that's really very nice of you," said Aggie. "I thank you."
+</p>
+<p>
+Tufik came over and stood beside her.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I give with my heart," he said shyly. "I have had nobody&mdash;in all so
+large this country&mdash;nobody! And now&mdash;I have you!" Aggie saw&mdash;but too
+late. He bent over and touched his lips to her hands. "The Bible says:
+'To him that overcometh I will give the morning star!' I have
+overcometh&mdash;ah, so much!&mdash;the sea; the cold, wet England; the Ellis
+Island; the hunger; the aching of one who has no love, no money! And
+now&mdash;I have the morning star!"
+</p>
+<p>
+He looked at us all three at once&mdash;Charlie Sands said this was
+impossible, until he met Tufik. Aggie was fairly palpitant and Tish was
+smug, positively smug. As for me, I roused with a start to find myself
+sugaring my ice cream.
+</p>
+<p>
+Charlie Sands was delayed that night. He came in about nine o'clock and
+found Tufik telling us about his home and his people and the shepherds
+on the hills about Damascus and the olive trees in sunlight. We
+half-expected Tufik to adopt Charlie Sands as a father; but he contented
+himself with a low Oriental salute, and shortly after he bowed himself
+away.
+</p>
+<p>
+Charlie Sands stood looking after him and smiling to himself. "Pretty
+smooth boy, that!" he said.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Smooth nothing!" Tish snapped, getting the bridge score. "He's a
+sad-hearted and lonely boy; and we are going to do the kindest thing&mdash;we
+are going to help him to help himself."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Oh, he'll help himself all right!" observed Charlie Sands. "But, since
+his people are Christians, I wish you'd tell me how he knows so much
+about the inside of a harem!"
+</p>
+<p>
+Seeing that comment annoyed us, he ceased, and we fell to our bridge
+game; but more than once his eye fell on Aggie's doily, and he muttered
+something about the Assyrian coming down like a wolf on the fold.
+</p>
+
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<h3><a name="h2H_4_0008" id="h2H_4_0008"></a>
+ II
+</h3>
+<p>
+The problem of Tufik's future was a pressing one. Tish called a meeting
+of the three of us next morning, and we met at her house. We found her
+reading about Syria in the encyclopædia, while spread round her on
+chairs and tables were numbers of silk kimonos, rolls of crocheted lace,
+shirt-waist patterns, and embroidered linens.
+</p>
+<p>
+Hannah let us in. She looked surly and had a bandage round her head, a
+sure sign of trouble&mdash;Hannah always referring a pain in her temper to
+her ear or her head or her teeth. She clutched my arm in the hall and
+held me back.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'm going to poison him!" she said. "Miss Lizzie, that little snake
+goes or I go!"
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'm ashamed of you, Hannah!" I replied sternly. "If out of the breadth
+of her charity Miss Tish wishes to assist a fellow man&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+Hannah reeled back and freed my arm.
+</p>
+<p>
+"My God!" she whispered. "You too!"
+</p>
+<p>
+I am very fond of Hannah, who has lived with Tish for many years; but I
+had small patience with her that morning.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I cannot see how it concerns you, anyhow, Hannah," I observed severely.
+</p>
+<p>
+Hannah put her apron to her eyes and sniffled into it.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Oh, you can't, can't you!" she wailed. "Don't I give him half his
+meals, with him soft-soapin' Miss Tish till she can't see for suds?
+Ain't I fallin' over him mornin', noon, and night, and the postman
+telling all over the block he's my steady company&mdash;that snip that's not
+eighteen yet? And don't I do the washin'? And will you look round the
+place and count the things I've got to do up every week? And don't he
+talk to me in that lingo of his, so I don't know whether he's askin' for
+a cup of coffee or insultin' me?"
+</p>
+<p>
+I patted Hannah on the arm. After all, none of the exaltation of a good
+deed upheld Hannah as it sustained us.
+</p>
+<p>
+"We are going to help him help himself, Hannah," I said kindly. "He
+hasn't found himself. Be gentle with him. Remember he comes from the
+land of the Bible."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Humph!" said Hannah, who reads the newspapers. "So does the plague!"
+</p>
+<p>
+The problem we had set ourselves we worked out that morning. As Tish
+said, the boy ought to have light work, for the Syrians are not a
+laboring people.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Their occupation is&mdash;er&mdash;mainly pastoral," she said, with the authority
+of the encyclopædia. "Grazing their herds and gathering figs and olives.
+If we knew some one who needed a shepherd&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+Aggie opposed the shepherd idea, however. As she said, and with reason,
+the climate is too rigorous. "It's all well enough in Syria," she said,
+"where they have no cold weather; but he'd take his death of pneumonia
+here."
+</p>
+<p>
+We put the shepherd idea reluctantly aside. My own notion of finding a
+camel for him to look after was negatived by Tish at once, and properly
+enough I realized.
+</p>
+<p>
+"The only camels are in circuses," she said, "and our duty to the boy is
+moral as well as physical. Circuses are dens of immorality. Of course
+the Syrians are merchants, and we might get him work in a store. But
+then again&mdash;what chance has he of rising? Once a clerk, always a clerk."
+She looked round at the chairs and tables, littered with the contents of
+Tufik's pasteboard suitcase, which lay empty at her feet. "And there is
+nothing to canvassing from door to door. Look at these exquisite
+things!&mdash;and he cannot sell them. Nobody buys. He says he never gets
+inside a house door. If you had seen his face when I bought a kimono
+from him!"
+</p>
+<p>
+At eleven o'clock, having found nothing in the "Help Wanted" column to
+fit Tufik's case, Tish called up Charlie Sands and offered Tufik as a
+reporter, provided he was given no nightwork. But Charlie Sands said it
+was impossible&mdash;that the editors and owners of the paper were always
+putting on their sons and relatives, and that when there was a vacancy
+the big advertisers got it. Tish insisted&mdash;she suggested that Tufik
+could run an Arabian column, like the German one, and bring in a lot of
+new subscribers. But Charlie Sands stood firm.
+</p>
+<p>
+At noon Tufik came. We heard a skirmish at the door and Hannah talking
+between her teeth.
+</p>
+<p>
+"She's out," she said.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Well, I think she is not out," in Tufik's soft tones.
+</p>
+<p>
+"You'll not get in."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Ah, but my toes are in. See, my foot wishes to enter!" Then something
+soft, coaxing, infinitely wistful, in Arabian followed by a slap. The
+next moment Hannah, in tears, rushed back to the kitchen. There was no
+sound from the hallway. No smiling Tufik presented himself in the
+doorway.
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish rose in the majesty of wrath. "I could strangle that woman!" she
+said, and we followed her into the hall.
+</p>
+<p>
+Tufik was standing inside the door with his arms folded, staring ahead.
+He took no notice of us.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Tufik!" Aggie cried, running to him. "Did she&mdash;did she dare&mdash;Tish, look
+at his cheek!"
+</p>
+<p>
+"She is a bad woman!" Tufik said somberly. "I make my little prayer to
+see Miss Tish, my mother, and she&mdash;I kill her!"
+</p>
+<p>
+We had a hard time apologizing to him for Hannah. Tish got a basin of
+cold water so he might bathe his face; and Aggie brought a tablespoonful
+of blackberry cordial, which is soothing. When the poor boy was calmer
+we met in Tish's bedroom and Tish was quite firm on one point&mdash;Hannah
+must leave!
+</p>
+<p>
+Now, this I must say in my own defense&mdash;I was sorry for Tufik; and it is
+quite true I bought him a suit and winter flannels and a pair of yellow
+shoes&mdash;he asked for yellow. He said he was homesick for a bit of
+sunshine, and our so somber garb made him heart-sad. But I would never
+have dismissed a cook like Hannah for him.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I shall have to let her go," Tish said. "He is Oriental and passionate.
+He has said he will kill her&mdash;and he'll do it. They hold life very
+lightly."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Humph!" I said. "Very well, Tish, that holding life lightly isn't a
+Christian trait. It's Mohammedan&mdash;every Mohammedan wants to die and go
+to his heaven, which is a sort of sublimated harem. The boy's probably a
+Christian by training, but he's a Mohammedan by blood."
+</p>
+<p>
+Aggie thought my remark immoral and said so. And just then Hannah solved
+her own problem by stalking into the room with her things on and a
+suitcase in her hand.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'm leaving, Miss Tish!" she said with her eye-rims red. "God knows I
+never expected to be put out of this place by a dirty dago! You'll find
+your woolen stockings on the stretchers, and you've got an appointment
+with the dentist tomorrow morning at ten. And when that little
+blackguard has sucked you dry, and you want him killed to get rid of
+him, you'll find me at my sister's."
+</p>
+<p>
+She picked up her suitcase and Tish flung open the door. "You're a
+hard-hearted woman, Hannah Mackintyre!" Tish snapped. "Your sister can't
+keep you. You'll have to work."
+</p>
+<p>
+Hannah turned in the doorway and sneered at the three of us.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Oh, no!" she said. "I'm going to hunt up three soft-headed old maids
+and learn to kiss their hands and tell 'em I have nobody but them and
+God!"
+</p>
+<p>
+She slammed out at that, leaving us in a state of natural irritation.
+But our rage soon faded. Tufik was not in the parlor; and Tish,
+tiptoeing back, reported that he was in the kitchen and was mixing up
+something in a bowl.
+</p>
+<p>
+"He's a dear boy!" she said. "He feels responsible for Hannah's leaving
+and he's getting luncheon! Hannah is a wicked and uncharitable woman!"
+</p>
+<p class="quote">
+ "Man's inhumanity to man,<br />
+ Makes countless thousands mourn!"
+</p>
+<p>
+quoted Aggie softly. From the kitchen came the rhythmic beating of a
+wooden spoon against the side of a bowl; a melancholy chant&mdash;quite
+archaic, as Tish said&mdash;kept time with the spoon, and later a smell of
+baking flour and the clatter of dishes told us that our meal was
+progressing.
+</p>
+<p>
+"'The Syrians,'" read Tish out of her book, "'are a peaceful and
+pastoral people. They have not changed materially in nineteen centuries,
+and the traveler in their country finds still the life of Biblical
+times.' Something's burning!"
+</p>
+<p>
+Shortly after, Tufik, beaming with happiness and Hannah clearly
+forgotten, summoned us to the dining-room. Tufik was not a cook. We
+realized that at once. He had made coffee in the Oriental way&mdash;strong
+enough to float an egg, very sweet and full of grounds; and after a bite
+of the cakes he had made, Tish remembered the dentist the next day and
+refused solid food on account of a bad tooth. The cakes were made of
+lard and flour, without any baking-powder or flavoring, and the tops
+were sprinkled thick with granulated sugar. Little circles of grease
+melted out of them on to the plate, and Tufik, wide-eyed with triumph,
+sweetly wistful over Tish's tooth, humble and joyous in one minute,
+stood by the cake plate and fed them to us!
+</p>
+<p>
+I caught Aggie's agonized eye, but there was nothing else to do. Were we
+not his friends? And had he not made this delicacy for us? On her third
+cake, however, Aggie luckily turned blue round the mouth and had to go
+and lie down. This broke up the meal and probably saved my life, though
+my stomach has never been the same since. Tish says the cakes are
+probably all right in the Orient, where it is hot and the grease does
+not get a chance to solidify. She thinks that Tufik is probably a good
+cook in his own country. But Aggie says that a good many things in the
+Bible that she never understood are made plain to her if that is what
+they ate in Biblical times&mdash;some of the things they saw in visions, and
+all that. She dropped asleep on Tish's lounge and distinctly saw Tufik
+murdering Hannah by forcing one of his cakes down her throat.
+</p>
+<p>
+The next month was one of real effort. We had planned to go to Panama,
+and had our passage engaged; but when we broke the news to Tufik he
+turned quite pale.
+</p>
+<p>
+"You go&mdash;away?" he said wistfully.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Only for a month," Tish hastened to apologize. "You see, we&mdash;we are all
+very tired, and the Panama Canal&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Canal? I know not a canal."
+</p>
+<p>
+"It is for ships&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+"You go there in a ship?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Yes. A canal is a&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+"You go far&mdash;in a ship&mdash;and I&mdash;I stay here?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Only for a month," Aggie broke in. "We will leave you enough money to
+live on; and perhaps when we come back you will have found something to
+do&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+"For a month," he said brokenly. "I have no friends, no Miss Tish, no
+Miss Liz, no Miss Pilk. I die!"
+</p>
+<p>
+He got up and walked to the window. It was Aggie who realized the awful
+truth. The poor lonely boy was weeping&mdash;and Charlie Sands may say what
+he likes! He was really crying&mdash;when he turned, there were large tears
+on his cheeks. What made it worse was that he was trying to smile.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I wish you much happiness on the canal," he said. "I am wicked; but my
+sad heart&mdash;it ache that my friends leave me. I am sad! If only my
+seester&mdash;"
+</p>
+<hr />
+<p>
+That was the first we had known of Tufik's sister, back in Beirut,
+wearing a veil over her face and making lace for the bazaars. We were to
+know more.
+</p>
+<p>
+Well, between getting ready to go to Panama and trying to find something
+Tufik could do, we were very busy for the next month. Tufik grew
+reconciled to our going, but he was never cheerful about it; and finding
+that it pained him we never spoke about it in his presence.
+</p>
+<p>
+He was with us a great deal. In the morning he would go to Tish, who
+would give him a list of her friends to see. Then Tish would telephone
+and make appointments for him, and he would start off hopefully,
+with his pasteboard suitcase. But he never sold anything&mdash;except a
+shirt-waist pattern to Mrs. Ostermaier, the minister's wife. We took day
+about giving him his carfare, but this was pauperizing and we knew it.
+Besides, he was very sensitive and insisted on putting down everything
+we gave him in a book, to be repaid later when he had made a success.
+</p>
+<p>
+The allowance idea was mine and it worked well. We figured that,
+allowing for his washing,&mdash;which was not much, as he seemed to prefer
+the celluloid collar,&mdash;he could live in a sort of way on nine dollars a
+week. We subscribed equally to this; and to save his pride we mailed it
+to him weekly by check.
+</p>
+<p>
+His failure to sell his things hurt him to the soul. More than once we
+caught tears in his eyes. And he was not well&mdash;he could not walk any
+distance at all and he coughed. At last Tish got Charlie Sands to take
+him to a lung specialist, a stupid person, who said it was a cigarette
+cough. This was absurd, as Tufik did not smoke.
+</p>
+<p>
+At last the time came for the Panama trip. Tish called me up the day she
+packed and asked me to come over.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I can't. I'm busy, Tish," I said.
+</p>
+<p>
+She was quite disagreeable. "This is your burden as well as mine," she
+snapped. "Come over and talk to that wretched boy while I pack my trunk.
+He stands and watches everything I put in, and I haven't been able to
+pack a lot of things I need."
+</p>
+<p>
+I went over that afternoon and found Tufik huddled on the top step of
+the stairs outside Tish's apartment, with his head in his hands.
+</p>
+<p>
+"She has put me out!" he said, looking up at me with tragic eyes. "My
+mother has put me out! She does not love Tufik! No one loves Tufik! I am
+no good. I am a dirty dago!"
+</p>
+<p>
+I was really shocked. I rang the bell and Tish let me in. She had had no
+maid since Hannah's departure and was taking her meals out. She saw
+Tufik and stiffened.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I thought I sent you away!" she said, glaring at him.
+</p>
+<p>
+He looked at her pitifully.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Where must I&mdash;go?" he asked, and coughed.
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish sighed and flung the door wide open. "Bring him in," she said with
+resignation, "but for Heaven's sake lock him in a closet until I get my
+underwear packed. And if he weeps&mdash;slap him."
+</p>
+<p>
+The poor boy was very repentant, and seeing that his cough worried us he
+fought it back bravely. I mixed the white of an egg with lemon juice and
+sugar, and gave it to him. He was pathetically grateful and kissed my
+hand. At five o'clock we sent him away firmly, having given him
+thirty-six dollars. He presented each of us with a roll of crocheted
+lace to take with us and turned in the doorway to wave a wistful final
+good-bye.
+</p>
+<p>
+We met at Tish's that night so that we might all go together to the
+train. Charlie Sands had agreed to see us off and to keep an eye on
+Tufik during our absence. Aggie was in a palpitating travel ecstasy,
+clutching a patent seasick remedy and a map of the Canal Zone; Tish was
+seeing that the janitor shut off the gas and water in the apartment; and
+Charlie Sands was jumping on top of a steamer trunk to close it. The
+taxicab was at the door and we had just time to make the night train.
+The steamer sailed early the next morning.
+</p>
+<p>
+"All ready!" cried Charlie Sands, getting the lid down finally. "All off
+for the Big Ditch!"
+</p>
+<p>
+We all heard a noise in the hall&mdash;a sort of scuffling, with an
+occasional groan. Tish rushed over and threw open the door. On the top
+step, huddled and shivering, with streams of water running off his hair
+down over his celluloid collar, pouring out of his sleeves and cascading
+down the stairs from his trousers legs, was Tufik. The policeman on the
+beat was prodding at him with his foot, trying to make him get up. When
+he saw us the officer touched his hat.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Evening, Miss Tish," he said, grinning. "This here boy of yours has
+been committing suicide. Just fished him out of the lake in the park!"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Get up!" snapped Charlie Sands. "You infernal young idiot! Get up and
+stop sniveling!"
+</p>
+<p>
+He stooped and took the poor boy by the collar. His brutality roused us
+all out of our stupor. Tish and I rushed forward and commanded him to
+stand back; and Aggie, with more presence of mind than we had given her
+credit for, brought a glass containing a tablespoonful of blackberry
+cordial into which she had poured ten drops of seasickness remedy. Tufik
+was white and groaning, but he revived enough to sit up and stare at us
+with his sad brown eyes.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I wish to die!" he said brokenly. "Why you do not let me die? My
+friends go on the canal! I am alone! My heart is empty!"
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish wished to roll him on a barrel, but we had no barrel; so, with
+Charlie Sands standing by with his watch in his hand, refusing to assist
+and making unkind remarks, we got him to Tish's room and laid out on her
+mackintosh on the bed. He did not want to live. We could hardly force
+him to drink the hot coffee Tish made for him. He kept muttering things
+about his loneliness and being only a dirty dago; and then he turned
+bitter and said hard things about this great America, where he could
+find no work and must be a burden on his three mothers, and could not
+bring his dear sister to be company for him. Aggie quite broke down and
+had to lie down on the sofa in the parlor and have a cracker and a cup
+of tea.
+</p>
+<p>
+When Tish and I had succeeded in making Tufik promise to live, and had
+given him one of his own silk kimonos to put on until his clothing could
+be dried&mdash;Charlie Sands having disagreeably refused to lend his
+overcoat&mdash;and when we had given the officer five dollars not to arrest
+the boy for attempting suicide, we met in the parlor to talk things
+over.
+</p>
+<p>
+Charlie Sands was sitting by the lamp in his overcoat. He had put our
+railway and steamer tickets on the table, and was holding his cigarette
+so that Aggie could inhale the fumes, she having hay fever and her
+cubebs being on their way to Panama.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I suppose you know," he said nastily, "that your train has gone and
+that you cannot get the boat tomorrow?"
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish was in an exalted mood&mdash;and she took off her things and flung them
+on a chair.
+</p>
+<p>
+"What is Panama," she demanded, "to saving a life? Charlie, we must plan
+something for this boy. If you will take off your overcoat&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+"And see you put it on that little parasite? Not if I melt! Do you know
+how deep the lake is? Three feet!"
+</p>
+<p>
+"One can drown in three feet of water," said Aggie sadly, "if one is
+very tired of life. People drown themselves in bathtubs."
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish's furious retort to this was lost, Tufik choosing that moment to
+appear in the doorway. He wore a purple-and-gold kimono that had given
+Tish bronchitis early in the winter, and he had twisted a bath towel
+round the waist. He looked very young, very sad, very Oriental. He
+ignored Charlie Sands, but made at once for Tish and dropped on one knee
+beside her.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Miss Tish!" he begged. "Forgive, Miss Tish! Tufik is wicked. He has the
+bad heart. He has spoil the going on the canal. No?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Get up!" said Tish. "Don't be a silly child. Go and take your shoes out
+of the oven. We are not going to Panama. When you are better, I am going
+to give you a good scolding."
+</p>
+<p>
+Charlie Sands put the cigarette on a book under Aggie's nose and stood
+up.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I guess I'll go," he said. "My nerves are not what they used to be and
+my disposition feels the change."
+</p>
+<p>
+Tufik had risen and the two looked at each other. I could not quite make
+out Tufik's expression; had I not known his gentleness I would have
+thought his expression a mixture of triumph and disdain.
+</p>
+<p>
+"'The Assyrian came down like a wolf on the fold, and his cohorts were
+gleaming in purple and gold!'" said Charlie Sands, and went out,
+slamming the door.
+</p>
+
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<h3><a name="h2H_4_0009" id="h2H_4_0009"></a>
+ III
+</h3>
+<p>
+The next day was rainy and cold. Aggie sneezed all day and Tish had
+neuralgia. Being unable to go out for anything to eat and the exaltation
+of the night before having passed, she was in a bad humor. When I got
+there she was sitting in her room holding a hot-water bottle to her
+face, and staring bitterly at the plate containing a piece of burned
+toast and Tufik's specialty&mdash;a Syrian cake crusted with sugar.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I wish he had drowned!" she said. "My stomach's gone, Lizzie! I ate one
+of those cakes for breakfast. You've got to eat this one."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'll do nothing of the sort! This is your doing, Tish Carberry. If it
+hadn't been for you and your habit of picking up stray cats and dogs and
+Orientals and imposing them on your friends we'd be on the ocean to-day,
+on our way to a decent climate. The next time your duty to your brother
+man overwhelms you, you'd better lock yourself in your room and throw
+the key out the window."
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish was not listening, however. Her eye and her mind both were on the
+cake.
+</p>
+<p>
+"If you would eat it and then take some essence of pepsin&mdash;" she
+hazarded. But I looked her full in the eye and she had the grace to
+color. "He loves to make them," she said&mdash;"he positively beamed when he
+brought it. He has another kind he is making now&mdash;of pounded beans, or
+something like that. Listen!" I listened.
+</p>
+<p>
+From back in the kitchen came a sound of hammering and Tufik's voice
+lifted in a low, plaintive chant. "He says that song is about the
+valleys of Lebanon," said Tish miserably. "Lizzie, if you'll eat half of
+it, I'll eat the rest."
+</p>
+<p>
+My answer was to pick up the plate and carry it into the bathroom.
+Heroic measures were necessary: Tish was not her resolute self; and,
+indeed, through all the episode of Tufik, and the shocking denouement
+that followed, Tish was a spineless individual who swayed to and fro
+with every breeze.
+</p>
+<p>
+She divined my purpose and followed me to the bathroom door.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Leave some crumbs on the plate!" she whispered. "It will look more
+natural. Get rid of the toast too."
+</p>
+<p>
+I turned and faced her, the empty plate in my hands.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Tish," I said sternly, "this is hypocrisy, which is just next door to
+lying. It's the first step downward. I have a feeling that this boy is
+demoralizing us! We shall have to get rid of him."
+</p>
+<p>
+"As for instance?" she sarcastically asked.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Send him back home," I said with firmness. "He doesn't belong here; he
+isn't accustomed to anything faster than a camel. He doesn't know how to
+work&mdash;none of them do. He comes from a country where they can eat food
+like this because digestion is one of their occupations."
+</p>
+<p>
+I was right and Tish knew it. Even Tufik was satisfied when we put it up
+to him. He spread his hands in his Oriental way and shrugged his
+shoulders.
+</p>
+<p>
+"If my mothers think best," he said softly. "In my own land Tufik is
+known&mdash;I sell in the bazaar the so fine lace my sister make. I drink
+wine, not water. My stomach&mdash;I cannot eat in this America. But&mdash;I have
+no money."
+</p>
+<p>
+"We will furnish the money," Tish said gently. "But you must promise one
+thing, Tufik. You must not become a Mohammedan."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Before that I die!" he said proudly.
+</p>
+<p>
+"And&mdash;there is something else, Tufik,&mdash;something rather personal. But I
+want you to promise. You are only a boy; but when you are a man&mdash;" Tish
+stopped and looked to me for help.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Miss Tish means this," I put in, "you are to have only one wife, Tufik.
+We are not sending you back to start a harem. We&mdash;we disapprove strongly
+of&mdash;er&mdash;anything like that."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Tufik takes but one wife," he said. "Our people&mdash;we have but one wife.
+My first child&mdash;it is called Tish; my next, Lizzie; and my next, Aggie
+Pilk. All for my so kind friends. And one I call Charlie Sands; and one
+shall be Hannah. So that Tufik never forget America."
+</p>
+<p>
+Aggie was rather put out when we told her what we had done; but after
+eating one of the cakes made of pounded beans and sugar, under Tufik's
+triumphant eyes, she admitted that it was probably for the best. That
+evening, while Tufik took his shrunken and wrinkled clothing to be
+pressed by a little tailor in the neighborhood who did Tish's repairing,
+the three of us went back to the kitchen and tried to put it in order.
+It was frightful&mdash;flour and burned grease over everything, every pan
+dirty, dishes all over the place and a half-burned cigarette in the
+sugar bin. But&mdash;it touched us all deeply&mdash;he had found an old photograph
+of the three of us and had made a sort of shrine of the clock-shelf&mdash;the
+picture in front of the clock and in front of the picture a bunch of red
+geraniums.
+</p>
+<p>
+While we were looking at the picture and Aggie was at the sink putting
+water in the glass that held the geraniums, Tufik having forgotten to do
+so, Tish's neighbor from the apartment below, an elderly bachelor, came
+up the service staircase and knocked at the door. Tish opened it.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Humph!" said the gentleman from below. "Gone is he?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Is who gone?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Your thieving Syrian, madam!"
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish stiffened.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Perhaps," she said, "if you will explain&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Perhaps," snarled the visitor, "you will explain what you have done
+with my geraniums! Why don't you raise your own flowers?"
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish was quite stunned and so was I. After all, it was Aggie who came to
+the rescue. She slammed the lid on to the teakettle and set it on the
+stove with a bang.
+</p>
+<p>
+"If you mean," she said indignantly, "that you think we have any
+geraniums of yours&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Think! Didn't my cook see your thieving servant steal 'em off the box
+on the fire-escape?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Then, perhaps," Aggie suggested, "you will look through the apartment
+and see if they are here. You will please look everywhere!"
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish and I gasped. It was not until the visitor had made the rounds of
+the apartment, and had taken an apologetic departure, that Tish and I
+understood. The teakettle was boiling and from its spout coming a spicy
+and familiar odor. Aggie took it off the stove and removed the lid. The
+geraniums, boiled to a pulp, were inside.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Back to Syria that boy goes!" said Tish, viewing the floral remains.
+"He did it out of love and we must not chide him. But we have our own
+immortal souls to think of."
+</p>
+<p>
+The next morning two things happened. We gave Tufik one hundred and
+twenty dollars to buy a ticket back to Syria and to keep him in funds on
+the way. And Tish got a note from Hannah:&mdash;
+</p>
+<p class="quote">
+ <i>Dear Miss Tish</i>: I here you still have the dago&mdash;or, as my sister's
+ husband says, he still has you. I am redy to live up to my bargen if
+ you are.
+</p>
+<p class="quote">
+ HANNAH.
+</p>
+<p class="quote">
+ P.S. I have lerned a new salud&mdash;very rich, but delissious.
+</p>
+<p class="quote">
+ H.
+</p>
+<p>
+In spite of herself, Tish looked haunted. It was the salad, no doubt.
+She said nothing, but she looked round the untidy rooms, where
+everything that would hold it had a linen cover with a Cluny-lace
+edge&mdash;all of them soiled and wrinkled. She watched Tufik, chanting about
+the plains of Lebanon and shoving the carpet-sweeper with a bang against
+her best furniture; and, with Hannah's salad in mind, she sniffed a
+warning odor from the kitchen that told of more Syrian experiments with
+her digestion. Tish surrendered: that morning she wrote to Hannah that
+Tufik was going back to Syria, and to come and bring the salad recipe
+with her.
+</p>
+<p>
+That was, I think, on a Monday. Tufik's steamer sailed on Thursday. On
+Tuesday Aggie and I went shopping; and in a spirit of repentance&mdash;for we
+felt we were not solving Tufik's question but getting rid of him&mdash;we
+bought him a complete new outfit. He almost disgraced us by kissing
+our hands in the store, and while we were buying him some ties he
+disappeared&mdash;to come back later with the rims of his eyes red from
+weeping. His gentle soul was touched with gratitude. Aggie had to tell
+him firmly that if he kissed any more hands he would get his ears boxed.
+</p>
+<p>
+The clerks in the store were all interested, and two or three cash-boys
+followed us round and stood, open-mouthed, staring at us. Neither Aggie
+nor I knew anything about masculine attire, and Tufik's idea was a suit,
+with nothing underneath, a shirt-front and collar of celluloid, and a
+green necktie already tied and hooking on to his collar-button. He was
+dazed when we bought him a steamer trunk and a rug, and disappeared
+again, returning in a few moments with a small paper bag full of
+gumdrops. We were quite touched.
+</p>
+<p>
+That, as I say, was on Tuesday. Tufik had been sleeping in Tish's
+guest-room since his desperate attempt at suicide, and we sent his
+things to Tish's apartment. That evening Tufik asked permission to spend
+the night with a friend in the restaurant business&mdash;a Damascan. Tish let
+him go against my advice.
+</p>
+<p>
+"He'll eat a lot of that Syrian food," I objected, "and get sick and
+miss his boat, and we'll have the whole thing over again!"
+</p>
+<p>
+But Tish was adamant. "It's his last night," she said, "and he has
+promised not to smoke any cigarettes and I've given him two pepsin
+tablets. This is the land of the free, Lizzie."
+</p>
+<p>
+We were to meet Tufik at the station next morning and we arranged a
+lunch for him to eat on the train, Aggie bringing fried chicken and I
+sandwiches and cake. Tish's domestic arrangements being upset, she
+supplied fruit, figs and dates mostly, to make him think of home.
+</p>
+<p>
+The train left early, and none of us felt very cheerful at having to be
+about. Aggie sat in the station and sneezed; Tish had a pain above her
+eye and sat by a heater. We had the luncheon in a large shoebox, wrapped
+in oiled paper to keep it moist.
+</p>
+<p>
+He never appeared! The train was called, filled up, and left. People
+took to staring at us as we sat there. Aggie sneezed and Tish held her
+eye. And no Tufik! In a sort of helpless, breakfastless rage we called a
+taxicab and went to Tish's. No one said much. We were all thinking.
+</p>
+<p>
+We were hungry; so we spread out the shoebox lunch on one of the
+Cluny-lace covers and ate it, mostly in silence. The steamer trunk and
+the rug had gone. We let them go. They might go to Jerusalem, as far as
+we were concerned! After we had eaten,&mdash;about eleven o'clock, I
+think,&mdash;Tish got up and surveyed the apartment. Then, with a savage
+gleam in her eye, she whisked off all the fancy linens, the Cluny laces,
+the hemstitched bedspreads, and piled them in a heap on the floor. Aggie
+and I watched her in silence. She said nothing, but kicked the whole lot
+into the bottom of a cupboard. When she had slammed the door, she turned
+and faced us grimly.
+</p>
+<p>
+"That roll of fiddle-de-dees has cost me about five hundred dollars,"
+she said. "It's been worth it if it teaches me that I'm an old fool and
+that you are two others! If that boy shows his face here again, I'll
+hand him over to the police."
+</p>
+<p>
+However, as it happened, she did nothing of the sort. At four o'clock
+that afternoon there was a timid ring at the doorbell and I answered it.
+Outside was Tufik, forlorn and drooping, and held up by main force by a
+tall, dark-skinned man with a heavy mustache.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I bring your boy!" said the mustached person, smiling. "He has great
+trouble&mdash;sorrow; he faint with grief."
+</p>
+<p>
+I took a good look at Tufik then. He was pale and shaky, and his new
+suit looked as if he had slept in it. His collar was bent and wilted,
+and the green necktie had been taken off and exchanged for a ragged
+black one.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Miss Liz!" he said huskily. "I die; the heart is gone! My parent&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+He broke down again; and leaning against the door jamb he buried his
+face in a handkerchief that I could not believe was one of the lot we
+had bought only yesterday. I hardly knew what to do. Tish had said she
+was through with the boy. I decided to close them out in the hallway
+until we had held a council; but Tufik's foot was on the sill, and the
+more I asked him to move it, the harder he wept.
+</p>
+<p>
+The mustached person said it was quite true. Tufik's father had died of
+the plague; the letter had come early that morning. Beirut was full of
+the plague. He waved the letter at me; but I ordered him to burn it
+immediately&mdash;on account of germs. I brought him a shovel to burn it on;
+and when that was over Tufik had worked out his own salvation. He was at
+the door of Tish's room, pouring out to Aggie and Tish his grief, and
+offering the black necktie as proof.
+</p>
+<p>
+We were just where we had started, but minus one hundred and twenty
+dollars; for, the black-mustached gentleman having gone after trying to
+sell Tish another silk kimono, I demanded Tufik's ticket&mdash;to be
+redeemed&mdash;and was met with two empty hands, outstretched.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Oh, my friends,&mdash;my Miss Tish, my Miss Liz, my Miss Ag,&mdash;what must I
+say? I have not the ticket! I have been wikkid&mdash;but for my sister&mdash;only
+for my sister! She must not die&mdash;she so young, so little girl!"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Tufik," said Tish sternly, "I want you to tell us everything this
+minute, and get it over."
+</p>
+<p>
+"She ees so little!" he said wistfully. "And the body of my
+parent&mdash;could I let it lie and rot in the so hot sun? Ah, no; Miss Tish,
+Miss Liz, Miss Ag,&mdash;not so. To-day I take back my ticket, get the
+money, and send it to my sister. She will bury my parent, and then&mdash;she
+comes to this so great America, the land of my good friends!"
+</p>
+<p>
+There was a moment's silence. Then Aggie sneezed!
+</p>
+
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<h3><a name="h2H_4_0010" id="h2H_4_0010"></a>
+ IV
+</h3>
+<p>
+I shall pass over the next month, with its unpleasantnesses; over
+Charlie Sands's coming one evening with a black tie and, on the strength
+of having killed a dog with his machine, asking for money to bury it,
+and bring another one from Syria! I shall not more than mention Hannah,
+who kept Tish physically comfortable and well fed and mentally wretched,
+having a teakettle of boiling water always ready if Tufik came to the
+apartment; I shall say nothing of our success in getting him employment
+in the foreign department of a bank, and his ending up by washing its
+windows; or of the position Tish got him as elevator boy in her
+hospital, where he jammed the car in some way and held up four surgeons
+and three nurses and a patient on his way to the operating-room&mdash;until
+the patient changed his mind and refused to be operated on.
+</p>
+<p>
+Aggie had a brilliant idea about the census&mdash;that he could make the
+census reports in the Syrian district. To this end she worked for some
+time, coaching Tufik for the examination, only to have him fail&mdash;fail
+absolutely and without hope. He was staying in the Syrian quarter at
+that time, on account of Hannah; and he brought us various tempting
+offers now and then&mdash;a fruit stand that could be bought for a hundred
+dollars; a restaurant for fifty; a tailor's shop for twenty-five. But,
+as he knew nothing of fruits or restaurants or tailoring, we refused to
+invest. Tish said that we had been a good while getting to it, but that
+we were being businesslike at last. We gave the boy nine dollars a week
+and not a penny more; and we refused to buy any more of his silly linens
+and crocheted laces. We were quite firm with him.
+</p>
+<p>
+And now I come to the arriving of Tufik's little sister&mdash;not that she
+was really little. But that comes later.
+</p>
+<p>
+Tufik had decided at last on what he would be in our so great America.
+Once or twice, when he was tired or discouraged, Tish had taken him out
+in her machine, and he had been thrilled&mdash;really thrilled. He did not
+seem able to learn how to crank it&mdash;Tish's car is hard to crank&mdash;but he
+learned how to light the lamps and to spot a policeman two blocks away.
+Several times, when we were going into the country, Tish took him
+because it gave her a sense of security to have a man along.
+</p>
+<p>
+Having come from a country where the general travel is by camel,
+however, he had not the first idea of machinery. He thought Tish made
+the engine go by pressing on the clutch with her foot, like a sewing
+machine, and he regarded her strength with awe. And once, when we were
+filling a tire from an air bottle and the tube burst and struck him, he
+declared there was a demon in the air bottle and said a prayer in the
+middle of the road. About that time Tish learned of a school for
+chauffeurs, and the three of us decided to divide the expense and send
+him.
+</p>
+<p>
+"In three months," Tish explained, "we can get him a state license and
+he can drive a taxicab. It will suit him, because he can sit to do it."
+</p>
+<p>
+So Tufik went to an automobile school and stood by while some one drew
+pictures of parts of the engine on a blackboard, and took home lists of
+words that he translated into Arabic at the library, and learned
+everything but why and how the engine of an automobile goes. He still
+thought&mdash;at the end of two months&mdash;that the driver did it with his
+foot! But we were ignorant of all that. He would drop round in the
+evenings, when Hannah was out or in bed, and tell us what "magneto" was
+in Arabic, and how he would soon be able to care for Tish's car and
+would not take a cent for it, doing it at night when the taxicab was
+resting.
+</p>
+<p>
+At the end of six weeks we bought him a chauffeur's outfit. The next
+day the sister arrived and Tufik brought her to Aggie's, where we were
+waiting. We had not told Hannah about the sister; she would not have
+understood.
+</p>
+<p>
+Charlie Sands telephoned while we were waiting and asked if he might
+come over and help receive the girl. We were to greet her and welcome
+her to America; then she was to go to the home of the Syrian with the
+large mustache. Charlie Sands came in and shook hands all round,
+surveying each of us carefully.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Strange!" he muttered. "Curious is no name for it! What do we know of
+the vagaries of the human mind? Three minds and one obsession!" he said
+with the utmost gentleness. "Three maiden ladies who have lived
+impeccable lives for far be it from me to say how many years; and
+now&mdash;this! Oh, Aunt Tish! Dear Aunt Tish!"
+</p>
+<p>
+He got out his handkerchief and wiped his eyes. Tish was speechless with
+rage, but I rose to our defense.
+</p>
+<p>
+"We don't want to do it and you know it!" I said tartly. "But when the
+Lord sends want and suffering to one's very door&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Want, with large brown eyes and a gentle voice!" he retorted. "My dear
+ladies, it's your money; and I dare say it costs you less than bridge at
+five cents a point, or the Gay White Way. But, for Heaven's sake, my
+respected but foolish virgins, why not an American that wants a real
+job? Why let a sticky Oriental pull your legs&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Charlie Sands!" cried Tish, rising in her wrath. "I will not endure
+such vulgarity. And when Tufik takes you out in a taxicab&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+"God forbid!" said Charlie Sands, and sat down to wait for Tufik's
+sister.
+</p>
+<p>
+She did not look like Tufik and she was tired and dirty from the
+journey; but she had big brown eyes and masses of dark hair and she
+spoke not a single word of English. Tufik's joy was boundless; his soft
+eyes were snapping with excitement; and Aggie, who is sentimental, was
+obliged to go out and swallow half a glass of water without breathing to
+keep from crying. Charlie Sands said nothing, but sat back in a corner
+and watched us all; and once he took out his notebook and made a
+memorandum of something. He showed it to us later.
+</p>
+<p>
+Tufik's sister was the calmest of us all, I believe. She sat on a stiff
+chair near the door and turned her brown eyes from one to the other.
+Tish said that proper clothing would make her beautiful; and Aggie,
+disappearing for a few minutes, came back with her last summer's foulard
+and a jet bonnet. When the poor thing understood they were for her, she
+looked almost frightened, the thing being unexpected; and Tufik, in a
+paroxysm of delight, kissed all our hands and the girl on each cheek.
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish says our vulgar lip-osculation is unknown in the Orient and that
+they rub noses by way of greeting. I think, however, that she is
+mistaken in this and that the Australians are the nose-rubbers. I recall
+a returned missionary's telling this, but I cannot remember just where
+he had been stationed.
+</p>
+<p>
+Things were very quiet for a couple of weeks. Tufik came round only
+once&mdash;to tell us that, having to pay car fare to get to the automobile
+school, his nine dollars were not enough. We added a dollar a week under
+protest; and Tish suggested with some asperity that as he was only busy
+four hours a day he might find some light employment for the balance of
+the day. He spread out his hands and drew up his shoulders.
+</p>
+<p>
+"My friends are angry," he said sadly. "It is not enough that I study? I
+must also work? Ver' well, I labor. I sell the newspaper. But, to buy
+newspapers, one must have money&mdash;a dollar; two dollars. Ver' leetle;
+only&mdash;I have it not."
+</p>
+<p>
+We gave him another dollar and he went out smiling and hopeful. It
+seemed that at last we had solved his problem. Tish recalled one of her
+Sunday-school scholars who sold papers and saved enough to buy a
+second-hand automobile and rear a family. But our fond hopes were dashed
+to the ground when, the next morning, Hannah, opening the door at Tish's
+to bring in the milk bottles, found a huge stack of the night-before's
+newspapers and a note on top addressed to Tish, which said:-
+</p>
+<p class="quote">
+ <i>Deer Mother Tish</i>: You see now that I am no good. I wish to die!
+ I hav one papier sold, and newsboys kell me on sight. I hav but you
+ and God&mdash;and God has forget!
+</p>
+<p class="quote">
+ TUFIK.
+</p>
+<p>
+We were discouraged and so, clearly, was Tufik. For ten days we did not
+hear from him, except that a flirty little Syrian boy called for the ten
+dollars on Saturday and brought a pair of Tufik's shoes for us to have
+resoled. But one day Tish telephoned in some excitement and said that
+Tufik was there and wanted us to go to a wedding.
+</p>
+<p>
+"His little sister's wedding!" she explained. "The dear child is all
+excited. He says it has been going on for two days and this is the day
+of the ceremony."
+</p>
+<p>
+Aggie was spending the afternoon with me, and spoke up hastily.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Ask her if I have time to go home and put on my broadcloth," she said.
+"I'm not fixed for a wedding."
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish said there was no time. She would come round with the machine and
+we were to be ready in fifteen minutes. Aggie hesitated on account of
+intending to wash her hair that night and so not having put up her
+crimps; but she finally agreed to go and Tish came for us. Tufik was in
+the machine. He looked very tidy and wore the shoes we had had repaired,
+a pink carnation in his buttonhole, and an air of suppressed excitement.
+</p>
+<p>
+"At last," he said joyously while Tish cranked the car&mdash;"at last my
+friends see my three mothers! They think Tufik only talks&mdash;now they
+see! And the priest will bless my mothers on this so happy day."
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish having crawled panting from her exertion into the driver's seat and
+taken the wheel, in sheer excess of boyish excitement he leaned over and
+kissed the hand nearest him.
+</p>
+<p>
+The janitor's small boy was on the curb watching, and at that he set up
+a yell of joy. We left him calling awful things after us and Tish's face
+was a study; but soon the care of the machine made her forget everything
+else.
+</p>
+<p>
+The Syrian quarter was not impressive. It was on a hillside above the
+Russian Jewish colony, and consisted of a network of cobble-paved
+alleys, indescribably dirty and incredibly steep. In one or two of these
+alleys Tish was obliged to turn the car and go up backward, her machine
+climbing much better on the reverse gear. Crowds of children followed
+us; dogs got under the wheels and apparently died, judging by the
+yelps&mdash;only to follow us with undiminished energy after they had picked
+themselves up. We fought and won a battle with a barrel of ashes and
+came out victorious but dusty; and at last, as Tufik made a lordly
+gesture, we stopped at an angle of forty-five degrees and Tufik bowed us
+out of the car. He stood by visibly glowing with happiness, while Tish
+got a cobblestone and placed it under a wheel, and Aggie and I took in
+our surroundings.
+</p>
+<p>
+We were in an alley ten feet wide and paved indiscriminately with stones
+and tin cans, babies and broken bottles. Before us was a two-story brick
+house with broken windows and a high, railed wooden stoop, minus two
+steps. Under the stoop was a door leading into a cellar, and from this
+cellar was coming a curious stamping noise and a sound as of an animal
+in its death throes.
+</p>
+<p>
+Aggie caught my arm. "What's that?" she quavered.
+</p>
+<p>
+I had no time to reply. Tufik had thrown open the door and stood aside
+to let us pass.
+</p>
+<p>
+"They dance," he said gravely. "There is always much dancing before a
+wedding. The music one hears is of Damascus and he who dances now is a
+sheik among his people."
+</p>
+<p>
+Reassured as to the sounds, we stepped down into the basement. That was
+at four o'clock in the afternoon.
+</p>
+<p>
+I have never been fairly clear as to what followed and Aggie's memory
+is a complete blank. I remember a long, boarded-in and floored cellar,
+smelling very damp and lighted by flaring gas jets. The center was empty
+save for a swarthy gentleman in a fez and his shirt-sleeves, wearing a
+pair of green suspenders and dancing alone&mdash;a curious stamping dance
+that kept time to a drum. I remember the musicians too&mdash;three of them
+in a corner: one playing on a sort of pipes-of-Pan affair of reeds,
+one on a long-necked instrument that looked like a guitar with zither
+ambitions, and a drummer who chanted with his eyes shut and kept time
+to his chants by beating on a sheepskin tied over the mouth of a brass
+bowl. Round three sides of the room were long, oil cloth-covered tables;
+and in preparation for the ceremony a little Syrian girl was sweeping up
+peanut shells, ashes, and beer bottles, with absolute disregard of the
+guests.
+</p>
+<p>
+All round the wall, behind rows of beer bottles, dishes of bananas,
+and plates of raw liver, were men,&mdash;soft-eyed Syrians with white
+teeth gleaming and black hair plastered close and celluloid
+collars,&mdash;gentle-voiced, urbane-mannered Orientals, who came up gravely
+one by one and shook hands with us; who pressed on us beer and peanuts
+and raw liver.
+</p>
+<p>
+Aggie, speaking between sneezes and over the chanting and the drum, bent
+toward me. "It's a breath of the Orient!" she said ecstatically. "Oh,
+Lizzie, do you think I could buy that drum for my tabouret?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Orient!" observed Tish, coughing. "I'm going out and take the
+switch-key out of that car. And I wish I'd brought Charlie Sands!"
+</p>
+<p>
+It was in vain we reminded her that the Syrians are a pastoral people
+and that they come from the land of the Bible. She looked round her
+grimly.
+</p>
+<p>
+"They look like a lot of bandits to me," she sniffed. "And there's
+always a murder at a wedding of this sort. There isn't a woman here but
+ourselves!"
+</p>
+<p>
+She was exceedingly disagreeable and Aggie and I began to get
+uncomfortable. But when Tufik brought us little thimble-sized glasses
+filled with a milky stuff and assured us that the women had only gone to
+prepare the bride, we felt reassured. He said that etiquette demanded
+that we drink the milky white stuff.
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish was inclined to demur. "Has it any alcohol in it?" she demanded.
+Tufik did not understand, but he said it was harmless and given to all
+the Syrian babies; and while we were still undecided Aggie sniffed it.
+</p>
+<p>
+"It smells like paregoric, Tish," she said. "I'm sure it's harmless."
+</p>
+<p>
+We took it then. It tasted sweet and rather spicy, and Aggie said it
+stopped her sneezing at once. It was very mild and pleasant, and rather
+medicinal in its flavor. We each had two little glasses&mdash;and Tish said
+she would not bother about the switch-key. The car was insured against
+theft.
+</p>
+<p>
+A little later Aggie said she used to do a little jig step when she was
+a girl, and if they would play slower she would like to see if she had
+forgotten it. Tish did not hear this&mdash;she was talking to Tufik, and a
+moment later she got up and went out.
+</p>
+<p>
+Aggie had decided to ask the musicians to play a little slower and I had
+my hands full with her; so it was with horror that, shortly after, I
+heard the whirring of the engine and through the cellar window caught a
+glimpse of Tish's machine starting off up the hill. I rose excitedly,
+but Tufik was before me, smiling and bowing.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Miss Tish has gone for the bride," he said softly. "The taxicab hav'
+not come. Soon the priest arrive, and so great shame&mdash;the bride is not
+here! Miss Tish is my mother, my heart's delight!"
+</p>
+<p>
+When Aggie realized that Tish had gone, she was rather upset&mdash;she
+depends a great deal on Tish&mdash;and she took another of the little glasses
+of milky stuff to revive her.
+</p>
+<p>
+I was a little bit nervous with Tish gone and the sun setting and
+another tub of beer bottles brought in&mdash;though the people were orderly
+enough and Tufik stood near. But Aggie began to feel very strange,
+and declared that the man with the sheepskin drum was winking at her and
+that her head was twitching round on her shoulders. And when a dozen or
+so young Syrians formed a circle, their hands on each other's shoulders,
+and sang a melancholy chant, stamping to beat time, she wept with sheer
+sentiment.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Ha! Hoo! Ta, Ta, Ta!" they chanted in unison; and Tufik bent over us,
+his soft eyes beaming.
+</p>
+<p>
+"They are shepherds and the sons of shepherds from Palestine," he
+whispered. "That is the shepherd's call to his sheep. In my country many
+are shepherds. Perhaps some day you go with me back to my country, and
+we hear the shepherd call his sheep&mdash;'Ha! Hoo! Ta, Ta, Ta!'&mdash;and we hear
+the sleepy sheep reply: 'Maaaa!'"
+</p>
+<p>
+"It is too beautiful!" murmured Aggie. "It is the Holy Land all over
+again! And we should never have known this but for you, Tufik!"
+</p>
+<p>
+Just then some one near the door clapped his hands and all the noise
+ceased. Those who were standing sat down. The little girl with the broom
+swept the accumulations of the room under a chair and put the broom in a
+corner. The music became loud and stirring.
+</p>
+<p>
+Aggie swayed toward me. "I'm sick, Lizzie!" she gasped. "That paregoric
+stuff has poisoned me. Air!"
+</p>
+<p>
+I took one arm and Tufik the other, and we got her out and seated on one
+of the wooden steps. She was a blue-green color and the whites of her
+eyes were yellow. But I had little time for Aggie. Tufik caught my hand
+and pointed.
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish's machine was coming down the alley. Beside her sat Tufik's sister,
+sobbing at the top of her voice and wearing Aggie's foulard, a pair of
+cotton gloves, and a lace curtain over her head. Behind in the tonneau
+were her maid of honor, a young Syrian woman with a baby in her arms and
+four other black-eyed children about her. But that was not all. In front
+of the machine, marching slowly and with dignity, were three bearded
+gentlemen, two in coats and one in a striped vest, blowing on curious
+double flutes and making a shrill wailing noise. And all round were
+crowds of women and children, carrying tin pans and paper bags full of
+parched peas, which they were flinging with all their might.
+</p>
+<p>
+I caught Tish's eye as the procession stopped, and she looked
+subdued&mdash;almost stunned. The pipers still piped. But the bride refused
+to move. Instead, her wails rose higher; and Aggie, who had paid no
+attention so far, but was sitting back with her eyes shut, looked up.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Lizzhie," she said thickly, "Tish looks about the way I feel." And with
+that she fell to laughing awful laughter that mingled with the bride's
+cries and the wail of the pipes.
+</p>
+<p>
+The bride, after a struggle, was taken by force from the machine and
+placed on a chair against the wall. Her veil was torn and her wreath
+crooked, and she observed a sulky silence. To our amazement, Tufik was
+still smiling, urbane and cheerful.
+</p>
+<p>
+"It is the custom of my country, my mothers," he said. "The bride leave
+with tears the home of her good parents or of her friends; and she speak
+no word&mdash;only weep&mdash;until she is marriaged. Ah&mdash;the priest!"
+</p>
+<p>
+The rest of the story is short and somewhat blurred. Tish having broken
+her glasses, Aggie being, as one may say, <i>hors de combat</i>, and I having
+developed a frightful headache in the dust and bad air, the real meaning
+of what was occurring did not penetrate to any of us. The priest
+officiated from a table in the center of the room, on which he placed
+two candles, an Arabic Bible, and a sacred picture, all of which he took
+out of a brown valise. He himself wore a long black robe and a beard,
+and looked, as Tish observed, for all the world as if he had stepped
+from an Egyptian painting. Before him stood Tufik's sister, the maid of
+honor with her baby, the black-mustached friend who had brought Tufik to
+us after his tragic attempt at suicide, and Tufik himself.
+</p>
+
+<div class="figure">
+<a name="image-0002"></a>
+<img src="images/ill-03.jpg" width="100%"
+alt="The real meaning of what was occurring did not penetrate to any of us" /><br />
+The real meaning of what was occurring did not penetrate to any of us
+</div>
+
+
+<p>
+Everybody held lighted candles, and the heat was frightful. The music
+ceased, there was much exhorting in Arabic, much reading from the book,
+many soft replies indiscriminately from the four principals&mdash;and then
+suddenly Tish turned and gripped my arm.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Lizzie," she said hoarsely, "that little thief and liar has done us
+again! That isn't his sister at all. He's marrying her&mdash;for us to keep!"
+</p>
+<p>
+Luckily Aggie grew faint again at that moment, and we led her out into
+the open air. Behind us the ceremony seemed to be over; the drum was
+beating, the pipes screaming, the lute thrumming.
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish let in the clutch with a vicious jerk, and the whir of the engine
+drowned out the beating of the drum and the clapping of the hands.
+Twilight hid the tin cans and ash-barrels, and the dogs slept on the
+cool pavements. In the doorways soft-eyed Syrian women rocked their
+babies to drowsy chants. The air revived Aggie. She leaned forward and
+touched Tish on the shoulder.
+</p>
+<p>
+"After all," she said softly, "if he loves her very much, and there was
+no other way&mdash;Do you remember that night she arrived&mdash;how he looked at
+her?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Yes," Tish snapped. "And I remember the way he looked at us every time
+he wanted money. We've been a lot of sheep and we've been sheared good
+and proper! But we needn't bleat with joy about it!"
+</p>
+<p>
+As we drew up at my door, Tish pulled out her watch.
+</p>
+<p>
+"It's seven o'clock," she said brusquely. "I am going to New York on the
+nine-forty train and I shall take the first steamer outward bound&mdash;I
+need a rest! I'll go anywhere but to the Holy Land!"
+</p>
+<p>
+We went to Panama.
+</p>
+<hr />
+<p>
+Two months afterward, in the dusk of a late spring evening, Charlie
+Sands met us at the station and took us to Tish's in a taxicab. We were
+homesick, tired, and dirty; and Aggie, who had been frightfully seasick,
+was clamoring for tea.
+</p>
+<p>
+As the taxicab drew up at the curb, Tish clutched my arm and Aggie
+uttered a muffled cry and promptly sneezed. Seated on the doorstep,
+celluloid collar shining, the brown pasteboard suitcase at his feet, was
+Tufik. He sat calmly smoking a cigarette, his eyes upturned in placid
+and Oriental contemplation of the heavens.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Drive on!" said Tish desperately. "If he sees us we are lost!"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Drive where?" demanded Charlie.
+</p>
+<p>
+Tufik's gaze had dropped gradually&mdash;another moment and his brown eyes
+would rest on us. But just then a diversion occurred. A window overhead
+opened with a slam and a stream of hot water descended. It had been
+carefully aimed&mdash;as if with long practice. Tufik was apparently not
+surprised. He side-stepped it with a boredom as of many repetitions,
+and, picking up his suitcase, stood at a safe distance looking up.
+First, in his gentle voice he addressed the window in Arabic; then from
+a safer distance in English.
+</p>
+<p>
+"You ugly old she-wolf!" he said softly. "When my three old women come
+back I eat you, skin and bones,&mdash;and they shall say nothing! They love
+me&mdash;Tufik! I am their child. Aye! And my child&mdash;which comes&mdash;will be
+their grandchild!"
+</p>
+<p>
+He kissed his fingers to the upper window which closed with a slam.
+Tufik stooped, picked up his suitcase, and saw the taxi for the first
+time. Even in the twilight we saw his face change, his brown eyes
+brighten, his teeth show in his boyish smile. The taxicab driver had
+stalled his engine and was cranking it.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Sh!" I said desperately, and we all cowered back into the shadows.
+</p>
+<p>
+Tufik approached, uncertainty changing to certainty. The engine was
+started now. Oh, for a second of time! He was at the window now, peering
+into the darkness.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Miss Tish!" he said breathlessly. No one answered. We hardly breathed.
+And then suddenly Aggie sneezed! "Miss Pilk!" he shouted in delight. "My
+mothers! My so dear friends&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+The machine jerked, started, moved slowly off. He ran beside it, a hand
+on the door. Tish bent forward to speak, but Charlie Sands put his hand
+over her mouth.
+</p>
+<p>
+And so we left him, standing in the street undecided, staring after us
+wistfully, uncertainly&mdash;the suitcase, full of Cluny-lace centerpieces,
+crocheted lace, silk kimonos, and embroidered bedspreads, in his hand.
+</p>
+<p>
+That night we hid in a hotel and the next day we started for Europe. We
+heard nothing from Tufik; but on the anniversary of Mr. Wiggins's death,
+while we were in Berlin, Aggie received a small package forwarded from
+home. It was a small lace doily, and pinned to it was a card. It read:&mdash;
+</p>
+<p class="quote">
+ For the sadness, Miss Pilk!
+</p>
+<p class="quote">
+ TUFIK.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Aggie cried over it.
+</p>
+
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<h2><a name="h2H_4_0011" id="h2H_4_0011"></a>
+ THE SIMPLE LIFERS
+</h2>
+<h3>
+ I
+</h3>
+<p>
+I suppose there is something in all of us that harks back to the soil.
+When you come to think of it, what are picnics but outcroppings of
+instinct? No one really enjoys them or expects to enjoy them, but with
+the first warm days some prehistoric instinct takes us out into the
+woods, to fry potatoes over a strangling wood fire and spend the next
+week getting grass stains out of our clothes. It must be instinct; every
+atom of intelligence warns us to stay at home near the refrigerator.
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish is really a child of instinct. She is intelligent enough, but in a
+contest between instinct and brains, she always follows her instinct.
+Aggie under the same circumstances follows her heart. As for me, I
+generally follow Tish and Aggie, and they've led me into some curious
+places.
+</p>
+<p>
+This is really a sort of apology, because, whereas usually Tish leads
+off and we follow her, in the adventure of the Simple Life we were all
+equally guilty. Tish made the suggestion, but we needed no urging. As
+you know, this summer two years ago was a fairly good one, as summers
+go,&mdash;plenty of fair weather, only two or three really hot spells, and
+not a great deal of rain. Charlie Sands, Tish's nephew, went over to
+England in June to report the visit of the French President to London
+for his newspaper, and Tish's automobile had been sent to the factory to
+be gone over. She had been teaching Aggie to drive it, and owing to
+Aggie's thinking she had her foot on the brake when it was really on the
+gas, they had leaped a four-foot ditch and gone down into a deep ravine,
+from which both Tish and Aggie had had to be pulled up with ropes.
+</p>
+<p>
+Well, with no machine and Charlie Sands away, we hardly knew how to plan
+the summer. Tish thought at first she would stay at home and learn to
+ride. She thought her liver needed stirring up. She used to ride, she
+said, and it was like sitting in a rocking-chair, only perhaps more so.
+Aggie and I went out to her first lesson; but when I found she had
+bought a divided skirt and was going to try a man's saddle, I could not
+restrain my indignation.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'm going, Tish," I said firmly, when she had come out of the
+dressing-room and I realized the situation. "I shan't attempt to
+restrain you, but I shall not remain to witness your shame."
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish eyed me coldly. "When you wish to lecture me," she snapped, "about
+revealing to the public that I have two legs, if I do wear a skirt,
+don't stand in a sunny doorway in that linen dress of yours. I am going
+to ride; every woman should ride. It's good for the liver."
+</p>
+<p>
+I think she rather wavered when they brought the horse, which looked
+larger than usual and had a Roman nose. The instructor handed Tish four
+lines and she grabbed them nervously in a bunch.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Just a moment!" said the instructor, and slipped a line between each
+two of her fingers.
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish looked rather startled. "When I used to ride&mdash;" she began with
+dignity.
+</p>
+<p>
+But the instructor only smiled. "These two are for the curb," he
+said&mdash;"if he bolts or anything like that, you know. Whoa, Viper! Still,
+old man!"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Viper!" Tish repeated, clutching at the lines. "Is&mdash;is he&mdash;er&mdash;nasty?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Not a bit of it," said the instructor, while he prepared to hoist her
+up. "He's as gentle as a woman to the people he likes. His only fault is
+that he's apt to take a little nip out of the stablemen now and then.
+He's very fond of ladies."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Humph!" said Tish. "He's looking at me rather strangely, don't you
+think? Has he been fed lately?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Perhaps he sees that divided skirt," I suggested.
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish gave me one look and got on the horse. They walked round the ring
+at first and Tish seemed to like it. Then a stableman put a nickel into
+a player-piano and that seemed to be a signal for the thing to trot.
+Tish said afterward that she never hit the horse's back twice in the
+same place. Once, she says, she came down on his neck, and several times
+she was back somewhere about his tail. Every time she landed, wherever
+it might be, he gave a heave and sent her up again. She tried to say
+"Whoa," but it came out in pieces, so to speak, and the creature seemed
+to be encouraged by it and took to going faster. By that time, she said,
+she wasn't coming down at all, but was in the air all the time, with the
+horse coming up at the rate of fifty revolutions a second. She had
+presence of mind enough to keep her mouth shut so she wouldn't bite her
+tongue off.
+</p>
+<p>
+After four times round the music stopped and the horse did also. They
+were just in front of us, and Tish looked rather dazed.
+</p>
+<p>
+"You did splendidly!" said Aggie. "Honestly, Tish, I was frightened at
+first, but you and that dear horse seemed one piece. Didn't they,
+Lizzie?"
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish straightened out the fingers of her left hand with her right and
+extricated the lines. Then she turned her head slowly from right to left
+to see if she could.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Help me down, somebody," she said in a thin voice, "and call an
+osteopath. There is something wrong with my spine!"
+</p>
+<p>
+She was in bed three days, having massage and a vibrator and being
+rubbed with chloroform liniment. At the end of that time she offered me
+her divided skirt, but I refused.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Riding would be good for your liver, Lizzie," she said, sitting up in
+bed with pillows all about her.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I don't intend to detach it to do it good," I retorted. "What your
+liver and mine and most of the other livers need these days isn't to be
+sent out in a divided skirt and beaten to a jelly: they need rest&mdash;less
+food and simpler food. If instead of taking your liver on a horse you'd
+put it in a tent and feed it nuts and berries, you wouldn't be the color
+you are to-day, Tish Carberry."
+</p>
+<p>
+That really started the whole thing, although at the time Tish said
+nothing. She has a way of getting an idea and letting it simmer on the
+back of her brain, as you may say, when nobody knows it's been cooking
+at all, and then suddenly bringing it out cooked and seasoned and ready
+to serve.
+</p>
+<p>
+On the day Tish sat up for the first time, Aggie and I went over to see
+her. Hannah, the maid, had got her out of bed to a window, and Tish was
+sitting there with books all about her. It is in times of enforced
+physical idleness that most of Tish's ideas come to her, and Aggie had
+reminded me of that fact on the way over.
+</p>
+<p>
+"You remember, Lizzie," she said, "how last winter when she was getting
+over the grippe she took up that correspondence-school course in
+swimming. If she's reading, watch her books. It'll probably be suffrage or
+airships."
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish always believes anything she reads. She had been quite sure she
+could swim after six correspondence lessons. She had all the movements
+exactly, and had worried her trained nurse almost into hysteria for a
+week by turning on her face in bed every now and then and trying the
+overhand stroke. She got very expert, and had decided she'd swim
+regularly, and even had Charlie Sands show her the Australian crawl
+business so she could go over some time and swim the Channel. It was a
+matter of breathing and of changing positions, she said, and was up to
+intelligence rather than muscle.
+</p>
+<p>
+Then when she was quite strong, she had gone to the natatorium. Aggie
+and I went along, not that we were any good in emergency, but because
+Tish had convinced us there would be no emergency. And Tish went in at
+the deep end of the pool, head first, according to diagram, and <i>did not
+come up</i>.
+</p>
+<p>
+Well, there seemed to be nothing threatening in what Tish was reading
+this time. She had ordered some books for Maria Lee's children and was
+looking them over before she sent them. The "Young Woods-man" was one
+and "Camper Craft" was another. How I shudder when I recall those names!
+</p>
+<p>
+Aggie had baked an angel cake and I had brought over a jar of cookies.
+But Tish only thanked us and asked Hannah to take them out. Even then we
+were not suspicious. Tish sat back among her pillows and said very
+little. The conversation was something like this:&mdash;
+</p>
+<p class="quote">
+ <i>Aggie</i>: Well, you're up again: I hope to goodness it will be a lesson
+ to you. If you don't mind, I'd like Hannah to cut that cake. It fell
+ in the middle.
+</p>
+<p class="quote">
+ <i>Tish</i>: Do you know that the Indians never sweetened their food and that
+ they developed absolutely perfect teeth?
+</p>
+<p class="quote">
+ <i>Aggie</i>: Well, they never had any automobiles either, but they didn't
+ develop wings.
+</p>
+<p class="quote">
+ <i>Lizzie</i>: Don't you want that window closed? I'm in a draft.
+</p>
+<p class="quote">
+ <i>Tish</i>: Air in motion never gave any one a cold. We do not catch cold;
+ we catch heat. It's ridiculous the way we shut ourselves up in houses
+ and expect to remain well.
+</p>
+<p class="quote">
+ <i>Aggie</i>: Well, I'b catchig sobethig.
+</p>
+<p class="quote">
+ <i>Lizzie</i> (<i>changing the subject</i>): Would you like me to help you dress?
+ It might rest your back to have your corset on.
+</p>
+<p class="quote">
+ <i>Tish</i> (<i>firmly</i>): I shall never wear a corset again.
+</p>
+<p class="quote">
+ <i>Aggie</i> (<i>sneezing</i>): Why? Didn't the Iddiads wear theb?
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish is very sensitive to lack of sympathy and she shut up like a clam.
+She was coldly polite to us for the remainder of our visit, but she did
+not again refer to the Indians, which in itself was suspicious.
+</p>
+<p>
+Fortunately for us, or unfortunately, Tish's new scheme was one she
+could not very well carry out alone. I believe she tried to induce
+Hannah to go with her, and only when Hannah failed her did she turn to
+us. Hannah was frightened and came to warn us.
+</p>
+<p>
+I remember the occasion very well. It was Mr. Wiggins's birthday
+anniversary, and we usually dine at Aggie's and have a cake with thirty
+candles on it. Tish was not yet able to be about, so Aggie and I ate
+together. She always likes to sit until the last candle is burned out,
+which is rather dispiriting and always leaves me low in my mind.
+</p>
+<p>
+Just as it flickered and went out, Hannah came in.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Miss Tish sent over Mr. Charlie's letter from London," said Hannah, and
+put it in front of Aggie. Then she sat down on a chair and commenced to
+cry.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Why, Hannah!" said Aggie. "What in the world has happened?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"She's off again!" sniveled Hannah; "and she's worse this time than she's
+ever been. No sugar, no tea, only nuts and fruit, and her windows open
+all night, with the curtains getting black. I wisht I had Mr. Charlie by
+the neck."
+</p>
+<p>
+I suppose it came over both of us at the same time&mdash;the "Young
+Woodsman," and the "Camper Craft," and no stays, and all that. I reached
+for Charlie Sands's letter, which was always sent to Tish and meant for
+all of us. He wrote:&mdash;
+</p>
+<p class="quote">
+ <i>Dear Three of a Kind</i>: Well, the French President has came and went,
+ and London has taken down all the brilliant flags which greeted him,
+ such tactful bits as bore Cressy and Agincourt, and the pretty little
+ smallpox and "plague here" banners, and has gone back to such innocent
+ diversions as baiting cabinet ministers, blowing up public buildings, or
+ going out into the woods seeking the Simple Life.
+</p>
+<p class="quote">
+ The Simple Lifers travel in bands&mdash;and little else. They go barefooted,
+ barearmed, bareheaded and barenecked. They wear one garment, I believe,
+ let their hair hang and their beards grow, eat only what Nature
+ provides, such as nuts and fruits, sleep under the stars, and drink
+ from Nature's pools. Rather bully, isn't it? They're a handsome lot
+ generally, brown as nuts. And I saw a girl yesterday&mdash;well, if you do
+ not hear from me for a time it will be because I have discarded the
+ pockets in which I carry my fountain pen and my stamps and am wandering
+ barefoot through the Elysian fields.
+</p>
+<p class="quote">
+ Yours for the Simple Life,
+</p>
+<p class="quote">
+ CHARLIE SANDS.
+</p>
+<p>
+As I finished reading the letter aloud, I looked at Aggie in dismay.
+"That settles it," I said hopelessly. "She had some such idea before,
+and now this young idiot&mdash;" I stopped and stared across the table at
+Aggie. She was sitting rapt, her eyes fixed on the smouldering wicks of
+Mr. Wiggins's candles.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Barefoot through the Elysian fields!" she said.
+</p>
+
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<h3><a name="h2H_4_0012" id="h2H_4_0012"></a>
+ II
+</h3>
+<p>
+I am not trying to defend myself. I never had the enthusiasm of the
+other two, but I rather liked the idea. And I did restrain them. It was
+my suggestion, for instance, that we wear sandals without stockings,
+instead of going in our bare feet, which was a good thing, for the first
+day out Aggie stepped into a hornet's nest. And I made out the lists.
+</p>
+<p>
+The idea, of course, is not how much one can carry, but how little. The
+"Young Woodsman" told exactly how to manage in the woods if one were
+lost there and had nothing in the world but a bootlace and a wire
+hairpin.
+</p>
+<p>
+With the hairpin one could easily make a fair fish-hook&mdash;and with a
+bootlace or a good hemp cord one could make a rabbit snare.
+</p>
+<p>
+"So you see," Tish explained, "there's fish and meat with no trouble at
+all. And there will be berries and nuts. That's a diet for a king."
+</p>
+<p>
+I was making a list of the necessaries at the time and under bootlaces
+and hairpins I put down "spade."
+</p>
+<p>
+"What in Heaven's name is the spade for?" Tish demanded.
+</p>
+<p>
+"You've got to dig bait, haven't you?"
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish eyed me with disgust.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Grasshoppers!" she said tersely.
+</p>
+<p>
+There was really nothing Tish was not prepared for. I should never have
+thought of grasshoppers.
+</p>
+<p>
+"The idea is simply this," observed Tish: "We have surrounded ourselves
+with a thousand and one things we do not need and would be better
+without&mdash;houses, foolish clothing, electric light, idiotic
+servants&mdash;Hannah, get away from that door!&mdash;rich foods, furniture and
+crowds of people. We've developed and cared for our bodies instead of
+our souls. What we want is to get out into the woods and think; to
+forget those pampered bodies of ours and to let our souls grow and
+assert themselves."
+</p>
+<p>
+We decided finally to take a blanket apiece, rolled on our shoulders,
+and Tish and I each took a strong knife. Aggie, instead of the knife,
+took a pair of scissors. We took a small bottle of blackberry cordial
+for emergencies, a cake of soap, a salt-cellar for seasoning the fish
+and rabbits, two towels, a package of court-plaster, Aggie's hay-fever
+remedy, a bottle of oil of pennyroyal to use against mosquitoes, and
+a large piece of canvas, light but strong, cut like the diagram.
+</p>
+
+
+<div class="figure" style="width: 60%;">
+<a name="image-0003"></a>
+<img src="images/blk-01.png" style="border: none; width: 100%;"
+alt="" /><br />
+
+</div>
+
+<p>
+Tish said it was the regulation Indian tepee, and that a squaw could set
+one up in an hour and have dinner cooked inside it in thirty minutes
+after. She said she guessed we could do it if an Indian squaw could, and
+that after we'd cut the poles once, we could carry them with us if we
+wished to move. She said the tent ought to be ornamented, but she had
+had no time, and we could paint designs on it with colored clay in the
+woods when we had nothing more important to do!
+</p>
+<p>
+It made a largish bundle, but we did not intend to travel much. We
+thought we could find a good place by a lake somewhere and put up the
+tent, and set a few snares, and locate the nearest berry-bushes and
+mushroom-patches, and then, while the rabbits were catching themselves,
+we should have time to get acquainted with our souls again.
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish put it in her terse manner most intelligently. "We intend to
+prove," she stated to Mrs. Ostermaier, the minister's wife, who came to
+call and found us all sitting on the floor trying to get used to it, for
+of course there would be no chairs, "we shall prove that the trappings
+of civilization are a delusion and a snare. We shall bring back 'Mens
+sana in corpore sano'."
+</p>
+<p>
+The minister's wife thought this was a disease, for she said, "I hope
+not, I'm sure," very hastily.
+</p>
+<p>
+"We shall make our own fire and our own shelter," said Tish from the
+floor. "We shall wear one garment, loose enough to allow entire freedom
+of movement. We shall bathe in Nature's pools and come out cleansed. On
+the Sabbath we shall attend divine service under the Gothic arches of
+the trees, read sermons in stones, and instead of that whining tenor in
+the choir we shall listen to the birds singing praise, overhead."
+</p>
+<p>
+Mrs. Ostermaier looked rather bewildered. "I'm sure I hope so," she said
+vaguely. "I don't like camping myself. There are so many bugs."
+</p>
+<p>
+As Tish said, some ideas are so large that the average person cannot see
+them at all.
+</p>
+<p>
+We had fixed on Maine. It seemed to combine all the necessary qualities:
+woods and lakes, rabbits, game and fish, and&mdash;solitude. Besides,
+Aggie's hay fever is better the farther north she gets. On the day we
+were leaving, Mr. Ostermaier came to see us.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I&mdash;I really must protest, ladies," he said. "That sort of thing may be
+all right for savages, but&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Are we not as intelligent as savages?" Tish demanded.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Primitive people are inured to hardships, and besides, they have
+methods of their own. They can make fire&mdash;" "So can I," retorted Tish.
+"Any fool can make a fire with a rubbing-stick. It's been done in
+thirty-one seconds."
+</p>
+<p>
+"If you would only take some matches," he wailed, "and a good revolver,
+Miss Letitia. And&mdash;you must pardon this, but I have your well-being at
+heart&mdash;if I could persuade you to take along some&mdash;er&mdash;flannels and warm
+clothing!"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Clothing," said Tish loftily, "is a matter of habit, Mr. Ostermaier."
+</p>
+<p>
+I think he got the idea from this that we intended to discard clothing
+altogether, for he went away almost immediately, looking rather upset,
+and he preached on the following Sunday from "Consider the lilies of the
+field.... Even Solomon in all his glory was not arrayed like one of
+these."
+</p>
+<p>
+We left on Monday evening, and by Tuesday at noon we were at our
+destination, as far as the railroad was concerned. Tish had a map with
+the lake we'd picked out, and we had figured that we'd drive out to
+within ten miles or so of it and then send the driver back. The lake was
+in an uninhabited neighborhood, with the nearest town twenty-five miles
+away. We had one suitcase containing our blankets, sandals, short
+dresses, soap, hairpins, salt-box, knives, scissors, and a compass, and
+the leather thongs for rabbit snares that we had had cut at a harness
+shop. In the other suitcase was the tepee.
+</p>
+<p>
+We ate a substantial breakfast at Tish's suggestion, because we expected
+to be fairly busy the first day, and there would be no time for hunting.
+We had to walk ten miles, set up the tent, make a fire and gather nuts
+and berries. It was about that time, I think, that I happened to recall
+that it was early for nuts. Still there would be berries, and Tish had
+added mushrooms to our menu.
+</p>
+<p>
+We found a man with a spring wagon to drive us out and Tish showed him
+the map.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I guess I can get you out that way," he said, "but I ain't heard of no
+camp up that direction."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Who said anything about a camp?" snapped Tish. "How much to drive us
+fifteen miles in that direction?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Fifteen miles! Well, about five dollars, but I think&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+"How much to drive us fifteen miles without thinking?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Ten dollars," said the man; and as he had the only wagon in the town we
+had to pay it.
+</p>
+<p>
+It was a lovely day, although very warm. The morning sun turned the
+woods to fairylike glades. Tish sat on the front seat, erect and staring
+ahead.
+</p>
+<p>
+Aggie bent over and touched my arm lightly. "Isn't she wonderful!" she
+whispered; "like some adventurer of old&mdash;Balboa discovering the Pacific
+Ocean, or Joan of Arc leading the what-you-call-'ems."
+</p>
+<p>
+But somehow my enthusiasm was dying. The sun was hot and there were no
+berry-bushes to be seen. Aggie's fairy glades in the woods were filled,
+not with dancing sprites, but with gnats. I wanted a glass of iced tea,
+and some chicken salad, and talcum powder down my neck. The road was
+bad, and the driver seemed to have a joke to himself, for every now and
+then he chuckled, and kept his eyes on the woods on each side, as if he
+expected to see something. His manner puzzled us all.
+</p>
+<p>
+"You can trust me not to say anything, ladies," he said at last, "but
+don't you think you're playing it a bit low down? This ain't quite up to
+contract, is it?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"You've been drinking!" said Tish shortly.
+</p>
+<p>
+After that he let her alone, but soon after he turned round to me and
+made another venture.
+</p>
+<p>
+"In case you need grub, lady," he said,"&mdash;and them two suitcases don't
+hold a lot,&mdash;I'll bring out anything you say: eggs and butter and garden
+truck at market prices. I'm no phylanthropist," he said, glaring at
+Tish, "but I'd be glad to help the girl, and that's the truth. I been
+married to this here wife o' mine quite a spell, and to my first one for
+twenty years, and I'm a believer in married life."
+</p>
+<p>
+"What girl?" I asked.
+</p>
+<p>
+He turned right round in the seat and winked at me.
+</p>
+<p>
+"All right," he said. "I'll not butt in unless you need me. But I'd like
+to know one thing: He hasn't got a mother, he says, so I take it you're
+his aunts. Am I on, ladies?"
+</p>
+<p>
+We didn't know what he was talking about, and we said so. But he only
+smiled. A mile or so from our destination the horse scared up a rabbit,
+and Tish could hardly be restrained from running after it with a leather
+thong. Aggie, however, turned a little pale.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'll never be able to eat one, never!" she confided to me. "Did you see
+its eyes? Lizzie, do you remember Mr. Wiggins's eyes? and the way he
+used to move his nose, just like that?"
+</p>
+<p>
+At the end of fifteen miles the driver drew up his horses and took a
+fresh chew of tobacco.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I guess this is about right," he said. "That trail there'll take you to
+the lake. How long do you reckon it'll be before you'll need some fresh
+eggs?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"We are quite able to look after ourselves," said Tish with hauteur, and
+got out of the wagon. She paid him off at once and sat down on her
+suitcase until he had driven out of sight. He drove slowly, looking back
+every now and then, and his last view of us must have been
+impressive&mdash;three middle-aged and determined women ready to conquer the
+wilderness, as Tish put it, and two suitcases.
+</p>
+<p>
+It was as solitary a place as we could have wished. We had not seen a
+house in ten miles, and when the last creak of the wagon had died away
+there was a silence that made our city-broke ears fairly ache. Tish
+waited until the wagon was out of sight; then she stood up and threw out
+her arms.
+</p>
+<p>
+"At last!" she said. "Free to have a lodge in some vast wilderness&mdash;to
+think, to breathe, to expand! Lizzie, do you suppose if we go back we
+can get that rabbit?"
+</p>
+<p>
+I looked at my watch. It was one o'clock and there was not a berry-bush
+in sight. The drive had made me hungry, and I'd have eaten a rabbit that
+looked like Mr. Wiggins and called me by name if I'd had it. But there
+was absolutely no use going back for the one we'd seen on our drive.
+</p>
+<p>
+Aggie was opening her suitcase and getting out her costume, which was a
+blue calico with short sleeves and a shoe-top skirt.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Where'll I put it on?" she asked, looking about her.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Right here!" Tish replied. "For goodness sake, Aggie, try to discard
+false modesty and false shame. We're here to get close to the great
+beating heart of Nature. Take off your switch before you do another
+thing."
+</p>
+<p>
+None of us looked particularly well, I admit; but it was wonderful how
+much more comfortable we were. Aggie, who is very thin, discarded a part
+of her figure, and each of us parted with some pet hypocrisy. But I
+don't know that I have ever felt better. Only, of course we were hungry.
+</p>
+<p>
+We packed our things in the suitcases and hid them in a hollow tree, and
+Tish suggested looking for a spring. She said water was always the first
+requisite and fire the second.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Fire!" said Aggie. "What for? We've nothing to cook."
+</p>
+<p>
+Well, that was true enough, so we sent Aggie to look for water and Tish
+and I made a rabbit snare. We made a good many snares and got to be
+rather quick at it. They were all made like this illustration.
+</p>
+
+<div class="figure" style="width: 60%;">
+<a name="image-0004"></a>
+<img src="images/blk-02.png" style="border: none; width: 100%;"
+alt="" /><br />
+</div>
+
+<p>
+First Tish, with her book open in front of her, made a running noose out
+of one of the buckskin thongs. Next we bent down a sapling and tied the
+noose to it, and last of all we bound the free part of the thong round a
+snag and thus held the sapling down. The idea is that a rabbit, bounding
+along, presumably with his eyes shut, will stick his head through the
+noose, kick the line clear of the snag and be drawn violently into the
+air. Tish figured that by putting up half a dozen snares we'd have
+three or four rabbits at least each day.
+</p>
+<p>
+It was about three when we finished, and we drew off to a safe distance
+to watch the rabbit bound to his doom. But no rabbits came along.
+</p>
+<p>
+I was very empty and rather faint, but Tish said she had never been able
+to think so clearly, and that we were all overfed and stodgy and would
+be better for fasting.
+</p>
+<p>
+Aggie came in at three-thirty with a hornet sting and no water. She said
+there were no springs, but that she had found a place where a spring had
+existed before the dry spell, and there was a naked footprint in the
+mud, quite fresh! We all went to look at it, and Tish was quite positive
+it was not a man's footprint at all, but only a bear's.
+</p>
+<p>
+"A bear!" said Aggie.
+</p>
+<p>
+"What of it?" Tish demanded. "The 'Young Woodsman' says that no bear
+attacks a human unless he is hungry, and at this time of the year with
+the woods full of food&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Humph!"&mdash;I could not restrain myself&mdash;"I wish you would show me a
+little of it. If no rabbit with acute melancholia comes along to commit
+suicide by hanging on that gallows of yours, I think we'll starve to
+death."
+</p>
+<p>
+"There will be a rabbit," Tish said tersely; and we started back to the
+snare.
+</p>
+<p>
+I was never so astonished in my life. There was a rabbit! It seems we
+had struck a runway without knowing it, although Tish said afterward
+that she had recognized it at once from the rabbit tracks. Anyhow,
+whether it died of design or curiosity, our supper was kicking at the
+top of the sapling, and Tish pretended to be calm and to have known all
+along that we'd get one. But it was not dead.
+</p>
+<p>
+We got it down somehow or other and I held it by the ears while it
+kicked and scratched. I was hungry enough to have eaten it alive, but
+Aggie began to cry.
+</p>
+<p>
+"You'll be murderers, nothing else," she wailed. "Look at his little
+white tail and pitiful baby eyes!"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Good gracious, Aggie," Tish snapped, "get a knife and cut its throat
+while I make a fire. If it's any help to you, we're not going to eat
+either its little white tail or its pitiful baby eyes."
+</p>
+<p>
+As a matter of fact Aggie wouldn't touch the rabbit and I did not care
+much about it myself. I do not like to kill things. My Aunt Sarah
+Mackintosh once killed a white hen that lived twenty minutes without its
+head; two weeks later she dreamed that that same hen, without a head,
+was sitting on the footboard of the bed, and the next day she got word
+that her cousin's husband in Sacramento had died of the hiccoughs.
+</p>
+<p>
+It ended with Tish giving me the fire-making materials and stalking off
+into the woods with the rabbit in one hand and the knife in the other.
+</p>
+
+<div class="figure" style="width: 75%;">
+<a name="image-0005"></a>
+<img src="images/ill-04.jpg" width="100%"
+alt="It ended with tish stalking off into the woods with the
+rabbit in one hand and the knife in the other" /><br />
+It ended with tish stalking off into the woods with the
+rabbit in one hand and the knife in the other
+</div>
+
+<p>
+Tish is nothing if not thorough, but she seemed to me inconsistent. She
+brought blankets and a canvas tepee and sandals and an aluminum kettle,
+but she disdained matches. I rubbed with that silly drill and a sort of
+bow arrangement until my wrists ached, but I did not get even a spark of
+fire. When Tish came back with the rabbit there was no fire, and Aggie
+had taken out her watch crystal and was holding it in the sun over a
+pile of leaves.
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish got out the "Young Woodsman" from the suitcase. It seems I had
+followed cuts I and II, but had neglected cut III, which is: Hold the
+left wrist against the left shin, and the left foot on the fireblock. I
+had got my feet mixed and was trying to hold my left wrist against my
+right shin, which is exceedingly difficult. Tish got a fire in fourteen
+minutes and thirty-one seconds by Aggie's watch, and had to wear a
+bandage on her hand for a week.
+</p>
+<p>
+But we had a fire. We cooked the rabbit, which proved to be much older
+than Aggie had thought, and ate what we could. Personally I am not fond
+of rabbit, and our enjoyment was rather chastened by the fear that some
+mushrooms Tish had collected and added to the stew were toadstools
+<i>incognito</i>. To make things worse, Aggie saw some goldenrod nearby and
+began to sneeze.
+</p>
+<p>
+It was after five o'clock, but it seemed wisest to move on toward the
+lake.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Even if we don't make it," said Tish, "we'll be on our way, and while
+that bear is likely harmless we needn't thrust temptation in his way."
+</p>
+<p>
+We carried the fire with us in the kettle and we took turns with the
+tepee, which was heavy. Our suitcases with our city clothes in them we
+hid in a hollow tree, and one after the other, with Aggie last, we
+started on.
+</p>
+<p>
+The trail, which was a sort of wide wagon road at first, became a
+footpath; as we went on even that disappeared at times under fallen
+leaves. Once we lost it entirely, and Aggie, falling over a hidden root,
+stilled the fire. She became exceedingly disagreeable at about that
+time, said she was sure Tish's mushrooms were toadstools because she
+felt very queer, and suddenly gave a yell and said she had seen
+something moving in the bushes.
+</p>
+<p>
+We all looked, and the bushes were moving.
+</p>
+
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<h3><a name="h2H_4_0013" id="h2H_4_0013"></a>
+ III
+</h3>
+<p>
+It was dusk by that time and the path was only a thread between masses
+of undergrowth. Tish said if it was the bear he would be afraid of the
+fire, so we put dry leaves in the kettle and made quite a blaze. By its
+light Tish read that bears in the summer are full fed and really
+frolicsome and that they are awful cowards. We felt quite cheered and
+brave, and Tish said if he came near to throw the fire kettle at him and
+he'd probably die of fright.
+</p>
+<p>
+It was too late to put up the tepee, so we found a clearing near the
+path and decided to spend the night there. Aggie still watched the
+bushes and wanted to spend the night in a tree; but Tish's calmness was
+a reproach to us both, and after we had emptied the kettle and made
+quite a fire to keep off animals, we unrolled our blankets and prepared
+for sleep. I could have slept anywhere, although I was still rather
+hungry. My last view was of Tish in the firelight grimly bending down a
+sapling and fastening a rabbit snare to it.
+</p>
+<p>
+During the night I was wakened by somebody clutching my arm. It was
+Aggie who lay next to me. When I raised my head she pointed off into the
+woods to our left. At a height of perhaps four feet from the ground a
+ghastly red glow was moving rapidly away from us. It was not a torch; it
+was more a radiance, and it moved not evenly, but jerkily. I could feel
+the very hair rising on my head and it was all I could do to call Tish.
+When we had roused her, however, the glow had faded entirely and she
+said we had had a nightmare.
+</p>
+<p>
+The snare the next morning contained a skunk, and we moved on as quickly
+as possible, without attempting to secure the thong, of which we had
+several. We gathered some puffballs to soak for breakfast and in a
+clearing I found some blackberry bushes. We were very cheerful that
+morning, for if we could capture rabbits and skunks, we were sure of
+other things, also, and soon we would be able to add fish to our menu.
+True, we had not had much time to commune with our souls, and Aggie's
+arms were so sunburned that she could not bend them at the elbows. But,
+as Tish said, we had already proved our contention that we could get
+along without men or houses or things. Things, she said, were the curse
+of modern life; we filled our lives with things instead of thoughts.
+</p>
+<p>
+It was when we were ready to cook the puffballs that we missed the
+kettle! Tish was very angry; she said it was evident that the bear was
+mischievous and that all bears were thieves. (See the "Young Woodsman.")
+But I recalled the glow of the night before, and more than once I caught
+Aggie's eyes on me, filled with consternation. For we had seen that
+kettle leaving the camp with some of our fire in it, and bears are
+afraid of fire!
+</p>
+<p>
+We reached the lake at noon and it seemed as if we might soon have time
+to sit down and rest. But there was a great deal to do. Aggie was of no
+assistance on account of her arms, so Tish and I put up the tent. The
+"Young Woodsman" said it was easy. First you tied three long poles
+together near the top and stood them up so they made a sort of triangle.
+Then you cut about a dozen and filled in between the three. That looked
+easy, but it took an afternoon, and our first three looked like this
+first cut.
+</p>
+
+
+<div class="figure" style="width: 60%;">
+<a name="image-0006"></a>
+<img src="images/blk-03.png" style="border: none; width: 100%;"
+alt="As the First Three Looked
+ As They Should Have Looked" /><br />
+<span style="float: left;" > As the First<br /> Three Looked </span>
+<span style="float: right;"> As They Should<br /> Have Looked </span>
+</div>
+
+<p style="clear: both;">
+We had caught a rabbit by noon, and Aggie being unfit for other work,
+and the kettle being gone, Tish set her to roasting it. It was not
+very good, but we ate some, being ravenous. The method was simplicity
+itself&mdash;two forked sticks in the ground, one across to hang the rabbit
+to and a fire beneath. It tasted rather smoky.
+</p>
+<p>
+In the afternoon we finished putting up the tepee, and Tish made a
+fishhook out of a hairpin and tied it to a strong creeper I had found.
+But we caught no fish. We had more rabbit for supper, with some
+puffballs smoked and a few huckleberries. But by that time the very
+sight of a rabbit sickened me, and Aggie began to talk about broiled
+beefsteak and fried spring chicken.
+</p>
+<p>
+We had seen no sign of the bear, or whatever it was, all day, and it
+seemed likely we were not to be again disturbed. But a most mysterious
+thing occurred that very night.
+</p>
+<p>
+As I have said, we had caught no fish. The lake was full of them. We sat
+on a bank that evening and watched them playing leapfrog, and talked
+about frying them on red-hot stones, but nothing came near the hairpin.
+At last Tish made a suggestion.
+</p>
+<p>
+"We need worms," she said. "A grasshopper loses all his spirit after
+he's been immersed for an hour, but a worm will keep on wriggling and
+attracting attention for half a day."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I wanted to bring a spade," said I.
+</p>
+<p>
+But Tish had read of a scheme for getting worms that she said the game
+warden of some place or other had guaranteed officially.
+</p>
+<p>
+"You stick a piece of wood about two feet into the ground in a likely
+spot," she said, "and rub a rough piece of bark or plank across the top.
+This man claims, and it sounds reasonable, that the worms think it is
+raining and come up for water. All you have to do is to gather them up."
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish found a pole for the purpose on the beach and set to work, while
+Aggie and I prepared several hooks and lines. The fish were jumping
+busily, and it seemed likely we should have more than we could do to
+haul them in.
+</p>
+<p>
+The experiment, however, failed entirely, for not a single worm
+appeared. Tish laid it to the fact that it was very late and that the
+worms were probably settled down for the night. It may have been that,
+or it may have been the wrong kind of wood.
+</p>
+<p>
+The mysterious happening was this: We rose quite early because the tepee
+did not seem to be well anchored and fell down on us at daybreak. Tish
+went down to the beach to examine the lines that had been out all night,
+and found nothing. She was returning rather dispirited to tell us that
+it would be rabbit again for breakfast, when she saw lying on a flat
+stone half a dozen beautiful fish, one or two still gasping, in our lost
+kettle!
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish said she stood there, opening and shutting her mouth like the fish.
+Then she gave a whoop and we came running. At first we thought they
+might have been jumping and leaped out on to the beach by accident, but,
+as Tish said, they would hardly have landed all together and into a
+kettle that had been lost for two nights and a day. The queer thing was
+that they had not been caught with a hook at all. They hadn't a mark on
+them.
+</p>
+<p>
+We were so hungry that we ate every one of them for breakfast. It was
+only when we had eaten, and were sitting gorged and not caring whether
+the tent was set up again or not, that we fell to wondering about the
+fish. Tish fancied it might have been the driver of the spring wagon,
+but decided he'd have sold us the fish at thirty cents a pound live
+weight.
+</p>
+<p>
+All day long we watched for a sign of our benefactor, but we saw
+nothing. Tish set up more rabbit snares; not that she wanted rabbits,
+but it had become a mania with her, and there were so many of them that
+as they grew accustomed to us they sat round our camp in a ring and
+criticized our housekeeping. She thought if she got a good many skins
+she could have a fur robe made for her automobile. As a matter of fact
+she found another use for them.
+</p>
+<p>
+It was that night, then, that we were sitting round the camp-fire on
+stones that we had brought up from the beach. We had seen nothing more
+of the bear, and if we had been asked we should have said that the
+nearest human being was twenty-five miles away.
+</p>
+<p>
+Suddenly a voice came out of the woods just behind us, a man's voice.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Please don't be alarmed," said the voice. "But may I have a little of
+your fire? Mine has gone out again."
+</p>
+<p>
+"G-g-g-good gracious!" said Aggie. "T-Tish, get your revolver!"
+</p>
+<p>
+This was for effect. Tish had no revolver.
+</p>
+<p>
+All of us had turned and were staring into the woods behind, but we
+could see no one. After Aggie's speech about the revolver it was some
+time before the voice spoke again.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Never mind, Aggie," Tish observed, very loud. "The revolver is here and
+loaded&mdash;as nice a little thirty-six as any one needs here in the woods."
+</p>
+<p>
+She said afterward that she knew all the time there was no thirty-six
+caliber revolver, but in the excitement she got it mixed with her bust
+measure. Having replied to Aggie, Tish then turned in the direction of
+the voice.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Don't skulk back there," she called. "Come out, where we can see you.
+If you look reliable, we'll give you some fire, of course."
+</p>
+<p>
+There was another pause, as if the stranger were hesitating. Then:&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+"I think I'd better not," he said with reluctance in his voice. "Can't
+you toss a brand this way?"
+</p>
+<p>
+By that time we had grown accustomed to the darkness, and I thought I
+could see in the shadow of a tree a lightish figure. Aggie saw it at the
+same instant and clutched my arm.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Lizzie!" she gasped.
+</p>
+<p>
+It was at that moment that Tish tossed the brand. It fell far short, but
+her movement caught the stranger unawares. He ducked behind the tree,
+but the flare of light had caught him. With the exception of what looked
+like a pair of bathing-trunks he was as bare as my hand!
+</p>
+<p>
+There was a sort of astonished silence. Then the voice called out:&mdash;"Why
+in the world didn't you warn me?" it said, aggrieved. "I didn't know you
+were going to throw the blamed thing."
+</p>
+<p>
+We had all turned our backs at once and Tish's face was awful.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Take it and go," she said, without turning. "Take it and go."
+</p>
+<p>
+From the crackling of leaves and twigs we judged that he had come out
+and got the brand, and when he spoke again it was from farther back in
+the woods.
+</p>
+<p>
+"You know," he said, "I don't like this any more than you do. I've got
+forty-two mosquito bites on my left arm."
+</p>
+<p>
+He waited, as if for a reply; but getting none he evidently retreated.
+The sound of rustling leaves and crackling twigs grew fainter, fainter
+still, died away altogether. We turned then with one accord and gazed
+through the dark arches of the forest. A glowing star was retreating
+there&mdash;a smouldering fire, that seemed to move slowly and with an
+appearance of dejection.
+</p>
+<p>
+It was the second time Aggie and I had seen fire thus carried through
+the wood; but whereas about the kettle there had been a glow and
+radiance that was almost triumphant, the brand we now watched seemed
+smouldering, dejected, ashamed. Even Tish felt it.
+</p>
+<p>
+"The wretch!" she exclaimed. "Daring to come here like that! No wonder
+he's ashamed."
+</p>
+<p>
+But Aggie, who is very romantic, sat staring after the distant torch.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Mr. Wiggins suffered so from mosquitoes," she said softly.
+</p>
+
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<h3><a name="h2H_4_0014" id="h2H_4_0014"></a>
+ IV
+</h3>
+<p>
+The next morning we found more fish awaiting us, and on the smooth sand
+of the beach was a message written with a stick:&mdash;
+</p>
+<p class="quote">
+ If you will leave a wire hairpin or two on this stone I can get
+ bigger fish. What do you mean to do with all those rabbit skins?
+</p>
+<p class="quote">
+ (Signed) P.
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish was touched by the fish, I think. She smoothed off the sand
+carefully and wrote a reply:&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p class="quote">
+ Here are the hairpins. Thank you. Do you want the rabbit skins?
+</p>
+<p class="quote">
+ L.C.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+All day we were in a state of expectancy. The mosquitoes were very bad,
+and had it not been for the excitement of the P&mdash;&mdash; person I should have
+given up and gone home. I wanted mashed potatoes and lima beans with
+butter dressing, and a cup of hot tea, and muffins, and ice&mdash;in fact,
+I cannot think of anything I did not want, except rabbits and fish and
+puffballs and such blackberries as the birds did not fancy. Although we
+were well enough&mdash;almost too well&mdash;the better I felt the hungrier I got.
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish thought the time had now come to rest and invite our souls. She
+set the example that day by going out on a flat rock in the lake and
+preparing to think all the things she'd been waiting most of her life
+to consider.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I am ready to form my own opinions about some things," she said.
+"I realize now that all my life the newspapers and stupid people and
+books have formed my opinions. Now I'm going to think along my own
+lines. Is there another life after this? Do I really desire the
+suffrage? Why am I a Baptist?"
+</p>
+<p>
+Aggie said she would like to invite her soul that day also, not to form
+any opinions,&mdash;Tish always does that for her,&mdash;but she had to get some
+clothes in September and she might as well think them out.
+</p>
+<p>
+So it happened that I was alone when I met the P&mdash;&mdash; person's young
+woman.
+</p>
+<p>
+I had intended to wander only a short way along the trail, but after I
+had gone a mile or two it occurred to me as likely that the spring-wagon
+driver would come back that way before long out of curiosity, and I
+thought I might leave a message for him to bring out some fresh eggs and
+leave them there. I could tell Tish I had found a nest, or perhaps,
+since that would be lying, I could put them in a nest and let her find
+them. I'd have ordered tea, too, if I could have thought of any way to
+account for it.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'm going to do some meditating myself to-day," I remarked, "but I
+think better when I'm moving. If I don't come back in an hour or so
+don't imagine I've been kidnaped."
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish turned on her stone and looked at me.
+</p>
+<p>
+"You will not be kidnaped," she said shortly. "I cannot imagine any one
+safer than you are in that costume."
+</p>
+<p>
+Well, I made my way along the trail as rapidly as I could. It was twenty
+miles there and back and I've seen the day when two city blocks would
+send me home to soak my feet in hot water. But the sandals were easy to
+walk in and my calico skirt was short and light.
+</p>
+<p>
+I had no paper to write my message on, of course, but on the way I
+gathered a large white fungus and I scraped a note on it with a pin.
+With the fungus under my arm I walked briskly along, planning an omelet
+with the eggs, if we got any, and gathering mushrooms here and there. It
+was the mushrooms that led me to the discovery of a camping-place that
+was prehistoric in its primitiveness&mdash;a clearing, surrounded by low
+bushes, and in the center a fireplace of stones with a fire smouldering.
+At one side a heap of leaves and small twigs for a bed, a stump for a
+seat, and lying on top of it a sort of stone axe, made by inserting a
+sharp stone into the cleft of a sapling and tying it into place with a
+wild-grape tendril. Pegged out on the ground to cure was a rabbit skin,
+indifferently scraped. It made our aluminum kettle and canvas tepee look
+like a marble-vestibuled apartment on Riverside Drive.
+</p>
+<p>
+The whole thing looked pitiful, hungry. I thought of Tish sitting on a
+stone inviting her soul, while rabbits came from miles round to stick
+their heads through our nooses and hang themselves for our dinner; and
+it seemed to me that we should share our plenty. I thought it probable
+that the gentleman of the woods lived here, and from the appearance of
+the place he carried all his possessions with him when he wore his
+bathing-trunks. If I had been in any doubt, the sight of Aggie's wire
+hairpin, sharpened and bent into a serviceable fishhook, decided me. I
+scratched a message for him on another fungus and left it:&mdash;
+</p>
+<p class="quote">
+ If you need anything come to the Indian tepee at the lake. We have
+ no clothing to spare, but are always glad to help in time of trouble.
+</p>
+<p class="quote">
+ (Signed) ONE OF THE SIMPLE LIFERS.
+</p>
+<p>
+I went on after that and about noon reached our point of exodus from the
+wagon. I was tired and hot and I kept thinking of my little dining-room
+at home, with the electric fan going, and iced cantaloupe, and nobody
+worrying about her soul or thinking her own thoughts, and no rabbits.
+</p>
+<p>
+Our suitcases were safe enough in the hollow tree, and I thought the
+spring wagon had been back already, for there were fresh tracks. This
+discouraged me and I sat down on a log to rest. It was then that I heard
+the girl crying.
+</p>
+<p>
+She was crying softly, but in the woods sounds travel. I found her on
+her face on the pine needles about twenty yards away, wailing her heart
+out into a pink automobile veil, and she was so absorbed in her misery
+that I had to stoop and touch her before she looked up.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Don't cry," I said. "If you are lost, I can direct you to a
+settlement."
+</p>
+<p>
+She looked up at me, and from being very red and suffused she went quite
+pale. It seems that with my bare legs and sandals and my hair down,
+which was Tish's idea for making it come in thick and not gray, and what
+with my being sunburned and stained with berries, she thought I was a
+wild woman. I realized what was wrong.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Don't be alarmed," I said somewhat grimly. "I'm rational enough; if I
+hop about instead of walking, it's because I'm the tomb of more rabbits
+than I care to remember, but aside from that I'm all right. Are you
+lost?"
+</p>
+<p>
+She sat up, still staring, and wiped her eyes.
+</p>
+<p>
+"No. I have a machine over there among the trees. Are there&mdash;are there
+plenty of rabbits in the woods?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Thousands." She was a pretty little thing, very young, and dressed in a
+white motor coat with white shoes and hat.
+</p>
+<p>
+"And&mdash;and berries?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"There aren't many berries," I admitted. "The birds eat 'em. We get the
+ones they don't fancy."
+</p>
+<p>
+Now I didn't think for a moment that she was worried about my diet, but
+she was worried about the food supply in the woods, that was sure. So I
+sat down on a stump and told her about puffballs, and what Tish had read
+about ants being edible but acid, and that wood mice, roasted and not
+cooked too dry, were good food, but that Aggie had made us liberate the
+only ones we had caught, because a man she was once engaged to used to
+carry a pet mouse in his pocket.
+</p>
+<p>
+Nothing had really appealed to her until I mentioned Mr. Wiggins. Then
+unexpectedly she began to cry again. And after that I got the whole
+story.
+</p>
+<p>
+It seems she was in love with a young man who was everything a young man
+ought to be and had money as well. But the money was the barrier really,
+for the girl's father wouldn't believe that a youth who played polo, and
+did not have to work for a living, and led cotillons, and paid calls in
+the afternoon could have really good red blood in him. He had a man in
+view for her, she said, one who had made his money himself, and had to
+have his valet lay out his clothes for fear he'd make a mistake. Once
+the valet had to go to have a tooth pulled and the man had to decline
+a dinner.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Father said," finished the little girl tearfully, "that if
+Percy&mdash;that's his name, and it counted against him too&mdash;that if Percy
+was a real man he'd do something. And then he hap-happened on a book of
+my small brother's, telling how people used to live in the woods, and
+kill their own food and make their own fire&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+"The 'Young Woodsman,' of course," I put in.
+</p>
+<p>
+"And how the strong survived, but the weak succumbed, and he said if
+Percy was a man, and not a t-tailor's dummy, he'd go out in the woods,
+j-just primitive man, without anything but a pair of bathing trunks,
+and keep himself alive for a month. If he s-stood the test father was
+willing to forget the 'Percy.' He said that he knew Mr. Willoughby could
+do it&mdash;that's the other man&mdash;and that he'd come in at the end of the
+time with a deed for the forest and mortgages on all the surrounding
+camps."
+</p>
+<p>
+"And Percy agreed?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"He didn't want to. He said it took mentality and physical endurance as
+well as some courage to play polo. Father said it did&mdash;on the part of
+the pony. Then s-some of the men heard of it, and there were bets on
+it&mdash;ten to one he wouldn't do it and twenty to one he couldn't do it. So
+Percy decided to try. Father was so afraid that some of the campers and
+guides would help him that he had notices sent out at Mr. Willoughby's
+suggestion offering a reward if Percy could be shown to have asked any
+assistance. Oh, I know he's sick in there somewhere, or starving
+or&mdash;dead!"
+</p>
+<p>
+I had had a great light break over me, and now I stooped and patted the
+girl on the shoulder.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Dead! Certainly not," I said. "I saw him last night."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Saw him!"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Well, not exactly saw him&mdash;there wasn't much light. But he's alive and
+well, and&mdash;do you really want him to win?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Do I?" She sat up with shining eyes. "I don't care whether he owns
+anything in the world but the trunks. If I didn't think I'd add to his
+troubles I'd go into the woods this minute and find him and suffer with
+him."
+</p>
+<p>
+"You'd have to be married to him first," I objected, rather startled.
+</p>
+<p>
+But she looked at me with her cheeks as red strawberries. "Why?" she
+demanded. "Father's crazy about primitive man&mdash;did primitive man take
+his woman to church to be married, with eight bridesmaids and a
+reception after the ceremony? Of course not. He grabbed her and carried
+her off."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Good Heavens! You're not in earnest?" "I think I am," she said slowly.
+"I'd rather live in the woods with Percy and no ceremony than live
+without him anywhere in the world. And I'll bet primitive man would have
+been wiped off the earth if he hadn't had primitive woman to add her
+wits to his strength. If Percy only had a woman to help him!"
+</p>
+<p>
+"My dear," I said solemnly, "he has! He has, not one, but three!"
+</p>
+<p>
+It took me some time to explain that Percy was not supporting a harem in
+the Maine woods; but when at last she got my idea and that the other two
+classed with me in beauty and attractiveness, she was overjoyed.
+</p>
+<p>
+"But Percy promised not to ask for help," she said suddenly.
+</p>
+<p>
+"He needn't. My dear, go away and stop worrying about Percy&mdash;he's all
+right. When is the time up?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"In three weeks."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I suppose father and the Willoughby person will come to meet him?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Yes, and all the fellows from the club who have put money up on him.
+We're going to motor over and father's bringing the physical director of
+the athletic club. He's not only got to survive, but he's got to be in
+good condition."
+</p>
+<p>
+"He'll be in good condition," I said grimly. "Does he drink and smoke?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"A little, not too much. Oh, yes, I had forgotten!" She opened up a
+little gold cigarette case, which she took from her pocket, and
+extracted a handful of cigarettes.
+</p>
+<p>
+"If you are going to see him," she said, "you might put them where he'll
+find them?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Certainly not."
+</p>
+<p>
+"But that's not giving them to him."
+</p>
+<p>
+"My dear child," I said sternly, "Percy is going to come out of these
+woods so well and strong that he may not have to work, but he'll want
+to. And he'll not smoke anything stronger than corn-silk, if we're to
+take charge of this thing."
+</p>
+<p>
+She understood quickly enough and I must say she was grateful. She was
+almost radiant with joy when I told her how capable Tish was, and that
+she was sure to be interested, and about Aggie's hay fever and Mr.
+Wiggins and the rabbit snares. She leaned over and kissed me
+impulsively.
+</p>
+<p>
+"You dear old thing!" she cried. "I know you'll look after him and make
+him comfortable and&mdash;how old is Miss Letitia?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Something over fifty and Aggie Pilkington's about the same, although
+she won't admit it."
+</p>
+<p>
+She kissed me again at that, and after looking at her wrist watch she
+jumped to her feet.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Heavens!" she said. "It's four o'clock and my engine has been running
+all this time!"
+</p>
+<p>
+She got a smart little car from somewhere up the road, and the last I
+saw of her she was smiling back over her shoulder and the car running on
+the edge of a ditch.
+</p>
+<p>
+"You are three darlings!" she called back. "And tell Percy I love
+him&mdash;love him&mdash;love him!"
+</p>
+<p>
+I thought I'd never get back to the lake. I was tired to begin with, and
+after I'd gone about four miles and was limping with a splinter in my
+heel and no needle to get it out with, I found I still had the fungus
+message to the spring-wagon person under my arm.
+</p>
+<p>
+It was dark when I got back and my nerves were rather unstrung, what
+with wandering from the path here and there, with nothing to eat since
+morning, and running into a tree and taking the skin off my nose. When I
+limped into camp at last, I didn't care whether Percy lived or died, and
+the thought of rabbit stew made my mouth water.
+</p>
+<p>
+It was not rabbit, however. Aggie was sitting alone by the fire, waving
+a brand round her head to keep off mosquitoes, and in front of her,
+dangling from the spit, were a dozen pairs of frogs' legs in a row.
+</p>
+<p>
+I ate six pairs without a question and then I asked for Tish.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Catching frogs," said Aggie laconically, and flourished the brand.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Where?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Pulling them off the trees. Where do you think she gets them?" she
+demanded.
+</p>
+<p>
+A large mosquito broke through her guard at that moment and she flung
+the torch angrily at the fire.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'm eaten alive!" she snapped. "I wish to Heaven I had smallpox or
+something they could all take and go away and die."
+</p>
+<p>
+The frogs' legs were heavenly, although in a restaurant I loathe the
+things. I left Aggie wondering if her hay fever wasn't contagious
+through the blood and hoping the mosquitoes would get it and sneeze
+themselves to death, and went to find Tish.
+</p>
+<p>
+She was standing in the margin of the lake up to her knees in water,
+with a blazing torch in one hand and one of our tent poles in the other.
+Tied to the end the pole was a grapevine line, and a fishing-hook made
+of a hairpin was attached to it.
+</p>
+<p>
+Her method, which it seems she'd heard from Charlie Sands and which was
+not in the "Young Woodsman," was simple and effectual.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Don't move," she said tensely when she heard me on the bank. "There's
+one here as big as a chicken!"
+</p>
+<p>
+She struck the flare forward, and I could see the frog looking at it and
+not blinking. He sat in a sort of heavenly ecstasy, like a dog about to
+bay at the moon, while the hook dangled just at his throat.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'm half-ashamed to do it, Lizzie, it's so easy," she said calmly,
+still tickling the thing's throat with the hook. "Grab him as I throw
+him at you. They slip off sometimes."
+</p>
+<p>
+The next instant she jerked the hook up and caught the creature by the
+lower jaw. It was the neatest thing I have ever seen. Tish came wading
+over to where I stood and examined the frog.
+</p>
+<p>
+"If we only had some Tartare sauce!" she said regretfully. "I wish you'd
+look at my ankle, Lizzie. There's something stuck to it."
+</p>
+<p>
+The something was a leech. It refused to come off, and so she carried
+both frog and leech back to the camp. Aggie said on no account to pull a
+leech off, it left its teeth in and the teeth went on burrowing, or laid
+eggs or something. One must leave it on until it was full and round and
+couldn't hold any more, and then it dropped off.
+</p>
+<p>
+So all night Tish kept getting up and going to the fire to see if it was
+swelling. But toward morning she fell asleep and it dropped off, and we
+had a terrible feeling that it was somewhere in our blankets.
+</p>
+<p>
+But the leech caused less excitement that evening than my story of Percy
+and the little girl in the white coat. Aggie was entranced, and Tish had
+made Percy a suit of rabbit skin with a cap to match and outlined a set
+of exercises to increase his chest measure before I was half through
+with my story.
+</p>
+<p>
+But Percy did not appear, although we had an idea that he was not far
+off in the woods. We could hear a crackling in the undergrowth, but when
+we called there was no reply. Tish was eating a frog's leg when the idea
+came to her.
+</p>
+<p>
+"He'll never come out under ordinary circumstances in that&mdash;er&mdash;costume,"
+she said. "Suppose we call for help. He'll probably come bounding.
+Help!" she yelled, between bites, as one may say.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Help! Fire! Police!"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Help!" cried Aggie. "Percy, help!" It sounded like "Mercy, help!"
+</p>
+<p>
+It worked like a charm. The faint cracking became louder, nearer, turned
+from a suspicion to a certainty and from a certainty to a fact. The
+bushes parted and Percy stood before us. All he saw was three elderly
+women eating frogs' legs round a fire under a cloud of mosquitoes. He
+stopped, dumbfounded, and in that instant we saw that he didn't need the
+physical exercises, but that, of course, he did need the rabbit-skin
+suit.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Great Scott!" he panted. "I thought I heard you calling for help."
+</p>
+<p>
+"So we did," said Tish, "but we didn't need it. Won't you sit down?"
+</p>
+<p>
+He looked dazed and backed toward the bushes.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I&mdash;I think," he said, "if there's nothing wrong I'd better not&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Fiddlesticks!" Tish snapped. "Are you ashamed of the body the Lord
+gave you? Don't you suppose we've all got skins? And didn't I thrash my
+nephew, Charlie Sands, when he was almost as big as you and had less on,
+for bathing in the river? Sit down, man, and don't be a fool."
+</p>
+<p>
+He edged toward the fire, looking rather silly, and Aggie passed him a
+frog's leg on a piece of bark.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Try this, Percy," she said, smiling.
+</p>
+<p>
+At the name he looked ready to run. "I guess you've seen the notices,"
+he said, "so you'll understand I cannot accept any food or assistance.
+I'm very grateful to you, anyhow."
+</p>
+<p>
+"You may take what food you find, surely," said Aggie. "If you find a
+roasted frog's leg on the ground&mdash;so&mdash;there's nothing to prevent you
+eating it, is there?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Nothing at all," said Percy, and picked it up. "Unless, of course&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+"It's not a trap, young man," said Tish. "Eat it and enjoy it. There are
+lots more where it came from."
+</p>
+<p>
+He relaxed at that, and on Tish's bringing out a blanket from the tent
+to throw over his shoulders he became almost easy. He was much surprised
+to learn that we knew his story, and when I repeated the "love him"
+message, he seemed to grow a foot taller and his eyes glowed.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'm holding out all right," he said. "I'm fit physically. But the thing
+that gets my goat is that I'm to come out clothed. Dorothea's father
+says that primitive man, with nothing but his hands and perhaps a stone
+club, fed himself, made himself a shelter, and clothed himself in skins.
+Skins! I'm so big that two or three bears would hardly be enough. I did
+find a hole that I thought a bear or two might fall into, and got almost
+stung to death robbing a bee tree to bait the thing with honey. But
+there aren't any bears, and if there were how'd I kill 'em? Wait until
+they starve to death?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Rabbits!" said Tish.
+</p>
+<p>
+He looked down at himself and he seemed very large in the firelight.
+"Dear lady," he said, "there aren't enough rabbits in the county to
+cover me, and how'd I put 'em together? I was a fool to undertake the
+thing, that's all."
+</p>
+<p>
+"But aren't you in love with her?" asked Aggie.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Well, I guess I am. It isn't that, you know. I'm a good bit worse than
+crazy about her. A man might be crazy about a mint julep or a power
+boat, but&mdash;he'd hardly go into the woods in his skin and live on fish
+until he's scaly for either of them. If I don't get her, I don't want to
+live. That's all."
+</p>
+<p>
+He looked so gloomy and savage that we saw he meant it, and Aggie was
+perceptibly thrilled. Trish, however, was thinking hard, her eyes on the
+leech. "Was there anything in the agreement to prevent your accepting
+any suggestions?"
+</p>
+<p>
+He pondered. "No, I was to be given no food, drink, shelter, or any
+weapon. The old man forgot fire&mdash;that's how I came to beg some."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Fire and brains," reflected Tish. "We've given you the first and we've
+plenty of the second to offer. Now, young man, this is my plan. We'll
+give you nothing but suggestions. If now and then you find a cooked meal
+under that tree, that's accident, not design, and you'd better eat it.
+Can you sew?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'm like the Irishman and the fiddle&mdash;I never tried, but I guess I
+can." He was much more cheerful.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Do you have to be alone?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"I believe he took that for granted, in this costume."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Will it take you long to move over here?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"I think I can move without a van," he said, grinning. "My sole worldly
+possessions are a stone hatchet and a hairpin fishhook."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Get them and come over," commanded Tish. "When you leave this forest at
+the end of the time you are going to be fed and clothed and carry a
+tent; you will have with you smoked meat and fish; you will carry under
+your arm an Indian clock or sundial; you will have a lamp&mdash;if we can
+find a clamshell or a broken bottle&mdash;and you will have a fire-making
+outfit with your monogram on it."
+</p>
+<p>
+"But, my dear friend," he said, "I am not supposed to have any
+assistance and&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Assistance!" Tish snapped. "Who said assistance? I'm providing the
+brains, but you'll do it all yourself."
+</p>
+<p>
+He moved over an hour or so later and Tish and I went into the tent to
+bed. Somewhat later, when she limped to the fire to see how the leech
+was filling up, he and Aggie were sitting together talking, he of
+Dorothea and Aggie of Mr. Wiggins. Tish said they were both talking at
+the same time, neither one listening to the other, and that it sounded
+like this:&mdash;"She's so sweet and trusting and honest&mdash;well, I'd believe
+what she said if she&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+"&mdash;fell off a roof on a rainy day and was picked up by a man with a
+horse and buggy quite unconscious."
+</p>
+
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<h3><a name="h2H_4_0015" id="h2H_4_0015"></a>
+ V
+</h3>
+<p>
+The next three weeks were busy times for Percy. He wore Tish's blanket
+for two days, and then, finding it in the way, he discarded it
+altogether. Seen in daylight it was easy to understand why little
+Dorothea was in love with him. He was a handsome young giant, although
+much bitten by mosquitoes and scratched with briers.
+</p>
+<p>
+The arrangement was a good one all round. He knew of things in the wood
+we'd never heard of&mdash;wild onions and artichokes, and he had found a
+clump of wild cherry trees. He made snares of the fibers of tree bark,
+and he brought in turtles and made plates out of the shells. And all the
+time he was working on his outfit, curing rabbit skins and sewing them
+together with fibers under my direction.
+</p>
+<p>
+When he'd made one sleeve of his coat we had a sort of celebration.
+He'd found an empty bottle somewhere in the woods, and he had made a
+wild-cherry decoction that he declared was cherry brandy, keeping it in
+the sun to ferment. Well, he insisted on opening the brandy that day and
+passing it round. We had cups made of leaves and we drank to his sleeve,
+although the stuff was villainous. He had put the sleeve on, and it
+looked rather inadequate. "Here's fun," he said joyously. "If my English
+tailor could see this sleeve he'd die of envy. A sleeve's not all of a
+coat, but what's a coat without a sleeve? Look at it&mdash;grace, ease of
+line, and beauty of material."
+</p>
+<p>
+Aggie lifted her leaf.
+</p>
+<p>
+"To Dorothea!" she said. "And may the sleeve soon be about her."
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish thought this toast was not delicate, but Percy was enchanted with
+it.
+</p>
+<p>
+It was on the evening of the fourth day of Percy's joining our camp that
+the Willoughby person appeared. It happened at a most inauspicious time.
+We had eaten supper and were gathered round the camp-fire and Tish had
+put wet leaves on the blaze to make a smudge that would drive the
+mosquitoes away. We were sitting there, Tish and I coughing and Aggie
+sneezing in the smoke, when Percy came running through the woods and
+stopped at the foot of a tree near by.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Bring a club, somebody," he yelled. "I've treed the back of my coat."
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish ran with one of the tent poles. A tepee is inconvenient for that
+reason. Every time any one wants a fishing-pole or a weapon, the tent
+loses part of its bony structure and sags like the face of a stout woman
+who has reduced. And it turned out that Percy had treed a coon. He
+climbed up after it, taking Tish's pole with him to dislodge it, and it
+was at that moment that a man rode into the clearing and practically
+fell off his horse. He was dirty and scratched with brambles, and his
+once immaculate riding-clothes were torn. He was about to take off his
+hat when he got a good look at us and changed his mind.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Have you got anything to eat?" he asked. "I've been lost since noon
+yesterday and I'm about all in."
+</p>
+<p>
+The leaves caught fire suddenly and sent a glow into Percy's tree. I
+shall never forget Aggie's agonized look or the way Tish flung on more
+wet leaves in a hurry.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'm sorry," she said, "but supper's over."
+</p>
+<p>
+"But surely a starving man&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+"You won't starve inside of a week," Tish snapped. "You've got enough
+flesh on you for a month."
+</p>
+<p>
+He stared at her incredulously.
+</p>
+<p>
+"But, my good woman," he said, "I can pay for my food. Even you
+itinerant folk need money now and then, don't you? Come, now, cook me a
+fish; I'll pay for it. My name is Willoughby&mdash;J.K. Willoughby. Perhaps
+you've heard of me."
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish cast a swift glance into the tree. It was in shadow again and she
+drew a long breath. She said afterward that the whole plan came to her
+in the instant of that breath.
+</p>
+<p>
+"We can give you something," she said indifferently. "We have a stewed
+rabbit, if you care for it."
+</p>
+<p>
+There was a wild scramble in the tree at that moment, and we thought all
+was over. We learned later that Percy had made a move to climb higher,
+out of the firelight, and the coon had been so startled that he almost
+fell out. But instead of looking up to investigate, the stranger backed
+toward the fire.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Only a wildcat," said Tish. "They'll not come near the fire."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Near!" exclaimed Mr. Willoughby. "If they came any nearer, they'd have
+to get into it!"
+</p>
+<p>
+"I think," said Tish, "that if you are afraid of them&mdash;although you are
+safe enough if you don't get under the trees; they jump down, you
+know&mdash;that you would better stay by the fire to-night. In the morning
+we'll start you toward a road."
+</p>
+<p>
+All night with Percy in the tree! I gave her a savage glance, but she
+ignored me.
+</p>
+<p>
+The Willoughby looked up nervously, and of course there were trees all
+about.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I guess I'll stay," he agreed. "What about that rabbit?"
+</p>
+<p>
+I did not know Tish's plan at that time, and while Aggie was feeding the
+Willoughby person and he was grumbling over his food, I took Tish aside.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Are you crazy?" I demanded. "Just through your idiocy Percy will have
+to stay in that tree all night&mdash;and he'll go to sleep, likely, and fall
+out."
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish eyed me coldly.
+</p>
+<p>
+"You are a good soul, Lizzie," she observed, "but don't overwork your
+mind. Go back and do something easy&mdash;let the Willoughby cross your palm
+with silver, and tell his fortune. If he asks any questions I'm queen of
+the gypsies, and give him to understand that we're in temporary hiding
+from the law. The worse he thinks of us the better. Remember, we haven't
+seen Percy."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'm not going to lie," I said sternly.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Pooh!" Tish sneered. "That wretch came into the woods to gloat over his
+rival's misery. The truth's too good for him."
+</p>
+<p>
+I did my best, and I still have the silver dollar he gave me. I told him
+I saw a small girl, who loved him but didn't realize it yet, and there
+was another man.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Good gracious," I said, "there must be something wrong with your palm.
+I see the other man, but he seems to be in trouble. His clothing has
+been stolen, for he has none, and he is hungry, very hungry."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Ha!" said Mr. Willoughby, looking startled. "You old gypsies beat the
+devil! Hungry, eh? Is that all?"
+</p>
+<p>
+The light flared up again and I could see clearly the pale spot in the
+tree, which was Percy. But Mr. Willoughby's eyes were on his palm.
+</p>
+<p>
+"He has about decided to give up something&mdash;I cannot see just what," I
+said loudly. "He seems to be in the air, in a tree, perhaps. If he
+wishes to be safe he should go higher."
+</p>
+<p>
+Percy took the hint and moved up, and I said that was all there was in
+the palm. Soon after that Mr. Willoughby stretched out on the ground by
+the fire, and before long he was asleep.
+</p>
+<p>
+During the night I heard Tish moving stealthily about in the tepee and
+she stepped on my ankle as she went out. I fell asleep again as soon as
+it stopped aching. Just at dawn Tish came back and touched me on the
+shoulder.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Where's the blackberry cordial?" she whispered I sat up instantly.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Has Percy fallen out of the tree?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"No. Don't ask any questions, Lizzie. I want it for myself. That dratted
+horse fell on me."
+</p>
+<p>
+She refused to say any more and lay down groaning. But I was too worried
+to sleep again. In the morning Percy was gone from the tree. Mr.
+Willoughby had more rabbit and prepared to leave the forest. He offered
+Tish a dollar for the two meals and a bed, and Tish, who was moving
+about stiffly, said that she and her people took no money for their
+hospitality. Telling fortunes was one thing, bread and salt was another.
+She looked quite haughty, and the Willoughby person apologized and went
+into the woods to get his horse.
+</p>
+<p>
+The horse was gone!
+</p>
+<p>
+It was rather disagreeable for a time. He plainly thought we'd taken it,
+although Tish showed him that the end of the strap had been chewed
+partly through and then jerked free.
+</p>
+<p>
+"If the creature smelled a wildcat," she said, "nothing would hold it.
+None of my people ever bring a horse into this part of the country."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Humph!" said Mr. Willoughby. "Well, I'll bet they take a few out!"
+</p>
+<p>
+He departed on foot shortly after, very disgusted and suspicious. We
+showed him the trail, and the last we saw of him he was striding along,
+looking up now and then for wildcats.
+</p>
+<p>
+When he was well on his way, Percy emerged from the bushes. I had
+thought that he had helped Tish to take the Willoughby horse, but it
+seems he had not, and he was much amazed when Tish came through the wood
+leading the creature by the broken strap.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'll turn it loose," she said to Percy, "and you can capture it. It
+will make a good effect for you to emerge from the forest on horseback,
+and anyhow, what with the rabbit skin, the tent, and the sundial and the
+other things, you have a lot to carry. You can say you found it straying
+in the woods and captured it."
+</p>
+<p>
+Percy looked at her with admiration not unmixed with reverence. "Miss
+Letitia," he said solemnly, "if it were not for Dorothea, I should ask
+you to marry me. I'd like to have you in my family."
+</p>
+<hr />
+<p>
+I am very nearly to the end of my narrative.
+</p>
+<p>
+Toward the last Percy was obliged to work far into the night, for of
+course we could not assist him. He made a full suit of rabbit skins
+sewed with fibers, and a cap and shoes of coonskin to match. The shoes
+were cut from a bedroom-slipper pattern that Tish traced in the sand on
+the beach, and the cap had an eagle feather in it. He made a birch-bark
+knapsack to hold the fish he smoked and a bow and arrow that looked well
+but would not shoot. When he had the outfit completed, he put it on,
+with the stone hatchet stuck into a grapevine belt and the bow and arrow
+over his shoulder, and he looked superb.
+</p>
+<p>
+"The question is," he reflected, trying to view himself in the edge of
+the lake: "Will Dorothea like it? She's very keen about clothes. And
+gee, how she hates a beard!"
+</p>
+<p>
+"You could shave as the Indians do," Tish said.
+</p>
+<p>
+"How?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"With a clamshell."
+</p>
+<p>
+He looked dubious, but Tish assured him it was feasible. So he hunted a
+clamshell, a double one, Tish requested, and brought it into camp.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'd better do it for you," said Tish. "It's likely to be slow, but it
+is sure."
+</p>
+<p>
+He was eyeing the clamshell and looking more and more uneasy.
+</p>
+<p>
+"You're not going to scrape it off?" he asked anxiously. "You know,
+pumice would be better for that, but somehow I don't like the idea."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Nothing of the sort," said Tish. "The double clamshell merely forms a
+pair of Indian nippers. I'm going to pull it out."
+</p>
+<p>
+But he made quite a fuss about it, and said he didn't care whether the
+Indians did it or not, he wouldn't. I think he saw how disappointed Tish
+was and was afraid she would attempt it while he slept, for he threw the
+Indian nippers into the lake and then went over and kissed her hand.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Dear Miss Tish," he said; "no one realizes more than I your inherent
+nobility of soul and steadfastness of purpose. I admire them both. But
+if you attempt the Indian nipper business, or to singe me like a chicken
+while I sleep, I shall be&mdash;forgive me, but I know my impulsiveness of
+disposition&mdash;I shall be really vexed with you."
+</p>
+<p>
+Toward the last we all became uneasy for fear hard work was telling on
+him physically. He used to sit cross-legged on the ground, sewing for
+dear life and singing Hood's "Song of the Shirt" in a doleful tenor.
+</p>
+<p>
+"You know," he said, "I've thought once or twice I'd like to do
+something&mdash;have a business like other fellows. But somehow dressmaking
+never occurred to me. Don't you think the expression of this right pant
+is good? And shall I make this gore bias or on the selvage?"
+</p>
+<p>
+He wanted to slash one trouser leg.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Why not?" he demanded when Tish frowned him down. "It's awfully
+fetching, and beauty half-revealed, you know. Do you suppose my
+breastbone will ever straighten out again? It's concave from stooping."
+</p>
+<p>
+It was after this that Tish made him exercise morning and evening and
+then take a swim in the lake. By the time he was to start back, he was
+in wonderful condition, and even the horse looked saucy and shiny, owing
+to our rubbing him down each day with dried grasses.
+</p>
+<p>
+The actual leave-taking was rather sad. We'd grown to think a lot of the
+boy and I believe he liked us. He kissed each one of us twice, once for
+himself and once for Dorothea, and flushed a little over doing it, and
+Aggie's eyes were full of tears.
+</p>
+<p>
+He rode away down the trail like a mixture of Robinson Crusoe and Indian
+brave, his rubbing-fire stick, his sundial with burned figures, and his
+bow and arrow jingling, his eagle feather blowing back in the wind, and
+his moccasined feet thrust into Mr. Willoughby's stirrups, and left us
+desolate. Tish watched him out of sight with set lips and Aggie was
+whimpering on a bank.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Tish," she said brokenly, "does he recall anything to you?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Only my age," said Tish rather wearily, "and that I'm an elderly
+spinster teaching children to defy their parents and committing larceny
+to help them."
+</p>
+<p>
+"To me," said Aggie softly, "he is young love going out to seek his
+mate. Oh, Tish, do you remember how Mr. Wiggins used to ride by taking
+his work horses to be shod!"
+</p>
+<hr />
+<p>
+We went home the following day, which was the time the spring-wagon man
+was to meet us. We started very early and were properly clothed and
+hatted when we saw him down the road.
+</p>
+<p>
+The spring-wagon person came on without hurry and surveyed us as he
+came.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Well, ladies," he said, stopping before us, "I see you pulled it off
+all right."
+</p>
+<p>
+"We've had a very nice time, thank you," said Tish, drawing on her
+gloves. "It's been rather lonely, of course."
+</p>
+<p>
+The spring-wagon person did not speak again until he had reached the
+open road. Then he turned round.
+</p>
+<p>
+"The horse business was pretty good," he said. "You ought to hev seen
+them folks when he rode out of the wood. Flabbergasted ain't the word.
+They was ding-busted."
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish whispered to us to show moderate interest and to say as little as
+possible, except to protest our ignorance. And we got the story at last
+like this:&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+It seems the newspapers had been full of the attempt Percy was to make,
+and so on the day before quite a crowd had gathered to see him come out
+of the wood.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Ten of these here automobiles," said the spring-wagon person, "and a
+hay-wagon full of newspaper fellows from the city with cameras, and
+about half the village back home walked out or druv and brought their
+lunches&mdash;sort of a picnic. I kep' my eye on the girl and on a Mr.
+Willoughby.
+</p>
+<p>
+"The story is that Willoughby who was the father's choice&mdash;Willoughby
+was pale and twitching and kep' moving about all the time. But the girl,
+she just kep' her eyes on the trail and waited. Noon was the time set,
+or as near it as possible.
+</p>
+<p>
+"The father talked to the newspaper men mostly. 'I don't think he'll
+do it, boys!' he said. 'He's as soft as milk and he's surprised me by
+sticking it out as long as he has. But mark my words, boys,' he said,
+'he's been living on berries and things he could pick up off the ground,
+and if his physical condition's bad he loses all bets!"
+</p>
+<p>
+It seems that, just as he said it, somebody pulled out a watch and
+announced "noon." And on the instant Percy was seen riding down the
+trail and whistling. At first they did not know it was he, as they had
+expected him to arrive on foot, staggering with fatigue probably. He
+rode out into the sunlight, still whistling, and threw an unconcerned
+glance over the crowd.
+</p>
+<p>
+He looked at the trees, and located north by the moss on the trunks, the
+S.-W.P. said, and unslinging his Indian clock he held it in front of
+him, pointing north and south. It showed exactly noon. It was then, and
+not until then, that Percy addressed the astonished crowd.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Twelve o'clock, gentlemen," he said. "My watch is quite accurate."
+</p>
+<p>
+Nobody said anything, being, as the S.-W.P. remarked, struck dumb. But
+a moment afterward the hay-wagon started a cheer and the machines took
+it up. Even the father "let loose," as we learned, and the little girl
+sat back in her motor car and smiled through her tears.
+</p>
+<p>
+But Willoughby was furious. It seems he had recognized the horse.
+"That's my horse," he snarled. "You stole it from me."
+</p>
+<p>
+"As a matter of fact," Percy retorted, "I found the beast wandering
+loose among the trees and I'm perfectly willing to return him to you. I
+brought him out for a purpose."
+</p>
+<p>
+"To make a Garrison finish!"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Not entirely. To prove that you violated the contract by going into the
+forest to see if you could find me and gloat over my misery. Instead you
+found&mdash;By the way, Willoughby, did you see any wild-cats?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Those three hags are in this!" said Willoughby furiously. "Are you
+willing to swear you made that silly outfit?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"I am, but not to you."
+</p>
+<p>
+"And at that minute, if you'll believe me," said the S.-W.P., "the girl
+got out of her machine and walked right up to the Percy fellow. I was
+standing right by and I heard what she said. It was curious, seeing
+he'd had no help and had gone in naked, as you may say, and came out
+clothed head to foot, with a horse and weapons and a watch, and able to
+make fire in thirty-one seconds, and a tent made of about a thousand
+rabbit skins."
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish eyed him coldly.
+</p>
+<p>
+"What did she say?" she demanded severely. "She said: 'Those three dear
+old things!'" replied the S.-W.P. "And she said: 'I hope you kissed
+them for me.'"
+</p>
+<p>
+"He did indeed," said Aggie dreamily, and only roused when Tish nudged
+her in a rage.
+</p>
+<hr />
+<p>
+Charlie Sands came to have tea with us yesterday at Tish's. He is just
+back from England and full of the subject.
+</p>
+<p>
+"But after all," he said, "the Simple Lifers take the palm. Think of it,
+my three revered and dearly beloved spinster friends; think of the
+peace, the holy calm of it! Now, if you three would only drink less tea
+and once in a while would get back to Nature a bit, it would be good for
+you. You're all too civilized."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Probably," said Tish, pulling down her sleeves to hide her sunburned
+hands. "But do you think people have so much time in the&mdash;er&mdash;woods?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Time!" he repeated. "Why, what is there to do?"
+</p>
+<p>
+Just then the doorbell rang and a huge box was carried in. Tish had a
+warning and did not wish to open it, but Charlie Sands insisted and cut
+the string. Inside were three sets of sable furs, handsomer than any in
+the church, Tish says, and I know I've never seen any like them.
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish and I hid the cards, but Aggie dropped hers and Charlie Sands
+pounced on it.
+</p>
+<p>
+"'The sleeve is now about Dorothea,'" he read aloud, and then, turning,
+eyed us all sternly.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Now, then," said Charlie Sands, "out with it! What have you been up to
+this time?"
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish returned his gaze calmly. "We have been in the Maine woods in the
+holy calm," she said. "As for those furs, I suppose a body may buy a set
+of furs if she likes." This, of course, was not a lie. "As for that
+card, it's a mistake." Which it was indeed.
+</p>
+<p>
+"But&mdash;Dorothea!" persisted Charlie Sands.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Never in my life knew anybody named Dorothea. Did you, Aggie?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Never," said Aggie firmly.
+</p>
+<p>
+Charlie Sands apologized and looked thoughtful. On Tish's remaining
+rather injured, he asked us all out to dinner that night, and almost the
+first thing he ordered was frogs' legs. Aggie got rather white about the
+lips.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I&mdash;I think I'll not take any," she said feebly. "I&mdash;I keep thinking of
+Tish tickling their throats with the hairpin, and how Percy&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+We glared at her, but it was too late. Charlie Sands drew up his chair
+and rested his elbows on the table.
+</p>
+<p>
+"So there was a Percy as well as a Dorothea!" he said cheerfully. "I
+might have known it. Now we'll have the story!"
+</p>
+
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<h2><a name="h2H_4_0016" id="h2H_4_0016"></a>
+ TISH'S SPY
+</h2>
+<h3>
+THE ADVENTURE OF THE RED-HEADED DETECTIVE, THE LADY CHAUFFEUR, AND THE
+MAN WHO COULD NOT TELL THE TRUTH
+</h3>
+<h3>
+I
+</h3>
+<p>
+It is easy enough, of course, to look back on our Canadian experience
+and see where we went wrong. What I particularly resent is the attitude
+of Charlie Sands.
+</p>
+<p>
+I am writing this for his benefit. It seems to me that a clean statement
+of the case is due to Tish, and, in less degree, to Aggie and myself.
+</p>
+<p>
+It goes back long before the mysterious cipher. Even the incident of our
+abducting the girl in the pink tam-o'-shanter was, after all, the
+inevitable result of the series of occurrences that preceded it.
+</p>
+<p>
+It is my intention to give this series of occurrences in their proper
+order and without bias. Herbert Spencer says that every act of one's
+life is the unavoidable result of every act that has preceded it.
+</p>
+<p>
+Naturally, therefore, I begin with the engagement by Tish of a girl as
+chauffeur; but even before that there were contributing causes. There
+was the faulty rearing of the McDonald youth, for instance, and Tish's
+æsthetic dancing. And afterward there was Aggie's hay fever, which made
+her sneeze and let go of a rope at a critical moment. Indeed, Aggie's
+hay fever may be said to be one of the fundamental causes, being the
+reason we went to Canada.
+</p>
+<p>
+It was like this: Along in June of the year before last, Aggie suddenly
+announced that she was going to spend the summer in Canada.
+</p>
+<p>
+"It's the best thing in the world for hay fever," she said, avoiding
+Tish's eye. "Mrs. Ostermaier says she never sneezed once last year. The
+Northern Lights fill the air with ozone, or something like that."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Fill the air with ozone!" Tish scoffed. "Fill Mrs. Ostermaier's skull
+with ozone, instead of brains, more likely!"
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish is a good woman&mdash;a sweet woman, indeed; but she has a vein of
+gentle irony, which she inherited from her maternal grandfather, who was
+on the Supreme Bench of his country. However, that spring she was
+inclined to be irritable. She could not drive her car, and that was
+where the trouble really started.
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish had taken up æsthetic dancing in March, wearing no stays and a
+middy blouse and short skirt; and during a fairy dance, where she was to
+twirl on her right toes, keeping the three other limbs horizontal, she
+twisted her right lower limb severely. Though not incapacitated, she
+could not use it properly; and, failing one day to put on the brake
+quickly, she drove into an open-front butter-and-egg shop.
+</p>
+<p>
+[This was the time one of the newspapers headed the article: "Even the
+Eggs Scrambled."]
+</p>
+<p>
+When Tish decided to have a chauffeur for a time she advertised. There
+were plenty of replies, but all of the applicants smoked cigarettes&mdash;a
+habit Tish very properly deplores. The idea of securing a young woman
+was, I must confess, mine.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Plenty of young women drive cars," I said, "and drive well. And, at
+least, they don't light a cigarette every time one stops to let a train
+go by."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Huh!" Tish commented. "And have a raft of men about all the time!"
+</p>
+<p>
+Nevertheless, she acted on the suggestion, advertising for a young woman
+who could drive a car and had no followers. Hutchins answered.
+</p>
+<p>
+She was very pretty and not over twenty; but, asked about men, her face
+underwent a change, almost a hardening. "You'll not be bothered with
+men," she said briefly. "I detest them!"
+</p>
+<p>
+And this seemed to be the truth. Charlie Sands, for instance, for whose
+benefit this is being written, absolutely failed to make any impression
+on her. She met his overtures with cold disdain. She was also adamant
+to the men at the garage, succeeding in having the gasoline filtered
+through a chamois skin to take out the water, where Tish had for years
+begged for the same thing without success.
+</p>
+<p>
+Though a dashing driver, Hutchins was careful. She sat on the small of
+her back and hurled us past the traffic policemen with a smile.
+</p>
+<p>
+[Her name was really Hutchinson; but it took so long to say it at the
+rate she ran the car that Tish changed it to Hutchins.]
+</p>
+<p>
+Really the whole experiment seemed to be an undoubted success, when
+Aggie got the notion of Canada into her head. Now, as it happened,
+owing to Tish's disapproval, Aggie gave up the Canada idea in favor
+of Nantucket, some time in June; but she had not reckoned with Tish's
+subconscious self. Tish was interested that spring in the subconscious
+self.
+</p>
+<p>
+You may remember that, only a year or so before, it had been the fourth
+dimension.
+</p>
+<p>
+[She became convinced that if one were sufficiently earnest one could go
+through closed doors and see into solids. In the former ambition she was
+unsuccessful, obtaining only bruises and disappointment; but she did
+develop the latter to a certain extent, for she met the laundress going
+out one day and, without a conscious effort, she knew that she had the
+best table napkins pinned to her petticoat. She accused the woman
+sternly&mdash;and she had six!]
+</p>
+<p>
+"Nantucket!" said Tish. "Why Nantucket?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"I have a niece there, and you said you hated Canada."
+</p>
+<p>
+"On the contrary," Tish replied, with her eyes partly shut, "I find
+that my subconscious self has adopted and been working on the Canadian
+suggestion. What a wonderful thing is this buried and greater ego!
+Worms, rifles, fishing-rods, 'The Complete Angler,' mosquito netting,
+canned goods, and sleeping-bags, all in my mind and in orderly array!"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Worms!" I said, with, I confess, a touch of scorn in my voice. "If you
+will tell me, Tish Carberry&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Life preservers," chanted Tish's subconscious self, "rubber blankets,
+small tent, folding camp-beds, a camp-stove, a meat-saw, a wood-saw,
+and some beads and gewgaws for placating the Indians." Then she opened
+her eyes and took up her knitting. "There are no worms in Canada,
+Lizzie, just as there are no snakes in Ireland. They were all destroyed
+during the glacial period."
+</p>
+<p>
+"There are plenty of worms in the United States," I said with spirit.
+"I dare say they could crawl over the border&mdash;unless, of course, they
+object to being British subjects."
+</p>
+<p>
+She ignored me, however, and, getting up, went to one of her bureau
+drawers. We saw then that her subconscious self had written down
+lists of various things for the Canadian excursion. There was one
+headed Foodstuffs. Others were: Necessary Clothing; Camp Outfit;
+Fishing-Tackle; Weapons of Defense; and Diversions. Under this last
+heading it had placed binoculars, yarn and needles, life preservers,
+a prayer-book, and a cribbage-board.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Boats," she said, "we can secure from the Indians, who make them, I
+believe, of hollow logs. And I shall rent a motor boat. Hutchins says
+she can manage one. When she's not doing that she can wash dishes."
+</p>
+<p>
+[We had been rather chary of motor boats, you may remember, since the
+time on Lake Penzance, when something jammed on our engine, and we had
+gone madly round the lake a number of times, with people on various
+docks trying to lasso us with ropes.]
+</p>
+<p>
+Considering that it was she who had started the whole thing, and got
+Tish's subconscious mind to working, Aggie was rather pettish.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Huh!" she said. "I can't swim, and you know it, Tish. Those canoe
+things turn over if you so much as sneeze in them."
+</p>
+<p>
+"You'll not sneeze," said Tish. "The Northern Lights fill the air with
+ozone."
+</p>
+<p>
+Aggie looked at me helplessly; but I could do nothing. Only the year
+before, Tish, as you may recall, had taken us out into the Maine woods
+without any outfit at all, and we had lived on snared rabbits, and
+things that no Christian woman ought to put into her stomach. This time
+we were at least to go provisioned and equipped.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Where are we going?" Aggie asked.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Far from a white man," said Tish. "Away from milk wagons and children
+on velocipedes and the grocer calling up every morning for an order.
+We'll go to the Far North, Aggie, where the red man still treads his
+native forests; we'll make our camp by some lake, where the deer come at
+early morning to drink and fish leap to see the sunset."
+</p>
+<p>
+Well, it sounded rather refreshing, though I confess that, until Tish
+mentioned it, I had always thought that fish leaped in the evening to
+catch mosquitoes.
+</p>
+<p>
+We sent for Hutchins at once. She was always respectful, but never
+subservient. She stood in the doorway while Tish explained.
+</p>
+<p>
+"How far north?" she said crisply. Tish told her. "We'll have no
+cut-and-dried destination," she said. "There's a little steamer goes up
+the river I have in mind. We'll get off when we see a likely place."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Are you going for trout or bass?"
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish was rather uncertain, but she said bass on a chance, and Hutchins
+nodded her approval.
+</p>
+<p>
+"If it's bass, I'll go," she said. "I'm not fond of trout-fishing."
+</p>
+<p>
+"We shall have a motor boat. Of course I shall not take the car."
+</p>
+<p>
+Hutchins agreed indifferently. "Don't you worry about the motor boat,"
+she said. "Sometimes they go, and sometimes they don't. And I'll help
+round the camp; but I'll not wash dishes."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Why not?" Tish demanded.
+</p>
+<p>
+"The reason doesn't really matter, does it? What really concerns you is
+the fact."
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish stared at her; but instead of quailing before Tish's majestic eye
+she laughed a little.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I've camped before," she said. "I'm very useful about a camp. I like to
+cook; but I won't wash dishes. I'd like, if you don't mind, to see the
+grocery order before it goes."
+</p>
+<p>
+Well, Aggie likes to wash dishes if there is plenty of hot water; and
+Hannah, Tish's maid, refusing to go with us on account of Indians, it
+seemed wisest to accept Hutchins's services.
+</p>
+<p>
+Hannah's defection was most unexpected. As soon as we reached our
+decision, Tish ordered beads for the Indians; and in the evenings we
+strung necklaces, and so on, while one of us read aloud from the works
+of Cooper. On the second evening thus occupied, Hannah, who is allowed
+to come into Tish's sitting-room in the evening and knit, suddenly
+burst into tears and refused to go.
+</p>
+<p>
+"My scalp's as good to me as it is to anybody, Miss Tish," she said
+hysterically; and nothing would move her.
+</p>
+<p>
+She said she would run no risk of being cooked over her own camp-fire;
+and from that time on she would gaze at Tish for long periods
+mournfully, as though she wanted to remember how she looked when she was
+gone forever.
+</p>
+<p>
+Except for Hannah, everything moved smoothly. Tish told Charlie Sands
+about the plan, and he was quite enthusiastic.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Great scheme!" he said. "Eat a broiled black bass for me. And take the
+advice of one who knows: don't skimp on your fishing-tackle. Get the
+best. Go light on the canned goods, if necessary; but get the best reels
+and lines on the market. Nothing in life hurts so much," he said
+impressively, "as to get a three-pound bass to the top of the water and
+have your line break. I've had a big fellow get away like that and chase
+me a mile with its thumb on its nose." This last, of course, was purely
+figurative.
+</p>
+<p>
+He went away whistling. I wish he had been less optimistic. When we came
+back and told him the whole story, and he sat with his mouth open and
+his hair, as he said, crackling at the roots, I reminded him with some
+bitterness that he had encouraged us. His only retort was to say that
+the excursion itself had been harmless enough; but that if three elderly
+ladies, church members in good standing, chose to become freebooters and
+pirates the moment they got away from a corner policeman, they need not
+blame him.
+</p>
+<p>
+The last thing he said that day in June was about fishing-worms.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Take 'em with you," he said. "They charge a cent apiece for them up
+there, assorted colors, and there's something stolid and British about a
+Canadian worm. The fish aren't crazy about 'em. On the other hand, our
+worms here are&mdash;er&mdash;vivacious, animated. I've seen a really brisk and
+on-to-its-job United States worm reach out and clutch a bass by the
+gills."
+</p>
+<p>
+I believe it was the next day that Tish went to the library and read
+about worms. Aggie and I had spent the day buying tackle, according to
+Charlie Sands's advice. We got some very good rods with nickel-plated
+reels for two dollars and a quarter, a dozen assorted hooks for each
+person, and a dozen sinkers. The man wanted to sell us what he called a
+"landing net," but I took a good look at it and pinched Aggie.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I can make one out of a barrel hoop and mosquito netting," I whispered;
+so we did not buy it.
+</p>
+<p>
+Perhaps he thought we were novices, for he insisted on showing us all
+sorts of absurd things&mdash;trolling-hooks, he called them; gaff hooks for
+landing big fish and a spoon that was certainly no spoon and did not
+fool us for a minute, being only a few hooks and a red feather. He asked
+a dollar and a quarter for it!
+</p>
+<p>
+[I made one that night at home, using a bit of red feather from a
+duster. It cost me just three cents. Of that, as of Hutchins, more
+later.]
+</p>
+<p>
+Aggie, whose idea of Canada had been the Hotel Frontenac, had grown
+rather depressed as our preparations proceeded. She insisted that night
+on recalling the fact that Mr. Wiggins had been almost drowned in
+Canada.
+</p>
+<p>
+"He went with the Roof and Gutter Club, Lizzie," she said, "and he was a
+beautiful swimmer; but the water comes from the North Pole, freezing
+cold, and the first thing he knew&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+The telephone bell rang just then. It was Tish.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I've just come from the library, Lizzie," she said. "We'd better raise
+the worms. We've got a month to do it in. Hutchins and I will be round
+with the car at eight o'clock to-night. Night is the time to get them."
+</p>
+<p>
+She refused to go into details, but asked us to have an electric flash
+or two ready and a couple of wooden pails. Also she said to wear
+mackintoshes and rubbers. Just before she rang off, she asked me to see
+that there was a package of oatmeal on hand, but did not explain. When I
+told Aggie she eyed me miserably.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I wish she'd be either more explicit or less," she said. "We'll be
+arrested again. I know it!"
+</p>
+<p>
+[Now and then Tish's enthusiasms have brought us into collision with the
+law&mdash;not that Tish has not every respect for law and order, but that she
+is apt to be hasty and at times almost unconventional.]
+</p>
+<p>
+"You remember," said Aggie, "that time she tried to shoot the sheriff,
+thinking he was a train robber? She started just like this&mdash;reading up
+about walking-tours, and all that. I&mdash;I'm nervous, Lizzie."
+</p>
+<p>
+I was staying with Aggie for a few days while my apartment was being
+papered. To soothe Aggie's nerves I read aloud from Gibbon's "Rome"
+until dinner-time, and she grew gradually calmer.
+</p>
+<p>
+"After all, Lizzie," she said, "she can't get us into mischief with two
+wooden pails and a package of oatmeal."
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish and Hutchins came promptly at eight and we got into the car. Tish
+wore the intent and dreamy look that always preceded her enterprises.
+There was a tin sprinkling-can, quite new, in the tonneau, and we placed
+our wooden pails beside it and the oatmeal in it. I confess I was
+curious, but to my inquiries Tish made only one reply:&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+"Worms!"
+</p>
+<p>
+Now I do not like worms. I do not like to touch them. I do not even like
+to look at them. As the machine went along I began to have a creepy
+loathing of them. Aggie must have been feeling the same way, for when my
+hand touched hers she squealed.
+</p>
+<p>
+Over her shoulder Tish told her plan. She said it was easy to get
+fishing-worms at night and that Hutchins knew of a place a few miles out
+of town where the family was away and where there would be plenty.
+</p>
+<p>
+"We'll put them in boxes of earth," she said, "and feed them coffee or
+tea grounds one day and oatmeal water the next. They propagate rapidly.
+We'll have a million to take with us. If we only have a hundred thousand
+at a cent apiece, that's a clear saving of a thousand dollars."
+</p>
+<p>
+"We could sell some," I suggested sarcastically; for Tish's enthusiasms
+have a way of going wrong.
+</p>
+<p>
+But she took me seriously. "If there are any fishing clubs about," she
+said, "I dare say they'll buy them; and we can turn the money over to
+Mr. Ostermaier for the new organ."
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish had bought the organ and had an evening concert with it before we
+turned off the main road into a private drive.
+</p>
+<p>
+"This is the place," Hutchins said laconically.
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish got out and took a survey. There was shrubbery all round and a very
+large house, quite dark, in the foreground.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Drive onto the lawn, Hutchins," she said. "When the worms come up, the
+lamps will dazzle them and they'll be easy to capture."
+</p>
+<p>
+We bumped over a gutter and came to a stop in the middle of the lawn.
+</p>
+<p>
+"It would be better if it was raining," Tish said. "You know, yourself,
+Lizzie, how they come up during a gentle rain. Give me the
+sprinkling-can."
+</p>
+<p>
+I do not wish to lay undue blame on Hutchins, who was young; but it was
+she who suggested that there would probably be a garden hose somewhere
+and that it would save time. I know she went with Tish round the corner
+of the house, and that they returned in ten minutes or so, dragging a
+hose.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I broke a tool-house window," Tish observed, "but I left fifty cents
+on the sill to replace it. It's attached at the other end. Run back,
+Hutchins, and turn on the water; but not too much. We needn't drown the
+little creatures."
+</p>
+<p>
+Well, I have never seen anything work better. Aggie, who had refused to
+put a foot out of the car, stood up in it and held the hose. As fast as
+she wet a bit of lawn, we followed with the pails. I spread my
+mackintosh out and knelt on it.
+</p>
+
+<div class="figure" style="width: 75%;">
+<a name="image-0007"></a>
+<img src="images/ill-05.jpg" width="100%"
+alt="As fast as she wet a bit of lawn, we followed with the pails" /><br />
+As fast as she wet a bit of lawn, we followed with the pails
+</div>
+
+<p>
+The thing took skill. The worms had a way of snapping back into their
+holes like lightning.
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish got about three to my one, and talked about packing them in moss
+and ice, and feeding them every other day. Hutchins, however, stood on
+the lawn, with her hands in her pockets, and watched the house.
+</p>
+<p>
+Suddenly, without warning, Aggie turned the hose directly on my left ear
+and held it there.
+</p>
+<p>
+"There's somebody coming!" she cried. "Merciful Heavens, what'll I do
+with the hose?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"You can turn it away from me!" I snapped.
+</p>
+<p>
+So she did, and at that instant a young man emerged from the shrubbery.
+</p>
+<p>
+He did not speak at once. Probably he could not. I happened to look at
+Hutchins, and, for all her usual <i>savoir-faire</i>, as Charlie Sands called
+it, she was clearly uncomfortable.
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish, engaged in a struggle at that moment and sitting back like a
+robin, did not see him at once.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Well!" said the young man; and again: "Well, upon my word!"
+</p>
+<p>
+He seemed out of breath with surprise; and he took off his hat and
+mopped his head with a handkerchief. And, of course, as though things
+were not already bad enough, Aggie sneezed at that instant, as she
+always does when she is excited; and for just a second the hose was
+on him.
+</p>
+<p>
+It was unexpected and he almost staggered. He looked at all of us,
+including Hutchins, and ran his handkerchief round inside his collar.
+Then he found his voice.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Really," he said, "this is awfully good of you. We do need rain&mdash;don't
+we?"
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish was on her feet by that time, but she could not think of anything
+to say.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'm sorry if I startled you," said the young man. "I&mdash;I'm a bit
+startled myself."
+</p>
+<p>
+"There is nothing to make a fuss about!" said Hutchins crisply. "We are
+getting worms to go fishing."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I see," said the young man. "Quite natural, I'm sure. And where are you
+going fishing?"
+</p>
+<p>
+Hutchins surprised us all by rudely turning her back on him. Considering
+we were on his property and had turned his own hose on him, a little
+tact would have been better.
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish had found her voice by that time. "We broke a window in the
+tool-house," she said; "but I put fifty cents on the sill."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Thank you," said the young man.
+</p>
+<p>
+Hutchins wheeled at that and stared at him in the most disagreeable
+fashion; but he ignored her.
+</p>
+<p>
+"We are trespassing," said Tish; "but I hope you understand. We thought
+the family was away."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I just happened to be passing through," he explained. "I'm awfully
+attached to the place&mdash;for various reasons. Whenever I'm in town I spend
+my evenings wandering through the shrubbery and remembering&mdash;er&mdash;happier
+days."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I think the lamps are going out," said Hutchins sharply. "If we're to
+get back to town&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Ah!" he broke in. "So you have come out from the city?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Surely," said Hutchins to Tish, "it is unnecessary to give this
+gentleman any information about ourselves! We have done no damage&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Except the window," he said.
+</p>
+<p>
+"We've paid for that," she said in a nasty tone; and to Tish: "How do we
+know this place is his? He's probably some newspaper man, and if you
+tell him who you are this whole thing will be in the morning paper, like
+the eggs."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I give you my word of honor," he said, "that I am nothing of the sort;
+in fact, if you will give me a little time I'd&mdash;I'd like to tell all
+about myself. I've got a lot to say that's highly interesting, if you'll
+only listen."
+</p>
+<p>
+Hutchins, however, only gave him a cold glance of suspicion and put the
+pails in the car. Then she got in and sat down.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I take it," he said to her, "that you decline either to give or to
+receive any information."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Absolutely!"
+</p>
+<p>
+He sighed then, Aggie declares.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Of course," he said, "though I haven't really the slightest curiosity,
+I could easily find out, you know. Your license plates&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Are under the cushion I'm sitting on," said Hutchins, and started the
+engine.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Really, Hutchins," said Tish, "I don't see any reason for being so
+suspicious. I have always believed in human nature and seldom have I
+been disappointed. The young man has done nothing to justify rudeness.
+And since we are trespassing on his place&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Huh!" was all Hutchins said.
+</p>
+<p>
+The young man sauntered over to the car, with his hands thrust into this
+coat pockets. He was nice-looking, especially then, when he was smiling.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Hutchins!" he said. "Well, that's a clue anyhow. It&mdash;it's an uncommon
+name. You didn't happen to notice a large 'No-Trespassing!' sign by the
+gate, did you?"
+</p>
+<p>
+Hutchins only looked ahead and ignored him. As Tish said afterward, we
+had a good many worms, anyhow; and, as the young man and Hutchins had
+clearly taken an awful dislike to each other at first sight, the best
+way to avoid trouble was to go home. So she got into the car. The young
+man helped her and took off his hat.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Come out any time you like," he said affably. "I'm not here at all in
+the daytime, and the grounds are really rather nice. Come out and get
+some roses. We've some pretty good ones&mdash;English importations. If you
+care to bring some children from the tenements out for a picnic, please
+feel free to do it. We're not selfish."
+</p>
+<p>
+Hutchins rudely started the car before he had finished; but he ignored
+her and waved a cordial farewell to the rest of us.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Bring as many as you like," he called. "Sunday is a good day. Ask
+Miss&mdash;Miss Hutchins to come out and bring some friends along."
+</p>
+<p>
+We drove back at the most furious rate. Tish was at last compelled to
+remonstrate with Hutchins.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Not only are we going too fast," she said, "but you were really rude to
+that nice young man."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I wish I had turned the hose on him and drowned him!" said Hutchins
+between her teeth.
+</p>
+
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<h3><a name="h2H_4_0017" id="h2H_4_0017"></a>
+ II
+</h3>
+<p>
+Hutchins brought a newspaper to Tish the next morning at breakfast, and
+Tish afterwards said her expression was positively malevolent in such a
+young and pretty woman.
+</p>
+<p>
+The newspaper said that an attempt had been made to rob the Newcomb
+place the night before, but that the thieves had apparently secured
+nothing but a package of oatmeal and a tin sprinkling-can, which they
+had abandoned on the lawn. Some color, however, was lent to the fear
+that they had secured an amount of money, from the fact that a silver
+half-dollar had been found on the window sill of a tool-house. The
+Newcomb family was at its summer home on the Maine coast.
+</p>
+<p>
+"You see," Hutchins said to Tish, "that man didn't belong there at all.
+He was just impertinent and&mdash;laughing in his sleeve."
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish was really awfully put out, having planned to take the Sunday
+school there for a picnic. She was much pleased, however, at Hutchins's
+astuteness.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I shall take her along to Canada," she said to me. "The girl has
+instinct, which is better than reason. Her subconsciousness is unusually
+active."
+</p>
+<p>
+Looking back, as I must, and knowing now all that was in her small head
+while she whistled about the car, or all that was behind her smile,
+one wonders if women really should have the vote. So many of them are
+creatures of sex and guile. A word from her would have cleared up so
+much, and she never spoke it!
+</p>
+<p>
+Well, we spent most of July in getting ready to go. Charlie Sands said
+the mosquitoes and black flies would be gone by August, and we were in
+no hurry.
+</p>
+<p>
+We bought a good tent, with a diagram of how to put it up, some folding
+camp-beds, and a stove. The day we bought the tent we had rather a
+shock, for as we left the shop the suburban youth passed us. We ignored
+him completely, but he lifted his hat. Hutchins, who was waiting in
+Tish's car, saw him, too, and went quite white with fury.
+</p>
+<p>
+Shortly after that, Hannah came in one night and said that a man was
+watching Tish's windows. We thought it was imagination, and Tish gave
+her a dose of sulphur and molasses&mdash;her liver being sluggish.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Probably an Indian, I dare say," was Tish's caustic comment.
+</p>
+<p>
+In view of later developments, however, it is a pity we did not
+investigate Hannah's story; for Aggie, going home from Tish's late one
+night in Tish's car, had a similar experience, declaring that a small
+machine had followed them, driven by a heavy-set man with a mustache.
+She said, too, that Hutchins, swerving sharply, had struck the smaller
+machine a glancing blow and almost upset it.
+</p>
+<p>
+It was about the middle of July, I believe, that Tish received the
+following letter:&mdash;
+</p>
+<p class="quote">
+ <i>Madam</i>: Learning that you have decided to take a fishing-trip in
+ Canada, I venture to offer my services as guide, philosopher, and
+ friend. I know Canada thoroughly; can locate bass, as nearly as it
+ lies in a mortal so to do; can manage a motor launch; am thoroughly
+ at home in a canoe; can shoot, swim, and cook&mdash;the last indifferently
+ well; know the Indian mind and my own&mdash;and will carry water and chop
+ wood.
+</p>
+<p class="quote">
+ I do not drink, and such smoking as I do will, if I am engaged, be
+ done in the solitude of the woods.
+</p>
+<p class="quote">
+ I am young and of a cheerful disposition. My object is not money, but
+ only expenses paid and a chance to forget a recent and still poignant
+ grief. I hope you will see the necessity for such an addition to your
+ party, and allow me to subscribe myself, madam,
+</p>
+<p class="quote">
+ Your most obedient servant,
+</p>
+<p class="quote">
+ J. UPDIKE.
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish was much impressed; but Hutchins, in whose judgment she began to
+have the greatest confidence, opposed the idea.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I wouldn't think of it," she said briefly.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Why? It's a frank, straightforward letter."
+</p>
+<p>
+"He likes himself too much. And you should always be suspicious of
+anything that's offered too cheap."
+</p>
+<p>
+So the Updike application was refused. I have often wondered since what
+would have been the result had we accepted it!
+</p>
+<p>
+The worms were doing well, though Tish found that Hannah neglected them,
+and was compelled to feed them herself. On the day before we started, we
+packed them carefully in ice and moss, and fed them. That was the day
+the European war was declared.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Canada is at war," Tish telephoned. "The papers say the whole country
+is full of spies, blowing up bridges and railroads."
+</p>
+<p>
+"We can still go to the seashore," I said. "The bead things will do for
+the missionary box to Africa."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Seashore nothing!" Tish retorted. "We're going, of course,&mdash;just as we
+planned. We'll keep our eyes open; that's all. I'm not for one side or
+the other, but a spy's a spy."
+</p>
+<p>
+Later that evening she called again to say there were rumors that the
+Canadian forests were bristling with German wireless outfits.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I've a notion to write J. Updike, Lizzie, and find out whether he knows
+anything about wireless telegraphy," she said, "only there's so little
+time. Perhaps I can find a book that gives the code."
+</p>
+<p>
+[This is only pertinent as showing Tish's state of mind. As a matter of
+fact, she did not write to Updike at all.]
+</p>
+<p>
+Well, we started at last, and I must say they let us over the border
+with a glance; but they asked us whether we had any firearms. Tish's
+trunk contained a shotgun and a revolver; but she had packed over the
+top her most intimate personal belongings, and they were not disturbed.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Have you any weapons?" asked the inspector.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Do we look like persons carrying weapons?" Tish demanded haughtily. And
+of course we did not. Still, there was an untruth of the spirit and none
+of us felt any too comfortable. Indeed, what followed may have been a
+punishment on us for deceit and conspiracy.
+</p>
+<p>
+Aggie had taken her cat along&mdash;because it was so fond of fish, she said.
+And, between Tish buying ice for the worms and Aggie getting milk for
+the cat, the journey was not monotonous; but on returning from one of
+her excursions to the baggage-car, Tish put a heavy hand on my shoulder.
+</p>
+<p>
+"That boy's on the train, Lizzie!" she said. "He had the impudence to
+ask me whether I still drive with the license plates under a cushion.
+English roses&mdash;importations!" said Tish, and sniffed. "You don't suppose
+he went into that tent shop and asked about us?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"He might," I retorted; "but, on the other hand, there's no reason why
+our going to Canada should keep the rest of the United States at home!"
+</p>
+<p>
+However, the thing did seem queer, somehow. Why had he told us things
+that were not so? Why had he been so anxious to know who we were? Why,
+had he asked us to take the Sunday-school picnic to a place that did not
+belong to him?
+</p>
+<p>
+"He may be going away to forget some trouble. You remember what he said
+about happier days," said Tish.
+</p>
+<p>
+"That was Updike's reason too," I relied. "Poignant grief!"
+</p>
+<p>
+For just a moment our eyes met. The same suspicion had occurred to us
+both. Well, we agreed to say nothing to Aggie or Hutchins, for fear of
+upsetting them, and the next hour or so was peaceful.
+</p>
+<p>
+Hutchins read and Aggie slept. Tish and I strung beads for the Indians,
+and watched the door into the next car. And, sure enough, about the
+middle of the afternoon he appeared and stared in at us. He watched us
+for quite a time, smoking a cigarette as he did so. Then he came in and
+bent down over Tish.
+</p>
+<p>
+"You didn't take the children out for the picnic, did you?" he said.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I did not!" Tish snapped.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'm sorry. Never saw the place look so well!"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Look here," Tish said, putting down her beads; "what were you doing
+there that night anyhow? You don't belong to the family."
+</p>
+<p>
+He looked surprised and then grieved.
+</p>
+<p>
+"You've discovered that, have you?" he said. "I did, you know&mdash;word of
+honor! They've turned me off; but I love the old place still, and on
+summer nights I wander about it, recalling happier days."
+</p>
+<p>
+Hutchins closed her book with a snap, and he sighed.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I perceive that we are overheard," he said. "Some time I hope to tell
+you the whole story. It's extremely sad. I'll not spoil the beginning of
+your holiday with it."
+</p>
+<p>
+All the time he had been talking he held a piece of paper in his hand.
+When he left us Tish went back thoughtfully to her beads.
+</p>
+<p>
+"It just shows, Lizzie," she said, "how wrong we are to trust to
+appearances. That poor boy&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+I had stooped into the aisle and was picking up the piece of paper which
+he had accidentally dropped as he passed Hutchins. I opened it and read
+aloud to Tish and Aggie, who had wakened:&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+"'Afraid you'll not get away with it! The red-haired man in the car
+behind is a plain-clothes man.'"
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish has a large fund of general knowledge, gained through Charlie
+Sands; so what Aggie and I failed to understand she interpreted at once.
+</p>
+<p>
+"A plain-clothes man," she explained, "is a detective dressed as a
+gentleman. It's as plain as pikestaff! The boy's received this warning
+and dropped it. He has done something he shouldn't and is escaping to
+Canada!"
+</p>
+<p>
+I do not believe, however, that we should have thought of his being a
+political spy but for the conductor of the train. He proved to be a very
+nice person, with eight children and a toupee; and he said that Canada
+was honeycombed with spies in the pay of the German Government.
+</p>
+<p>
+"They're sending wireless messages all the time, probably from remote
+places," he said. "And, of course, their play now is to blow up the
+transcontinental railroads. Of course the railroads have an army of
+detectives on the watch."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Good Heavens!" Aggie said, and turned pale.
+</p>
+<p>
+Well, our pleasure in the journey was ruined. Every time the whistle
+blew on the engine we quailed, and Tish wrote her will then and there on
+the back of an envelope. It was while she was writing that the truth
+came to her.
+</p>
+<p>
+"That boy!" she said. "Don't you see it all? That note was a warning to
+him. He's a spy and the red-haired man is after him."
+</p>
+<p>
+None of us slept that night though Tish did a very courageous thing
+about eleven o'clock, when she was ready for bed. I went with her. We
+had put our dressing-gowns over our nightrobes, and we went back to the
+car containing the spy.
+</p>
+<p>
+He had not retired, but was sitting alone, staring ahead moodily. The
+red-haired man was getting ready for bed, just opposite. Tish spoke
+loudly, so the detective should hear.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I have come back," Tish said, "to say that we know everything. A word
+to the wise, Mister Happier Days! Don't try any of your tricks!"
+</p>
+<p>
+He sat, with his mouth quite open, and stared at us: but the red-haired
+man pretended to hear nothing and took off his other shoe.
+</p>
+<p>
+None of us slept at all except Hutchins. Though we had told her nothing,
+she seemed inherently to distrust the spy. When, on arriving at the town
+where we were to take the boat, he offered to help her off with Aggie's
+cat basket, which she was carrying, she snubbed him.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I can do it myself," she said coldly; "and if you know when you're well
+off you'll go back to where you came from. Something might happen to you
+here in the wilderness."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I wish it would," he replied in quite a tragic manner.
+</p>
+<p>
+[As Tish said then, a man is probably often forced by circumstances into
+hateful situations. No spy can really want to be a spy with every brick
+wall suggesting, as it must, a firing-squad.]
+</p>
+<p>
+Well, to make a long story short, we took the little steamer that goes
+up the river three times a week to take groceries and mail to the
+logging-camps, and the spy and the red-haired detective went along. The
+spy seemed to have quite a lot of luggage, but the detective had only a
+suitcase.
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish, watching the detective, said his expression grew more and more
+anxious as we proceeded up the river. Cottages gave place to
+logging-camps and these to rocky islands, with no sign of life; still,
+the spy stayed on the steamer, and so, of course, did the detective.
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish went down and examined the luggage. She reported that the spy was
+traveling under the name of McDonald and that the detective's suitcase
+was unmarked. Mr. McDonald had some boxes and a green canoe. The
+detective had nothing at all. There were no other passengers.
+</p>
+<p>
+We let Aggie's cat out on the boat and he caught a mouse almost
+immediately, and laid it in the most touching manner at the detective's
+feet; but he was in a very bad humor and flung it over the rail. Shortly
+after that he asked Tish whether she intended to go to the Arctic
+Circle.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I don't know that that's any concern of yours," Tish said. "You're not
+after me, you know."
+</p>
+<p>
+He looked startled and muttered something into his mustache.
+</p>
+<p>
+"It's perfectly clear what's wrong with him," Tish said. "He's got to
+stick to Mr. McDonald, and he hasn't got a tent in that suitcase, or
+even a blanket. I don't suppose he knows where his next meal's coming
+from."
+</p>
+<p>
+She was probably right, for I saw the crew of the boat packing a box or
+two of crackers and an old comfort into a box; and Aggie overheard the
+detective say to the captain that if he would sell him some fishhooks he
+would not starve anyhow.
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish found an island that suited her about three o'clock that afternoon,
+and we disembarked. Mr. McDonald insisted on helping the crew with our
+stuff, which they piled on a large flat rock; but the detective stood on
+the upper deck and scowled down at us. Tish suggested that he was a
+woman-hater.
+</p>
+<p>
+"They know so many lawbreaking women," she said, "it's quite natural."
+</p>
+<p>
+Having landed us, the boat went across to another island and deposited
+Mr. McDonald and the green canoe. Tish, who had talked about a lodge in
+some vast wilderness, complained at that; but when the detective got off
+on a little tongue of the mainland, in sight of both islands, she said
+the place was getting crowded and she had a notion to go farther.
+</p>
+<p>
+The first thing she did was to sit on a box and open a map. The Canadian
+Pacific was only a few miles away through the woods!
+</p>
+<p>
+Hutchins proved herself a treasure. She could work all round the three
+of us; she opened boxes and a can of beans for supper with the same
+hatchet, and had tea made and the beans heated while Tish was selecting
+a site for the tent.
+</p>
+<p>
+But&mdash;and I remembered this later&mdash;she watched the river at intervals,
+with her cheeks like roses from the exertion. She was really a pretty
+girl&mdash;only, when no one was looking, her mouth that day had a way of
+setting itself firmly, and she frowned at the water.
+</p>
+<p>
+We, Hutchins and I, set up the stove against a large rock, and when the
+teakettle started to boil it gave the river front a homey look. Sitting
+on my folding-chair beside the stove, with a cup of tea in my hand and
+a plate of beans on a doily on a packing-box beside me, I was entirely
+comfortable. Through the glasses I could see the red-haired man on
+the other shore sitting on a rock, with his head in his hands; but Mr.
+McDonald had clearly located on the other side of his island and was
+not in sight.
+</p>
+<p>
+Aggie and Tish were putting up the tent, and Hutchins was feeding the
+tea grounds to the worms, which had traveled comfortably, when I saw a
+canoe coming up the river. I called to Tish about it.
+</p>
+<p>
+"An Indian!" she said calmly. "Get the beads, Aggie; and put my shotgun
+on that rock, where he can see it." She stood and watched him.
+"Primitive man, every inch of him!" she went on. "Notice his uncovered
+head. Notice the freedom, almost the savagery, of the way he uses that
+paddle. I wish he would sing. You remember, in Hiawatha, how they sing
+as they paddle along?"
+</p>
+<p>
+She got the beads and went to the water's edge; but the Indian stooped
+just then and, picking up a Panama hat, put it on his head.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I have called," he said, "to see whether I can interest you in a set of
+books I am selling. I shall detain you only a moment. Sixty-three steel
+engravings by well-known artists; best hand-made paper; and the work
+itself is of high educational value."
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish suddenly put the beads behind her back and said we did not expect
+to have any time to read. We had come into the wilderness to rest our
+minds.
+</p>
+<p>
+"You are wrong, I fear," said the Indian. "Personally I find that I can
+read better in the wilds than anywhere else. Great thoughts in great
+surroundings! I take Nietzsche with me when I go fishing."
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish had the wretched beads behind her all the time; and, to make
+conversation, more than anything else, she asked about venison. He
+shrugged his shoulders. J. Fenimore Cooper had not prepared us for an
+Indian who shrugged his shoulders.
+</p>
+<p>
+"We Indians are allowed to kill deer," he said; "but I fear you are
+prohibited. I am not even permitted to sell it."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I should think," said Tish sharply, "that, since we are miles from a
+game warden, you could safely sell us a steak or two."
+</p>
+<p>
+He gazed at her disapprovingly. "I should not care to break the law,
+madam," he said.
+</p>
+<p>
+Then he picked up his paddle and took himself and his scruples and his
+hand-made paper and his sixty-three steel engravings down the river.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Primitive man!" I said to Tish, from my chair. "Notice the freedom,
+almost the savagery, with which he swings that paddle."
+</p>
+<p>
+We had brought a volume of Cooper along, not so much to read as to
+remind us how to address the Indians. Tish said nothing, but she got the
+book and flung it far out into the river.
+</p>
+<p>
+There were a number of small annoyances the first day or two. Hutchins
+was having trouble with the motor launch, which the steamer had towed up
+the day we came, and which she called the "Mebbe." And another civilized
+Indian, with a gold watch and a cigarette case, had rented us a leaky
+canoe for a dollar a day.
+</p>
+<p>
+[We patched the leak with chewing gum, which Aggie always carried for
+indigestion; and it did fairly well, so long as the gum lasted.]
+</p>
+<p>
+Then, on the second night, there was a little wind, and the tent
+collapsed on us, the ridgepole taking Aggie across the chest. It was
+that same night, I think, when Aggie's cat found a porcupine in the
+woods, and came in looking like a pincushion.
+</p>
+<p>
+What with chopping firewood for the stove, and carrying water, and
+bailing out the canoe, and with the motor boat giving one gasp and then
+dying for every hundred times somebody turned over the engine, we had no
+time to fish for two days.
+</p>
+<p>
+The police agent fished all day from a rock, for, of course, he had
+no boat; but he seemed to catch nothing. At times we saw him digging
+frantically, as though for worms. What he dug with I do not know; but,
+of course, he got no worms. Tish said if he had been more civil she
+would have taken something to him and a can of worms; but he had been
+rude, especially to Aggie's cat, and probably the boat would bring him
+things.
+</p>
+<p>
+What with getting settled and everything, we had not much time to think
+about the spy. It was on the third day, I believe, that he brought his
+green canoe to the open water in front of us and anchored there, just
+beyond earshot.
+</p>
+<p>
+He put out a line and opened a book; and from that time on he was a part
+of the landscape every day from 10 A.M. to 4 P.M. At noon he would eat
+some sort of a lunch, reading as he ate.
+</p>
+<p>
+He apparently never looked toward us, but he was always there. It was
+the most extraordinary thing. At first we thought he had found a
+remarkable fishing-place; but he seemed to catch very few fish. It was
+Tish, I think, who found the best explanation.
+</p>
+<p>
+"He's providing himself with an alibi," she stated. "How can he be a spy
+when we see him all day long? Don't you see how clever it is?"
+</p>
+<p>
+It was the more annoying because we had arranged a small cove for
+soap-and-water bathing, hanging up a rod for bath-towels and suspending
+a soap-dish and a sponge-holder from an overhanging branch. The cove was
+well shielded by brush and rocks from the island, but naturally was open
+to the river.
+</p>
+<p>
+It was directly opposite this cove that Mr. McDonald took up his
+position.
+</p>
+<p>
+This compelled us to bathe in the early morning, while the water was
+still cold, and resulted in causing Aggie a most uncomfortable half-hour
+on the fourth morning of our stay.
+</p>
+<p>
+She was the last one in the pool, and Tish absent-mindedly took her
+bathrobe and slippers back to the camp when she went. Tish went out
+in the canoe shortly after. She was learning to use one, with a life
+preserver on&mdash;Tish, of course, not the canoe. And Mr. McDonald arriving
+soon after, Aggie was compelled to sit in the water for two hours and
+twenty minutes. When Hutchins found her she was quite blue.
+</p>
+<p>
+This was the only disagreement we had all summer: Aggie's refusing to
+speak to Tish that entire day. She said Mr. McDonald had seen her head
+and thought it was some sort of swimming animal, and had shot at her.
+</p>
+<p>
+Mr. McDonald said afterward he knew her all the time, and was uncertain
+whether she was taking a cure for something or was trying to commit
+suicide. He said he spent a wretched morning. At five o'clock that
+evening we began to hear a curious tapping noise from the spy's island.
+It would last for a time, stop, and go on.
+</p>
+<p>
+Hutchins said it was woodpeckers; but Tish looked at me significantly.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Wireless!" she said. "What did I tell you?"
+</p>
+<p>
+That decided her next move, for that evening she put some tea and canned
+corn and a rubber blanket into the canoe; and in fear and trembling I
+went with her.
+</p>
+<p>
+"It's going to rain, Lizzie," she said, "and after all, that detective
+may be surly; but he's doing his duty by his country. It's just as
+heroic to follow a spy up here, and starve to death watching him, as it
+is to storm a trench&mdash;and less showy. And I've something to tell him."
+</p>
+<p>
+The canoe tilted just then, and only by heroic effort, were we able to
+calm it.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Then why not go comfortably in the motor boat?"
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish stopped, her paddle in the air. "Because I can't make that dratted
+engine go," she said, "and because I believe Hutchins would drown us all
+before she'd take any help to him. It's my belief that she's known him
+somewhere. I've seen her sit on a rock and look across at him with
+murder in her eyes."
+</p>
+<p>
+A little wind had come up, and the wretched canoe was leaking, the
+chewing gum having come out. Tish was paddling; so I was compelled to
+sit over the aperture, thus preventing water from coming in. Despite my
+best efforts, however, about three inches seeped in and washed about me.
+It was quite uncomfortable.
+</p>
+<p>
+The red-haired man was asleep when we landed. He had hung the comfort
+over a branch, like a tent, and built a fire at the end of it. He had
+his overcoat on, buttoned to the chin, and his head was on his
+suit-case. He sat up and looked at us, blinking.
+</p>
+<p>
+"We've brought you some tea and some canned corn," Tish said; "and a
+rubber blanket. It's going to rain."
+</p>
+<p>
+He slid out of the tent, feet first, and got up; but when he tried to
+speak he sneezed. He had a terrible cold.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I might as well say at once," Tish went on, "that we know why you are
+here&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+"The deuce you do!" he said hoarsely.
+</p>
+<p>
+"We do not particularly care about you, especially since the way you
+acted to a friendly and innocent cat&mdash;one can always judge a man by the
+way he treats dumb animals; but we sympathize with your errand. We'll
+even help if we can."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Then the&mdash;the person in question has confided in you?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Not at all," said Tish loftily. "I hope we can put two and two
+together. Have you got a revolver?"
+</p>
+<p>
+He looked startled at that. "I have one," he said; "but I guess I'll not
+need it. The first night or two a skunk hung round; two, in fact&mdash;mother
+and child&mdash;but I think they're gone."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Would you like some fish?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"My God, no!"
+</p>
+<p>
+This is a truthful narrative. That is exactly what he said.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'll tell you what I do need, ladies," he went on: "If you've got
+a spare suit of underwear over there, I could use it. It'd stretch,
+probably. And I'd like a pen and some ink. I must have lost my fountain
+pen out of my pocket stooping over the bank to wash my face."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Do you know the wireless code?" Tish asked suddenly.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Wireless?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"I have every reason to believe," she said impressively, "that one of
+the great trees on that island conceals a wireless outfit."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I see!" He edged back a little from us both.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I should think," Tish said, eyeing him, "that a knowledge of the
+wireless code would be essential to you in your occupation."
+</p>
+<p>
+"We&mdash;we get a smattering of all sorts of things," he said; but he was
+uneasy&mdash;you could see that with half an eye.
+</p>
+<p>
+He accompanied us down to the canoe; but once, when Tish turned
+suddenly, he ducked back as though he had been struck and changed color.
+He thanked us for the tea and corn, and said he wished we had a spare
+razor&mdash;but, of course, he supposed not. Then:&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+"I suppose the&mdash;the person in question will stay as long as you do?" he
+asked, rather nervously.
+</p>
+<p>
+"It looks like it," said Tish grimly. "I've no intention of being driven
+away, if that's what you mean. We'll stay as long as the fishing's
+good."
+</p>
+<p>
+He groaned under his breath. "The whole d&mdash;d river is full of fish," he
+said. "They crawled up the bank last night and ate all the crackers I'd
+saved for to-day. Oh, I'll pay somebody out for this, all right! Good
+gracious, ladies, your boat's full of water!"
+</p>
+<p>
+"It has a hole in it," Tish replied and upturned it to empty it.
+</p>
+<p>
+When he saw the hole his eyes stuck out. "You can't go out in that leaky
+canoe! It's suicidal!"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Not at all," Tish assured him. "My friend here will sit on the leak.
+Get in quick, Lizzie. It's filling."
+</p>
+<p>
+The last we saw of the detective that night he was standing on the bank,
+staring after us. Afterward, when a good many things were cleared up, he
+said he decided that he'd been asleep and dreamed the whole thing&mdash;the
+wireless, and my sitting on the hole in the canoe, and the wind tossing
+it about, and everything&mdash;only, of course, there was the tea and the
+canned corn!
+</p>
+<p>
+We did our first fishing the next day. Hutchins had got the motor boat
+going, and I put over the spoon I had made from the feather duster.
+After going a mile or so slowly I felt a tug, and on drawing my line in
+I found I had captured a large fish. I wrapped the line about a part of
+the engine and Tish put the barrel hoop with the netting underneath it.
+The fish was really quite large&mdash;about four feet, I think&mdash;and it broke
+through the netting. I wished to hit it with the oar, but Hutchins said
+that might break the fin and free it. Unluckily we had not brought
+Tish's gun, or we might have shot it.
+</p>
+<p>
+At last we turned the boat round and went home, the fish swimming
+alongside, with its mouth open. And there Aggie, who is occasionally
+almost inspired, landed the fish by the simple expedient of getting out
+of the boat, taking the line up a bank and wrapping it round a tree. By
+all pulling together we landed the fish successfully. It was forty-nine
+inches by Tish's tape measure.
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish did not sleep well that night. She dreamed that the fish had a red
+mustache and was a spy in disguise. When she woke she declared there was
+somebody prowling round the tent.
+</p>
+<p>
+She got her shotgun and we all sat up in bed for an hour or so.
+</p>
+<p>
+Nothing happened, however, except that Aggie cried out that there was a
+small animal just inside the door of the tent. We could see it, too,
+though faintly. Tish turned the shotgun on it and it disappeared; but
+the next morning she found she had shot one of her shoes to pieces.
+</p>
+
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<h3><a name="h2H_4_0018" id="h2H_4_0018"></a>
+ III
+</h3>
+<p>
+It was the day Tish began her diary that we discovered the red-haired
+man's signal. Tish was compelled to remain at home most of the day,
+breaking in another pair of shoes, and she amused herself by watching
+the river and writing down interesting things. She had read somewhere of
+the value of such records of impressions:&mdash;
+</p>
+<p class="quote">
+ 10 A.M. Gull on rock. Very pretty. Frightened away by the McDonald
+ person, who has just taken up his customary position. Is he reading
+ or watching this camp?
+</p>
+<p class="quote">
+ 10.22. Detective is breakfasting&mdash;through glasses, he is eating canned
+ corn. Aggie&mdash;pickerel, from bank.
+</p>
+<p class="quote">
+ 10.40. Aggie's cat, beside her, has caught a small fish. Aggie declares
+ that the cat stole one of her worms and held it in the water. I think
+ she is mistaken.
+</p>
+<p class="quote">
+ 11. Most extraordinary thing&mdash;Hutchins has asked permission to take pen
+ and ink across to the detective! Have consented.
+</p>
+<p class="quote">
+ 11.20. Hutchins is still across the river. If I did not know differently
+ I should say she and the detective are quarreling. He is whittling
+ something. Through glasses, she appears to stamp her foot.
+</p>
+<p class="quote">
+ 11.30. Aggie has captured a small sunfish. Hutchins is still across the
+ river. He seems to be appealing to her for something&mdash;possibly the
+ underwear. We have none to spare.
+</p>
+<p class="quote">
+ 11.40. Hutchins is an extraordinary girl. She hates men, evidently. She
+ has had some sort of quarrel with the detective and has returned flushed
+ with battle. Mr. McDonald called to her as she passed, but she ignored
+ him.
+</p>
+<p class="quote">
+ 12, noon. Really, there is something mysterious about all this. The
+ detective was evidently whittling a flagpole. He has erected it now,
+ with a red silk handkerchief at end. It hangs out over the water.
+ Aggie&mdash;bass, but under legal size.
+</p>
+<p class="quote">
+ 1.15 P.M. The flag puzzles Hutchins. She is covertly watching it. It is
+ evidently a signal&mdash;but to whom? Are the secret-service men closing in
+ on McDonald?
+</p>
+<p class="quote">
+ 1. Aggie&mdash;pike!
+</p>
+<p class="quote">
+ 2. On consulting map find unnamed lake only a few miles away. Shall
+ investigate to-morrow.
+</p>
+<p class="quote">
+ 3. Steamer has just gone. Detective now has canoe, blue in color. Also
+ food. He sent off his letter.
+</p>
+<p class="quote">
+ 4. Fed worms. Lizzie thinks they know me. How kindness is its own
+ reward! Mr. McDonald is drawing in his anchor, which is a large stone
+ fastened to a rope. Shall take bath.
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish's notes ended here. She did not take the bath after all, for Mr.
+McDonald made us a call that afternoon.
+</p>
+<p>
+He beached the green canoe and came up the rocks calmly and smilingly.
+Hutchins gave him a cold glance and went on with what she was doing,
+which was chopping a plank to cook the fish on. He bowed cheerfully to
+all of us and laid a string of fish on a rock.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I brought a little offering," he said, looking at Hutchins's back.
+"The fishing isn't what I expected but if the young lady with the hatchet
+will desist, so I can make myself heard, I've found a place where there
+are fish! This biggest fellow is three and a quarter pounds."
+</p>
+<p>
+Hutchins chopped harder than ever, and the plank flew up, striking her
+in the chest; but she refused all assistance, especially from Mr.
+McDonald, who was really concerned. He hurried to her and took the
+hatchet out of her hand, but in his excitement he was almost uncivil.
+</p>
+<p>
+"You obstinate little idiot!" he said. "You'll kill yourself yet."
+</p>
+<p>
+To my surprise, Hutchins, who had been entirely unemotional right along,
+suddenly burst into tears and went into the tent. Mr. McDonald took a
+hasty step or two after her, realizing, no doubt, that he had said more
+than he should to a complete stranger; but she closed the fly of the
+tent quite viciously and left him standing, with his arms folded,
+staring at it.
+</p>
+<p>
+It was at that moment he saw the large fish, hanging from a tree. He
+stood for a moment staring at it and we could see that he was quite
+surprised.
+</p>
+<p>
+"It is a fish, isn't it?" he said after a moment. "I&mdash;I thought for a
+moment it was painted on something."
+</p>
+<p>
+He sat down suddenly on one of our folding-chairs and looked at the
+fish, and then at each of us in turn.
+</p>
+<p>
+"You know," he said, "I didn't think there were such fish! I&mdash;you
+mustn't mind my surprise." He wiped his forehead with his handkerchief.
+"Just kick those things I brought into the river, will you? I apologize
+for them."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Forty-nine inches," Tish said. "We expect to do better when we really
+get started. This evening we shall go after its mate, which is probably
+hanging round."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Its mate?" he said, rather dazed. "Oh, I see. Of course!"
+</p>
+<p>
+He still seemed to doubt his senses, for he went over and touched it
+with his finger. "Ladies," he said, "I'm not going after the&mdash;the mate.
+I couldn't land it if I did get it. I am going to retire from the
+game&mdash;except for food; but I wish, for the sake of my reason, you'd tell
+me what you caught it with."
+</p>
+<p>
+Well, you may heartily distrust a person; but that is no reason why you
+should not answer a simple question. So I showed him the thing I had
+made&mdash;and he did not believe me!
+</p>
+<p>
+"You're perfectly right," he said. "Every game has its secrets. I had no
+business to ask. But you haven't caught me with that feather-duster
+thing any more than you caught that fish with it. I don't mind your not
+telling me. That's your privilege. But isn't it rather rubbing it in to
+make fun of me?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Nothing of the sort!" Aggie said angrily. "If you had caught it&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+"My dear lady," he said, "I couldn't have caught it. The mere shock of
+getting such a bite would have sent me out of my boat in a swoon." He
+turned to Tish. "I have only one disappointment," he said, "that it
+wasn't one of <i>our</i> worms that did the work."
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish said afterward she was positively sorry for him, he looked so
+crestfallen. So, when he started for his canoe she followed him.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Look here," she said; "you're young, and I don't want to see you get
+into trouble. Go home, young man! There are plenty of others to take
+your place."
+</p>
+<p>
+He looked rather startled. "That's it exactly," he said, after a moment.
+"As well as I can make out there are about a hundred. If you think," he
+said fiercely, raising his voice, "that I'm going to back out and let
+somebody else in, I'm not. And that's flat."
+</p>
+<p>
+"It's a life-and-death matter," said Tish.
+</p>
+<p>
+"You bet it's a life-and-death matter."
+</p>
+<p>
+"And&mdash;what about the&mdash;the red-headed man over there?"
+</p>
+<p>
+His reply amazed us all. "He's harmless," he said. "I don't like him,
+naturally; but I admire the way he holds on. He's making the best of a
+bad business."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Do you know why he's here?"
+</p>
+<p>
+He looked uneasy for once.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Well, I've got a theory," he replied; but, though his voice was calm,
+he changed color.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Then perhaps you'll tell me what that signal means?"
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish gave him the glasses and he saw the red flag. I have never seen a
+man look so unhappy.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Holy cats!" he said, and almost dropped the glasses. "Why, he&mdash;he must
+be expecting somebody!"
+</p>
+<p>
+"So I should imagine," Tish commented dryly. "He sent a letter by the
+boat to-day."
+</p>
+<p>
+"The h&mdash;l he did!" And then: "That's ridiculous! You're mistaken. As
+a&mdash;as a matter of fact, I went over there the other night and
+commandeered his fountain pen."
+</p>
+<p>
+So it had not fallen out of his pocket!
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'll be frank, ladies," he said. "It's my object just now to keep that
+chap from writing letters. It doesn't matter why, but it's vital."
+</p>
+<p>
+He was horribly cast down when we told him about Hutchins and the pen
+and ink.
+</p>
+<p>
+"So that's it!" he said gloomily. "And the flag's a signal, of course.
+Ladies, you have done it out of the kindness of your hearts, I know; but
+I think you have wrecked my life."
+</p>
+<p>
+He took a gloomy departure and left us all rather wrought up. Who were
+we, as Tish said, to imperil a fellow man? And another thing&mdash;if there
+was a reward on him, why should we give it to a red-haired detective,
+who was rude to harmless animals and ate canned corn for breakfast?
+</p>
+<p>
+With her customary acumen Tish solved the difficulty that very evening.
+</p>
+<p>
+"The simplest thing," she said, "of course, would be to go over
+during the night and take the flag away; but he may have more red
+handkerchiefs. Then, too, he seems to be a light sleeper, and it would
+be awkward to have him shoot at us."
+</p>
+<p>
+She sat in thought for quite a while. Hutchins was watching the sunset,
+and seemed depressed and silent. Tish lowered her voice.
+</p>
+<p>
+"There's no reason why we shouldn't have a red flag, too," she said. "It
+gives us an even chance to get in on whatever is about to happen. We can
+warn Mr. McDonald, for one thing, if any one comes here. Personally I
+think he is unjustly suspected."
+</p>
+<p>
+[But Tish was to change her mind very soon.]
+</p>
+<p>
+We made the flag that night, by lantern light, out of Tish's red silk
+petticoat. Hutchins was curious, I am sure; but we explained nothing.
+And we fastened it obliquely over the river, like the one on the other
+side.
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish's change of heart, which occurred the next morning, was due
+to a most unfortunate accident that happened to her at nine o'clock.
+Hutchins, who could swim like a duck, was teaching Tish to swim, and
+she was learning nicely. Tish had put a life-preserver on, with a
+clothes-line fastened to it, and Aggie was sitting on the bank holding
+the rope while she went through the various gestures.
+</p>
+<p>
+Having completed the lesson Hutchins went into the woods for red
+raspberries, leaving Tish still practicing in the water with Aggie
+holding the rope. Happening to sneeze, the line slipped out of her hand,
+and she had the agonizing experience of seeing Tish carried away by the
+current.
+</p>
+<p>
+I was washing some clothing in the river a few yards down the stream
+when Tish came floating past. I shall never forget her expression or my
+own sense of absolute helplessness.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Get the canoe," said Tish, "and follow. I'm heading for Island Eleven."
+</p>
+
+
+<div class="figure" style="width: 75%;">
+<a name="image-0008"></a>
+<img src="images/ill-06.jpg" width="100%"
+alt="'Get the canoe and follow. I'm heading for Island Eleven'" /><br />
+"Get the canoe and follow. I'm heading for Island Eleven"
+</div>
+
+<p>
+She was quite calm, though pale; but, in her anxiety to keep well above
+the water, she did what was almost a fatal thing&mdash;she pushed the
+life-preserver lower down round her body. And having shifted the
+floating center, so to speak, without warning her head disappeared and
+her feet rose in the air.
+</p>
+<p>
+For a time it looked as though she would drown in that position; but
+Tish rarely loses her presence of mind. She said she knew at once what
+was wrong. So, though somewhat handicapped by the position, she replaced
+the cork belt under her arms and emerged at last.
+</p>
+<p>
+Aggie had started back into the woods for Hutchins; but, with one thing
+and another, it was almost ten before they returned together. Tish by
+that time was only a dot on the horizon through the binocular, having
+missed Island Eleven, as she explained later, by the rope being caught
+on a submerged log, which deflected her course.
+</p>
+<p>
+We got into the motor boat and followed her, and, except for a most
+unjust sense of irritation that I had not drowned myself by following
+her in the canoe, she was unharmed. We got her into the motor boat and
+into a blanket, and Aggie gave her some blackberry cordial at once. It
+was some time before her teeth ceased chattering so she could speak.
+When she did it was to announce that she had made a discovery.
+</p>
+<p>
+"He's a spy, all right!" she said. "And that Indian is another. Neither
+of them saw me as I floated past. They were on Island Eleven. Mr.
+McDonald wrote something and gave it to the Indian. It wasn't a letter
+or he'd have sent it by the boat. He didn't even put it in an envelope,
+so far as I could see. It's probably in cipher."
+</p>
+<p>
+Well, we took her home, and she had a boiled egg at dinner.
+</p>
+<p>
+The rest of us had fish. It is one of Tish's theories that fish should
+only be captured for food, and that all fish caught must be eaten. I do
+not know when I have seen fish come as easy. Perhaps it was the worms,
+which had grown both long and fat, so that one was too much for a hook;
+and we cut them with scissors, like tape or ribbon. Aggie and I finally
+got so sick of fish that while Tish's head was turned we dropped in our
+lines without bait. But, even at that, Aggie, reeling in her line to go
+home, caught a three-pound bass through the gills and could not shake
+it off.
+</p>
+<p>
+We tried to persuade Tish to lie down that afternoon, but she refused.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'm not sick," she said, "even if you two idiots did try to drown me.
+And I'm on the track of something. If that was a letter, why didn't he
+send it by the boat?"
+</p>
+<p>
+Just then her eye fell on the flagpole, and we followed her horrified
+gaze. The flag had been neatly cut away!
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish's eyes narrowed. She looked positively dangerous; and within five
+minutes she had cut another flag out of the back breadth of the
+petticoat and flung it defiantly in the air. Who had cut away the
+signal&mdash;McDonald or the detective? We had planned to investigate the
+nameless lake that afternoon, Tish being like Colonel Roosevelt in her
+thirst for information, as well as in the grim pugnacity that is her
+dominant characteristic; but at the last minute she decided not to go.
+</p>
+<p>
+"You and Aggie go, Lizzie," she said. "I've got something on hand."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Tish!" Aggie wailed. "You'll drown yourself or something."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Don't be a fool!" Tish snapped. "There's a portage, but you and Lizzie
+can carry the canoe across on your heads. I've seen pictures of it. It's
+easy. And keep your eyes open for a wireless outfit. There's one about,
+that's sure!"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Lots of good it will do to keep our eyes open," I said with some
+bitterness, "with our heads inside the canoe!"
+</p>
+<p>
+We finally started and Hutchins went with us. It was Hutchins, too, who
+voiced the way we all felt when we had crossed the river and were
+preparing for what she called the portage.
+</p>
+<p>
+"She wants to get us out of the way, Miss Lizzie," she said. "Can you
+imagine what mischief she's up to?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"That is not a polite way to speak of Miss Tish, Hutchins," I said
+coldly. Nevertheless, my heart sank.
+</p>
+<p>
+Hutchins and I carried the canoe. It was a hot day and there was no
+path. Aggie, who likes a cup of hot tea at five o'clock, had brought
+along a bottle filled with tea, and a small basket containing sugar and
+cups.
+</p>
+<p>
+Personally I never had less curiosity about a lake. As a matter of fact
+I wished there was no lake. Twice&mdash;being obliged, as it were, to walk
+blindly and the canoe being excessively heavy&mdash;I, who led the way, ran
+the front end of the thing against the trunk of a tree, and both
+Hutchins and I sat down violently, under the canoe as a result of the
+impact.
+</p>
+<p>
+To add to the discomfort of the situation Aggie declared that we were
+being followed by a bear, and at the same instant stepped into a swamp
+up to her knees. She became calm at once, with the calmness of despair.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Go and leave me, Lizzie!" she said. "He is just behind those bushes. I
+may sink before he gets me&mdash;that's one comfort."
+</p>
+<p>
+Hutchins found a log and, standing on it, tried to pull her up; but she
+seemed firmly fastened. Aggie went quite white; and, almost beside
+myself, I poured her a cup of hot tea, which she drank. I remember she
+murmured Mr. Wiggins's name, and immediately after she yelled that the
+bear was coming.
+</p>
+<p>
+It was, however, the detective who emerged from the bushes. He got Aggie
+out with one good heave, leaving both her shoes gone forever; and while
+she collapsed, whimpering, he folded his arms and stared at all of us
+angrily.
+</p>
+<p>
+"What sort of damnable idiocy is this?" he demanded in a most unpleasant
+tone.
+</p>
+<p>
+Aggie revived and sat upright.
+</p>
+<p>
+"That's our affair, isn't it?" said Hutchins curtly.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Not by a blamed sight!" was his astonishing reply.
+</p>
+<p>
+"The next time I am sinking in a morass, let me sink," Aggie said, with
+simple dignity.
+</p>
+<p>
+He did not speak another word, but gave each of us a glance of the most
+deadly contempt, and finished up with Hutchins.
+</p>
+<p>
+"What I don't understand," he said furiously, "is why you have to lend
+yourself to this senile idiocy. Because some old women choose to sink
+themselves in a swamp is no reason why you should commit suicide!"
+</p>
+<p>
+Aggie said afterward only the recollection that he had saved her life
+prevented her emptying the tea on him. I should hardly have known
+Hutchins.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Naturally," she said in a voice thick with fury, "you are in a position
+to insult these ladies, and you do. But I warn you, if you intend to
+keep on, this swamp is nothing. We like it here. We may stay for months.
+I hope you have your life insured."
+</p>
+<p>
+Perhaps we should have understood it all then. Of course Charlie Sands,
+for whom I am writing this, will by this time, with his keen mind,
+comprehend it all; but I assure you we suspected nothing.
+</p>
+<p>
+How simple, when you line it up: The country house and the garden hose;
+the detective, with no camp equipment; Mr. McDonald and the green
+canoe; the letter on the train; the red flag; the girl in the pink
+tam-o'-shanter&mdash;who has not yet appeared, but will shortly; Mr.
+McDonald's incriminating list&mdash;also not yet, but soon.
+</p>
+<p>
+How inevitably they led to what Charlie Sands has called our crime!
+</p>
+<p>
+The detective, who was evidently very strong, only glared at her. Then
+he swung the canoe up on his head and, turning about, started back the
+way we had come. Though Hutchins and Aggie were raging, I was resigned.
+My neck was stiff and my shoulders ached. We finished our tea in silence
+and then made our way back to the river.
+</p>
+<p>
+I have now reached Tish's adventure. It is not my intention in this
+record to defend Tish. She thought her conclusions were correct. Charlie
+Sands says she is like Shaw&mdash;she has got a crooked point of view, but
+she believes she is seeing straight. And, after a while, if you look her
+way long enough you get a sort of mental astigmatism.
+</p>
+<p>
+So I shall confess at once that, at the time, I saw nothing immoral in
+what she did that afternoon while we were having our adventure in the
+swamp.
+</p>
+<p>
+I was putting cloths wrung out of arnica and hot water on my neck when
+she came home, and Hutchins was baking biscuit&mdash;she was a marvelous
+cook, though Aggie, who washed the dishes, objected to the number of
+pans she used.
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish ignored both my neck and the biscuits, and, marching up the bank,
+got her shotgun from the tent and loaded it.
+</p>
+<p>
+"We may be attacked at any time," she said briefly; and, getting the
+binocular, she searched the river with a splendid sweeping glance. "At
+any time. Hutchins, take these glasses, please, and watch that we are
+not disturbed."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'm baking biscuit, Miss Letitia."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Biscuit!" said Tish scornfully. "Biscuit in times like these?"
+</p>
+<p>
+She walked up to the camp stove and threw the oven door open; but,
+though I believe she had meant to fling them into the river, she changed
+her mind when she saw them.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Open a jar of honey, Hutchins," she said, and closed the oven; but
+her voice was abstracted. "You can watch the river from the stove,
+Hutchins," she went on. "Miss Aggie and Miss Lizzie and I must confer
+together."
+</p>
+<p>
+So we went into the tent, and Tish closed and fastened it.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Now," she said, "I've got the papers."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Papers?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"The ones Mr. McDonald gave that Indian this morning. I had an idea he'd
+still have them. You can't hurry an Indian. I waited in the bushes until
+he went in swimming. Then I went through his pockets."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Tish Carberry!" cried Aggie.
+</p>
+<p>
+"These are not times to be squeamish," Tish said loftily. "I'm neutral;
+of course; but Great Britain has had this war forced on her and I'm
+going to see that she has a fair show. I've ordered all my stockings
+from the same shop in London, for twenty years, and squarer people never
+lived. Look at these&mdash;how innocent they look, until one knows!"
+</p>
+<p>
+She produced two papers from inside her waist. I must confess that, at
+first glance, I saw nothing remarkable.
+</p>
+<p>
+"The first one looks," said Tish, "like a grocery order. It's meant to
+look like that. It's relieved my mind of one thing&mdash;McDonald's got no
+wireless or he wouldn't be sending cipher messages by an Indian."
+</p>
+<p>
+It was written on a page torn out of a pocket notebook and the page was
+ruled with an inch margin at the left. This was the document:&mdash;
+</p>
+<p class="quote" style="float: left; text-align: right;">
+ 1 <br />
+ 20 <br />
+ 1 pkg. <br />
+ 1 doz. <br />
+ 3 lbs. <br />
+ 1 bot. <br />
+ 3 <br />
+ 1 <br />
+</p>
+<p class="quote" style="float: left;">
+Dozen eggs.<br />
+Yards fishing-line.<br />
+Needles&mdash;anything to sew a button on.<br />
+A B C bass hooks.<br />
+Meat&mdash;anything so it isn't fish.<br />
+Ink for fountain pen.<br />
+Tins sardines.<br />
+Extractor.<br />
+</p>
+<p style="clear: both;">
+Well, I could not make anything of it; but, of course, I have not Tish's
+mind. Aggie was almost as bad.
+</p>
+<p>
+"What's an extractor?" she asked.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Exactly!" said Tish. "What is an extractor? Is the fellow going to pull
+teeth? No! He needed an <i>e</i>; so he made up a word."
+</p>
+<p>
+She ran her finger down the first letters of the second column.
+"D-y-n-a-m-i-t-e!" she said triumphantly. "Didn't I tell you?"
+</p>
+
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<h3><a name="h2H_4_0019" id="h2H_4_0019"></a>
+ IV
+</h3>
+<p>
+Well, there it was&mdash;staring at us. I felt positively chilled. He looked
+so young and agreeable, and, as Aggie said, he had such nice teeth. And
+to know him for what he was&mdash;it was tragic! But that was not all.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Add the numbers!" said Tish. "Thirty-one tons, perhaps, of dynamite!
+And that's only part," said Tish. "Here's the most damning thing of
+all&mdash;a note to his accomplice!"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Damning" is here used in the sense of condemnatory. We are none of us
+addicted to profanity.
+</p>
+<p>
+We read the other paper, which had been in a sealed envelope, but
+without superscription. It is before me as I write, and I am copying it
+exactly:&mdash;
+</p>
+<p class="quote">
+ I shall have to see you. I'm going crazy! Don't you realize that this
+ is a matter of life and death to me? Come to Island Eleven to-night,
+ won't you? And give me a chance to talk, anyhow. Something has got to
+ be done and done soon. I'm desperate!
+</p>
+<p>
+Aggie sneezed three times in sheer excitement; for anyone can see how
+absolutely incriminating the letter was. It was not signed, but it was
+in the same writing as the list.
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish, who knows something about everything, said the writing denoted an
+unscrupulous and violent nature.
+</p>
+<p>
+"The <i>y</i> is especially vicious," she said. "I wouldn't trust a man who
+made a <i>y</i> like that to carry a sick child to the doctor!"
+</p>
+<p>
+The thing, of course, was to decide at once what measures to take. The
+boat would not come again for two days, and to send a letter by it to
+the town marshal or sheriff, or whatever the official is in Canada who
+takes charge of spies, would be another loss of time.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Just one thing," said Tish. "I'll plan this out and find some way to
+deal with the wretch; but I wouldn't say anything to Hutchins. She's a
+nice little thing, though she is a fool about a motor boat. There's no
+use in scaring her."
+</p>
+<p>
+For some reason or other, however, Hutchins was out of spirits that
+night.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I hope you're not sick, Hutchins?" said Tish.
+</p>
+<p>
+"No, indeed, Miss Tish."
+</p>
+<p>
+"You're not eating your fish."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'm sick of fish," she said calmly. "I've eaten so much fish that when
+I see a hook I have a mad desire to go and hang myself on it."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Fish," said Tish grimly, "is good for the brain. I do not care to
+boast, but never has my mind been so clear as it is to-night."
+</p>
+<p>
+Now certainly, though Tish's tone was severe, there was nothing in it to
+hurt the girl; but she got up from the cracker box on which she was
+sitting, with her eyes filled with tears.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Don't mind me. I'm a silly fool," she said; and went down to the river
+and stood looking out over it.
+</p>
+<p>
+It quite spoiled our evening. Aggie made her a hot lemonade and, I
+believe, talked to her about Mr. Wiggins, and how, when he was living,
+she had had fits of weeping without apparent cause. But if the girl was
+in love, as we surmised, she said nothing about it. She insisted that it
+was too much fish and nervous strain about the Mebbe.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I never know," she said, "when we start out whether we're going to get
+back or be marooned and starve to death on some island."
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish said afterward that her subconscious self must have taken the word
+"marooned" and played with it; for in ten minutes or so her plan popped
+into her head.
+</p>
+<p>
+"'Full-panoplied from the head of Jove,' Lizzie," she said. "Really, it
+is not necessary to think if one only has faith. The supermind does it
+all without effort. I do not dislike the young man; but I must do my
+duty."
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish's plan was simplicity itself. We were to steal his canoe.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Then we'll have him," she finished. "The current's too strong there for
+him to swim to the mainland."
+</p>
+<p>
+"He might try it and drown," Aggie objected. "Spy or no spy, he's
+somebody's son."
+</p>
+<p>
+"War is no time to be chicken-hearted," Tish replied.
+</p>
+<p>
+I confess I ate little all that day. At noon Mr. McDonald came and
+borrowed two eggs from us.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I've sent over to a store across country, by my Indian guide,
+philosopher, and friend," he said, "for some things I needed; but I dare
+say he's reading Byron somewhere and has forgotten it."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Guide, philosopher, and friend!" I caught Tish's eye. McDonald had
+written the Updike letter! McDonald had meant to use our respectability
+to take him across the border!
+</p>
+<p>
+We gave him the eggs, but Tish said afterward she was not deceived for a
+moment.
+</p>
+<p>
+"The Indian has told him," she said, "and he's allaying our suspicions.
+Oh, he's clever enough! 'Know the Indian mind and my own!'" she quoted
+from the Updike letter. "'I know Canada thoroughly.' 'My object is not
+money.' I should think not!"
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish stole the green canoe that night. She put on the life preserver and
+we tied the end of the rope that Aggie had let slip to the canoe. The
+life-preserver made it difficult to paddle, Tish said, but she felt
+more secure. If she struck a rock and upset, at least she would not
+drown; and we could start after her at dawn with the Mebbe.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'll be somewhere down the river," she said, "and safe enough, most
+likely, unless there are falls."
+</p>
+<p>
+Hutchins watched in a puzzled way, for Tish did not leave until dusk.
+</p>
+<p>
+"You'd better let me follow you with the launch, Miss Tish," she said.
+"Just remember that if the canoe sinks you're tied to it."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'm on serious business to-night, Hutchins," Tish said ominously. "You
+are young, and I refuse to trouble your young mind; but your ears are
+sharp. If you hear any shooting, get the boat and follow me."
+</p>
+<p>
+The mention of shooting made me very nervous. We watched Tish as long as
+we could see her; then we returned to the tent, and Aggie and I
+crocheted by the hanging lantern. Two hours went by. At eleven o'clock
+Tish had not returned and Hutchins was in the motor boat, getting it
+ready to start.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I like courage, Miss Lizzie," she said to me; "but this thing of
+elderly women, with some sort of bug, starting out at night in canoes is
+too strong for me. Either she's going to stay in at night or I'm going
+home."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Elderly nothing!" I said, with some spirit. "She is in the prime of
+life. Please remember, Hutchins, that you are speaking of your employer.
+Miss Tish has no bug, as you call it."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Oh, she's rational enough," Hutchins retorted: "but she is a woman of
+one idea and that sort of person is dangerous."
+</p>
+<p>
+I was breathless at her audacity.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Come now, Miss Lizzie," she said, "how can I help when I don't know
+what is being done? I've done my best up here to keep you comfortable
+and restrain Miss Tish's recklessness; but I ought to know something."
+</p>
+<p>
+She was right; and, Tish or no Tish, then and there I told her. She was
+more than astonished. She sat in the motor boat, with a lantern at her
+feet, and listened.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I see," she said slowly. "So the&mdash;so Mr. McDonald is a spy and has sent
+for dynamite to destroy the railroad! And&mdash;and the red-haired man is a
+detective! How do you know he is a detective?"
+</p>
+<p>
+I told her then about the note we had picked up from beside her in the
+train, and because she was so much interested she really seemed quite
+thrilled. I brought the cipher grocery list and the other note down to
+her.
+</p>
+<p>
+"It's quite convincing, isn't it?" she said. "And&mdash;and exciting! I don't
+know when I've been so excited."
+</p>
+<p>
+She really was. Her cheeks were flushed. She looked exceedingly pretty.
+</p>
+<p>
+"The thing to do," she said, "is to teach him a lesson. He's young. He
+mayn't always have had to stoop to such&mdash;such criminality. If we can
+scare him thoroughly, it might do him a lot of good."
+</p>
+<p>
+I said I was afraid Tish took a more serious view of things and would
+notify the authorities. And at that moment there came two or three
+shots&mdash;then silence.
+</p>
+<p>
+I shall never forget the ride after Tish and how we felt when we failed
+to find her; for there was no sign of her. The wind had come up, and,
+what with seeing Tish tied to that wretched canoe and sinking with it or
+shot through the head and lying dead in the bottom of it, we were about
+crazy. As we passed Island Eleven we could see the spy's camp-fire and
+his tent, but no living person.
+</p>
+<p>
+At four in the morning we gave up and started back, heavy-hearted.
+What, therefore, was our surprise to find Tish sitting by the fire in
+her bathrobe, with a cup of tea in her lap and her feet in a foot-tub of
+hot water! Considering all we had gone through and that we had obeyed
+orders exactly, she was distinctly unjust. Indeed, at first she quite
+refused to speak to any of us.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I do think, Tish," Aggie said as she stood shivering by the fire, "that
+you might at least explain where you have been. We have been going up
+and down the river for hours, burying you over and over."
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish took a sip of tea, but said nothing.
+</p>
+<p>
+"You said," I reminded her, "that if there was shooting, we were to
+start after you at once. When we heard the shots, we went, of course."
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish leaned over and, taking the teakettle from the fire, poured more
+water into the foot-tub. Then at last she turned to speak.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Bring some absorbent cotton and some bandages, Hutchins," she said. "I
+am bleeding from a hundred wounds. As for you"&mdash;she turned fiercely on
+Aggie and me&mdash;"the least you could have done was to be here when I
+returned, exhausted, injured, and weary; but, of course, you were
+gallivanting round the lake in an upholstered motor boat."
+</p>
+<p>
+Here she poured more water into the foot-tub and made it much too hot.
+This thawed her rather, and she explained what was wrong. She was
+bruised, scratched to the knees, and with a bump the size of an egg on
+her forehead, where she had run into a tree.
+</p>
+<p>
+The whole story was very exciting. It seems she got the green canoe
+without any difficulty, the spy being sound asleep in his tent; but
+about that time the wind came up and Tish said she could not make an
+inch of progress toward our camp.
+</p>
+<p>
+The chewing gum with which we had repaired our canoe came out at that
+time and the boat began to fill, Tish being unable to sit over the leak
+and paddle at the same time. So, at last, she gave up and made for the
+mainland.
+</p>
+<p>
+"The shooting," Tish said with difficulty, "was by men from the Indian
+camp firing at me. I landed below the camp, and was making my way as
+best I could through the woods when they heard me moving. I believe they
+thought it was a bear."
+</p>
+<p>
+I think Tish was more afraid of the Indians, in spite of their
+sixty-three steel engravings and the rest of it, than she pretended,
+though she said she would have made herself known, but at that moment
+she fell over a fallen tree and for fifteen minutes was unable to speak
+a word. When at last she rose the excitement was over and they had gone
+back to their camp.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Anyhow," she finished, "the green canoe is hidden a couple of miles
+down the river, and I guess Mr. McDonald is safe for a time. Lizzie, you
+can take a bath to-morrow safely."
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish sat up most of the rest of the night composing a letter to the
+authorities of the town, telling them of Mr. McDonald and enclosing
+careful copies of the incriminating documents she had found.
+</p>
+<p>
+During the following morning the river was very quiet. Through the
+binocular we were able to see Mr. McDonald standing on the shore of his
+island and looking intently in our direction, but naturally we paid no
+attention to him.
+</p>
+<p>
+The red-haired man went in swimming that day and necessitated our
+retiring to the tent for an hour and a half; but at noon Aggie's
+naturally soft heart began to assert itself.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Spy or no spy," she said to Tish, "we ought to feed him."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Huh!" was Tish's rejoinder. "There is no sense is wasting good food on
+a man whose hours are numbered."
+</p>
+<p>
+We were surprised, however, to find that Hutchins, who had detested Mr.
+McDonald, was rather on Aggie's side.
+</p>
+<p>
+"The fact that he has but a few more hours," she said to Tish, "is an
+excellent reason for making those hours as little wretched as possible."
+</p>
+<p>
+It was really due to Hutchins, therefore, that Mr. McDonald had a
+luncheon. The problem of how to get it to him was a troublesome one, but
+Tish solved it with her customary sagacity.
+</p>
+<p>
+"We can make a raft," she said, "a small one, large enough to hold a
+tray. By stopping the launch some yards above the island we can float
+his luncheon to him quite safely."
+</p>
+<p>
+That was the method we ultimately pursued and it worked most
+satisfactorily.
+</p>
+<p>
+Hutchins baked hot biscuits; and, by putting a cover over the pan, we
+were enabled to get them to him before they cooled.
+</p>
+<p>
+We prepared a really appetizing luncheon of hot biscuits, broiled ham,
+marmalade, and tea, adding, at Aggie's instructions, a jar of preserved
+peaches, which she herself had put up.
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish made the raft while we prepared the food, and at exactly half-past
+twelve o'clock we left the house. Mr. McDonald saw us coming and was
+waiting smilingly at the upper end of the island.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Great Scott!" he said. "I thought you were never going to hear me.
+Another hour and I'd have made a swim for it, though it's suicidal with
+this current. I'll show you where you can come in so you won't hit a
+rock."
+</p>
+<p>
+Hutchins had stopped the engine of the motor boat and we threw out the
+anchor at a safe distance from the shore.
+</p>
+<p>
+"We are not going to land," said Tish, "and I think you know perfectly
+well the reason why."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Oh, now," he protested; "surely you are going to land! I've had an
+awfully uncomfortable accident&mdash;my canoe's gone."
+</p>
+<p>
+"We know that," Tish said calmly. "As a matter of fact, we took it."
+</p>
+<p>
+Mr. McDonald sat down suddenly on a log at the water's edge and looked
+at us.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Oh!" he said.
+</p>
+<p>
+"You may not believe it," Tish said, "but we know everything&mdash;your
+dastardly plot, who the red-haired man is, and all the destruction and
+wretchedness you are about to cause."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Oh, I say!" he said feebly. "I wouldn't go as far as that. I'm&mdash;I'm
+not such a bad sort."
+</p>
+<p>
+"That depends on the point of view," said Tish grimly.
+</p>
+<p>
+Aggie touched her on the arm then and reminded her that the biscuits
+were getting cold; but Tish had a final word with him.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Your correspondence has fallen into my hands, young man," she said,
+"and will be turned over to the proper authorities."
+</p>
+<p>
+"It won't tell them anything they don't know," he said doggedly. "Look
+here, ladies: I am not ashamed of this thing. I&mdash;I am proud of it. I am
+perfectly willing to yell it out loud for everybody to hear. As a matter
+of fact, I think I will."
+</p>
+<p>
+Mr. McDonald stood up suddenly and threw his head back; but here
+Hutchins, who had been silent, spoke for the first time.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Don't be an idiot!" she said coldly. "We have something here for you to
+eat if you behave yourself."
+</p>
+<p>
+He seemed to see her then for the first time, for he favored her with a
+long stare.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Ah!" he said. "Then you are not entirely cold and heartless?"
+</p>
+<p>
+She made no reply to this, being busy in assisting Aggie to lower the
+raft over the side of the boat.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Broiled ham, tea, hot biscuits, and marmalade," said Aggie gently. "My
+poor fellow, we are doing what we consider our duty; but we want you to
+know that it is hard for us&mdash;very hard."
+</p>
+<p>
+When he saw our plan, Mr. McDonald's face fell; but he stepped out into
+the water up to his knees and caught the raft as it floated down.
+</p>
+<p>
+Before he said "Thank you" he lifted the cover of the pan and saw the
+hot biscuits underneath.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Really," he said, "it's very decent of you. I sent off a grocery order
+yesterday, but nothing has come."
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish had got Hutchins to start the engine by that time and we were
+moving away. He stood there, up to his knees in water, holding the tray
+and looking after us. He was really a pathetic figure, especially in
+view of the awful fate we felt was overtaking him.
+</p>
+<p>
+He called something after us. On account of the noise of the engine, we
+could not be certain, but we all heard it the same way.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Send for the whole d&mdash;d outfit!" was the way it sounded to us. "It
+won't make any difference to me."
+</p>
+
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<h3><a name="h2H_4_0020" id="h2H_4_0020"></a>
+ V
+</h3>
+<p>
+The last thing I recall of Mr. McDonald that day is seeing him standing
+there in the water, holding the tray, with the teapot steaming under his
+nose, and gazing after us with an air of bewilderment that did not
+deceive us at all.
+</p>
+<p>
+As I look back, there is only one thing we might have noticed at the
+time. This was the fact that Hutchins, having started the engine, was
+sitting beside it on the floor of the boat and laughing in the cruelest
+possible manner. As I said to Aggie at the time: "A spy is a spy and
+entitled to punishment if discovered; but no young woman should laugh
+over so desperate a situation."
+</p>
+<p>
+I come now to the denouement of this exciting period. It had been Tish's
+theory that the red-haired man should not be taken into our confidence.
+If there was a reward for the capture of the spy, we ourselves intended
+to have it.
+</p>
+<p>
+The steamer was due the next day but one. Tish was in favor of not
+waiting, but of at once going in the motor boat to the town, some thirty
+miles away, and telling of our capture; but Hutchins claimed there was
+not sufficient gasoline for such an excursion. That afternoon we went in
+the motor launch to where Tish had hidden the green canoe and, with a
+hatchet, rendered it useless.
+</p>
+<p>
+The workings of the subconscious mind are marvelous. In the midst of
+chopping, Tish suddenly looked up.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Have you noticed," she said, "that the detective is always watching our
+camp?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"That's all he has to do," Aggie suggested.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Stuff and nonsense! Didn't he follow you into the swamp? Does Hutchins
+ever go out in the canoe that he doesn't go out also? I'll tell you what
+has happened: She's young and pretty, and he's fallen in love with her."
+</p>
+<p>
+I must say it sounded reasonable. He never bothered about the motor
+boat, but the instant she took the canoe and started out he was hovering
+somewhere near.
+</p>
+<p>
+"She's noticed it," Tish went on. "That's what she was quarreling about
+with him yesterday."
+</p>
+<p>
+"How are we to know," said Aggie, who was gathering up the scraps of the
+green canoe and building a fire under them&mdash;"how are we to know they are
+not old friends, meeting thus in the wilderness? Fate plays strange
+tricks, Tish. I lived in the same street with Mr. Wiggins for years, and
+never knew him until one day when my umbrella turned wrong side out in a
+gust of wind."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Fate fiddlesticks!" said Tish. "There's no such thing as fate in
+affairs of this sort. It's all instinct&mdash;the instinct of the race to
+continue itself."
+</p>
+<p>
+This Aggie regarded as indelicate and she was rather cool to Tish the
+balance of the day.
+</p>
+<p>
+Our prisoner spent most of the day at the end of the island toward us,
+sitting quietly, as we could see through the glasses. We watched
+carefully, fearing at any time to see the Indian paddling toward him.
+</p>
+<p>
+[Tish was undecided what to do in such an emergency, except to intercept
+him and explain, threatening him also with having attempted to carry the
+incriminating papers. As it happened, however, the entire camp had gone
+for a two-days' deer hunt, and before they returned the whole thing had
+come to its surprising end.]
+</p>
+<p>
+Late in the afternoon Tish put her theory of the red-haired man to the
+test.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Hutchins," she said, "Miss Lizzie and I will cook the dinner if you
+want to go in the canoe to Harvey's Bay for water-lilies."
+</p>
+<p>
+Hutchins at once said she did not care a rap for water-lilies; but,
+seeing a determined glint in Tish's eye, she added that she would go for
+frogs if Tish wanted her out of the way.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Don't talk like a child!" Tish retorted. "Who said I wanted you out of
+the way?"
+</p>
+<p>
+It is absolutely true that the moment Hutchins put her foot into the
+canoe the red-haired man put down his fishing-rod and rose. And she had
+not taken three strokes with the paddle before he was in the blue canoe.
+</p>
+<p>
+Hutchins saw him just then and scowled. The last we saw of her she was
+moving rapidly up the river and the detective was dropping slowly
+behind. They both disappeared finally into the bay and Tish drew a long
+breath.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Typical!" she said curtly. "He's sent here to watch a dangerous man and
+spends his time pursuing the young woman who hates the sight of him.
+When women achieve the suffrage they will put none but married men in
+positions of trust."
+</p>
+<p>
+Hutchins and the detective were still out of sight when supper-time
+came. The spy's supper weighed on us, and at last Tish attempted to
+start the motor launch. We had placed the supper and the small raft
+aboard, and Aggie was leaning over the edge untying the painter,&mdash;not a
+man, but a rope,&mdash;when unexpectedly the engine started at the first
+revolution of the wheel.
+</p>
+<p>
+It darted out to the length of the rope, where it was checked abruptly,
+the shock throwing Aggie entirely out and into the stream. Tish caught
+the knife from the supper tray to cut us loose, and while Tish cut I
+pulled Aggie in, wet as she was. The boat was straining and panting,
+and, on being released, it sprang forward like a dog unleashed.
+</p>
+<p>
+Aggie had swallowed a great deal of water and was most disagreeable; but
+the Mebbe was going remarkably well, and there seemed to be every
+prospect that we should get back to the camp in good order. Alas, for
+human hopes! Mr. McDonald was not very agreeable.
+</p>
+<p>
+"You know," he said as he waited for his supper to float within reach,
+"you needn't be so blamed radical about everything you do! If you object
+to my hanging round, why not just say so? If I'm too obnoxious I'll
+clear out."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Obnoxious is hardly the word," said Tish.
+</p>
+<p>
+"How long am I to be a prisoner?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"I shall send letters off by the first boat."
+</p>
+<p>
+He caught the raft just then and examined the supper with interest.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Of course things might be worse," he said; "but it's dirty treatment,
+anyhow. And it's darned humiliating. Somebody I know is having a good
+time at my expense. It's heartless! That's what it is&mdash;heartless!"
+</p>
+<p>
+Well, we left him, the engine starting nicely and Aggie being wrapped in
+a tarpaulin; but about a hundred yards above the island it began to slow
+down, and shortly afterward it stopped altogether. As the current caught
+us, we luckily threw out the anchor, for the engine refused to start
+again. It was then we saw the other canoes.
+</p>
+<p>
+The girl in the pink tam-o'-shanter was in the first one.
+</p>
+<p>
+They glanced at us curiously as they passed, and the P.T.S.&mdash;that is the
+way we grew to speak of the pink tam-o'-shanter&mdash;raised one hand in the
+air, which is a form of canoe greeting, probably less upsetting to the
+equilibrium than a vigorous waving of the arm.
+</p>
+<p>
+It was just then, I believe, that they saw our camp and headed for it.
+The rest of what happened is most amazing. They stopped at our landing
+and unloaded their canoes. Though twilight was falling, we could see
+them distinctly. And what we saw was that they calmly took
+possession of the camp.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Good gracious!" Tish cried. "The girls have gone into the tent! And
+somebody's working at the stove. The impertinence!"
+</p>
+<p>
+Our situation was acutely painful. We could do nothing but watch. We
+called, but our voices failed to reach them. And Aggie took a chill,
+partly cold and partly fury. We sat there while they ate the entire
+supper!
+</p>
+<p>
+They were having a very good time. Now and then somebody would go into
+the tent and bring something out, and there would be shrieks of
+laughter.
+</p>
+<p>
+[We learned afterward that part of the amusement was caused by Aggie's
+false front, which one of the wretches put on as a beard.]
+</p>
+<p>
+It was while thus distracted that Aggie suddenly screamed, and a moment
+later Mr. McDonald climbed over the side and into the boat, dripping.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Don't be alarmed!" he said. "I'll go back and be a prisoner again just
+as soon as I've fired the engine. I couldn't bear to think of the lady
+who fell in sitting here indefinitely and taking cold." He was examining
+the engine while he spoke. "Have visitors, I see," he observed, as
+calmly as though he were not dripping all over the place.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Intruders, not visitors!" Tish said angrily. "I never saw them before."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Rather pretty, the one with the pink cap. May I examine the gasoline
+supply?" There was no gasoline. He shrugged his shoulders. "I'm afraid
+no amount of mechanical genius I intended to offer you will start her,"
+he said; "but the young lady&mdash;Hutchins is her name, I believe?&mdash;will
+see you here and come after you, of course."
+</p>
+<p>
+Well, there was no denying that, spy or no spy, his presence was a
+comfort. He offered to swim back to the island and be a prisoner again,
+but Tish said magnanimously that there was no hurry. On Aggie's offering
+half of her tarpaulin against the wind, which had risen, he accepted.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Your Miss Hutchins is reckless, isn't she?" he said when he was
+comfortably settled. "She's a strong swimmer; but a canoe is uncertain
+at the best."
+</p>
+<p>
+"She's in no danger," said Tish. "She has a devoted admirer watching out
+for her."
+</p>
+<p>
+"The deuce she has!" His voice was quite interested. "Why, who on
+earth&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Your detective," said Aggie softly. "He's quite mad about her. The way
+he follows her and the way he looks at her&mdash;it's thrilling!"
+</p>
+<p>
+Mr. McDonald said nothing for quite a while. The canoe party had
+evidently eaten everything they could find, and somebody had brought out
+a banjo and was playing.
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish, unable to vent her anger, suddenly turned on Mr. McDonald. "If you
+think," she said, "that the grocery list fooled us, it didn't!"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Grocery list?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"That's what I said."
+</p>
+<p>
+"How did you get my grocery list?"
+</p>
+<p>
+So she told him, and how she had deciphered it, and how the word
+"dynamite" had only confirmed her early suspicions.
+</p>
+<p>
+His only comment was to say, "Good Heavens!" in a smothered voice.
+</p>
+<p>
+"It was the extractor that made me suspicious," she finished. "What were
+you going to extract? Teeth?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"And so, when my Indian was swimming, you went through his things! It's
+the most astounding thing I ever&mdash;My dear lady, an extractor is used to
+get the hooks out of fish. It was no cipher, I assure you. I needed an
+extractor and I ordered it. The cipher you speak of is only a remarkable
+coincidence."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Huh!" said Tish. "And the paper you dropped in the train&mdash;was that a
+coincidence?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"That's not my secret," he said, and turned sulky at once.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Don't tell me," Tish said triumphantly, "that any young man comes here
+absolutely alone without a purpose!"
+</p>
+<p>
+"I had a purpose, all right; but it was not to blow up a railroad
+train."
+</p>
+<p>
+Apparently he thought he had said too much, for he relapsed into silence
+after that, with an occasional muttering.
+</p>
+<p>
+It was eight o'clock when Hutchins's canoe came into sight. She was
+paddling easily, but the detective was far behind and moving slowly.
+</p>
+<p>
+She saw the camp with its uninvited guests, and then she saw us. The
+detective, however, showed no curiosity; and we could see that he made
+for his landing and stumbled exhaustedly up the bank. Hutchins drew up
+beside us. "He'll not try that again, I think," she said in her crisp
+voice. "He's out of training. He panted like a motor launch. Who are our
+visitors?"
+</p>
+<p>
+Here her eyes fell on Mr. McDonald and her face set in the dusk.
+</p>
+<p>
+"You'll have to go back and get some gasoline, Hutchins."
+</p>
+<p>
+"What made you start out without looking?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"And send the vandals away. If they wait until I arrive, I'll be likely
+to do them some harm. I have never been so outraged."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Let me go for gasoline in the canoe," said Mr. McDonald. He leaned over
+the thwart and addressed Hutchins. "You're worn out," he said. "I
+promise to come back and be a perfectly well-behaved prisoner again."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Thanks, no."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'm wet. The exercise will warm me."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Is it possible," she said in a withering tone that was lost on us at
+the time, "that you brought no dumb-bells with you?"
+</p>
+<p>
+If we had had any doubts they should have been settled then; but we
+never suspected. It is incredible, looking back.
+</p>
+<p>
+The dusk was falling and I am not certain of what followed. It was,
+however, something like this: Mr. McDonald muttered something angrily
+and made a motion to get into the canoe. Hutchins replied that she would
+not have help from him if she died for it. The next thing we knew she
+was in the launch and the canoe was floating off on the current. Aggie
+squealed; and Mr. McDonald, instead of swimming after the thing, merely
+folded his arms and looked at it.
+</p>
+<p>
+"You know," he said to Hutchins, "you have so unpleasant a disposition
+that somebody we both know of is better off than he thinks he is!"
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish's fury knew no bounds, for there we were marooned and two of us wet
+to the skin. I must say for Hutchins, however, that when she learned
+about Aggie she was bitterly repentant, and insisted on putting her own
+sweater on her. But there we were and there we should likely stay.
+</p>
+<p>
+It was quite dark by that time, and we sat in the launch, rocking
+gently. The canoeing party had lighted a large fire on the beach, using
+the driftwood we had so painfully accumulated.
+</p>
+<p>
+We sat in silence, except that Tish, who was watching our camp, said
+once bitterly that she was glad there were three beds in the tent. The
+girls of the canoeing party would be comfortable.
+</p>
+<p>
+After a time Tish turned on Mr. McDonald sharply. "Since you claim to be
+no spy," she said, "perhaps you will tell us what brings you alone to
+this place? Don't tell me it's fish&mdash;I've seen you reading, with a line
+out. You're no fisherman."
+</p>
+<p>
+He hesitated. "No," he admitted. "I'll be frank, Miss Carberry. I did
+not come to fish."
+</p>
+<p>
+"What brought you?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Love," he said, in a low tone. "I don't expect you to believe me, but
+it's the honest truth."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Love!" Tish scoffed.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Perhaps I'd better tell you the story," he said. "It's long and&mdash;and
+rather sad."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Love stories," Hutchins put in coldly, "are terribly stupid, except to
+those concerned."
+</p>
+<p>
+"That," he retorted, "is because you have never been in love. You are
+young and&mdash;you will pardon the liberty?&mdash;attractive; but you are totally
+prosaic and unromantic."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Indeed!" she said, and relapsed into silence.
+</p>
+<p>
+"These other ladies," Mr. McDonald went on, "will understand the
+strangeness of my situation when I explain that the&mdash;the young lady I
+care for is very near; is, in fact, within sight."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Good gracious!" said Aggie. "Where?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"It is a long story, but it may help to while away the long night hours;
+for I dare say we are here for the night. Did any one happen to notice
+the young lady in the first canoe, in the pink tam-o'-shanter?"
+</p>
+<p>
+We said we had&mdash;all except Hutchins, who, of course, had not seen her.
+Mr. McDonald got a wet cigarette from his pocket and, finding a box of
+matches on the seat, made an attempt to dry it over the flames; so his
+story was told in the flickering light of one match after another.
+</p>
+
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<h3><a name="h2H_4_0021" id="h2H_4_0021"></a>
+ VI
+</h3>
+<p>
+"I am," Mr. McDonald said, as the cigarette steamed, "the son of poor
+but honest parents. All my life I have been obliged to labor. You may
+say that my English is surprisingly pure, under such conditions. As a
+matter of fact, I educated myself at night, using a lantern in the top
+of my father's stable."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I thought you said he was poor," Hutchins put in nastily. "How did he
+have a stable?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"He kept a livery stable. Any points that are not clear I will explain
+afterward. Once the thread of a narrative is broken, it is difficult to
+resume, Miss Hutchins. Near us, in a large house, lived the lady of my
+heart."
+</p>
+<p>
+"The pink tam-o'-shanter girl!" said Aggie. "I begin to understand."
+</p>
+<p>
+"But," he added, "near us also lived a red-headed boy. She liked him
+very much, and even in the long-ago days I was fiercely jealous of him.
+It may surprise you to know that in those days I longed&mdash;fairly
+longed&mdash;for red hair and a red mustache."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I hate to interrupt," said Hutchins; "but did he have a mustache as a
+boy?"
+</p>
+<p>
+He ignored her. "We three grew up together. The girl is
+beautiful&mdash;you've probably noticed that&mdash;and amiable. The one thing I
+admire in a young woman is amiability. It would not, for instance, have
+occurred to her to isolate an entire party on the bosom of a northern
+and treacherous river out of pure temper."
+</p>
+<p>
+"To think," said Aggie softly, "that she is just over there by the
+camp-fire! Don't you suppose, if she loves you, she senses your
+nearness?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"That's it exactly," he replied in a gloomy voice, "if she loves me! But
+does she? In other words, has she come up the river to meet me or to
+meet my rival? She knows we are here. Both of us have written her. The
+presence of one or the other of us is the real reason for this excursion
+of hers. But again the question is&mdash;which?"
+</p>
+<p>
+Here the match he was holding under the cigarette burned his fingers and
+he flung it overboard with a violent gesture.
+</p>
+<p>
+"The detective, of course," said Tish. "I knew it from the beginning of
+your story."
+</p>
+<p>
+"The detective," he assented. "You see his very profession attracts.
+There's an element of romance in it. I myself have kept on with my
+father and now run the&mdash;er&mdash;livery stable. My business is a handicap
+from a romantic point of view.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I am aware," Mr. McDonald went on, "that it is not customary to speak
+so frankly of affairs of this sort; but I have two reasons. It hurts me
+to rest under unjust suspicion. I am no spy, ladies. And the second
+reason is even stronger. Consider my desperate position: In the morning
+my rival will see her; he will paddle his canoe to the great rock below
+your camp and sing his love song from the water. In the morning I shall
+sit here helpless&mdash;ill, possibly&mdash;and see all that I value in life slip
+out of my grasp. And all through no fault of my own! Things are so
+evenly balanced, so little will shift the weight of her favor, that
+frankly the first one to reach her will get her."
+</p>
+<p>
+I confess I was thrilled. And even Tish was touched; but she covered her
+emotion with hard common sense.
+</p>
+<p>
+"What's her name?" she demanded.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Considering my frankness I must withhold that. Why not simply refer to
+her as the pink tam-o'-shanter&mdash;or, better still and more briefly, the
+P.T.S.? That may stand for pink tam-o'-shanter, or the Person That
+Smiles,&mdash;she smiles a great deal,&mdash;or&mdash;or almost anything."
+</p>
+<p>
+"It also stands," said Hutchins, with a sniff, "for Pretty Tall Story."
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish considered her skepticism unworthy in one so young, and told her
+so; on which she relapsed into a sulky silence.
+</p>
+<p>
+In view of what we knew, the bonfire at our camp and the small figure
+across the river took on a new significance.
+</p>
+<p>
+As Aggie said, to think of the red-haired man sleeping calmly while his
+lady love was so near and his rival, so to speak, <i>hors de combat!</i>
+Shortly after finishing his story, Mr. McDonald went to the stern of the
+boat and lifted the anchor rope.
+</p>
+<p>
+"It is possible," he said, "that the current will carry us to my island
+with a little judicious management. Even though we miss it, we'll hardly
+be worse off than we are."
+</p>
+<p>
+It was surprising we had not thought of it before, for the plan
+succeeded admirably. By moving a few feet at a time and then anchoring,
+we made slow but safe progress, and at last touched shore. We got out,
+and Mr. McDonald built a large fire, near which we put Aggie to steam.
+His supper, which he had not had time to eat, he generously divided, and
+we heated the tea. Hutchins, however, refused to eat.
+</p>
+<p>
+Warmth and food restored Tish's mind to its usual keenness. I recall now
+the admiration in Mr. McDonald's eyes when she suddenly put down the
+sandwich she was eating and exclaimed:&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+"The flags, of course! He told her to watch for a red flag as she came
+up the river; so when the party saw ours they landed. Perhaps they still
+think it is his camp and that he is away overnight."
+</p>
+<p>
+"That's it, exactly," he said. "Think of the poor wretch's excitement
+when he saw your flag!"
+</p>
+<p>
+Still, on looking back, it seems curious that we overlooked the way the
+red-headed man had followed Hutchins about. True, men are polygamous
+animals, Tish says, and are quite capable of following one woman about
+while they are sincerely in love with somebody else. But, when you think
+of it, the detective had apparently followed Hutchins from the start,
+and had gone into the wilderness to be near her, with only a suitcase
+and a mackintosh coat; which looked like a mad infatuation.
+</p>
+<p>
+[Tish says she thought of this at the time, and that, from what she had
+seen of the P.T.S., Hutchins was much prettier. But she says she decided
+that men often love one quality in one girl and another in another; that
+he probably loved Hutchins's beauty and the amiability of the P.T.S.
+Also, she says, she reflected that the polygamy of the Far East is
+probably due to this tendency in the male more than to a preponderance
+of women.]
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish called me aside while Mr. McDonald was gathering firewood. "I'm a
+fool and a guilty woman, Lizzie," she said. "Because of an unjust
+suspicion I have possibly wrecked this poor boy's life."
+</p>
+<p>
+I tried to soothe her. "They might have been wretchedly unhappy
+together, Tish," I said; "and, anyhow, I doubt whether he is able to
+support a wife. There's nothing much in keeping a livery stable
+nowadays."
+</p>
+<p>
+"There's only one thing that still puzzles me," Tish observed: "granting
+that the grocery order was a grocery order, what about the note?"
+</p>
+<p>
+We might have followed this line of thought, and saved what occurred
+later, but that a new idea suddenly struck Tish. She is curious in that
+way; her mind works very rapidly at times, and because I cannot take her
+mental hurdles, so to speak, she is often impatient.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Lizzie," she said suddenly, "did you notice that when the anchor was
+lifted, we drifted directly to this island? Don't stare at me like that.
+Use your wits."
+</p>
+<p>
+When I failed instantly to understand, however, she turned abruptly and
+left me, disappearing in the shadows.
+</p>
+<p>
+For the next hour nothing happened. Tish was not in sight and Aggie
+slept by the fire. Hutchins sat with her chin cupped in her hands, and
+Mr. McDonald gathered driftwood.
+</p>
+<p>
+Hutchins only spoke once. "I'm awfully sorry about the canoe, Miss
+Lizzie," she said; "it was silly and&mdash;and selfish. I don't always act
+like a bad child. The truth is, I'm rather upset and nervous. I hate to
+be thwarted&mdash;I'm sorry I can't explain any further."
+</p>
+<p>
+I was magnanimous. "I'm sure, until to-night, you've been perfectly
+satisfactory," I said; "but it seems extraordinary that you should
+dislike men the way you do."
+</p>
+<p>
+She only eyed me searchingly.
+</p>
+<p>
+It is my evening custom to prepare for the night by taking my switch off
+and combing and braiding my hair; so, as we seemed to be settled for the
+night, I asked Mr. McDonald whether the camp afforded an extra comb. He
+brought out a traveling-case at once from the tent and opened it.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Here's a comb," he said. "I never use one. I'm sorry this is all I can
+supply."
+</p>
+<p>
+My eyes were glued to the case. It was an English traveling-case, with
+gold-mounted fittings. He saw me staring at it and changed color.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Nice bag, isn't it?" he said. "It was a gift, of course. The&mdash;the
+livery stable doesn't run much to this sort of thing."
+</p>
+<p>
+But the fine edge of suspicion had crept into my mind again.
+</p>
+<hr />
+<p>
+Tish did not return to the fire for some time. Before she came back we
+were all thoroughly alarmed. The island was small, and a short search
+convinced us that she was not on it!
+</p>
+<p>
+We wakened Aggie and told her, and the situation was very painful. The
+launch was where we had left it. Mr. McDonald looked more and more
+uneasy.
+</p>
+<p>
+"My sane mind tells me she's perfectly safe," he said. "I don't know
+that I've ever met a person more able to take care of herself; but it's
+darned odd&mdash;that's all I can say."
+</p>
+<p>
+Just as he spoke a volley of shots sounded from up the river near our
+camp, two close together and then one; and somebody screamed.
+</p>
+<p>
+It was very dark. We could see lanterns flashing at our camp and
+somebody was yelling hoarsely. One lantern seemed to run up and down the
+beach in mad excitement, and then, out of the far-off din, Aggie, whose
+ears are sharp, suddenly heard the splash of a canoe paddle.
+</p>
+<p>
+I shall tell Tish's story of what happened as she told it to Charlie
+Sands two weeks or so later.
+</p>
+<p>
+"It is perfectly simple," she said, "and it's stupid to make such a fuss
+over it. Don't talk to me about breaking the law! The girl came; I
+didn't steal her."
+</p>
+<p>
+Charlie Sands, I remember, interrupted at that moment to remind her that
+she had shot a hole in the detective's canoe; but this only irritated
+her.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Certainly I did," she snapped; "but it's perfectly idiotic of him to
+say that it took off the heel of his shoe. In that stony country it's
+always easy to lose a heel."
+</p>
+<p>
+But to return to Tish's story:&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+"It occurred to me," she said, "that, if the launch had drifted to Mr.
+McDonald's island, the canoe might have done so too; so I took a look
+round. I'd been pretty much worried about having called the boy a spy
+when he wasn't, and it worried me to think that he couldn't get away
+from the place. I never liked the red-haired man. He was cruel to
+Aggie's cat&mdash;but we've told you that.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I knew that in the morning the detective would see the P.T.S., as we
+called her, and he could get over and propose before breakfast. But when
+I found the canoe&mdash;yes, I found it&mdash;I didn't intend to do anything more
+than steal the detective's boat."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Is that all?" said Charlie Sands sarcastically. "You disappoint me,
+Aunt Letitia! With all the chances you had&mdash;to burn his pitiful little
+tent, for instance, or steal his suitcase&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+"But on my way," Tish went on with simple dignity, "it occurred to me
+that I could move things a step farther by taking the girl to Mr.
+McDonald and letting him have his chance right away. Things went well
+from the start, for she was standing alone, looking out over the river.
+It was dark, except for the starlight, and I didn't know it was she. I
+beached the canoe and she squealed a little when I spoke to her."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Just what," broke in Charlie Sands, "does one say under such
+circumstances? Sometime I may wish to abduct a young woman and it is
+well to be prepared."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I told her the young man she had expected was on Island Eleven and had
+sent me to get her. She was awfully excited. She said they'd seen his
+signal, but nothing of him. And when they'd found a number of feminine
+things round they all felt a little&mdash;well, you can understand. She went
+back to get a coat, and while she was gone I untied the canoes and
+pushed them out into the river. I'm thorough, and I wasn't going to have
+a lot of people interfering before we got things fixed."
+</p>
+<p>
+It was here, I think, that Charlie Sands gave a low moan and collapsed
+on the sofa. "Certainly!" he said in a stifled voice. "I believe in
+being thorough. And, of course, a few canoes more or less do not
+matter."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Later," Tish said, "I knew I'd been thoughtless about the canoes; but,
+of course, it was too late then."
+</p>
+<p>
+"And when was it that you assaulted the detective?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"He fired first," said Tish. "I never felt more peaceable in my life.
+It's absurd for him to say that he was watching our camp, as he had
+every night we'd been there. Who asked him to guard us? And the idea of
+his saying he thought we were Indians stealing things, and that he fired
+into the air! The bullets sang past me. I had hardly time to get my
+revolver out of my stocking."
+</p>
+<p>
+"And then?" asked Charlie Sands.
+</p>
+<p>
+"And then," said Tish, "we went calmly down the river to Island Eleven.
+We went rapidly, for at first the detective did not know I had shot a
+hole in his canoe, and he followed us. It stands to reason that if I'd
+shot his heel off he'd have known there was a hole in the boat. Luckily
+the girl was in the bottom of the canoe when she fainted or we might
+have been upset."
+</p>
+<p>
+It was at this point, I believe, that Charlie Sands got his hat and
+opened the door.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I find," he said, "that I cannot stand any more at present, Aunt Tish.
+I shall return when I am stronger."
+</p>
+<hr />
+<p>
+So I shall go back to my own narrative. Really my justification is
+almost complete. Any one reading to this point will realize the
+injustice of the things that have been said about us.
+</p>
+<p>
+We were despairing of Tish, as I have said, when we heard the shots and
+then the approach of a canoe. Then Tish hailed us.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Quick, somebody!" she said. "I have a cramp in my right leg."
+</p>
+<p>
+[The canoeing position, kneeling as one must, had been always very
+trying for her. She frequently developed cramps, which only a hot
+footbath relieved.]
+</p>
+<p>
+Mr. McDonald waded out into the water. Our beach fire illuminated the
+whole scene distinctly, and when he saw the P.T.S. huddled in the canoe
+he stopped as though he had been shot.
+</p>
+<p>
+"How interesting!" said Hutchins from the bank, in her cool voice.
+</p>
+<p>
+I remember yet Tish, stamping round on her cramped limb and smiling
+benevolently at all of us. The girl, however, looked startled and
+unhappy, and a little dizzy. Hutchins helped her to a fallen tree.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Where&mdash;where is he?" said the P.T.S.
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish stared at her. "Bless the girl!" she said. "Did you think I meant
+the other one?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"I&mdash;What other one?"
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish put her hand on Mr. McDonald's arm. "My dear girl," she said, "this
+young man adores you. He's all that a girl ought to want in the man she
+loves. I have done him a grave injustice and he has borne it nobly. Come
+now&mdash;let me put your hand in his and say you will marry him."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Marry him!" said the P.T.S. "Why, I never saw him in my life before!"
+</p>
+<p>
+We had been so occupied with this astounding scene that none of us had
+noticed the arrival of the detective. He limped rapidly up the
+bank&mdash;having lost his heel, as I have explained&mdash;and, dripping with
+water, confronted us. When a red-haired person is pale, he is very pale.
+And his teeth showed.
+</p>
+<p>
+He ignored all of us but the P.T.S., who turned and saw him, and went
+straight into his arms in the most unmaidenly fashion.
+</p>
+<p>
+"By Heaven," he said, "I thought that elderly lunatic had taken you off
+and killed you!"
+</p>
+<p>
+He kissed her quite frantically before all of us; and then, with one arm
+round her, he confronted Tish.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'm through!" he said. "I'm done! There isn't a salary in the world
+that will make me stay within gunshot of you another day." He eyed her
+fiercely. "You are a dangerous woman, madam," he said. "I'm going to
+bring a charge against you for abduction and assault with intent to
+kill. And if there's any proof needed I'll show my canoe, full of water
+to the gunwale."
+</p>
+<p>
+Here he kissed the girl again.
+</p>
+<p>
+"You&mdash;you know her?" gasped Mr. McDonald, and dropped on a tree-trunk,
+as though he were too weak to stand.
+</p>
+<p>
+"It looks like it, doesn't it?"
+</p>
+<p>
+Here I happened to glance at Hutchins, and she was convulsed with mirth!
+Tish saw her, too, and glared at her; but she seemed to get worse. Then,
+without the slightest warning, she walked round the camp-fire and kissed
+Mr. McDonald solemnly on the top of his head.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I give it up!" she said. "Somebody will have to marry you and take care
+of you. I'd better be the person."
+</p>
+<hr />
+<p>
+"But why was the detective watching Hutchins?" said Charlie Sands. "Was
+it because he had heard of my Aunt Letitia's reckless nature? I am still
+bewildered."
+</p>
+<p>
+"You remember the night we got the worms?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"I see. The detective was watching all of you because you stole the
+worms."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Stole nothing!" Tish snapped. "That's the girl's house. She's the Miss
+Newcomb you read about in the papers. Now do you understand?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Certainly I do. She was a fugitive from justice because the cat found
+dynamite in the woods. Or&mdash;perhaps I'm a trifle confused, but&mdash;Now I
+have it! She had stolen a gold-mounted traveling-bag and given it to
+McDonald. Lucky chap! I was crazy about Hutchins myself. You might tip
+her the word that I'm badly off for a traveling-case myself. But what
+about the P.T.S.? How did she happen on the scene?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"She was engaged to the detective, and she was camping down the river.
+He had sent her word where he was. The red flag was to help her find
+him."
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish knows Charlie Sands, so she let him talk. Then:&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+"Mr. McDonald was too wealthy, Charlie," she said; "so when she wanted
+him to work and be useful, and he refused, she ran off and got a
+situation herself to teach him a lesson. She could drive a car. But her
+people heard about it, and that wretched detective was responsible for
+her safety. That's why he followed her about."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I should like to follow her about myself," said Charlie Sands. "Do you
+think she's unalterably decided to take McDonald, money and all? He's
+still an idler. Lend me your car, Aunt Tish. There's a theory there;
+and&mdash;who knows?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"He is going to work for six months before she marries him," Tish said.
+"He seems to like to work, now he has started."
+</p>
+<p>
+She rang the bell and Hannah came to the door.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Hannah," said Tish calmly, "call up the garage and tell McDonald to
+bring the car round. Mr. Sands is going out."
+</p>
+
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<h2><a name="h2H_4_0022" id="h2H_4_0022"></a>
+ MY COUNTRY TISH OF THEE&mdash;
+</h2>
+<p>
+We had meant to go to Europe this last summer, and Tish would have gone
+anyhow, war or no war, if we had not switched her off onto something
+else. "Submarines fiddlesticks!" she said. "Give me a good life
+preserver, with a bottle of blackberry cordial fastened to it, and the
+sea has no terrors for me."
+</p>
+<p>
+She said the proper way to do, in case the ship was torpedoed, was to go
+up on an upper deck, and let the vessel sink under one.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Then without haste," she explained, "as the water rises about one,
+strike out calmly. The life-belt supports one, but swim gently for the
+exercise. It will prevent chilling. With a waterproof bag of crackers,
+and mild weather, one could go on comfortably for a day or two."
+</p>
+<p>
+I still remember the despairing face Aggie turned to me. It was December
+then, and very cold.
+</p>
+<p>
+However, she said nothing more until January. Early in that month
+Charlie Sands came to Tish's to Sunday dinner, and we were all there.
+The subject came up then.
+</p>
+<p>
+It was about the time Tish took up vegetarianism, I remember that,
+because the only way she could induce Charlie Sands to come to dinner
+was to promise to have two chops for him. Personally I am not a
+vegetarian. I am not and never will be. I took a firm stand except when
+at Tish's home. But Aggie followed Tish's lead, of course, and I believe
+lived up to it as far as possible, although it is quite true that,
+stopping in one day unexpectedly to secure a new crochet pattern, I
+smelled broiling steak. But Aggie explained that she merely intended to
+use the juice from a small portion, having had one of her weak spells,
+the balance to go to the janitor's dog.
+</p>
+<p>
+However, this is a digression.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Europe!" said Charlie Sands. "Forget it! What in the name of the
+gastric juice is this I'm eating?"
+</p>
+<p>
+It was a mixture of bran, raisins, and chopped nuts, as I recall it,
+moistened with water and pressed into a compact form. It was Tish's own
+invention. She called it "Bran-Nut," and was talking of making it in
+large quantities for sale.
+</p>
+<p>
+Charlie Sands gave it up with a feeble gesture. "I'm sorry, Aunt
+Letitia," he said at last; "I'm a strong man ordinarily, but by the time
+I've got it masticated I'm too weak to swallow it. If&mdash;if one could
+have a stream of water playing on it while working, it would facilitate
+things."
+</p>
+<p>
+"The Ostermaiers," said Aggie, "are going West."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Good for the Ostermaiers," said Charlie Sands. "Great idea. See America
+first. 'My Country Tish of Thee,' etc. Why don't you three try it?"
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish relinquished Europe slowly.
+</p>
+<p>
+"One would think," Charlie Sands said, "that you were a German being
+asked to give up Belgium."
+</p>
+<p>
+"What part of the West?" she demanded. "It's all civilized, isn't it?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"The Rocky Mountains," said Charlie Sands, "will never be civilized."
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish broke off a piece of Bran-Nut, and when she thought no one was
+looking poured a little tea over it. There was a gleam in her eye that
+Aggie and I have learned to know.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Mountains!" she said. "That ought to be good for Aggie's hay fever."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'd rather live with hay fever," Aggie put in sharply, "than cure it by
+falling over a precipice."
+</p>
+<p>
+"You'll have to take a chance on that, of course," Charlie Sands said.
+"I'm not sure it will be safe, but I am sure it will be interesting."
+</p>
+<p>
+Oh, he knew Tish well enough. Tell her a thing was dangerous, and no
+power could restrain her.
+</p>
+<p>
+I do not mind saying that I was not keen about the thing. I had my
+fortune told years ago, and the palmist said that if a certain line had
+had a bend in it I should have been hanged. But since it did not, to be
+careful of high places.
+</p>
+<p>
+"It's a sporting chance," said Charlie Sands, although I was prodding
+him under the table. "With some good horses and a bag of
+this&mdash;er&mdash;concentrated food, you would have the time of your young
+lives."
+</p>
+<p>
+This was figurative. We are all of us round fifty.
+</p>
+<p>
+"The&mdash;the Bran-Nut," he said, "would serve for both food and ammunition.
+I can see you riding along, now and then dropping a piece of it on the
+head of some unlucky mountain goat, and watching it topple over into
+eternity. I can see&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Riding!" said Aggie. "Then I'm not going. I have never been on a horse
+and I never intend to be."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Don't be a fool," Tish snapped. "If you've never been on a horse, it's
+time and to spare you got on one."
+</p>
+<p>
+Hannah had been clearing the table with her lips shut tight. Hannah is
+an old and privileged servant and has a most unfortunate habit of
+speaking her mind. So now she stopped beside Tish.
+</p>
+<p>
+"You take my advice and go, Miss Tish," she said. "If you ride a horse
+round some and get an appetite, you'll go down on your knees and
+apologize to your Maker for the stuff we've been eating the last four
+weeks." She turned to Charlie Sands, and positively her chin was
+quivering. "I'm a healthy woman," she said, "and I work hard and need
+good nourishing food. When it's come to a point where I eat the cat's
+meat and let it go hungry," she said, "it's time either I lost my
+appetite or Miss Tish went away."
+</p>
+<p>
+Well, Tish dismissed Hannah haughtily from the room, and the
+conversation went on. None of us had been far West, although Tish has a
+sister-in-law in Toledo, Ohio. But owing to a quarrel over a pair of
+andirons that had been in the family for a time, she had never visited
+her.
+</p>
+<p>
+"You'll like it, all of you," Charlie Sands said as we waited for the
+baked apples. "Once get started with a good horse between your knees,
+and&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+"I hope," Tish interrupted him, "that you do not think we are going to
+ride astride!"
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'm darned sure of it."
+</p>
+<p>
+That was Charlie Sands's way of talking. He does not mean to be rude,
+and he is really a young man of splendid character. But, as Tish says,
+contact with the world, although it has not spoiled him, has roughened
+his speech.
+</p>
+<p>
+"You see," he explained, "there are places out there where the horses
+have to climb like goats. It's only fair to them to distribute your
+weight equally. A side saddle is likely to turn and drop you a mile or
+two down a crack."
+</p>
+<p>
+Aggie went rather white and sneezed violently.
+</p>
+<p>
+But Tish looked thoughtful. "It sounds reasonable," she said. "I've felt
+for a long time that I'd be glad to discard skirts. Skirts," she said,
+"are badges of servitude, survivals of the harem, reminders of a time
+when nothing was expected of women but parasitic leisure."
+</p>
+<p>
+I tried to tell her that she was wrong about the skirts. Miss
+MacGillicuddy, our missionary in India, had certainly said that the
+women in harems wore bloomers. But Tish left the room abruptly,
+returning shortly after with a volume of the encyclopædia, and looked up
+the Rocky Mountains.
+</p>
+<p>
+I remember it said that the highest ranges were, as compared with the
+size and shape of the earth, only as the corrugations on the skin of an
+orange. Either the man who wrote that had never seen an orange or he had
+never seen the Rocky Mountains. Orange, indeed! If he had said the upper
+end of a pineapple it would have been more like it. I wish the man who
+wrote it would go to Glacier Park. I am not a vindictive woman, but I
+know one or two places where I would like to place him and make him
+swallow that orange. I'd like to see him on a horse, on the brink of a
+cañon a mile deep, and have his horse reach over the edge for a stray
+plant or two, or standing in a cloud up to his waist, so that, as Aggie
+so plaintively observed, "The lower half of one is in a snowstorm while
+the upper part is getting sunburned."
+</p>
+<p>
+For we went. Oh, yes, we went. It is not the encyclopædia's fault that
+we came back. But now that we are home, and nothing wrong except a touch
+of lumbago that Tish got from sleeping on the ground, and, of course,
+Aggie's unfortunate experience with her teeth, I look back on our
+various adventures with pleasure. I even contemplate a return next year,
+although Aggie says she will die first. But even that is not to be taken
+as final. The last time I went to see her, she had bought a revolver
+from the janitor and was taking lessons in loading it.
+</p>
+<p>
+The Ostermaiers went also. Not with us, however. The congregation made
+up a purse for the purpose, and Tish and Aggie and I went further, and
+purchased a cigar-case for Mr. Ostermaier and a quantity of cigars.
+Smoking is the good man's only weakness.
+</p>
+<p>
+I must say, however, that it is absurd to hear Mrs. Ostermaier boasting
+of the trip. To hear her talk, one would think they had done the whole
+thing, instead of sitting in an automobile and looking up at the
+mountains. I shall never forget the day they were in a car passing along
+a road, and we crossed unexpectedly ahead of them and went on straight
+up the side of a mountain.
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish had a sombrero on the side of her head, and was resting herself in
+the saddle by having her right leg thrown negligently over the horse's
+neck. With the left foot she was kicking our pack-horse, a creature so
+scarred with brands that Tish had named her Jane, after a cousin of hers
+who had had so many operations that Tish says she is now entirely
+unfurnished.
+</p>
+<p>
+Mr. Ostermaier's face was terrible, and only two days ago Mrs.
+Ostermaier came over to ask about putting an extra width in the skirt to
+her last winter's suit. But it is my belief that she came to save Tish's
+soul, and nothing else.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'm so glad wide skirts have come in," she said. "They're so modest,
+aren't they, Miss Tish?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Not in a wind," Tish said, eying her coldly.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I do think, dear Miss Tish," she went on with her eyes down, "that
+to&mdash;to go about in riding-breeches before a young man is&mdash;well, it is
+hardly discreet, is it?"
+</p>
+<p>
+I saw Tish glancing about the room. She was pretty angry, and I knew
+perfectly well what she wanted. I put my knitting-bag over Charlie
+Sands's tobacco-pouch.
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish had learned to roll cigarettes out in Glacier Park. Not that she
+smoked them, of course, but she said she might as well know how. There
+was no knowing when it would come in handy. And when she wishes to calm
+herself she reaches instinctively for what Bill used to call, strangely,
+"the makings."
+</p>
+<p>
+"If," she said, her eye still roving,&mdash;"if it was any treat to a
+twenty-four-year-old cowpuncher to see three elderly women in
+riding-breeches, Mrs. Ostermaier,&mdash;and it's kind of you to think
+so,&mdash;why, I'm not selfish."
+</p>
+<p>
+Mrs. Ostermaier's face was terrible. She gathered up her skirt and rose.
+"I shall not tell Mr. Ostermaier what you have just said," she observed
+with her mouth set hard. "We owe you a great deal, especially the return
+of my earrings. But I must request, Miss Tish, that you do not voice
+such sentiments in the Sunday school."
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish watched her out. Then she sat down and rolled eleven cigarettes for
+Charlie Sands, one after the other. At last she spoke.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'm not sure," she said tartly, "that if I had it to do over again I'd
+do it. That woman's not a Christian. I was thinking," she went on, "of
+giving them a part of the reward to go to Asbury Park with. But she'd
+have to wear blinders on the bathing-beach, so I'll not do it."
+</p>
+<p>
+However, I am ahead of my recital.
+</p>
+<p>
+For a few days Tish said nothing more, but one Sunday morning, walking
+home from church, she turned to me suddenly and said:&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+"Lizzie, you're fat."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'm as the Lord made me," I replied with some spirit.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Fiddlesticks!" said Tish. "You're as your own sloth and overindulgence
+has made you. Don't blame the Good Man for it."
+</p>
+<p>
+Now, I am a peaceful woman, and Tish is as my own sister, and indeed
+even more so. But I was roused to anger by her speech.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I've been fleshy all my life," I said. "I'm no lazier than most, and
+I'm a dratted sight more agreeable than some I know, on account of
+having the ends of my nerves padded."
+</p>
+<p>
+But she switched to another subject in her characteristic manner.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Have you ever reflected, either of you," she observed, "that we know
+nothing of this great land of ours? That we sing of loving 'thy rocks
+and rills, thy woods and templed hills'&mdash;although the word 'templed'
+savors of paganism and does not belong in a national hymn? And that it
+is all balderdash?"
+</p>
+<p>
+Aggie took exception to this and said that she loved her native land,
+and had been south to Pinehurst and west to see her niece in
+Minneapolis, on account of the baby having been named for her.
+</p>
+<p>
+But Tish merely listened with a grim smile. "Travel from a car window,"
+she observed, "is no better than travel in a nickelodeon. I have done
+all of that I am going to. I intend to become acquainted with my native
+land, closely acquainted. State by State I shall wander over it,
+refreshing soul and body and using muscles too long unused."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Tish!" Aggie quavered. "You are not going on another walking-tour?"
+</p>
+<p>
+Only a year or two before Tish had read Stevenson's "Travels with a
+Donkey," and had been possessed to follow his example. I have elsewhere
+recorded the details of that terrible trip. Even I turned pale, I fear,
+and cast a nervous eye toward the table where Tish keeps her
+reading-matter.
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish is imaginative, and is always influenced by the latest book she has
+read. For instance, a volume on "Nursing at the Front" almost sent her
+across to France, although she cannot make a bed and never could, and
+turns pale at the sight of blood; and another time a book on flying
+machines sent her up into the air, mentally if not literally. I shall
+never forget the time she secured some literature on the Mormon Church,
+and the difficulty I had in smuggling it out under my coat.
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish did not refute the walking-tour at once, but fell into a deep
+reverie.
+</p>
+<p>
+It is not her custom to confide her plans to us until they are fully
+shaped and too far on to be interfered with, which accounts for our
+nervousness.
+</p>
+<p>
+On arriving at her apartment, however, we found a map laid out on the
+table and the Rocky Mountains marked with pins. We noticed that whenever
+she straightened from the table she grunted.
+</p>
+<p>
+"What we want," Tish said, "is isolation. No people. No crowds. No
+servants. If I don't get away from Hannah soon I'll murder her."
+</p>
+<p>
+"It wouldn't hurt to see somebody now and then, Tish," Aggie objected.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Nobody," Tish said firmly. "A good horse is companion enough." She
+forgot herself and straightened completely, and she groaned.
+</p>
+<p>
+"We might meet some desirable people, Tish," I put in firmly. "If we do,
+I don't intend to run like a rabbit."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Desirable people!" Tish scoffed. "In the Rocky Mountains! My dear
+Lizzie, every desperado in the country takes refuge in the Rockies. Of
+course, if you want to take up with that class&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+Aggie sneezed and looked wretched. As for me, I made up my mind then and
+there that if Letitia Carberry was going to such a neighborhood, she was
+not going alone. I am not much with a revolver, but mighty handy with a
+pair of lungs.
+</p>
+<p>
+Well, Tish had it all worked out. "I've found the very place," she said.
+"In the first place, it's Government property. When our country puts
+aside a part of itself as a public domain we should show our
+appreciation. In the second place, it's wild. I'd as soon spend a
+vacation in Central Park near the Zoo as in the Yellowstone. In the
+third place, with an Indian reservation on one side and a national
+forest on the other, it's bound to be lonely. Any tourist," she said
+scornfully, "can go to the Yosemite and be photographed under a redwood
+tree."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Do the Indians stay on the reservation?" Aggie asked feebly.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Probably not," Tish observed coldly. "Once for all, Aggie&mdash;if you are
+going to run like a scared deer every time you see an Indian or a bear,
+I wish you would go to Asbury Park."
+</p>
+<p>
+She forgot herself then and sat down quickly, an action which was
+followed by an agonized expression.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Tish," I said sharply, "you have been riding a horse!
+</p>
+<p>
+"Only in a cinder ring," she replied with unwonted docility. "The
+teacher said I would be a trifle stiff."
+</p>
+<p>
+"How long did you ride?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Not more than twenty minutes," she said. "The lesson was to be an hour,
+but somebody put a nickel in a mechanical piano, and the creature I was
+on started going sideways."
+</p>
+<p>
+Well, she had fallen off and had to be taken home in a taxicab. When
+Aggie heard it she simply took the pins out of the map and stuck them in
+Tish's cushion. Her mouth was set tight.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I didn't really fall," Tish said. "I sat down, and it was cinders, and
+not hard. It has made my neck stiff, that's all."
+</p>
+<p>
+"That's enough," said Aggie. "If I've got to seek pleasure by ramming my
+spinal column up into my skull and crowding my brains, I'll stay at
+home."
+</p>
+<p>
+"You can't fall out of a Western saddle," Tish protested rather
+bitterly. "And if I were you, Aggie, I wouldn't worry about crowding my
+brains."
+</p>
+<p>
+However, she probably regretted this speech, for she added more gently:
+"A high altitude will help your hay fever, Aggie."
+</p>
+<p>
+Aggie said with some bitterness that her hay fever did not need to be
+helped. That, as far as she could see, it was strong and flourishing. At
+that matters rested, except for a bit of conversation just before we
+left. Aggie had put on her sweater vest and her muffler and the jacket
+of her winter suit and was getting into her fur coat, when Tish said:
+"Soft as mush, both of you!"
+</p>
+<p>
+"If you think, Tish Carberry," I began, "that I&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Apple dumplings!" said Tish. "Sofa pillows! Jellyfish! Not a muscle to
+divide between you!"
+</p>
+<p>
+I drew on my woolen tights angrily.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Elevators!" Tish went on scornfully. "Street cars and taxicabs! No
+wonder your bodies are mere masses of protoplasm, or cellulose, or
+whatever it is."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Since when," said Aggie, "have you been walking to develop yourself,
+Tish? I must say&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+Here anger brought on one of her sneezing attacks, and she was unable to
+finish.
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish stood before us oracularly. "After next September," she said, "you
+will both scorn the sloth of civilization. You will move about for the
+joy of moving about. You will have cast off the shackles of the flesh
+and be born anew. That is, if a plan of mine goes through. Lizzie, you
+will lose fifty pounds!"
+</p>
+<p>
+Well, I didn't want to lose fifty pounds. After our summer in the Maine
+woods I had gone back to find that my new tailor-made coat, which had
+fitted me exactly, and being stiffened with haircloth kept its shape off
+and looked as if I myself were hanging to the hook, had caved in on me
+in several places. Just as I had gone to the expense of having it taken
+in I began to put on flesh again, and had to have it let out. Besides,
+no woman over forty should ever reduce, at least not violently. She
+wrinkles. My face that summer had fallen into accordion plaits, and I
+had the curious feeling of having enough skin for two.
+</p>
+<p>
+Aggie had suggested at that time that I have my cheeks filled out with
+paraffin, which I believe cakes and gives the appearance of youth. But
+Mrs. Ostermaier knew a woman who had done so, and being hit on one side
+by a snowball, the padding broke in half, one part moving up under her
+eye and the second lodging at the angle of her jaw. She tried lying on a
+hot-water bottle to melt the pieces and bring them together again, but
+they did not remain fixed, having developed a wandering habit and
+slipping unexpectedly now and then. Mrs. Ostermaier says it is painful
+to watch her holding them in place when she yawns.
+</p>
+<p>
+Strangely enough, however, a few weeks later Tish's enthusiasm for the
+West had apparently vanished. When several weeks went by and the atlas
+had disappeared from her table, and she had given up vegetarianism for
+Swedish movements, we felt that we were to have a quiet summer after
+all, and Aggie wrote to a hotel in Asbury Park about rooms for July and
+August.
+</p>
+<p>
+There was a real change in Tish. She stopped knitting abdominal bands
+for the soldiers in Europe, for one thing, although she had sent over
+almost a dozen very tasty ones. In the evenings, when we dropped in to
+chat with her, she said very little and invariably dozed in her chair.
+</p>
+<p>
+On one such occasion, Aggie having inadvertently stepped on the rocker
+of her chair while endeavoring by laying a hand on Tish's brow to
+discover if she was feverish, the chair tilted back and Tish wakened
+with a jerk.
+</p>
+<p>
+She immediately fell to groaning and clasped her hands to the small of
+her back, quite ignoring poor Aggie, whom the chair had caught in the
+epigastric region, and who was compelled for some time to struggle for
+breath.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Jumping Jehoshaphat!" said Tish in an angry tone. It is rare for Tish
+to use the name of a Biblical character in this way, but she was clearly
+suffering. "What in the world are you doing, Aggie?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"T-t-trying to breathe," poor Aggie replied.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Then I wish," Tish said coldly, "that you would make the effort some
+place else than on the rocker of my chair. You jarred me, and I am in no
+state to be jarred."
+</p>
+<p>
+But she refused to explain further, beyond saying, in reply to a
+question of mine, that she was not feverish and that she had not been
+asleep, having merely closed her eyes to rest them. Also she affirmed
+that she was not taking riding-lessons. We both noticed however, that
+she did not leave her chair during the time we were there, and that she
+was sitting on the sofa cushion I had made her for the previous
+Christmas, and on which I had embroidered the poet Moore's beautiful
+words: "Come, rest in this bosom."
+</p>
+<p>
+As Aggie was still feeling faint, I advised her to take a mouthful of
+blackberry cordial, which Tish keeps for emergencies in her bathroom
+closet. Immediately following her departure the calm of the evening was
+broken by a loud shriek.
+</p>
+<p>
+It appeared, on my rushing to the bathroom, while Tish sat heartlessly
+still, that Aggie, not seeing a glass, had placed the bottle to her lips
+and taken quite a large mouthful of liniment, which in color resembled
+the cordial. I found her sitting on the edge of the bathtub in a state
+of collapse.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'm poisoned!" she groaned. "Oh, Lizzie, I am not fit to die!"
+</p>
+<p>
+I flew with the bottle to Tish, who was very calm and stealthily rubbing
+one of her ankles.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Do her good," Tish said. "Take some of the stiffness out of her liver,
+for one thing. But you might keep an eye on her. It's full of alcohol."
+</p>
+<p>
+"What's the antidote?" I asked, hearing Aggie's low groans.
+</p>
+<p>
+"The gold cure is the only thing I can think of at the moment," said
+Tish coldly, and started on the other ankle.
+</p>
+<p>
+I merely record this incident to show the change in Tish. Aggie was not
+seriously upset, although dizzy for an hour or so and very talkative,
+especially about Mr. Wiggins.
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish was changed. Her life, which mostly had been an open book to us,
+became filled with mystery. There were whole days when she was not to be
+located anywhere, and evenings, as I have stated, when she dozed in her
+chair.
+</p>
+<p>
+As usual when we are worried about Tish, we consulted her nephew,
+Charlie Sands. But like all members of the masculine sex he refused to
+be worried.
+</p>
+<p>
+"She'll be all right," he observed. "She takes these spells. But trust
+the old lady to come up smiling."
+</p>
+<p>
+"It's either Christian Science or osteopathy," Aggie said dolefully.
+"She's not herself. The fruit cake she sent me the other day tasted very
+queer, and Hannah thinks she put ointment in instead of butter."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Ointments!" observed Charlie thoughtfully. "And salves! By George, I
+wonder&mdash;I'll tell you," he said: "I'll keep an eye open for a few days.
+The symptoms sound like&mdash;But never mind. I'll let you know."
+</p>
+<p>
+We were compelled to be satisfied with this, but for several days we
+lingered in anxiety. During that painful interval nothing occurred to
+enlighten us, except one conversation with Tish.
+</p>
+<p>
+We had taken dinner with her, and she seemed to be all right again and
+more than usually active. She had given up the Bran-Nut after breaking
+a tooth on it, and was eating rare beef, which she had heard was
+digested in the spleen or some such place, thus resting the stomach for
+a time. She left us, however, immediately after the meal, and Hannah,
+her maid, tiptoed into the room.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'm that nervous I could scream," she said. "Do you know what she's
+doing now?
+</p>
+<p>
+"No, Hannah," I said with bitter sarcasm. "Long ago I learned never to
+surmise what Miss Tish is doing."
+</p>
+<p>
+"She's in the bathroom, standing on one foot and waving the other in the
+air. She's been doing it," Hannah said, "for weeks. First one foot, then
+the other. And that ain't all."
+</p>
+<p>
+"You've been spying on Miss Tish," Aggie said. "Shame on you, Hannah!"
+</p>
+<p>
+"I have, Miss Aggie. Spy I have and spy I will, while there's breath in
+my body. Twenty years have I&mdash;Do you know what she does when she come
+home from these sneakin' trips of hers? She sits in a hot bath until the
+wonder is that her blood ain't turned to water. And after that she uses
+liniment. Her underclothes is that stained up with it that I'm ashamed
+to hang 'em out."
+</p>
+<p>
+Here Tish returned and, after a suspicious glance at Hannah, sat down.
+Aggie and I glanced at each other. She did not, as she had for some time
+past, line the chair with pillows, and there was an air about her almost
+of triumph.
+</p>
+<p>
+She did not, however, volunteer any explanation. Aggie and I were driven
+to speculation, in which we indulged on our way home, Aggie being my
+guest at the time, on account of her janitor's children having measles,
+and Aggie never having had them, although recalling a severe rash as a
+child, with other measly symptoms.
+</p>
+<p>
+"She has something in mind for next summer," said Aggie apprehensively,
+"and she is preparing her strength for it. Tish is forehanded if nothing
+else."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Well," I remarked with some bitterness, "if we are going along it might
+be well to prepare us too."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Something," Aggie continued, "that requires landing on one foot with
+the other in the air."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Don't drivel," said I. "She's not likely going into the Russian ballet.
+She's training her muscles, that's all."
+</p>
+<p>
+But the mystery was solved the following morning when Charlie Sands
+called me up.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I've got it, beloved aunt," he said.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Got what?" said I.
+</p>
+<p>
+"What the old lady is up to. She's a wonder, and no mistake. Only I
+think it was stingy of her not to let you and Aunt Aggie in."
+</p>
+<p>
+He asked me to get Aggie and meet him at the office as soon as possible,
+but he refused to explain further. And he continued to refuse until we
+had arrived at our destination, a large brick building in the center of
+the city.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Now," he said, "take a long breath and go in. And mind&mdash;no excitement."
+</p>
+<p>
+We went in. There was a band playing and people circling at a mile a
+minute. In the center there was a cleared place, and Tish was there on
+ice skates. An instructor had her by the arm, and as we looked she waved
+him off, gave herself a shove forward with one foot, and then, with her
+arms waving, she made a double curve, first on one foot and then on the
+other.
+</p>
+<p>
+"The outside edge, by George!" said Charlie Sands. "The old sport!"
+</p>
+<p>
+Unluckily at that moment Tish saw us, and sat down violently on the ice.
+And a quite nice-looking young man fell over her and lay stunned for
+several seconds. We rushed round the arena, expecting to see them both
+carried out, but Tish was uninjured, and came skating toward us with her
+hands in her pockets. It was the young man who had to be assisted out.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Well," she said, fetching up against the railing with a bang, "of
+course you had to come before I was ready for you! In a week I'll really
+be skating."
+</p>
+<p>
+We said nothing, but looked at her, and I am afraid our glances showed
+disapproval, for she straightened her hat with a jerk.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Well?" she said. "You're not tongue-tied all of a sudden, are you?
+Can't a woman take a little exercise without her family and friends
+coming snooping round and acting as if she'd broken the Ten
+Commandments?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Breaking the Ten Commandments!" I said witheringly. "Breaking a leg
+more likely. If you could have seen yourself, Tish Carberry, sprawled on
+that ice at your age, and both your arteries and your bones brittle, as the
+specialist told you,&mdash;and I heard him myself,&mdash;you'd take those things
+off your feet and go home and hide your head."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I wish I had your breath, Lizzie," Tish said. "I'd be a submarine
+diver."
+</p>
+<p>
+Saying which she skated off, and did not come near us again. A young
+gentleman went up to her and asked her to skate, though I doubt if she
+had ever seen him before. And as we left the building in disapproval
+they were doing fancy turns in the middle of the place, and a crowd was
+gathering round them.
+</p>
+<p>
+Owing to considerable feeling being roused by the foregoing incident,
+we did not see much of Tish for a week. If a middle-aged woman wants to
+make a spectacle of herself, both Aggie and I felt that she needed to be
+taught a lesson. Besides, we knew Tish. With her, to conquer a thing is
+to lose interest.
+</p>
+<p>
+On the anniversary of the day Aggie became engaged to Mr. Wiggins, Tish
+asked us both to dinner, and we buried the hatchet, or rather the
+skates. It was when dessert came that we realized how everything that
+had occurred had been preparation for the summer, and that we were not
+going to Asbury Park, after all.
+</p>
+<p>
+"It's like this," said Tish. "Hannah, go out and close the door, and
+don't stand listening. I have figured it all out," she said, when Hannah
+had slammed out. "The muscles used in skating are the ones used in
+mountain-climbing. Besides, there may be times when a pair of skates
+would be handy going over the glaciers. It's not called Glacier Park for
+nothing, I dare say. When we went into the Maine woods we went
+unprepared. This time I intend to be ready for any emergency."
+</p>
+<p>
+But we gave her little encouragement. We would go along, and told her
+so. But further than that I refused to prepare. I would not skate, and
+said so.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Very well, Lizzie," she said. "Don't blame me if you find yourself
+unable to cope with mountain hardships. I merely felt this way: if each
+of us could do one thing well it might be helpful. There's always snow,
+and if Aggie would learn to use snowshoes it might be valuable."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Where could I practice?" Aggie demanded.
+</p>
+<p>
+But Tish went on, ignoring Aggie's sarcastic tone. "And if you, Lizzie,
+would learn to throw a lasso, or lariat,&mdash;I believe both terms are
+correct,&mdash;it would be a great advantage, especially in case of meeting
+ferocious animals. The park laws will not allow us to kill them, and it
+would be mighty convenient, Lizzie. Not to mention that it would be an
+accomplishment few women possess."
+</p>
+<p>
+I refused to make the attempt, although Tish sent for the clothesline,
+and with the aid of the encyclopædia made a loop in the end of it.
+Finally she became interested herself, and when we left rather
+downhearted at ten o'clock she had caught the rocking-chair three times
+and broken the clock.
+</p>
+<p>
+Aggie and I prepared with little enthusiasm, I must confess. We had as
+much love for the rocks and rills of our great country as Tish, but, as
+Aggie observed, there were rocks and rocks, and one could love them
+without climbing up them or falling off them.
+</p>
+<p>
+The only comfort we had was that Charlie Sands said that we should ride
+ponies, and not horses. My niece's children have a pony which is very
+gentle and not much larger than a dog, which comes up on the porch for
+lumps of sugar. We were lured to a false sense of security, I must say.
+</p>
+<p>
+As far as we could see, Tish was making few preparations for the trip.
+She said we could get everything we needed at the park entrance, and
+that the riding was merely sitting in a saddle and letting the pony do
+the rest. But on the 21st of June, the anniversary of the day Aggie was
+to have been married, we went out to decorate Mr. Wiggins's last
+resting-place, and coming out of the cemetery we met Tish.
+</p>
+<p>
+She was on a horse, astride!
+</p>
+<p>
+She was not alone. A gentleman was riding beside her, and he had her
+horse by a long leather strap.
+</p>
+<p>
+She pretended not to see us, and Aggie unfortunately waved her red
+parasol at her. The result was most amazing. The beast she was on jerked
+itself free in an instant, and with the same movement, apparently,
+leaped the hedge beside the road. One moment there was Tish, in a derby
+hat and breeches, and the next moment there was only the gentleman, with
+his mouth open.
+</p>
+<p>
+Aggie collapsed, moaning, in the road, and beyond the hedge we could
+hear the horse leaping tombstones in the cemetery.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Oh, Tish!" Aggie wailed.
+</p>
+<p>
+I broke my way through the hedge to find what was left of her, while the
+riding-master bolted for the gate. But to my intense surprise Tish was
+not on the ground. Then I saw her. She was still on the creature, and
+she was coming back along the road, with her riding-hat on the back of
+her head and a gleam in her eye that I knew well enough was a gleam of
+triumph.
+</p>
+<p>
+She halted the thing beside me and looked down with a patronizing air.
+</p>
+<p>
+"He's a trifle nervous this morning," she said calmly. "Hasn't been
+worked enough. Good horse, though,&mdash;very neat jump."
+</p>
+<p>
+Then she rode on and out through the gates, ignoring Aggie's pitiful
+wail and scorning the leading-string the instructor offered.
+</p>
+<p>
+We reached Glacier Park without difficulty, although Tish insisted on
+talking to the most ordinary people on the train, and once, losing her,
+we found her in the drawing-room learning to play bridge, although not a
+card-player, except for casino. Though nothing has ever been said, I
+believe she learned when too late that they were playing for money, as
+she borrowed ten dollars from me late in the afternoon and was looking
+rather pale.
+</p>
+<p>
+"What do you think?" she said, while I was getting the money from the
+safety pocket under my skirt. "The young man who knocked me down on the
+ice that day is on the train. I've just exchanged a few words with him.
+He was not much hurt, although unconscious for a short time. His name is
+Bell&mdash;James C. Bell."
+</p>
+<p>
+Soon after that Tish brought him to us, and we had a nice talk. He said
+he had not been badly hurt on the ice, although he got a cut on the
+forehead from Tish's skate, requiring two stitches.
+</p>
+<p>
+After a time he and Aggie went out on the platform, only returning when
+Aggie got a cinder in her eye.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Just think," she said as he went for water to use in my eye-cup, "he
+is going to meet the girl he is in love with out at the park. She has
+been there for four weeks. They are engaged. He is very much in love. He
+didn't talk of anything else."
+</p>
+<p>
+She told him she had confided his tender secret to us, and instead of
+looking conscious he seemed glad to have three people instead of one to
+talk to about her.
+</p>
+<p>
+"You see, it's like this," he said: "She is very good looking, and in
+her town a moving-picture company has its studio. That part's all right.
+I suppose we have to have movies. But the fool of a director met her at
+a party, and said she would photograph well and ought to be with them.
+He offered her a salary, and it went to her head. She's young," he
+added, "and he said she could be as great a hit as Mary Pickford."
+</p>
+<p>
+"How sad!" said Aggie. "But of course she refused?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Well, no, she liked the idea. It got me worried. Worried her people
+too. Her father's able to give her a good home, and I'm expecting to
+take that job off his hands in about a year. But girls are queer. She
+wanted to try it awfully."
+</p>
+<p>
+It developed that he had gone to her folks about it, and they'd offered
+her a vacation with some of her school friends in Glacier Park.
+</p>
+<p>
+"It's pretty wild out there," he went on, "and we felt that the air, and
+horseback riding and everything, would make her forget the movies. I
+hope so. She's there now. But she's had the bug pretty hard. Got so she
+was always posing, without knowing it."
+</p>
+<p>
+But he was hopeful that she would be cured, and said she was to meet him
+at the station.
+</p>
+<p>
+"She's an awfully nice girl, you understand," he finished. "It's only
+that this thing got hold of her and needed driving out."
+</p>
+<p>
+Well, we were watching when the train drew in at Glacier Park Station,
+and she was there. She was a very pretty girl, and it was quite touching
+to see him look at her. But Aggie observed something and remarked on it.
+</p>
+<p>
+"She's not as glad to see him as he is to see her," she said. "He was
+going to kiss her, and she moved back."
+</p>
+<p>
+In the crowd we lost sight of them, but that evening, sitting in the
+lobby of the hotel, we saw Mr. Bell wandering round alone. He looked
+depressed, and Aggie beckoned to him.
+</p>
+<p>
+"How is everything?" she asked. "Is the cure working?"
+</p>
+<p>
+He dropped into a chair and looked straight ahead.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Not so you could notice it!" he said bitterly. "Would you believe that
+there's a moving-picture outfit here, taking scenes in the park?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"No!"
+</p>
+<p>
+"There is. They've taken two thousand feet of her already, dressed like
+an Indian," he said in a tone of suppressed fury. "It makes me sick. I
+dare say if we tied her in a well some fool would lower a camera on a
+rope."
+</p>
+<p>
+Just at that moment she sauntered past us with a reddish-haired young
+man. Mr. Bell ignored her, although I saw her try to catch his eye.
+</p>
+<p>
+"That's the moving-picture man with her," he said in a low, violent tone
+when they had passed. "Name's Oliver." He groaned. "He's told her she
+ought to go in for the business. She'd be a second Mary Pickford! I'd
+like to kill him!" He rose savagely and left us.
+</p>
+<p>
+We spent the night in the hotel at the park entrance, and I could not
+get to sleep. Tish was busy engaging a guide and going over our
+supplies, and at eleven o'clock Aggie came into my room and sat down on
+the bed.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I can't sleep, Lizzie," she said. "That poor Mr. Bell is on my mind.
+Besides, did you see those ferocious Indians hanging round?"
+</p>
+<p>
+Well, I had seen them, but said nothing.
+</p>
+<p>
+"They would scalp one as quick as not," Aggie went on. "And who's to
+know but that our guide will be in league with them? I've lost my
+teeth," she said with a flash of spirit, "but so far I've kept my hair,
+and mean to if possible. That old Indian has a scalp tied to the end of
+a stick. Lizzie, I'm nervous."
+</p>
+<p>
+"If it is only hair they want, I don't mind their taking my switch," I
+observed, trying to be facetious, although uneasy. As to the switch, it
+no longer matched my hair, and I would have parted from it without a
+pang.
+</p>
+<p>
+"And another thing," said Aggie: "Tish can talk about ponies until she
+is black in the face. The creatures are horses. I've seen them."
+</p>
+<p>
+Well, I knew that, too, by that time. As we walked to the hotel from the
+train I had seen one of them carrying on. It was arching its back like a
+cat that's just seen a strange dog, and with every arch it swelled its
+stomach. At the third heave it split the strap that held the saddle on,
+and then it kicked up in the rear and sent saddle and rider over its
+head. So far as I had seen, no casualty had resulted, but it had set me
+thinking. Given a beast with an India-rubber spine and no sense of
+honor, I felt I would be helpless.
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish came in just then and we confronted her.
+</p>
+
+<div class="figure">
+<a name="image-0009"></a>
+<img src="images/ill-07.jpg" width="100%"
+alt="'It's well enough for you, Tish Carberry, to talk about
+gripping a horse with your knees'" /><br />
+"It's well enough for you, Tish Carberry, to talk about
+gripping a horse with your knees"
+</div>
+
+<p>
+"Ponies!" I said bitterly. "They are horses, if I know a horse. And,
+moreover, it's well enough for you, Tish Carberry, to talk about
+gripping a horse with your knees. I'm not built that way, and you know
+it. Besides, no knee grip will answer when a creature begins to act like
+a cat in a fit."
+</p>
+<p>
+Aggie here had a bright idea. She said that she had seen pictures of
+pneumatic jackets to keep people from drowning, and that Mr. McKee, a
+buyer at one of the stores at home, had taken one, fully inflated, when
+he crossed to Paris for autumn suits.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I would like to have one, Tish," she finished. "It would break the
+force of a fall anyhow, even if it did puncture."
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish, who was still dressed, went out to the curio shop in the lobby,
+and returned with the sad news that there was nothing of the sort on
+sale.
+</p>
+<p>
+We were late in getting started the next morning owing partly to Aggie's
+having put her riding-breeches on wrong, and being unable to sit down
+when once in the saddle. But the main reason was the guide we had
+engaged. Tish heard him using profane language to one of the horses and
+dismissed him on the spot.
+</p>
+<p>
+The man who was providing our horses and outfit, however, understood,
+and in a short time returned with another man.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I've got a good one for you now, Miss Carberry," he said. "Safe and
+perfectly gentle, and as mild as milk. Only has one fault, and maybe you
+won't mind that. He smokes considerably."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I don't object, as long as it's in the open air," Tish said.
+</p>
+<p>
+So that was arranged. But I must say that the new man did not look mild.
+He had red hair, although a nice smile with a gold tooth, and his
+trousers were of white fur, which looked hot for summer.
+</p>
+<p>
+"You are sure that you don't use strong language?" Tish asked.
+</p>
+<p>
+"No, ma'am," he said. "I was raised strict, and very particular as to
+swearing. Dear, dear now, would you look at that cinch! Blow up their
+little tummies, they do, when they're cinched, and when they breathe it
+out, the saddle's as loose as the tongues of some of these here
+tourists."
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish swung herself up without any trouble, but owing to a large canvas
+bag on the back of my saddle I was unable to get my leg across, and
+was compelled to have it worked over, a little at a time. At last,
+however, we were ready. A white pack-horse, carrying our tents and
+cooking-utensils, was led by Bill, which proved to be the name of our
+cowboy guide.
+</p>
+<p>
+Mr. Bell came to say good-bye and to wish us luck. But he looked
+unhappy, and there was no sign whatever of the young lady, whose name we
+had learned was Helen.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I may see you on the trail," he said sadly. "I'm about sick of this
+place, and I'm thinking of clearing out."
+</p>
+<p>
+Aggie reminded him that faint heart never won fair lady, but he only
+shook his head.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'm not so sure that I want to win," he said. "Marriage is a serious
+business, and I don't know that I'd care to have a wife that followed a
+camera like a street kid follows a brass band. It wouldn't make for a
+quiet home."
+</p>
+<p>
+We left him staring wistfully into the distance.
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish sat in her saddle and surveyed the mountain peaks that rose behind
+the hotel.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Twenty centuries are looking down upon us!" she said. "The crest of our
+native land lies before us. We will conquer those beetling crags, or die
+trying. All right, Bill. Forward!"
+</p>
+<p>
+Bill led off, followed by the pack-horse, then Tish, Aggie and myself.
+We kept on in this order for some time, which gave me a chance to
+observe Aggie carefully. I am not much of a horsewoman myself, having
+never been on a horse before. But my father was fond of riding, and I
+soon adapted myself to the horse's gait, especially when walking. On
+level stretches, however, where Bill spurred his horse to a trot, I was
+not so comfortable, and Aggie appeared to strike the saddle in a
+different spot every time she descended.
+</p>
+<p>
+Once, on her turning her profile to me in a glance of despair, I was
+struck by the strange and collapsed appearance of her face. This was
+explained, however, when my horse caught up to hers on a wider stretch
+of road, and I saw that she had taken out her teeth and was holding them
+in her hand.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Al-almost swallowed them," she gasped. "Oh, Lizzie, to think of a
+summer of this!"
+</p>
+<p>
+At last we left the road and turned onto a footpath, which instantly
+commenced to rise. Tish called back something about the beauties of
+nature and riding over a carpet of flowers, but my horse was fording a
+small stream at the time and I was too occupied to reply. The path&mdash;or
+trail, which is what Bill called it&mdash;grew more steep, and I let go of
+the lines and held to the horn of my saddle. The horses were climbing
+like goats.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Tish," Aggie called desperately, "I can't stand this. I'm going back!
+I'm&mdash;Lordamighty!"
+</p>
+<p>
+Fortunately Tish did not hear this. We had suddenly emerged on the brink
+of a precipice. A two-foot path clung to the cliff, and along the very
+edge of this the horses walked, looking down in an interested manner now
+and then. My blood turned to water and I closed my eyes.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Tish!" Aggie shrieked.
+</p>
+<p>
+But the only effect of this was to start her horse into a trot. I had
+closed my eyes, but I opened them in time to see Aggie give a wild
+clutch and a low moan.
+</p>
+<p>
+In a few moments the trail left the edge, and Aggie turned in her saddle
+and looked back at me.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I lost my lower set back there," she said. "They went over the edge. I
+suppose they're falling yet."
+</p>
+<p>
+"It's a good thing it wasn't the upper set," I said, to comfort her. "As
+far as appearance goes&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Appearance!" she said bitterly. "Do you suppose we'll meet anybody but
+desperadoes and Indians in a place like this? And not an egg with us, of
+course."
+</p>
+<p>
+The eggs referred to her diet, as at different times, when having her
+teeth repaired, she can eat little else.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Ham," she called back in a surly tone, "and hard tack, I suppose! I'll
+starve, Lizzie, that's all. If only we had brought some junket tablets!"
+</p>
+<p>
+With the exception of this incident the morning was quiet. Tish and Bill
+talked prohibition, which he believed in, and the tin pans on the
+pack-horse clattered, and we got higher all the time, and rode through
+waterfalls and along the edge of death. By noon I did not much care if
+the horses fell over or not. The skin was off me in a number of places,
+and my horse did not like me, and showed it by nipping back at my leg
+here and there.
+</p>
+<p>
+At eleven o'clock, riding through a valley on a trail six inches wide,
+Bill's horse stepped on a hornets' nest. The insects were probably dazed
+at first, but by the time Tish's horse arrived they were prepared, and
+the next thing we knew Tish's horse was flying up the mountain-side as
+if it had gone crazy, and Bill was shouting to us to stop.
+</p>
+<p>
+The last we saw of Tish for some time was her horse leaping a mountain
+stream, and jumping like a kangaroo, and Bill was following.
+</p>
+<p>
+"She'll be killed!" Aggie cried. "Oh, Tish, Tish!"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Don't yell," I said. "You'll start the horses. And for Heaven's sake,
+Aggie," I added grimly, "remember that this is a pleasure trip."
+</p>
+<p>
+It was a half-hour before Tish and Bill returned. Tish was a chastened
+woman. She said little or nothing, but borrowed some ointment from me
+for her face, where the branches of trees had scraped it, while Bill led
+the horses round the fatal spot. I recall, however, that she said she
+wished now that we had brought the other guide.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Because I feel," she observed, "that a little strong language would be
+a relief."
+</p>
+<p>
+We had luncheon at noon in a sylvan glade, and Aggie was pathetic. She
+dipped a cracker in a cup of tea, and sat off by herself under a tree.
+Tish, however, had recovered her spirits.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Throw out your chests, and breathe deep of this pure air unsullied by
+civilization," she cried. "Aggie, fill yourself with ozone."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Humph!" said Aggie. "It's about all I will fill myself with."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Think," Tish observed, "of the fools and dolts who are living under
+roofs, struggling, contending, plotting, while all Nature awaits them."
+</p>
+<p>
+"With stings," Aggie said nastily, "and teeth, and horns, and claws, and
+every old thing! Tish, I want to go back. I'm not happy, and I don't
+enjoy scenery when I'm not happy. Besides, I can't eat the landscape."
+</p>
+<p>
+As I look back, I believe it would have been better if we had returned.
+I think of that day, some time later, when we made the long descent from
+the Piegan Pass under such extraordinary circumstances, and I realize
+that, although worse for our bodies, which had grown strong and agile,
+so that I have, later on, seen Aggie mount her horse on a run, it would
+have been better for our nerves had we returned.
+</p>
+<p>
+We were all perfectly stiff after luncheon, and Aggie was sulking also.
+Bill was compelled to lift us into our saddles, and again we started up
+and up. The trail was now what he called a "switchback." Halfway up
+Aggie refused to go farther, but on looking back decided not to return
+either.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I shall not go another step," she called. "Here I am, and here I stay
+till I die."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Very well," Tish said from overhead. "I suppose you don't expect us all
+to stay and die with you. I'll tell your niece when I see her."
+</p>
+<p>
+Aggie thought better of it, however, and followed on, with her eyes
+closed and her lips moving in prayer. She happened to open them at a bad
+place, although safe enough, according to Bill, and nothing to what we
+were coming to a few days later. Opening them as she did on a ledge of
+rock which sloped steeply for what appeared to be several miles down
+on each side, she uttered a piercing shriek, followed by a sneeze. As
+before, her horse started to run, and Aggie is, I believe Bill said,
+the only person in the world who ever took that place at a canter.
+</p>
+<p>
+We were to take things easy the first day, Bill advised. "Till you get
+your muscles sort of eased up, ladies," he said. "If you haven't been
+riding astride, a horse's back seems as wide as the roof of a church.
+But we'll get a rest now. The rest of the way is walking."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I can't walk," Aggie said. "I can't get my knees together."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Sorry, ma'am," said Bill. "We're going down now, and the animals has to
+be led. That's one of the diversions of a trip like this. First you ride
+and than you walk. And then you ride again. This here's one of the show
+places, although easy of access from the entrance. Be a good place for a
+holdup, I've always said."
+</p>
+<p>
+"A holdup?" Tish asked. Her enthusiasm seemed to have flagged somewhat,
+but at this she brightened up.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Yes'm. You see, we're near the Canadian border, and it would be easy
+for a gang to slip over and back again. Don't know why we've never had
+one. Yellowstone can boast of a number."
+</p>
+<p>
+I observed tartly that I considered it nothing to boast of, but Bill did
+not agree with me.
+</p>
+<p>
+"It doesn't hurt a neighborhood none," he observed. "Adds romance, as
+you might say."
+</p>
+<p>
+He went on and, happening to slide on a piece of shale at that moment, I
+sat down unexpectedly and the horse put its foot on me.
+</p>
+<p>
+I felt embittered and helpless, but the others kept on.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Very well," I said, "go on. Don't mind me. If this creature wants to
+sit in my lap, well and good. I expect it's tired."
+</p>
+<p>
+But as they went on callously, I was obliged to shove the creature off
+and to hobble on. Bill was still babbling about holdups, and Aggie was
+saying that he was sunstruck, but of course it did not matter.
+</p>
+<p>
+We made very slow progress, owing to taking frequent rests, and late in
+the afternoon we were overtaken by Mr. Bell, on foot and carrying a
+pack. He would have passed on without stopping, but Aggie hailed him.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Not going to hike, are you?" she said pleasantly. Aggie is fond of
+picking up the vernacular of a region.
+</p>
+<p>
+"No," he said in a surly tone quite unlike his former urbane manner,
+"I'm merely taking this pack out for a walk."
+</p>
+<p>
+But he stopped and mopped his face.
+</p>
+<p>
+"To tell you the truth, ladies," he said, "I'm working off a little
+steam, that's all. I was afraid, if I stayed round the hotel, I'd do
+something I'd be sorry for. There are times when I am not a fit
+companion for any one, and this is one of them."
+</p>
+<p>
+We invited him to join us, but he refused.
+</p>
+<p>
+"No, I'm better alone," he said. "When things get too strong for me on
+the trail I can sling things about. I've been throwing boulders down the
+mountain every now and then. I'd just as soon they hit somebody as not.
+Also," he added, "I'm safer away from any red-headed men."
+</p>
+<p>
+We saw him glance at Bill, and understood. Mr. Oliver was red-headed.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Love's an awful thing," said Bill as the young man went on, kicking
+stones out of his way. "I'm glad I ain't got it."
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish turned and eyed him. "True love is a very beautiful thing," she
+rebuked him. "Although a single woman myself, I believe in it. 'Come
+live with me and be my love,'" she quoted, sitting down to shake a stone
+out of her riding-boot.
+</p>
+<p>
+Bill looked startled. "I might say," he said hastily, "that I may have
+misled you, ladies. I'm married."
+</p>
+<p>
+"You said you had never been in love," Tish said sharply.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Well, not to say real love," he replied. "She was the cook of an outfit
+I was with and it just came about natural. She was going to leave, which
+meant that I'd have to do the cooking, which I ain't much at, especially
+pastry. So I married her."
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish gave him a scornful glance but said nothing and we went on.
+</p>
+<p>
+We camped late that afternoon beside Two Medicine Lake, and while Bill
+put up the tents the three of us sat on a log and soaked our aching feet
+in the water which was melted glacier, and naturally cold.
+</p>
+<p>
+What was our surprise, on turning somewhat, to see the angry lover
+fishing on a point near by. While we stared he pulled out a large trout,
+and stalked away without a glance in our direction. As Tish, with her
+usual forethought, had brought a trout rod, she hastily procured it, but
+without result.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Of course," Aggie said, "no fish! I could eat a piece of broiled fish.
+I dare say I shall be skin and bone at the end of this trip&mdash;and not
+much skin."
+</p>
+<p>
+Bill had set up the sleeping-tent and built a fire, and it looked cozy
+and comfortable. But Tish had the young man on her mind, and after
+supper she put on a skirt which she had brought along and went to see
+him.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'd take him some supper, Bill," she said, "but you are correct: you
+are no cook."
+</p>
+<p>
+She disappeared among the bushes, only to return in a short time,
+jerking off her skirt as she came.
+</p>
+<p>
+"He says all he wants is to be let alone," she said briefly. "I must say
+I'm disappointed in him. He was very agreeable before."
+</p>
+<p>
+I pass without comment over the night. Bill had put up the tent over the
+root of a large tree, and we disposed ourselves about it as well as we
+could. In the course of the night one of the horses broke loose and put
+its head inside the tent. Owing to Aggie's thinking it was a bear, Tish
+shot at it, fortunately missing it.
+</p>
+<p>
+But the frightened animal ran away, and Bill was until noon the next day
+finding it. We cooked our own breakfast, and Tish made some gems, having
+brought the pan along. But the morning dragged, although the scenery was
+lovely.
+</p>
+<p>
+At twelve Bill brought the horse back and came over to us.
+</p>
+<p>
+"If you don't mind my saying it, Miss Carberry," he observed, "you're a
+bit too ready with that gun. First thing you know you'll put a hole
+through me, and then where will you be?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"I've got along without men most of my life," Tish said sharply. "I
+reckon we'd manage."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Well," he said, "there's another angle to it. Where would I be?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"That's between you and your Creator," Tish retorted.
+</p>
+<p>
+We went on again that afternoon, and climbed another precipice. We saw
+no human being except a mountain goat, although Bill claimed to have
+seen a bear. Tish was quite calm at all times, and had got so that she
+could look down into eternity without a shudder. But Aggie and I were
+still nervous, and at the steepest places we got off and walked.
+</p>
+<p>
+The unfortunate part was that the exercise and the mountain air made
+Aggie hungry, and there was little that she could eat.
+</p>
+<p>
+"If any one had told me a month ago," she said, mopping her forehead,
+"that I would be scaling the peaks of my country on crackers and tea, I
+wouldn't have believed it. I'm done out, Lizzie. I can't climb another
+inch."
+</p>
+<p>
+Bill was ahead with the pack horse, and Tish, overhearing her, called
+back some advice.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Take your horse's tail and let him pull you up, Aggie," she said. "I've
+read it somewhere."
+</p>
+<p>
+Aggie, although frequently complaining, always does as Tish suggests. So
+she took the horse's tail, when a totally unexpected thing happened.
+Docile as the creature generally was, it objected at once, and kicked
+out with both rear feet. In a moment, it seemed to me, Aggie was gone,
+and her horse was moving on alone.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Aggie!" I called in a panic.
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish stopped, and we both looked about. Then we saw her, lying on a
+ledge about ten feet below the trail. She was flat on her back, and her
+riding-hat was gone. But she was uninjured, although shaken, for as we
+looked she sat up, and an agonized expression came over her face.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Aggie!" I cried. "Is anything broken?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Damnation!" said Aggie in an awful voice. "The upper set is gone!"
+</p>
+<p>
+I have set down exactly what Aggie said. I admit that the provocation
+was great. But Tish was not one to make allowances, and she turned and
+went on, leaving us alone. She is not without feeling, however, for from
+the top of the pass she sent Bill down with a rope, and we dragged poor
+Aggie to the trail again. Her nerves were shaken and she was repentant
+also, for when she found that her hat was gone she said nothing,
+although her eyes took on a hunted look.
+</p>
+<p>
+At the top of the pass Tish was sitting on a stone. She had taken her
+mending-box from the saddle, where she always kept it handy, and was
+drawing up a hole in her stocking. I observed to her pleasantly that it
+was a sign of scandal to mend clothing while still on, but she ignored
+me, although, as I reflected bitterly, I had not been kicked over the
+cliff.
+</p>
+<p>
+It was a subdued and speechless Aggie who followed us that afternoon
+along the trail. As her hat was gone, I took the spare dish towel and
+made a turban for her, with an end hanging down to protect the back of
+her neck. But she expressed little gratitude, beyond observing that as
+she was going over the edge piecemeal, she'd better have done it all at
+once and be through with it.
+</p>
+<p>
+The afternoon wore away slowly. It seemed a long time until we reached
+our camping-place, partly because, although a small eater ordinarily,
+the air and exercise had made me feel famished. But the disagreement
+between Tish and Aggie, owing to the latter's unfortunate exclamation
+while kicked over the cliff, made the time seem longer. There was not
+the usual exchange of pleasant nothings between us.
+</p>
+<p>
+But by six o'clock Tish was more amiable, having seen bear scratches on
+trees near the camp, and anticipating the sight of a bear. She mixed up
+a small cup cake while Bill was putting up our tent, and then, taking
+her rod, proceeded to fish, while Aggie and I searched for grasshoppers.
+These were few, owing to the altitude, but we caught four, which we
+imprisoned in a match-box.
+</p>
+<p>
+With them Tish caught four trout and, broiling them nicely, she offered
+one to poor Aggie. It was a peace offering, and taken as such, so that
+we were soon on our former agreeable footing, and all forgotten.
+</p>
+<p>
+The next day it rained, and we were obliged to sit in the tent. Bill sat
+with us, and talked mainly of desperadoes.
+</p>
+<p>
+"As I observed before," he said, "there hasn't been any tourist holdup
+yet. But it's bound to come. Take the Yellowstone, now,&mdash;one holdup a
+year's the average, and it's full of soldiers at that."
+</p>
+<p>
+"It's a wonder people keep on going," I observed, moving out of a puddle.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Oh, I don't know," he said. "In one way it's good business. I take it
+this way: When folks come West they want the West they've read about.
+What do they care for irrigation and apple orchards? What they like is
+danger and a little gunplay, the sort of thing they see in these here
+moving pictures."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'm sure I don't," Aggie remarked. It was growing dusk, and she peered
+out into the forest round us. "There is something crackling out there
+now," she said.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Only a bear, likely," Bill assured her. "We have a sight of bears here.
+No, ma'am, they want danger. And every holdup's an advertisement. You
+see, the Government can't advertise these here parks; not the way it
+should, anyhow. But a holdup's news, so the papers print it, and it sets
+people to thinking about the park. Maybe they never thought of the place
+and are arranging to go elsewhere. Then along comes a gang and raises
+h&mdash;, raises trouble, and the park's in every one's mouth, so to speak.
+We'd get considerable business if there was one this summer."
+</p>
+<p>
+At that moment the crackling outside increased, and a shadowy form
+emerged from the bushes. Even Bill stood up, and Aggie screamed.
+</p>
+<p>
+It was, however, only poor Mr. Bell.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Mind if I borrow some matches?" he said gruffly.
+</p>
+<p>
+"We can't lend matches," Tish replied. "At least, I don't see the use of
+sending them back after they've been lighted. We can give you some."
+</p>
+<p>
+"My mistake," he said.
+</p>
+<p>
+That was all he said, except the word "Thanks" when I reached him a box.
+</p>
+<p>
+"He's a surly creature," Tish observed as he crackled through the brush
+again. "More than likely that girl's better off without him."
+</p>
+<p>
+"He looks rather downhearted," Aggie remarked. "Much that we think is
+temper is due to unhappiness."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Much of your charitable view is due to a good dinner too," Tish said.
+"Here we are, in the center of the wilderness, with great peaks on every
+hand, and we meet a fellow creature who speaks nine words, and begrudges
+those. If he's as stingy with money as with language she's had a narrow
+escape."
+</p>
+<p>
+"He's had kind of a raw deal," Bill put in. "The girl was stuck on him
+all right, until this moving-picture chap came along. He offered to take
+some pictures with her in them, and it was all off. They're making up a
+play now, and she's to be in it."
+</p>
+<p>
+"What sort of a play?" Tish demanded.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Sorry not to oblige," Bill replied. "Can't say the nature of it."
+</p>
+<p>
+But all of us felt that Bill knew and would not say.
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish, to whom a mystery is a personal affront, determined to find out
+for herself; and when later in the evening we saw the light of Bell's
+camp-fire, it was Tish herself who suggested that we go over and visit
+with him.
+</p>
+<p>
+"We can converse about various things," she said, "and take his mind
+from his troubles. But it would be better not to mention affairs of the
+heart. He's probably sensitive."
+</p>
+<p>
+So we left Bill to look after things, and went to call on Mr. Bell. It
+was farther to his camp than it had appeared, and Tish unfortunately ran
+into a tree and bruised her nose badly. When it had stopped bleeding,
+however, we went on, and at last arrived.
+</p>
+<p>
+He was sitting on a log by the fire, smoking a pipe and looking very
+sad. Behind him was a bit of a tent not much larger than an umbrella.
+</p>
+<p>
+Aggie touched my arm. "My heart aches for him," she said. "There is
+despair in his very eyes."
+</p>
+<p>
+I do not believe that at first he was very glad to see us, but he
+softened somewhat when Tish held out the cake she had brought.
+</p>
+<p>
+"That's very nice of you," he said, rising. "I'm afraid I can't ask you
+to sit down. The ground's wet and there is only this log."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I've sat on logs before," Tish replied. "We thought we'd call, seeing
+we are neighbors. As the first comers it was our place to call first, of
+course."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I see," he said, and poked up the fire with a piece of stick.
+</p>
+<p>
+"We felt that you might be lonely," said Aggie.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I came here to be lonely," he replied gloomily. "I want to be lonely."
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish, however, was determined to be cheerful, and asked him, as a safe
+subject, how he felt about the war.
+</p>
+<p>
+"War?" he said. "That's so, there is a war. To tell the truth, I had
+forgotten about it. I've been thinking of other things."
+</p>
+<p>
+We saw that it was going to be difficult to cheer him. Tish tried the
+weather, which brought us nowhere, as he merely grunted. But Aggie
+broached the subject of desperadoes, and he roused somewhat.
+</p>
+<p>
+"There are plenty of shady characters in the park," he said shortly.
+"Wolves in sheep's clothing, that's what they are."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Bill, our guide, says there may be a holdup at any time."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Sure there is," he said calmly. "There's one going to be pulled off in
+the next day or two."
+</p>
+<p>
+We sat petrified, and Aggie's eyes were starting out of her head.
+</p>
+<p>
+"All the trimmings," he went on, staring at the fire. "Innocent and
+unsuspecting tourists, lunch, laughter, boiled coffee, and cold ham.
+Ambush. The whole business&mdash;followed by highwaymen in flannel shirts and
+revolvers. Dead tourist or two, desperate resistance&mdash;everything."
+</p>
+<p>
+Aggie rose, pale as an aspen. "You&mdash;you are joking!" she cried.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Do I look like it?" he demanded fiercely. "I tell you there is going to
+be the whole thing. At the end the lovely girl will escape on horseback
+and ride madly for aid. She will meet the sheriff and a posse, who are
+out for a picnic or some such damfool nonsense, and&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Young man," Tish said coldly, "if you know all this, why are you
+sitting here and not alarming the authorities?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Pooh!" he said disagreeably. "It's a put-up scheme, to advertise the
+park. Yellowstone's got ahead of them this year, and has had its
+excitement, with all the papers ringing with it. That was a gag, too,
+probably."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Do you mean&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+"I mean considerable," he said. "That red-headed movie idiot will be on
+a rise, taking the tourists as they ride through. Of course he doesn't
+expect the holdup&mdash;not in the papers anyhow. He happens to have the
+camera trained on the party, and gets it all. Result&mdash;a whacking good
+picture, revolvers firing blank cartridges, everything which people will
+crowd to see. Oh, it's good business all right. I don't mind admitting
+that."
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish's face expressed the greatest rage. She rose, drawing herself to
+her full height.
+</p>
+<p>
+"And the tourists?" she demanded. "They lend themselves to this
+imposition? To this infamy? To this turpitude?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Certainly not. They think it's the real thing. The whole business hangs
+on that. And as the sheriff, or whoever it is in the fool plot, captures
+the bandits, the party gets its money back, and has material for
+conversation for the next twenty years."
+</p>
+<p>
+"To think," said Tish, "of our great National Government lending itself
+to such a scheme!"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Wrong," said the young man. "It's a combination of Western railroads
+and a movie concern acting together."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I trust," Tish observed, setting her lips firmly, "that the tourists
+will protest."
+</p>
+<p>
+"The more noise, the better." The young man, though not more cheerful as
+to appearance, was certainly more talkative. "Trust a clergyman for
+yelling when his pocket's picked."
+</p>
+<p>
+With one voice the three of us exclaimed: "Mr. Ostermaier!"
+</p>
+<p>
+He was not sure of the name, but "Helen" had pointed the clergyman out
+to him, and it was Mr. Ostermaier without a doubt.
+</p>
+<p>
+We talked it over with Bill when we got back, and he was not as
+surprised as we'd expected.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Knew they were cooking up something. They've got some Indians in it
+too. Saw them rehearsing old Thunder Mountain the other day in nothing
+but a breech-clout."
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish reproved him for a lack of delicacy of speech, and shortly
+afterward we went to bed. Owing to the root under the tent, and puddles
+here and there, we could not go to sleep for a time, and we discussed
+the "nefarious deed," as Tish aptly termed it, that was about to take
+place.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Although," Tish observed, "Mr. Ostermaier has been receiving for so
+many years that it might be a good thing, for his soul's sake, to have
+him give up something, even if to bandits." I dozed off after a time,
+but awakened to find Tish sitting up, wide awake.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I've been thinking that thing over, Lizzie," she said in a low tone. "I
+believe it's our duty to interfere."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Of course," I replied sarcastically; "and be shown all over the country
+in the movies making fools of ourselves."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Did you notice that that young man said they would be firing blank
+cartridges?"
+</p>
+<p>
+Well, even a blank cartridge can be a dangerous thing. Then and there I
+reminded her of my niece's boy, who was struck on the Fourth of July by
+a wad from one, and had to be watched for lockjaw for several weeks.
+</p>
+<p>
+It was at that moment that we heard Bill, who had no tent, by choice,
+and lay under a tree, give a loud whoop, followed by what was
+unmistakably an oath.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Bear!" he yelled. "Watch out, he's headed for the tent! It's a
+grizzly."
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish felt round wildly for her revolver, but it was gone! And the bear
+was close by. We could hear it snuffing about, and to add to the
+confusion Aggie wakened and commenced to sneeze with terror.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Bill!" Tish called. "I've lost my revolver!"
+</p>
+<p>
+"I took it, Miss Carberry. But I've been lying in a puddle, and it won't
+go off."
+</p>
+<p>
+All hope seemed gone. The frail walls of our tent were no protection
+whatever, and as we all knew, even a tree was no refuge from a bear,
+which, as we had seen in the Zoological Garden at home, can climb like a
+cat, only swifter. Besides, none of us could climb a tree.
+</p>
+<p>
+It was at that moment that Tish had one of those inspirations that make
+her so dependable in emergencies. Feeling round in the tent for a
+possible weapon, she touched a large ham, from which we had broiled a
+few slices at supper. In her shadowy form there was both purpose and
+high courage. With a single sweeping gesture she flung the ham at the
+bear so accurately that we heard the thud with which it struck.
+</p>
+<p>
+"What the hell are you doing?" Bill called from a safe distance. Even
+then we realized that his restraint of speech was a pose, pure and
+simple. "If you make him angry he'll tear up the whole place."
+</p>
+<p>
+But Tish did not deign to answer. The rain had ceased, and suddenly the
+moon came out and illuminated the whole scene. We saw the bear sniffing
+at the ham, which lay on the ground. Then he picked it up in his jaws
+and stood looking about.
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish said later that the moment his teeth were buried in the ham she
+felt safe. I can still see the majestic movement with which she walked
+out of the tent and waved her arms.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Now, scat with you!" she said firmly. "Scat!"
+</p>
+<p>
+He "scatted." Snarling through his nose, for fear of dropping the ham,
+he turned and fled up the mountainside. In the open space Tish stood the
+conqueror. She yawned and glanced about.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Going to be a nice night, after all," she said. "Now, Bill, bring me
+that revolver, and if I catch you meddling with it again I'll put that
+pair of fur rugs you are so proud of in the fire."
+</p>
+<p>
+Bill, who was ignorant of the ham, emerged sheepishly into the open.
+"Where the&mdash;where the dickens did you hit him, Miss Tish?" he asked.
+</p>
+<p>
+"In the stomach," Tish replied tartly, and taking her revolver went back
+to the tent.
+</p>
+<p>
+All the next day Tish was quiet. She rode ahead, hardly noticing the
+scenery, with her head dropped on her chest. At luncheon she took a
+sardine sandwich and withdrew to a tree, underneath which she sat, a
+lonely and brooding figure.
+</p>
+<p>
+When luncheon was over and Aggie and I were washing the dishes and
+hanging out the dish towels to dry on a bush, Tish approached Bill, who
+was pouring water on the fire to extinguish it.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Bill," she stated, "you came to us under false pretenses. You swear,
+for one thing."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Only under excitement, Miss Tish," he said. "And as far as that goes,
+Miss Aggie herself said&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Also," Tish went on hastily, "you said you could cook. You cannot
+cook."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Now, look here, Miss Tish," he said in a pleading tone, "I can cook. I
+didn't claim to know the whole cookbook. I can make coffee and fry
+bacon. How'd I know you ladies wanted pastry? As for them canned salmon
+croquettes with white sauce, I reckon to make them with a little
+showing, and&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Also," said Tish, cutting in sternly, "you took away my revolver, and
+left us helpless last night, and in peril of wild beasts."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Tourists ain't allowed to carry guns."
+</p>
+<p>
+He attempted to look injured, but Tish ignored him.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Therefore," she said, "if I am not to send you back&mdash;which I have been
+considering all day, as I've put up a tent myself before this, and you
+are only an extra mouth to feed, which, as we are one ham short, is
+inconvenient&mdash;you will have to justify my keeping you."
+</p>
+<p>
+"If you will just show me once about them gems, Miss Tish&mdash;" he began.
+</p>
+<p>
+But Tish cut him off. "No," she said firmly, "you are too casual about
+cooking. And you are no dish-washer. Setting a plate in a river and
+letting the current wash it may satisfy cow-punchers. It doesn't go with
+me. The point is this: You know all about the holdup that is going to
+take place. Don't lie. I know you know. Now, you take us there and tell
+us all you know about it."
+</p>
+<p>
+He scratched his head reflectively. "I'll tell you," he said. "I'm a
+slow thinker. Give me about twenty minutes on it, will you? It's a sort
+of secret, and there's different ways of looking at it."
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish took out her watch. "Twenty minutes," she said. "Start thinking
+now."
+</p>
+<p>
+He wandered off and rolled a cigarette. Later on, as I have said, he
+showed Tish how to do it&mdash;not, of course, that she meant to smoke, but
+Tish is fond of learning how to do things. She got so she could roll
+them with one hand, and she does it now in the winter evenings, instead
+of rolling paper spills as formerly. When Charlie Sands comes, she
+always has a supply ready for him, although occasionally somewhat dry
+from waiting for a few weeks.
+</p>
+<p>
+At the end of twenty minutes Tish snapped her watch shut.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Time!" she called, and Bill came back.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Well, I'll do it," he said. "I don't know as they'll put you in the
+picture, but I'll see what I can do."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Picture nothing!" Tish snapped. "You take us there and hide us. That's
+the point. There must be caves round to put us in, although I don't
+insist on a cave. They're damp usually."
+</p>
+<p>
+Well, he looked puzzled, but he agreed. I caught Aggie's eye, and we
+exchanged glances. There was trouble coming, and we knew it. Our long
+experience with Tish had taught us not to ask questions. "Ours but to do
+and die," as Aggie later said. But I confess to a feeling of uneasiness
+during the remainder of that day.
+</p>
+<p>
+We changed our course that afternoon, turning off at Saint Mary's and
+spending the night near the Swiss Chalet at Going-to-the-Sun. Aggie and
+I pleaded to spend the night in the chalet, but Tish was adamant.
+</p>
+<p>
+"When I am out camping, I camp," she said. "I can have a bed at home,
+but I cannot sleep under the stars, on a bed of pine needles, and be
+lured to rest by the murmur of a mountain stream."
+</p>
+<p>
+Well, we gave it up and went with her. I must say that the trip had
+improved us already. Except when terrified or kicked by a horse, Aggie
+was not sneezing at all, and I could now climb into the saddle
+unassisted. My waistbands were much looser, too, and during a short rest
+that afternoon I put a dart in my riding-breeches, during the absence
+of Bill after the pack-horse, which had strayed.
+</p>
+<p>
+It was on that occasion that Tish told us as much of her plan as she
+thought it wise for us to know.
+</p>
+<p>
+"The holdup," she explained, "is to be the day after to-morrow on the
+Piegan Pass. Bill says there is a level spot at the top with rocks all
+about. That is the spot. The Ostermaiers and their party leave the
+automobiles at Many Glaciers and take horses to the pass. It will be
+worth coming clear to Montana to see Mrs. Ostermaier on a horse."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I still don't see," Aggie observed in a quavering voice, "what we have
+to do with it."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Naturally not," said Tish. "You'll know as soon as is good for you."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I don't believe it will ever be good for me," said poor Aggie. "It
+isn't good for anybody to be near a holdup. And I don't want to be in a
+moving picture with no teeth. I'm not a vain woman," she said, "but I
+draw the line at that."
+</p>
+<p>
+But Tish ignored her. "The only trouble," she said, "is having one
+revolver. If we each had one&mdash;Lizzie, did you bring any ink?"
+</p>
+<p>
+Well, I had, and said so, but that I needed it for postcards when we
+struck a settlement.
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish waved my objection aside. "I guess it can be managed," she
+observed. "Bill has a knife. Yes, I think it can be done."
+</p>
+<p>
+She and Bill engaged in an earnest conference that afternoon. At first
+Bill objected. I could see him shaking his head. Then Tish gave him
+something which Aggie said was money. I do not know. She had been short
+of cash on the train, but she may have had more in her trunk. Then I saw
+Bill start to laugh. He laughed until he had to lean against a tree,
+although Tish was quite stern and serious.
+</p>
+<p>
+We reached Piegan Pass about three that afternoon, and having inspected
+it and the Garden Wall, which is a mile or two high at that point, we
+returned to a "bench" where there were some trees, and dismounted.
+</p>
+<p>
+Here, to our surprise, we found Mr. Bell again. As Tish remarked, he was
+better at walking than at talking. He looked surprised at seeing us, and
+was much more agreeable than before.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'm afraid I was pretty surly the other night," he said. "The truth is,
+I was so blooming unhappy that I didn't give a damn for anything."
+</p>
+<p>
+But when he saw that Bill was preparing to take the pack off the horse
+he looked startled.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I say," he said, "you don't mean to camp here, do you?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Such is my intention," Tish observed grimly.
+</p>
+<p>
+"But look here. Just beyond, at the pass, is where the holdup is to take
+place to-morrow."
+</p>
+<p>
+"So I believe," said Tish. "What has that to do with us? What are you
+going to do?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Oh, I'm going to hang round."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Well, we intend to hang round also."
+</p>
+<p>
+He stood by and watched our preparations for camp. Tish chose a small
+grove for the tent, and then left us, clambering up the mountain-side.
+She finally disappeared. Aggie mixed some muffins for tea, and we
+invited the young man to join us. But he was looking downhearted again
+and refused.
+</p>
+<p>
+However, when she took them out of the portable oven, nicely browned,
+and lifting the tops of each one dropped in a teaspoonful of grape
+jelly, he changed his mind.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'll stay, if you don't mind," he said. "Maybe some decent food will
+make me see things clearer."
+</p>
+<p>
+When Tish descended at six o'clock, she looked depressed. "There is no
+cave," she said, "although I have gone where a mountain goat would get
+dizzy. But I have found a good place to hide the horses, where we can
+get them quickly when we need them."
+</p>
+<p>
+Aggie was scooping the inside out of her muffin, being unable to eat the
+crust, but she went quite pale.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Tish," she said, "you have some desperate plan in view, and I am not
+equal to it. I am worn with travel and soft food, and am not as young as
+I once was."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Desperate nothing!" said Tish, pouring condensed milk into her tea. "I
+am going to teach a lot of idiots a lesson, that's all. There should be
+one spot in America free from the advertising man and his schemes, and
+this is going to be it. Commercialism," she went on, growing oratorical,
+"does not belong here among these mighty mountains. Once let it start,
+and these towering cliffs will be defaced with toothpowder and
+intoxicating-liquor signs."
+</p>
+<p>
+The young man knew the plans for the holdup even better than Bill. He
+was able to show us the exact spot which had been selected, and to tell
+us the hour at which the Ostermaier party was to cross the pass.
+</p>
+<p>
+"They'll lunch on the pass," he said, "and, of course, they suspect
+nothing. The young lady of whom I spoke to you will be one of their
+party. She, however, knows what is coming, and is, indeed, a party to
+it. The holdup will take place during luncheon."
+</p>
+<p>
+Here his voice broke, and he ate an entire muffin before he went on:
+"The holdup will take place on the pass, the bandits having been hidden
+on this 'bench' right here. Then the outlaws, having robbed the
+tourists, will steal the young lady and escape down the trail on the
+other side. The guide, who is in the plot, will ride ahead in this
+direction and raise the alarm. You understand," he added, "that as it's
+a put-up job, the tourists will get all their stuff back. I don't know
+how that's to be arranged."
+</p>
+<p>
+"But the girl?" Tish asked.
+</p>
+<p>
+"She's to make her escape later," Mr. Bell said grimly, "and will be
+photographed galloping down the trail, by another idiot with a camera,
+who, of course, just happens to be on the spot. She'll do it too," he
+added with a pathetic note of pride in his voice. "She's got nerve
+enough for anything."
+</p>
+<p>
+He drew a long breath, and Aggie poured him a third cup of tea.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I dare say this will finish everything," he said dejectedly. "I can't
+offer her any excitement like this. We live in a quiet suburb, where
+nobody ever fires a revolver except on the Fourth of July."
+</p>
+<p>
+"What she needs," Tish said, bending forward, "is a lesson, Mr.
+Bell&mdash;something to make her hate the very thought of a moving picture
+and shudder at the sound of a shot."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Exactly," said Mr. Bell. "I've thought of that. Something to make her
+gun-shy and camera-shy. It's curious about her. In some ways she's a
+timid girl. She's afraid of thunder, for one thing."
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish bent forward. "Do you know," she said, "the greatest weapon in the
+world?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Weapon? Well, I don't know. These new German guns&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+"The greatest weapon in the world," Tish explained, "is ridicule. Man is
+helpless against it. To be absurd is to be lost. When the bandits take
+the money, where do they go?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Down the other side from the pass. A photographer will photograph them
+there, making their escape with the loot."
+</p>
+<p>
+"And the young lady?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"I've told you that," he said bitterly. "She is to be captured by the
+attacking party."
+</p>
+<p>
+"They will all be armed?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Sure, with blanks. The Indians have guns and arrows, but the arrows
+have rubber tips."
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish rose majestically. "Mr. Bell," she said, "you may sleep to-night
+the sleep of peace. When I undertake a thing, I carry it through. My
+friends will agree with me. I never fail, when my heart is set on it. By
+the day after to-morrow the young lady in the case will hate the sight
+of a camera."
+</p>
+<p>
+Although not disclosing her plan, she invited the young man to join us.
+But his face fell and he shook his head.
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish said that she did not expect to need him, but that, if the time
+came, she would blow three times on a police whistle, which she had,
+with her usual foresight, brought along. He agreed to that, although
+looking rather surprised, and we parted from him.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I would advise," Tish said as he moved away, "that you conceal yourself
+in the valley below the pass on the other side."
+</p>
+<p>
+He agreed to this, and we separated for the night. But long after Aggie
+and I had composed ourselves to rest Tish sat on a stone by the
+camp-fire and rolled cigarettes.
+</p>
+<p>
+At last she came into the tent and wakened us by prodding us with her
+foot.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Get all the sleep you can," she said. "We'll leave here at dawn
+to-morrow, and there'll be little rest for any of us to-morrow night."
+</p>
+<p>
+At daylight next morning she roused us. She was dressed, except that she
+wore her combing-jacket, and her hair was loose round her face.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Aggie, you make an omelet in a hurry, and, Lizzie, you will have to get
+the horses."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'll do nothing of the sort," I said, sitting up on the ground. "We've
+got a man here for that. Besides, I have to set the table."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Very well," Tish replied, "we can stay here, I dare say. Bill's busy at
+something I've set him to doing."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Whose fault is it," I demanded, "that we are here in 'Greenland's Icy
+Mountains'? Not mine. I'd never heard of the dratted place. And those
+horses are five miles away by now, most likely."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Go and get a cup of tea. You'll have a little sense then," said Tish,
+not unkindly. "And as for what Bill's doing, he's making revolvers.
+Where's your writing ink?"
+</p>
+<p>
+<i>I had none!</i> I realized it that moment. I had got it out at the first
+camp to record in my diary the place, weather, temperature, and my own
+pulse rate, which I had been advised to watch, on account of the effect
+of altitude on the heart, and had left the bottle sitting on a stone.
+</p>
+<p>
+When I confessed this to Tish, she was unjustly angry and a trifle
+bitter.
+</p>
+<p>
+"It's what I deserve, most likely, for bringing along two incompetents,"
+was her brief remark. "Without ink we are weaponless."
+</p>
+<p>
+But she is a creature of resource, and a moment later she emerged from
+the tent and called to Bill in a cheerful tone.
+</p>
+<p>
+"No ink, Bill," she said, "but we've got blackberry cordial, and by
+mixing it with a little soot we may be able to manage."
+</p>
+<p>
+Aggie demurred loudly, as there are occasions when only a mouthful of
+the cordial enables her to keep doing. But Tish was firm. When I went to
+the fire, I found Bill busily carving wooden revolvers, copying Tish's,
+which lay before him. He had them done well enough, and could have gone
+for the horses as easy as not, but he insisted on trimming them up.
+Mine, which I still have, has a buffalo head carved on the handle, and
+Aggie's has a wreath of leaves running round the barrel.
+</p>
+<p>
+In spite of Aggie's wails Tish poured a large part of the blackberry
+cordial into a biscuit pan, and put in a chip of wood.
+</p>
+<p>
+"It makes it red," she said doubtfully. "I never saw a red revolver,
+Bill."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Seems like an awful waste," Bill said. But having now completed the
+wreath he placed all three weapons&mdash;he had made one for himself&mdash;in the
+pan. The last thing I saw, as I started for the horses, was the three of
+them standing about, looking down, and Aggie's face was full of misery.
+</p>
+<p>
+I was gone for a half-hour. The horses had not wandered far, and having
+mounted mine, although without a saddle, I copied as well as I could the
+whoop Bill used to drive them in, and rounded them up. When I returned,
+driving them before me, the pack was ready, and on Tish's face was a
+look of intense satisfaction. I soon perceived the reason.
+</p>
+<p>
+Lying on a stone by the fire were three of the shiniest black revolvers
+any one could want. I eyed Tish and she explained.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Stove polish," she said. "Like a fool I'd forgot it. Gives a true
+metallic luster, as it says on the box."
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish is very particular about a stove, and even on our camping-trips we
+keep the portable stove shining and clean.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Does it come off?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Well, more or less," she admitted. "We can keep the box out and renew
+when necessary. It is a great comfort," she added, "to feel that we are
+all armed. We shall need weapons."
+</p>
+<p>
+"In an emergency," I observed rather tartly, "I hope you will not depend
+on us too much. While I don't know what you intend to do, if it is
+anything desperate, just remember that the only way Aggie or I can do
+any damage with these things is to thrust them down somebody's throat
+and strangle him to death."
+</p>
+<p>
+She ignored my remark, however, and soon we were on our horses and
+moving along the trail toward the pass.
+</p>
+
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<h3><a name="h2H_4_0023" id="h2H_4_0023"></a>
+ II
+</h3>
+<p>
+It will be unnecessary to remind those familiar with Glacier Park of the
+trail which hugs the mountain above timber-line, and extends toward the
+pass for a mile or so, in a long semicircle which curves inward.
+</p>
+<p>
+At the end it turns to the right and mounts to an acre or so of level
+ground, with snow and rocks but no vegetation. This is the Piegan Pass.
+Behind it is the Garden Wall, that stupendous mass of granite rising to
+incredible heights. On the other side the trail drops abruptly, by means
+of stepladders which I have explained.
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish now told us of her plan.
+</p>
+<p>
+"The unfortunate part is," she said, "that the Ostermaiers will not see
+us. I tried to arrange it so they could, but it was impossible. We must
+content ourselves with the knowledge of a good deed done."
+</p>
+<p>
+Her plan, in brief, was this: The sham attacking party was to turn and
+ride away down the far side of the pass, up which the Ostermaiers had
+come. They were, according to the young man, to take the girl with them,
+with the idea of holding her for ransom. She was to escape, however,
+while they were lunching in some secluded fastness, and, riding back to
+the pass, was to meet there a rescue party, which the Ostermaiers were
+to meet on the way down to Gunsight Chalet.
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish's idea was this: We would ride up while they were lunching, pretend
+to think them real bandits, paying no attention to them if they fired at
+us, as we knew they had only blank cartridges, and, having taken them
+prisoners, make them walk in ignominy to the nearest camp, some miles
+farther.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Then," said Tish, "either they will confess the ruse, and the country
+will ring with laughter, or they will have to submit to arrest and much
+unpleasantness. It will be a severe lesson."
+</p>
+<p>
+We reached the pass safely, and on the way down the other side we passed
+Mr. Oliver, the moving-picture man, with his outfit on a horse. He
+touched his hat politely and moved out on a ledge to let us by.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Mind if I take you as you go down the mountain?" he called. "It's a
+bully place for a picture." He stared at Aggie, who was muffled in a
+cape and had the dish towel round her head. "I'd particularly like to
+get your Arab," he said. "The Far East and the Far West, you know."
+</p>
+<p>
+Aggie gave him a furious glance. "Arab nothing!" she snapped. "If you
+can't tell a Christian lady from a heathen, on account of her having
+lost her hat, then you belong in the dirty work you're doing."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Aggie, be quiet!" Tish said in an awful voice.
+</p>
+<p>
+But wrath had made Aggie reckless. "'Dirty work' was what I said," she
+repeated, staring at the young man.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I beg your pardon. I'm sure I&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Don't think," Aggie went on, to Tish's fury, "that we don't know a few
+things. We do."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I see," he said slowly. "All right. Although I'd like to know&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Good-morning," said Aggie, and kicked her horse to go on.
+</p>
+<p>
+I shall never forget Tish's face. Round the next bend she got off her
+horse and confronted Aggie.
+</p>
+
+<div class="figure">
+<a name="image-0010"></a>
+<img src="images/ill-08.jpg" width="100%"
+alt="'The older I get, Aggie Pilkington, the more I realize
+that to take you anywhere means ruin.'" /><br />
+"The older I get, Aggie Pilkington, the more I realize
+that to take you anywhere means ruin."
+</div>
+
+<p>
+"The older I get, Aggie Pilkington," she said, "the more I realize that
+to take you anywhere means ruin. We are done now. All our labor is for
+nothing. There will be no holdup, no nothing. They are scared off."
+</p>
+<p>
+But Aggie was still angry. "Just let some one take you for a lousy
+Bedouin, Tish," she said, "and see what you would do. I'm not sorry
+anyhow. I never did like the idea."
+</p>
+<p>
+But Tish dislikes relinquishing an idea, once it has taken hold. And,
+although she did not speak to Aggie again for the next hour, she went
+ahead with her preparations.
+</p>
+<p>
+"There's still a chance, Lizzie," she said. "It's not likely they'll
+give up easy, on account of hiring the Indians and everything."
+</p>
+<p>
+About a mile and a half down the trail, she picked out a place to hide.
+This time there was a cave. We cleared our saddles for action, as Tish
+proposed to let them escape past us with the girl, and then to follow
+them rapidly, stealing upon them if possible while they were at
+luncheon, and covering them with the one real revolver and the three
+wooden ones.
+</p>
+<p>
+The only thing that bothered us was Bill's attitude. He kept laughing to
+himself and muttering, and when he was storing things in the cave, Tish
+took me aside.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I don't like his attitude, Lizzie," she said. "He's likely to giggle or
+do something silly, just at the crucial moment. I cannot understand why
+he thinks it is funny, but he does. We'd be much better without him."
+</p>
+<p>
+"You'd better talk to him, Tish," I said. "You can't get rid of him
+now."
+</p>
+<p>
+But to tell Tish she cannot do a thing is to determine her to do it.
+</p>
+<p>
+It was still early, only half-past eight, when she came to me with an
+eager face.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I've got it, Lizzie," she said. "I'll send off Mona Lisa, and he will
+have to search for her. The only thing is, she won't move unless she's
+driven. If we could only find a hornet's nest again, we could manage. It
+may be cruel, but I understand that a hornet's sting is not as painful
+to a horse as to a human being."
+</p>
+<p>
+Mona Lisa, I must explain, was the pack-horse. Tish had changed her name
+from Jane to Mona Lisa because in the mornings she was constantly
+missing, and having to be looked for.
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish disappeared for a time, and we settled down to our long wait. Bill
+put another coat of stove polish on the weapons, and broke now and then
+into silent laughter. On my giving him a haughty glance, however, he
+became sober and rubbed with redoubled vigor.
+</p>
+<p>
+In a half-hour, however, I saw Tish beckoning to me from a distance, and
+I went to her. I soon saw that she was holding her handkerchief to one
+cheek, but when I mentioned the fact she ignored me.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I have found a nest, Lizzie," she cried. "Slip over and unfasten Mona
+Lisa. She's not near the other horses, which is fortunate."
+</p>
+<p>
+I then perceived that Tish's yellow slicker was behind her on the ground
+and tied into a bundle, from which emerged a dull roaring. I was
+wondering how Tish expected to open it, when she settled the question by
+asking me to cut a piece from the mosquito netting which we put in the
+doorway of the tent at night, and to bring her riding-gloves.
+</p>
+<p>
+Aggie was darning a hole in the tablecloth when I went back and Bill was
+still engaged with the weapons. Having taken what she required to Tish,
+under pretense of giving Mona Lisa a lump of sugar, I untied her. What
+followed was exactly as Tish had planned. Mona Lisa, not realizing her
+freedom, stood still while Tish untied the slicker and freed its furious
+inmates. She then dropped the whole thing under the unfortunate animal,
+and retreated, not too rapidly, for fear of drawing Bill's attention.
+For possibly sixty seconds nothing happened, except that Mona Lisa
+raised her head and appeared to listen. Then, with a loud scream, she
+threw up her head and bolted. By the time Bill had put down the stove
+brush she was out of sight among the trees, but we could hear her
+leaping and scrambling through the wood.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Jumping cats!" said Bill, and ran for his horse. "Acts as though she'd
+started for the Coast!" he yelled to me, and flung after her.
+</p>
+<p>
+When he had disappeared, Tish came out of the woods, and, getting a
+kettle of boiling water, poured it over the nest. In spite of the
+netting, however, she was stung again, on the back of the neck, and
+spent the rest of the morning holding wet mud to the affected parts.
+</p>
+<p>
+Her brain, however, was as active as ever, and by half-past eleven,
+mounting a boulder, she announced that she could see the Ostermaier
+party far down the trail, and that in an hour they would probably be at
+the top. She had her field-glasses, and she said that Mrs. Ostermaier
+was pointing up to the pass and shaking her head, and that the others
+were arguing with her.
+</p>
+
+
+<div class="figure" style="width: 75%;">
+<a name="image-0011"></a>
+<img src="images/ill-09.jpg" width="100%"
+alt="'It would be just like the woman, to refuse to come any
+farther and spoil everything'" /><br />
+"It would be just like the woman, to refuse to come any
+farther and spoil everything"
+</div>
+
+<p>
+"It would be just like the woman," Tish said bitterly, "to refuse to
+come any farther and spoil everything."
+</p>
+<p>
+But a little later she announced that the guide was leading Mrs.
+Ostermaier's horse and that they were coming on.
+</p>
+<p>
+We immediately retreated to the cave and waited, it being Tish's
+intention to allow them to reach the pass without suspecting our
+presence, and only to cut off the pseudo-bandits in their retreat, as I
+have explained.
+</p>
+<p>
+It was well that we had concealed the horses also, for the party stopped
+near the cave, and Mrs. Ostermaier was weeping. "Not a step farther!"
+she said. "I have a family to consider, and Mr. Ostermaier is a man of
+wide usefulness and cannot be spared."
+</p>
+<p>
+We did not dare to look out, but we heard the young lady speaking, and
+as Aggie remarked later, no one would have thought, from the sweetness
+of her voice, that she was a creature of duplicity.
+</p>
+<p>
+"But it is perfectly safe, dear Mrs. Ostermaier," she said "And think,
+when you go home, of being able to say that you have climbed a mountain
+pass."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Pass!" sniffed Mrs. Ostermaier. "Pass nothing! I don't call a wall a
+mile high a pass."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Think," said the girl, "of being able to crow over those three old
+women who are always boasting of the things they do. Probably you are
+right, and they never do them at all, but you&mdash;there's a moving-picture
+man waiting, remember, and you can show the picture before the Dorcas
+Society. No one can ever doubt that you have done a courageous thing.
+You'll have the proof."
+</p>
+<p>
+"George," said Mrs. Ostermaier in a small voice, "if anything happens, I
+have told you how I want my things divided."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Little devil!" whispered Aggie, referring to the girl. "If that young
+man knows when he is well off, he'll let her go."
+</p>
+<p>
+But beyond rebuking her for the epithet, Tish made no comment, and the
+party moved on. We lost them for a time among the trees, but when they
+moved out above timber-line we were able to watch them, and we saw that
+Mrs. Ostermaier got off her horse, about halfway up, and climbed slowly
+on foot. Tish, who had the glasses, said that she looked purple and
+angry, and that she distinctly saw the guide give her something to drink
+out of a bottle. It might, however, have been vichy or some similar
+innocent beverage, and I believe in giving her the benefit of the doubt.
+</p>
+<p>
+When at last they vanished over the edge of the pass, we led out our
+horses and prepared for what was to come. Bill had not returned, and,
+indeed, we did not see him until the evening of the second day after
+that, when, worn but triumphant, we emerged from the trail at the Many
+Glaciers Hotel. That, however, comes later in this narrative.
+</p>
+<p>
+With everything prepared, Tish judged it best to have luncheon. I made a
+few mayonnaise-and-lettuce sandwiches, beating the mayonnaise in the
+cool recesses of the cave, and we drank some iced tea, to which Aggie
+had thoughtfully added sliced lemon and a quantity of ginger ale.
+Feeling much refreshed, we grasped our weapons and waited.
+</p>
+<p>
+At half-past twelve we heard a loud shriek on the pass, far overhead,
+followed almost immediately by a fusillade of shots. Then a silence,
+followed by more shots. Then a solitary horseman rode over the edge of
+the pass and, spurring his horse, rode recklessly down the precipitous
+trail. Aggie exclaimed that it was Mr. Ostermaier, basely deserting his
+wife in her apparent hour of need. But Tish, who had the glasses,
+reported finally that it was the moving-picture man.
+</p>
+<p>
+We were greatly surprised, as it had not occurred to us that this would
+be a part of the program.
+</p>
+<p>
+As he descended, Tish announced that there must be another photographer
+on top, as he was "registering" signs of terror&mdash;a moving-picture
+expression which she had acquired from Charlie Sands&mdash;and looking back
+frequently over his shoulder.
+</p>
+<p>
+We waited until he reached timber-line, and then withdrew to a group of
+trees. It was not our intention to allow him to see us and spoil
+everything. But when he came near, through the woods, and his horse
+continued at unabated speed, Tish decided that the animal, frightened by
+the shots, was running away.
+</p>
+<p>
+She therefore placed herself across the trail to check its headlong
+speed, but the animal merely rushed round her. Mr. Oliver yelled
+something at us, which we were, however, unable to hear, and kept madly
+on.
+</p>
+<p>
+Almost immediately four men, firing back over their shoulders, rode into
+sight at the pass and came swiftly down toward us.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Where's the girl?" Tish cried with her glasses to her eyes. "The idiots
+have got excited and have forgotten to steal her."
+</p>
+<p>
+That was plainly what had happened, but she was determined to be stolen
+anyhow, for the next moment she rode into view, furiously following the
+bandits.
+</p>
+<p>
+"She's kept her head anyhow," Tish observed with satisfaction. "Trust a
+lot of men to go crazy and do the wrong thing. But they'll have to
+change the story and make her follow them."
+</p>
+<p>
+At timber-line the men seemed to realize that she was behind them, and
+they turned and looked up. They seemed to be at a loss to know what to
+do, in view of the picture. But they were quick thinkers, too, we
+decided. Right then and there they took her prisoner, surrounding her.
+</p>
+<p>
+She made a desperate resistance, even crying out, as we could plainly
+see. But Tish was irritated. She said she could not see how the story
+would hold now. Either the girl should have captured them, they being
+out of ammunition, or the whole thing should have been done again,
+according to the original plan. However, as she said, it was not our
+affair. Our business was to teach them a lesson not to impose on
+unsuspecting tourists, for although not fond of Mrs. Ostermaier, we had
+been members of Mr. Ostermaier's church, and liked him, although his
+sermons were shorter than Tish entirely approved of.
+</p>
+<p>
+We withdrew again to seclusion until they had passed, and Tish gave them
+ten minutes to get well ahead. Then we rode out.
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish's face was stern as she led off. The shriek of Mrs. Ostermaier was
+still, as she said in a low tone, ringing in her ears. But before we had
+gone very far, Tish stopped and got off her horse. "We've got to pad the
+horses' feet," she said. "How can we creep up on them when on every
+stony place we sound like an artillery engagement?"
+</p>
+<p>
+Here was a difficulty we had not anticipated. But Tish overcame it with
+her customary resource, by taking the blanket from under her saddle and
+cutting it into pieces with her scissors, which always accompany her. We
+then cut the leather straps from our saddles at her direction, and each
+of us went to work. Aggie, however, protested.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I never expected," she said querulously, "to be sitting on the Rocky
+Mountains under a horse, tying a piece of bed quilt on his feet. I
+wouldn't mind," she added, "if the creature liked me. But the way he
+feels toward me he's likely to haul off and murder me at any moment."
+</p>
+<p>
+However, it was done at last, and it made a great change. We moved along
+silently, and all went well except that, having neglected to draw the
+cinch tight, and the horse's back being slippery without the padding, my
+saddle turned unexpectedly, throwing me off into the trail. I bruised my
+arm badly, but Tish only gave me a glance of scorn and went on.
+</p>
+<p>
+Being above carelessness herself, she very justly resents it in others.
+</p>
+<p>
+We had expected, with reason, that the so-called highwaymen, having
+retreated to a certain distance, would there pause and very possibly
+lunch before returning. It was, therefore, a matter of surprise to find
+that they had kept on.
+</p>
+<p>
+Moreover, they seemed to have advanced rapidly, and Tish, who had read a
+book on signs of the trail, examined the hoofprints of their horses in a
+soft place beside a stream, and reported that they had been going at a
+lope.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Now, remember," she said as she prepared to mount again, "to all
+intents and purposes these are real bandits and to be treated
+accordingly. Our motto is 'No quarter.' I shall be harsh, and I expect
+no protest from either of you. They deserve everything they get."
+</p>
+<p>
+But when, after another mile or two, we came to a side trail, leading,
+by Tish's map, not to Many Glaciers, but up a ravine to another pass,
+and Tish saw that they had taken that direction, we were puzzled.
+</p>
+<p>
+But not for long.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I understand now," she said. "It is all clear. The photographer was
+riding ahead to get them up this valley somewhere. They've probably got
+a rendezvous all ready, with another camera in place. I must say," she
+observed, "that they are doing it thoroughly."
+</p>
+<p>
+We rode for two hours, and no sign of them. The stove polish had come
+off the handles of our revolvers by that time, and Aggie, having rubbed
+her face ever and anon to remove perspiration, presented under her
+turban a villainous and ferocious expression quite at variance with her
+customary mildness.
+</p>
+<p>
+I urged her to stop and wash, but Tish, after a glance, said to keep on.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Your looking like that's a distinct advantage, Aggie," she said. "Like
+as not they'll throw up their hands the minute they see you. I know I
+should. You'd better ride first when we get near."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Like as not they'll put a hole in me," Aggie objected. "And as to
+riding first, I will not. This is your doing, Tish Carberry, and as for
+their having blank cartridges&mdash;how do we know someone hasn't made a
+mistake and got a real one?"
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish reflected on that. "It's a possibility," she agreed. "If we find
+that they're going to spend the night out, it might be better to wait
+until they've taken off all the hardware they're hung with."
+</p>
+<p>
+But we did not come up with them. We kept on finding traces of the party
+in marshy spots, and once Tish hopped off her horse and picked up a
+small handkerchief with a colored border and held it up to us.
+</p>
+<p>
+"It's hers," she said. "Anybody would know she is the sort to use
+colored borders. They're ahead somewhere."
+</p>
+<p>
+But it seemed strange that they would go so far, and I said so.
+</p>
+<p>
+"We're far enough off the main trail, Tish," I said. "And it's getting
+wilder every minute. There's nothing I can see to prevent a mountain
+lion dropping on us most any time."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Not if it gets a good look at Aggie!" was Tish's grim response.
+</p>
+<p>
+It began to grow dark in the valley, and things seemed to move on either
+side of the trail. Aggie called out once that we had just passed a
+grizzly bear, but Tish never faltered. The region grew more and more
+wild. The trail was broken with mudholes and crossed by fallen logs.
+With a superb disdain Tish rode across all obstacles, not even glancing
+at them. But Aggie and I got off at the worst places and led our horses.
+At one mudhole I was unfortunate enough to stumble. A horse with a
+particle of affection for a woman who had ridden it and cared for it for
+several days would have paused.
+</p>
+<p>
+Not so my animal. With a heartlessness at which I still shudder the
+creature used me as a bridge, and stepped across, dryfoot, on my back.
+Owing to his padded feet and to the depth of the mud&mdash;some eight feet, I
+believe&mdash;I was uninjured. But it required ten minutes of hard labor on
+the part of both Tish and Aggie to release me from the mud, from which I
+was finally raised with a low, hissing sound.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Park!" said Aggie as she scraped my obliterated features with a small
+branch. "Park, indeed! It's a howling wilderness. I'm fond of my native
+land," she went on, digging out my nostrils, so I could breathe, "but I
+don't calculate to eat it. As for that unfeeling beast of yours, Lizzie,
+I've never known a horse to show such selfishness. Never."
+</p>
+<p>
+Well, we went on at last, but I was not so enthusiastic about teaching
+people lessons as I had been. It seemed to me that we might have kept on
+along the trail and had a mighty good time, getting more and more nimble
+and stopping now and then to bake a pie and have a decent meal, and
+putting up our hair in crimps at night, without worrying about other
+folks' affairs.
+</p>
+<p>
+Late in the afternoon of that day, when so far as I could see Tish was
+lost, and not even her gathering a bunch of wild flowers while the
+horses rested could fool me, I voiced my complaint.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Let me look at the map, Tish," I suggested. "I'm pretty good at maps.
+You know how I am at charades and acrostics. At the church supper&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Nonsense, Lizzie," she returned. "You couldn't make head or tail of
+this map. It's my belief that the man who made it had never been here.
+Either that or there has been an earthquake since. But," she went on,
+more cheerfully, "if we are lost, so are the others."
+</p>
+<p>
+"If we even had Bill along!"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Bill!" Tish said scornfully. "It's my belief Bill is in the whole
+business, and that if we hadn't got rid of him we'd have been the next
+advertising dodge. As far as that goes," she said thoughtfully, "it
+wouldn't surprise me a particle to find that we've been taken, without
+our knowing it, most any time. Your horse just now, walking across that
+bridge of size, for one thing."
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish seldom makes a pun, which she herself has said is the lowest form
+of humor. The dig at my figure was unkind, also, and unworthy of her. I
+turned and left her.
+</p>
+<p>
+At last, well on in the evening, I saw Tish draw up her horse and point
+ahead.
+</p>
+<p>
+"The miscreants!" she said.
+</p>
+<p>
+True enough, up a narrow side cañon we could see a camp-fire. It was a
+small one, and only noticeable from one point. But Tish's keen eye had
+seen it. She sat on her horse and gazed toward it.
+</p>
+<p>
+"What a shameful thing it is," she said, "to prostitute the beauties of
+this magnificent region to such a purpose. To make of these beetling
+crags a joke! To invade these vast gorges with the spirit of
+commercialism and to bring a pack of movie actors to desecrate the
+virgin silence with ribald jests and laughter! Lizzie, I wish you
+wouldn't wheeze!"
+</p>
+<p>
+"You would wheeze, too, Tish Carberry," I retorted, justly indignant,
+"if a horse had just pressed your spinal column into your breast bone.
+Goodness knows," I said, "where my lungs are. I've missed them ever
+since my fall."
+</p>
+<p>
+However, she was engrossed with larger matters, and ignored my
+petulance. She is a large-natured woman and above pettiness.
+</p>
+<p>
+We made our way slowly up the cañon. The movie outfit was securely
+camped under an overhanging rock, as we could now see. At one point
+their position commanded the trail, which was hardly more than a track
+through the wilderness, and before we reached this point we dismounted
+and Tish surveyed the camp through her glasses.
+</p>
+<p>
+"We'd better wait until dark," Tish said. "Owing to the padding they
+have not heard us, but it looks to me as if one of them is on a rock,
+watching."
+</p>
+<p>
+It seemed rather strange to me that they were keeping a lookout, but
+Tish only shrugged her shoulders.
+</p>
+<p>
+"If I know anything of that red-headed Oliver man," she said, "he hates
+to let a camera rest. Like as not he's got it set up among the trees
+somewhere, taking flashlights of wild animals. It's rather a pity," she
+said, turning and surveying Aggie and myself, "that he cannot get you
+two. If you happen to see anything edible lying on the ground, you'd
+better not pick it up. It's probably attached to the string that sets
+off the flash."
+</p>
+<p>
+We led our horses into the woods, which were very thick at that point,
+and tied them. My beast, however, lay down and rolled, saddle and all,
+thus breaking my mirror&mdash;a most unlucky omen&mdash;and the bottle of olive
+oil which we had brought along for mayonnaise dressing. Tish is fond of
+mayonnaise, and, besides, considers olive oil most strengthening.
+However, it was gone, and although Aggie comforted me by suggesting that
+her boiled salad dressing is quite tasty, I was disconsolate.
+</p>
+<p>
+It was by that time seven o'clock and almost dark. We held a conference.
+Tish was of the opinion that we should first lead off their horses, if
+possible.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I intend," she said severely, "to make escape impossible. If they fire,
+when taken by surprise, remember that they have only blank cartridges. I
+must say," she added with a confession of unusual weakness, "that I am
+glad the Indians escaped the other way. I would hardly know what to do
+with Indians, even quite tame ones. While I know a few letters of the
+deaf-and-dumb language, which I believe all tribes use in common, I fear
+that in a moment of excitement I would forget what I know."
+</p>
+<p>
+The next step, she asserted, was to secure their weapons.
+</p>
+<p>
+"After all," she said, "the darkness is in our favor. I intend to fire
+once, to show them that we are armed and dangerous. And if you two will
+point the guns Bill made, they cannot possibly tell that they are not
+real."
+</p>
+<p>
+"But we will know it," Aggie quavered. Now that the quarry was in sight
+she was more and more nervous, sneezing at short intervals in spite of
+her menthol inhaler. "I am sorry, Tish, but I cannot feel the same about
+that wooden revolver as I would about a real one. And even when I try to
+forget that it is only wood the carving reminds me."
+</p>
+<p>
+But Tish silenced her with a glance. She had strangely altered in the
+last few minutes. All traces of fatigue had gone, and when she struck a
+match and consulted her watch I saw in her face that high resolve, that
+stern and matchless courage, which I so often have tried to emulate and
+failed.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Seven o'clock," she announced. "We will dine first. There is nothing
+like food to restore failing spirits."
+</p>
+<p>
+But we had nothing except our sandwiches, and Tish suggested snaring
+some of the stupid squirrels with which the region abounded.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Aggie needs broth," she said decidedly. "We have sandwiches, but Aggie
+is frail and must be looked to."
+</p>
+<p>
+Aggie was pathetically grateful, although sorry for the squirrels, which
+were pretty and quite tame. But Tish was firm in her kindly intent, and
+proceeded at once to set a rabbit snare, a trick she had learned in the
+Maine woods. Having done this, and built a small fire, well hidden, we
+sat down to wait.
+</p>
+<p>
+In a short time we heard terrible human cries proceeding from the snare,
+and, hurrying thither, found in it a young mountain lion. It looked
+dangerous, and was biting in every direction. I admit that I was
+prepared to leave in haste, but not so Tish. She fetched her umbrella,
+without which she never travels, and while the animal set its jaws in
+it&mdash;a painful necessity, as it was her best umbrella&mdash;Tish hit it on the
+head&mdash;not the umbrella, but the lion&mdash;with a large stone.
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish's satisfaction was unbounded. She stated that the flesh of the
+mountain lion was much like veal, and so indeed it proved. We made a
+nourishing soup of it, with potatoes and a can of macédoine vegetables,
+and within an hour and a half we had dined luxuriously, adding to our
+repast what remained of the sandwiches, and a tinned plum pudding of
+English make, very nutritious and delicious.
+</p>
+<p>
+For twenty minutes after the meal we all stood. Tish insists on this, as
+aiding digestion. Then we prepared for the night's work.
+</p>
+<p>
+I believe that our conduct requires no defense. But it may be well again
+to explain our position. These people, whose camp-fire glowed so
+brazenly against the opposite cliff, had for purely mercenary motives
+committed a cruel hoax. They had posed as bandits, and as bandits they
+deserved to be treated. They had held up our own clergyman, of a nervous
+temperament, on a mountain pass, and had taken from him a part of his
+stipend. It was heartless. It was barbarous. It was cruel.
+</p>
+<p>
+My own courage came back with the hot food, which I followed by a
+charcoal tablet. And the difference in Aggie was marked. Possibly some
+of the courage of the mountain lion, that bravest of wild creatures, had
+communicated itself to her through the homely medicine of digestion.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I can hardly wait to get after them," she said.
+</p>
+<p>
+However, it was still too early for them to have settled for the night.
+We sat down, having extinguished our fire, and I was just dozing off
+when Tish remembered the young man who was to have listened for the
+police whistle.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I absolutely forgot him," she said regretfully. "I suppose he is
+hanging round the foot of Piegan's Pass yet. I'm sorry to have him miss
+this. I shall tell him, when I see him, that no girl worth having would
+be sitting over there at supper with four moving-picture actors without
+a chaperon. The whole proceeding is scandalous. I have noticed," she
+added, "that it is the girls from quiet suburban towns who are really
+most prone to defy the conventions when the chance comes."
+</p>
+<p>
+We dozed for a short time.
+</p>
+<p>
+Then Tish sat up suddenly. "What's that?" she said.
+</p>
+<p>
+We listened and distinctly heard the tramp of horses' feet. We started
+up, but Tish was quite calm.
+</p>
+<p>
+"They've turned their horses out," she said. "Fortune is with us. They
+are coming this way."
+</p>
+<p>
+But at first it did not seem so fortunate, for we heard one of the men
+following them, stumbling along, and, I regret to say, using profane
+language. They came directly toward us, and Aggie beside me trembled. But
+Tish was equal to the emergency.
+</p>
+<p>
+She drew us behind a large rock, where, spreading out a raincoat to
+protect us from the dampness, we sat down and waited.
+</p>
+<p>
+When one of the animals loomed up close to the rock Aggie gave a low
+cry, but Tish covered her mouth fiercely with an ungentle hand.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Be still!" she hissed.
+</p>
+<p>
+It was now perfectly dark, and the man with the horses was not far off.
+We could not see him, but at last he came near enough so that we could
+see the flare of a match when he lighted a cigarette. I put my hand on
+Aggie, and she was shaking with nervousness.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I am sure I am going to sneeze, Lizzie," she gasped.
+</p>
+<p>
+And sneeze she did. She muffled it considerably, however, and we were
+not discovered. But, Tish, I knew, was silently raging.
+</p>
+<p>
+The horses came nearer.
+</p>
+<p>
+One of them, indeed, came quite close, and took a nip at the toe of my
+riding-boot. I kicked at it sharply, however, and it moved away.
+</p>
+<p>
+The man had gone on. We watched the light of his cigarette, and thus, as
+he now and then turned his head, knew where he was. It was now that I
+felt, rather than heard, that Tish was crawling out from the shelter of
+the rock. At the same time we heard, by the crunching of branches, that
+the man had sat down near at hand.
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish's progress was slow but sure. For a half-hour we sat there. Then
+she returned, still crawling, and on putting out my hand I discovered
+that she had secured the lasso from her saddle and had brought it back.
+How true had been her instinct when she practiced its use! How my own
+words, that it was all foolishness, came back and whispered lessons of
+humility in my ear!
+</p>
+<p>
+At this moment a deep, resonant sound came from the tree where the movie
+actor sat. At the same moment a small creature dropped into my lap from
+somewhere above, and ran up my sleeve. I made frantic although
+necessarily silent efforts to dislodge it, and it bit me severely.
+</p>
+<p>
+The necessity for silence taxed all my strength, but managing finally to
+secure it by the tail, I forcibly withdrew it and flung it away.
+Unluckily it struck Aggie in the left eye and inflicted a painful
+bruise.
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish had risen to her feet and was standing, a silent and menacing
+figure, while this event transpired. The movements of the horses as they
+grazed, the soft breeze blowing through the pines, were the only sounds.
+Now she took a step forward.
+</p>
+<p>
+"He's asleep!" she whispered. "Aggie, sit still and watch the horses.
+Lizzie, come with me."
+</p>
+<p>
+As I advanced to her she thrust her revolver into my hand.
+</p>
+<p>
+"When I give the word," she said in a whisper, "hold it against his
+neck. But keep your finger off the trigger. It's loaded."
+</p>
+<p>
+We advanced slowly, halting now and then to listen. Although brush
+crackled under our feet, the grazing horses were making a similar
+disturbance, and the man slept on. Soon we could see him clearly,
+sitting back against a tree, his head dropped forward on his breast.
+Tish surveyed the scene with her keen and appraising eye, and raised
+the lasso.
+</p>
+<p>
+The first result was not good. The loaded end struck a branch, and,
+being deflected, the thing wrapped itself perhaps a dozen times round my
+neck. Tish, being unconscious of what had happened, drew it up with a
+jerk, and I stood helpless and slowly strangling. At last, however, she
+realized the difficulty and released me. I was unable to breathe
+comfortably for some time, and my tongue felt swollen for several hours.
+</p>
+<p>
+Through all of this the movie actor had slept soundly. At the second
+effort Tish succeeded in lassoing him without difficulty. We had feared
+a loud outcry before we could get to him, but owing to Tish's swiftness
+in tightening the rope he was able to make, at first, only a low,
+gurgling sound. I had advanced to him, and was under the impression that
+I was holding the revolver to his neck. On discovering, however, that I
+was pressing it to the trunk of the tree, to which he was now secured by
+the lariat, I corrected the error and held it against his ear.
+</p>
+<p>
+He was now wide awake and struggling violently. Then, I regret to say,
+he broke out into such language as I have never heard before. At Tish's
+request I suppress his oaths, and substitute for them harmless
+expressions in common use.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Good gracious!" he said. "What in the world are you doing anyhow?
+Jimminy crickets, take that thing away from my neck! Great Scott and
+land alive, I haven't done anything! My word, that gun will go off if
+you aren't careful!"
+</p>
+<p>
+I am aware that much of the strength of what he said is lost in this
+free translation. But it is impossible to repeat his real language.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Don't move," Tish said, "and don't call out. A sound, and a bullet goes
+crashing through your brain."
+</p>
+<p>
+"A woman!" he said in most unflattering amazement. "Great Jehoshaphat, a
+woman!"
+</p>
+<p>
+This again is only a translation of what he said.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Exactly," Tish observed calmly. She had cut the end off the lasso with
+her scissors, and was now tying his feet together with it. "My friend,
+we know the whole story, and I am ashamed, ashamed," she said
+oratorically, "of your sex! To frighten a harmless and well-meaning
+preacher and his wife for the purpose of publicity is not a joke. Such
+hoaxes are criminal. If you must have publicity, why not seek it in some
+other way?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Crazy!" he groaned to himself. "In the hands of lunatics! Oh, my
+goodness!" Again these were not exactly his words.
+</p>
+<p>
+Having bound him tightly, hand and foot, and taken a revolver from his
+pocket, Tish straightened herself.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Now we'll gag him, Lizzie," she said. "We have other things to do
+to-night than to stand here and converse." Then she turned to the man
+and told him a deliberate lie. I am sorry to record this. But a tendency
+to avoid the straight and narrow issues of truth when facing a crisis is
+one of Tish's weaknesses, the only flaw in an otherwise strong and
+perfect character.
+</p>
+<p>
+"We are going to leave you here," she said. "But one of our number,
+fully armed, will be near by. A sound from you, or any endeavor to call
+for succor, will end sadly for you. A word to the wise. Now, Lizzie,
+take that bandanna off his neck and tie it over his mouth."
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish stood, looking down at him, and her very silhouette was scornful.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Think, my friend," she said, "of the ignominy of your position! Is any
+moving picture worth it? Is the pleasure of seeing yourself on the
+screen any reward for such a shameful position as yours now is? No. A
+thousand times no."
+</p>
+<p>
+He made a choking sound in his throat and writhed helplessly. And so we
+left him, a hopeless and miserable figure, to ponder on his sins.
+</p>
+<p>
+"That's one," said Tish briskly. "There are only three left. Come,
+Aggie," she said cheerfully&mdash;"to work! We have made a good beginning."
+</p>
+<p>
+It is with modesty that I approach that night's events, remembering
+always that Tish's was the brain which conceived and carried out the
+affair. We were but her loyal and eager assistants. It is for this
+reason that I thought, and still think, that the money should have been
+divided so as to give Tish the lion's share. But she, dear, magnanimous
+soul, refused even to hear of such a course, and insisted that we share
+it equally.
+</p>
+<p>
+Of that, however, more anon.
+</p>
+<p>
+We next proceeded to capture their horses and to tie them up. We
+regretted the necessity for this, since the unfortunate animals had
+traveled far and were doubtless hungry. It went to my heart to drag them
+from their fragrant pasture and to tie them to trees. But, as Tish said,
+"Necessity knows no law," not even kindness. So we tied them up. Not,
+however, until we had moved them far from the trail.
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish stopped then, and stared across the cañon to the enemy's camp-fire.
+</p>
+<p>
+"No quarter, remember," she said. "And bring your weapons."
+</p>
+<p>
+We grasped our wooden revolvers and, with Tish leading, started for the
+camp. Unluckily there was a stream between us, and it was necessary to
+ford it. It shows Tish's true generalship that, instead of removing her
+shoes and stockings, as Aggie and I were about to do, she suggested
+getting our horses and riding across. This we did, and alighted on the
+other side dryshod.
+</p>
+<p>
+It was, on consulting my watch, nine o'clock and very dark. A few drops
+of rain began to fall also, and the distant camp-fire was burning low.
+Tish gave us each a little blackberry cordial, for fear of dampness, and
+took some herself. The mild glow which followed was very comforting.
+</p>
+<p>
+It was Tish, naturally, who went forward to reconnoiter. She returned in
+an hour, to report that the three men were lying round the fire, two
+asleep and one leaning on his elbow with a revolver handy. She did not
+see Mr. Oliver, and it was possible that it was he we had tied to the
+tree. The girl, she said, was sitting on a log, with her chin propped in
+her hands.
+</p>
+<p>
+"She looked rather low-spirited," Tish said. "I expect she liked the
+first young man better than she thought she did. I intend to give her a
+piece of my mind as soon as I get a chance. This playing hot and cold
+isn't maidenly, to say the least."
+</p>
+<p>
+We now moved slowly forward, after tying our horses. Toward the last,
+following Tish's example, we went on our hands and knees, and I was
+thankful then for no skirts. It is wonderful the freedom a man has. I
+was never one to approve of Doctor Mary Walker, but I'm not so sure she
+isn't a wise woman and the rest of us fools. I haven't put on a skirt
+braid since that time without begrudging it.
+</p>
+<p>
+Well, as I have stated, we advanced, and at last we were in full sight
+of the camp. I must say I'd have thought they'd have a tent. We expected
+something better, I suppose, because of the articles in the papers about
+movie people having their own limousines, and all that. But there they
+were, open to the wrath of the heavens, and deserving it, if I do say
+so.
+</p>
+<p>
+The girl was still sitting, as Tish had described her. Only now she was
+crying. My heart was downright sore for her. It is no comfort, having
+made a wrong choice, to know that it is one's own fault.
+</p>
+<p>
+Having now reached the zone of firelight Tish gave the signal, and we
+rose and pointed our revolvers at them. Then Tish stepped forward and
+said:&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+"Hands up!"
+</p>
+<p>
+I shall never forget the expression on the man's face.
+</p>
+<p>
+He shouted something, but he threw up his hands also, with his eyes
+popping out of his head. The others scrambled to their feet, but he
+warned them.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Careful, boys!" he yelled. "They're got the drop on us."
+</p>
+<p>
+Just then his eyes fell on Aggie, and he screeched:&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+"Two women and a Turk, by &mdash;&mdash;." The blank is mine.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Lizzie," said Tish sternly, as all of them, including the girl, held
+their hands up, "just give me your weapon and go over them."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Go over them?" I said, not understanding.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Search them," said Tish. "Take everything out of their pockets. And
+don't move," she ordered them sternly. "One motion, and I fire. Go on,
+Lizzie."
+</p>
+<p>
+Now I have never searched a man's pockets, and the idea was repugnant to
+me. I am a woman of delicate instincts. But Tish's face was stern. I did
+as commanded, therefore, the total result being:&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+Four revolvers.
+</p>
+<p>
+Two large knives.
+</p>
+<p>
+One small knife.
+</p>
+<p>
+One bunch of keys.
+</p>
+<p>
+One plug of chewing-tobacco.
+</p>
+<p>
+Four cartridge belts.
+</p>
+<p>
+Two old pipes.
+</p>
+<p>
+Mr. Ostermaier's cigar-case, which I recognized at once, being the one
+we had presented to him.
+</p>
+<p>
+Mrs. Ostermaier's wedding-ring and gold bracelet, which her sister gave
+her on her last birthday.
+</p>
+<p>
+A diamond solitaire, unknown, as Mrs. Ostermaier never owned one,
+preferring instead earrings as more showy.
+</p>
+<p>
+And a considerable sum of money, which I kept but did not count.
+</p>
+<p>
+There were other small articles, of no value.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Is that all the loot you secured during the infamous scene on Piegan
+Pass?" Tish demanded. "You need not hide anything from us. We know the
+facts, and the whole story will soon be public."
+</p>
+<p>
+"That's all, lady," whined one of the men. "Except a few boxes of lunch,
+and that's gone. Lady, lemme take my hands down. I've got a stiff
+shoulder, and I&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Keep them up," Tish snapped. "Aggie, see that they keep them up."
+</p>
+<p>
+Until that time we had been too occupied to observe the girl, who merely
+stood and watched in a disdainful sort of way. But now Tish turned and
+eyed her sternly.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Search her, Lizzie," she commanded.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Search me!" the girl exclaimed indignantly. "Certainly not!"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Lizzie," said Tish in her sternest manner, "go over that girl. Look in
+her riding-boots. I haven't come across Mrs. Ostermaier's earrings yet."
+</p>
+<p>
+At that the girl changed color and backed off.
+</p>
+<p>
+"It's an outrage," she said. "Surely I have suffered enough."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Not as much," Tish observed, "as you are going to suffer. Go over her,
+Lizzie."
+</p>
+<p>
+While I searched her, Tish was lecturing her.
+</p>
+<p>
+"You come from a good home, I understand," she said, "and you ought
+to know better. Not content with breaking an honest heart, you join a
+moving-picture outfit and frighten a prominent divine&mdash;for Mr. Ostermaier
+is well known&mdash;into what may be an illness. You cannot deny," she
+accused her, "that it was you who coaxed them to the pass. At least you
+needn't. We heard you."
+</p>
+<p>
+"How was I to know&mdash;" the girl began sullenly.
+</p>
+<p>
+But at that moment I found Mrs. Ostermaier's chamois bag thrust into her
+riding-boot, and she suddenly went pale.
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish held it up before her accusingly. "I dare say you will not deny
+this," she exclaimed, and took Mrs. Ostermaier's earrings out of it.
+</p>
+<p>
+The men muttered, but Aggie was equal to the occasion. "Silence!" she
+said, and pointed the revolver at each in turn.
+</p>
+<p>
+The girl started to speak. Then she shrugged her shoulders. "I could
+explain," she said, "but I won't. If you think I stole those hideous
+earrings you're welcome to."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Of course not," said Tish sarcastically. "No doubt she gave them to
+you&mdash;although I never knew her to give anything away before."
+</p>
+<p>
+The girl stood still, thinking. Suddenly she said "There's another one,
+you know. Another man."
+</p>
+<p>
+"We have him. He will give no further trouble," Tish observed grimly. "I
+think we have you all, except your Mr. Oliver."
+</p>
+<p>
+"He is not my Mr. Oliver," said the girl. "I never want to see him
+again. I&mdash;I hate him."
+</p>
+<p>
+"You haven't got much mind or you couldn't change it so quickly."
+</p>
+<p>
+She looked sulky again, and said she'd thank us for the ring, which was
+hers and she could prove it.
+</p>
+<p>
+But Tish sternly refused. "It's my private opinion," she observed, "that
+it is Mrs. Ostermaier's, and she has not worn it openly because of the
+congregation talking quite considerably about her earrings, and not
+caring for jewelry on the minister's wife. That's what I think."
+</p>
+<p>
+Shortly after that we heard a horse loping along the road. It came
+nearer, and then left the trail and came toward the fire. Tish picked up
+one of the extra revolvers and pointed it. It was Mr. Oliver!
+</p>
+<p>
+"Throw up your hands!" Tish called. And he did it. He turned a sort of
+blue color, too, when he saw us, and all the men with their hands up.
+But he looked relieved when he saw the girl.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Thank Heaven!" he said. "The way I've been riding this country&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+"You rode hard enough away from the pass," she replied coldly.
+</p>
+<p>
+We took a revolver away from him and lined him up with the others. All
+the time he was paying little attention to us and none at all to the
+other men. But he was pleading with the girl.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Honestly," he said, "I thought I could do better for everybody by doing
+what I did. How did I know," he pleaded, "that you were going to do such
+a crazy thing as this?"
+</p>
+<p>
+But she only stared at him as if she hated the very ground he stood on.
+</p>
+<p>
+"It's a pity," Tish observed, "that you haven't got your camera along.
+This would make a very nice picture. But I dare say you could hardly
+turn the crank with your hands in the air."
+</p>
+<p>
+We searched him carefully, but he had only a gold watch and some money.
+On the chance, however, that the watch was Mr. Ostermaier's, although
+unlikely, we took it.
+</p>
+<p>
+I must say he was very disagreeable, referring to us as highwaymen and
+using uncomplimentary language. But, as Tish observed, we might as well
+be thorough while we were about it.
+</p>
+<p>
+For the nonce we had forgotten the other man. But now I noticed that the
+pseudo-bandits wore a watchful and not unhopeful air. And suddenly one
+of them whistled&mdash;a thin, shrill note that had, as Tish later remarked,
+great penetrative power without being noisy.
+</p>
+<p>
+"That's enough of that," she said. "Aggie, take another of these guns
+and point them both at these gentlemen. If they whistle again, shoot.
+As to the other man, he will not reply, nor will he come to your
+assistance. He is gagged and tied, and into the bargain may become at
+any time the victim of wild beasts."
+</p>
+<p>
+The moment she had said it, Tish realized that it was but too true, and
+she grew thoughtful. Aggie, too, was far from comfortable. She said
+later that she was uncertain what to do. Tish had said to fire if they
+whistled again. The question in her mind was, had it been said purely
+for effect or did Tish mean it? After all, the men were not real
+bandits, she reflected, although guilty of theft, even if only for
+advertising purposes. She was greatly disturbed, and as agitation always
+causes a return of her hay fever, she began to sneeze violently.
+</p>
+<p>
+Until then the men had been quiet, if furious. But now they fell into
+abject terror, imploring Tish, whom they easily recognized as the
+leader, to take the revolvers from her.
+</p>
+<p>
+But Tish only said: "No fatalities, Aggie, please. Point at an arm or a
+leg until the spasm subsides."
+</p>
+<p>
+Her tone was quite gentle.
+</p>
+<p>
+Heretofore this has been a plain narrative, dull, I fear, in many
+places. But I come now to a not unexciting incident&mdash;which for a time
+placed Tish and myself in an unpleasant position.
+</p>
+<p>
+I refer to the escape of the man we had tied.
+</p>
+<p>
+We held a brief discussion as to what to do with our prisoners until
+morning, a discussion which Tish solved with her usual celerity by
+cutting from the saddles which lay round the fire a number of those
+leather thongs with which such saddles are adorned and which are used in
+case of necessity to strap various articles to the aforesaid saddles.
+</p>
+<p>
+With these thongs we tied them, not uncomfortably, but firmly, their
+hands behind them and their feet fastened together. Then, as the night
+grew cold, Tish suggested that we shove them near the fire, which we
+did.
+</p>
+<p>
+The young lady, however, offered a more difficult problem. We
+compromised by giving her her freedom, but arranging for one of our
+number to keep her covered with a revolver.
+</p>
+<p>
+"You needn't be so thoughtful," she said angrily, and with a total lack
+of appreciation of Tish's considerate attitude. "I'd rather be tied,
+especially if the Moslem with the hay fever is going to hold the gun."
+</p>
+<p>
+It was at that moment that we heard a whistle from across the stream,
+and each of the prostrate men raised his head eagerly. Before Tish could
+interfere one of them had whistled three times sharply, probably a
+danger signal.
+</p>
+<p>
+Without a word Tish turned and ran toward the stream, calling to me to
+follow her.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Tish!" I heard Aggie's agonized tone. "Lizzie! Come back. Don't leave
+me here alone. I&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+Here she evidently clutched the revolver involuntarily, for there was a
+sharp report, and a bullet struck a tree near us.
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish paused and turned. "Point that thing up into the air, Aggie," she
+called back. "And stay there. I hold you responsible."
+</p>
+<p>
+I heard Aggie give a low moan, but she said nothing, and we kept on.
+</p>
+<p>
+The moon had now come up, flooding the valley with silver radiance. We
+found our horses at once, and Tish leaped into the saddle. Being heavier
+and also out of breath from having stumbled over a log, I was somewhat
+slower.
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish was therefore in advance of me when we started, and it was she who
+caught sight of him first.
+</p>
+<p>
+"He's got a horse, Lizzie," she called back to me. "We can get him, I
+think. Remember, he is unarmed."
+</p>
+<p>
+Fortunately he had made for the trail, which was here wider than
+ordinary and gleamed white in the moonlight. We had, however, lost some
+time in fording the stream, and we had but the one glimpse of him as the
+trail curved.
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish lashed her horse to a lope, and mine followed without urging.
+I had, unfortunately, lost a stirrup early in the chase, and was
+compelled, being unable to recover it, to drop the lines and clutch
+the saddle.
+</p>
+<p>
+Twice Tish fired into the air. She explained afterward that she did this
+for the moral effect on the fugitive, but as each time it caused my
+horse to jump and almost unseat me, at last I begged her to desist.
+</p>
+<p>
+We struck at last into a straight piece of trail, ending in a wall of
+granite, and up this the trail climbed in a switchback. Tish turned to
+me.
+</p>
+<p>
+"We have him now," she said. "When he starts up there he is as much gone
+as a fly on the wall. As a matter of fact," she said as calmly as though
+we had been taking an afternoon stroll, "his taking this trail shows
+that he is a novice and no real highwayman. Otherwise he would have
+turned off into the woods."
+</p>
+<p>
+At that moment the fugitive's horse emerged into the moonlight and Tish
+smiled grimly.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I see why now," she exclaimed. "The idiot has happened on Mona Lisa,
+who must have returned and followed us. And no pack-horse can be made to
+leave the trail unless by means of a hornet. Look, he's trying to pull
+her off and she won't go."
+</p>
+<p>
+It was true, as we now perceived. He saw his danger, but too late. Mona
+Lisa, probably still disagreeable after her experience with the hornets,
+held straight for the cliff.
+</p>
+<p>
+The moon shone full on it, and when he was only thirty feet up its face
+Tish fired again, and the fugitive stopped.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Come down," said Tish quietly.
+</p>
+<p>
+He said a great many things which, like his earlier language, I do not
+care to repeat. But after a second shot he began to descend slowly.
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish, however, approached him warily, having given her revolver to me.
+</p>
+<p>
+"He might try to get it from me, Lizzie," she observed. "Keep it pointed
+in our direction, but not at us. I'm going to tie him again."
+</p>
+<p>
+This she proceeded to do, tying his hands behind him and fastening his
+belt also to the horn of the saddle, but leaving his feet free. All this
+was done to the accompaniment of bitter vituperation. She pretended to
+ignore this, but it made an impression evidently, for at last she
+replied.
+</p>
+<p>
+"You have no one to blame but yourself," she said. "You deserve your
+present humiliating position, and you know it. I've made up my mind to
+take you all in and expose your cruel scheme, and I intend to do it. I'm
+nothing if I am not thorough," she finished.
+</p>
+<p>
+He made no reply to this, and, in fact, he made only one speech on the
+way back, and that, I am happy to say, was without profanity.
+</p>
+<p>
+"It isn't being taken in that I mind so much," he said pathetically.
+"It's all in the game, and I can stand up as well under trouble as any
+one. It's being led in by a crowd of women that makes it painful."
+</p>
+<p>
+I have neglected to say that Tish was leading Mona Lisa, while I
+followed with the revolver.
+</p>
+<p>
+It was not far from dawn when we reached the camp again. Aggie was as we
+had left her, but in the light of the dying fire she looked older and
+much worn. As a matter of fact, it was some weeks before she looked like
+her old self.
+</p>
+<p>
+The girl was sitting where we had left her, and sulkier than ever. She
+had turned her back to Mr. Oliver, and Aggie said afterward that the way
+they had quarreled had been something terrible.
+</p>
+<p>
+Aggie said she had tried to make conversation with the girl, and had,
+indeed, told her of Mr. Wiggins and her own blasted life. But she had
+remained singularly unresponsive.
+</p>
+<p>
+The return of our new prisoner was greeted by the other men with brutal
+rage, except Mr. Oliver, who merely glanced at him and then went back to
+his staring at the fire. It appeared that they had been counting on him
+to get assistance, and his capture destroyed their last hope. Indeed,
+their language grew so unpleasant that at last Tish hammered sharply on
+a rock with the handle of her revolver.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Please remember," she said, "that you are in the presence of ladies!"
+</p>
+<p>
+They jeered at her, but she handled the situation with her usual
+generalship.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Lizzie," she said calmly, "get the tin basin that is hanging to my
+saddle, and fill it with the water from that snowbank. On the occasion
+of any more unseemly language, pour it over the offender without mercy."
+</p>
+<p>
+It became necessary to do it, I regret to state. They had not yet
+learned that Tish always carries out her threats. It was the one who we
+felt was the leader who offended, and I did as I had been requested to.
+But Aggie, ever tender-hearted, feared that it would give the man a
+severe cold, and got Tish's permission to pour a little blackberry
+cordial down his throat.
+</p>
+<p>
+Far from this kindness having a salubrious effect, it had the contrary.
+They all fell to bad language again, and, realizing that they wished the
+cordial, and our supply being limited, we were compelled to abandon the
+treatment.
+</p>
+<p>
+It had been an uncomfortable night, and I confess to a feeling of relief
+when "the rift of dawn" broke the early skies.
+</p>
+<p>
+We were, Tish calculated, some forty miles from breakfast, and Aggie's
+diet for some days had been light at the best, even the mountain-lion
+broth having been more stimulating than staying. We therefore
+investigated the camp, and found behind a large stone some flour,
+baking-powder, and bacon. With this equipment and a frying-pan or two we
+were able to make some very fair pancakes&mdash;or flapjacks, as they are
+called in the West.
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish civilly invited the girl to eat with us, but she refused curtly,
+although, on turning once, I saw her eyeing us with famished eyes. I
+think, however, that on seeing us going about the homely task of getting
+breakfast, she realized that we were not the desperate creatures she had
+fancied during the night, but three gentlewomen on a holiday&mdash;simple
+tourists, indeed.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I wish," she said at last almost wistfully&mdash;"I wish that I could
+understand it all. I seem to be all mixed up. You don't suppose I want
+to be here, do you?"
+</p>
+<p>
+But Tish was not in a mood to make concessions. "As for what you want,"
+she said, "how are we to know that? You are here, aren't you?&mdash;here as
+a result of your own cold-heartedness. Had you remained true to the very
+estimable young man you jilted you would not now be in this position."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Of course he would talk about it!" said the girl darkly.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I am convinced," Tish went on, dexterously turning a pancake by a swift
+movement of the pan, "that sensational movies are responsible for much
+that is wrong with the country to-day. They set false standards.
+Perfectly pure-minded people see them and are filled with thoughts of
+crime."
+</p>
+<p>
+Although she had ignored him steadily, the girl turned now to Mr.
+Oliver.
+</p>
+<p>
+"They don't believe anything I tell them. Why don't you explain?" she
+demanded.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Explain!" he said in a furious voice. "Explain to three lunatics?
+What's the use?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"You got me into this, you know."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I did! I like that! What in the name of Heaven induced you to ride off
+the way you did?"
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish paused, with the frying-pan in the air. "Silence!" she commanded.
+"You are both only reaping what you have sowed. As far as quarreling
+goes, you can keep that until you are married, if you intend to be. I
+don't know but I'd advise it. It's a pity to spoil two houses."
+</p>
+<p>
+But the girl said that she wouldn't marry him if he was the last man on
+earth, and he fell back to sulking again.
+</p>
+<p>
+As Aggie observed later, he acted as if he had never cared for her,
+while Mr. Bell, on the contrary, could not help his face changing when
+he so much as mentioned her name.
+</p>
+<p>
+We made some tea and ate a hearty breakfast, while the men watched us.
+And as we ate, Tish held the moving-picture business up to contumely and
+scorn.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Lady," said one of the prostrate men, "aren't you going to give us
+anything to eat?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"People," Tish said, ignoring him, "who would ordinarily cringe at the
+sight of a wounded beetle sit through bloody murders and go home with
+the obsession of crime."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I hope you won't take it amiss," said the man again, "if I say that,
+seeing it's our flour and bacon, you either ought to feed us or take it
+away and eat it where we can't see you."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I take it," said Tish to the girl, pouring in more batter, "that you
+yourself would never have thought of highway robbery had you not been
+led to it by an overstimulated imagination."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I wish," said the girl rudely, "that you wouldn't talk so much. I've
+got a headache."
+</p>
+<p>
+When we had finished Tish indicated the frying-pan and the batter.
+"Perhaps," she said, "you would like to bake some cakes for these
+friends of yours. We have a long trip ahead of us."
+</p>
+<p>
+But the girl replied heartlessly that she hoped they would starve to
+death, ignoring their pitiful glances. In the end it was our own
+tender-hearted Aggie who baked pancakes for them and, loosening their
+hands while I stood guard, saw that they had not only food but the
+gentle refreshment of fresh tea. Tish it was, however, who, not to be
+outdone in magnanimity, permitted them to go, one by one, to the stream
+to wash. Escape, without horses or weapons, was impossible, and they
+realized it.
+</p>
+<p>
+By nine o'clock we were ready to return. And here a difficulty presented
+itself. There were six prisoners and only three of us. The men, fed now,
+were looking less subdued, although they pretended to obey Tish's
+commands with alacrity.
+</p>
+<p>
+Aggie overheard a scrap of conversation, too, which seemed to indicate
+that they had not given up hope. Had Tish not set her heart on leading
+them into the great hotel at Many Glaciers, and there exposing them to
+the taunts of angry tourists, it would have been simpler for one of us
+to ride for assistance, leaving the others there.
+</p>
+<p>
+In this emergency Tish, putting her hand into her pocket for her
+scissors to trim a hangnail, happened to come across the policeman's
+whistle.
+</p>
+<p>
+"My gracious!" she said. "I forgot my promise to that young man!"
+</p>
+<p>
+She immediately put it to her lips and blew three shrill blasts. To our
+surprise they were answered by a halloo, and a moment later the young
+gentleman himself appeared on the trail. He was no longer afoot, but was
+mounted on a pinto pony, which we knew at once for Bill's.
+</p>
+<p>
+He sat on his horse, staring as if he could not believe his eyes. Then
+he made his way across the stream toward us.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Good Heavens!" he said. "What in the name of&mdash;" Here his eyes fell on
+the girl, and he stiffened.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Jim!" cried the girl, and looked at him with what Aggie afterward
+characterized as a most touching expression.
+</p>
+<p>
+But he ignored her. "Looks as though you folks have been pretty busy,"
+he observed, glancing at our scowling captives. "I'm a trifle surprised.
+You don't mind my being rather breathless, do you?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"My only regret," Tish said loftily, "is that we have not secured the
+Indians. They too should be taught a lesson. I am sure that the red man
+is noble until led away by civilized people who might know better."
+</p>
+<p>
+It was at this point that Mr. Bell's eyes fell on Mr. Oliver, who with
+his hands tied behind him was crouching over the fire.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Well!" he said. "So you're here too! But of course you would be." This
+he said bitterly.
+</p>
+<p>
+"For the love of Heaven, Bell," Mr. Oliver said, "tell those mad women
+that I'm not a bandit."
+</p>
+<p>
+"We know that already," Tish observed.
+</p>
+<p>
+"And untie my hands. My shoulders are about broken."
+</p>
+<p>
+But Mr. Bell only looked at him coldly. "I can't interfere with these
+ladies," he said. "They're friends of mine. If they think you are better
+tied, it's their business. They did it."
+</p>
+<p>
+"At least," Mr. Oliver said savagely, "you can tell them who I am, can't
+you?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"As to that," Mr. Bell returned, "I can only tell them what you say you
+are. You must remember that I know nothing about you. Helen knows much
+more than I do."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Jim," cried the girl, "surely you are going to tell these women that we
+are not highway robbers. Tell them the truth. Tell them I am not a
+highway robber. Tell them that these men are not my accomplices, that I
+never saw them before."
+</p>
+<p>
+"You must remember," he replied in an icy tone, "that I no longer know
+your friends. It is some days since you and I parted company. And you
+must admit that one of them is a friend of yours&mdash;as well as I can
+judge, a very close friend."
+</p>
+<p>
+She was almost in tears, but she persisted. "At least," she said, "you
+can tell them that I did not rob that woman on the pass. They are going
+to lead us in to Many Glaciers, and&mdash;Jim, you won't let them, will you?
+I'll die of shame."
+</p>
+<p>
+But he was totally unmoved. As Aggie said afterward, no one would have
+thought that, but a day or two before, he had been heartbroken because
+she was in love with someone else.
+</p>
+<p>
+"As to that," he said, "it is questionable, according to Mrs.
+Ostermaier, that nothing was taken from you, and that as soon as the
+attack was over you basely deserted her and followed the bandits. A full
+description of you, which I was able to correct in one or two trifling
+details, is now in the hands of the park police."
+</p>
+<p>
+She stared at him with fury in her eyes. "I hope you will never speak to
+me again," she cried.
+</p>
+<p>
+"You said that the last time I saw you, Helen. If you will think, you
+will remember that you addressed me first just now."
+</p>
+<p>
+She stamped her foot.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Of course," he said politely, "you can see my position. You maintain
+and possibly believe that these&mdash;er&mdash;acquaintances of yours"&mdash;he
+indicated the men&mdash;"are not members of the moving-picture outfit. Also
+that your being with them is of an accidental nature. But, on the other
+hand&mdash;"
+</p>
+<p>
+She put her fingers in her ears and turned her back on him.
+</p>
+<p>
+"On the other hand," he went on calmly, "I have the word of these three
+respectable ladies that they are the outfit, or part of it, that they
+have just concluded a cruel hoax on unsuspecting tourists, and that they
+justly deserve to be led in as captives and exposed to the full ignominy
+of their position."
+</p>
+<p>
+Here she faced him again, and this time she was quite pale. "Ask
+those&mdash;those women where they found my engagement ring," she said. "One
+of those wretches took it from me. That ought to be proof enough that
+they are not from the moving-picture outfit."
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish at once produced the ring and held it out to him. But he merely
+glanced at it and shook his head.
+</p>
+<p>
+"All engagement rings look alike," he observed. "I cannot possibly say,
+Helen, but I think it is unlikely that it is the one I gave you, as you
+told me, you may recall, that you had thrown it into a crack in a
+glacier. It may, of course, be one you have recently acquired."
+</p>
+<p>
+He glanced at Mr. Oliver, but the latter only shrugged his shoulders.
+</p>
+<p>
+Well, she shed a few tears, but he was adamant, and helped us saddle the
+horses, ignoring her utterly. It was our opinion that he no longer cared
+for her, and that, having lost him, she now regretted it. I know that
+she watched him steadily when he was not looking her way. But he went
+round quite happily, whistling a bit of tune, and not at all like the
+surly individual we had at first thought him.
+</p>
+<p>
+The ride back was without much incident. Our prisoners rode with their
+hands tied behind them, except the young lady.
+</p>
+<p>
+"We might as well leave her unfastened," the young man said casually.
+"While I dare say she would make her escape if possible, and
+particularly if there was any chance of getting filmed while doing it,
+I will make myself personally responsible."
+</p>
+<p>
+As a matter of fact she was exceedingly rude to all of us, and during
+our stop for luncheon, which was again bacon and pancakes, she made a
+dash for her horse. The young man saw her, however, in time, and brought
+her back. From that time on she was more civil, but I saw her looking at
+him now and then, and her eyes were positively terrified.
+</p>
+<p>
+It was Aggie, at last, who put in a plea for her with him, drawing him
+aside to do so. "I am sure," she said, "that she is really a nice girl,
+and has merely been led astray by the search for adventure. Naturally my
+friends, especially Miss Tish, have small sympathy with such a state of
+mind. But you are younger&mdash;and remember, you loved her once."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Loved her once!" he replied. "Dear lady, I'm so crazy about her at this
+minute that I can hardly hold myself in."
+</p>
+<p>
+"You are not acting much like it."
+</p>
+<p>
+"The fact is," he replied, "I'm afraid to let myself go. And if she's
+learned a lesson, I have too. I've been her doormat long enough. I tried
+it and it didn't work. She's caring more for me now, at this minute,
+than she has in eleven months. She needs a strong hand, and, by George!
+I've got it&mdash;two of them, in fact."
+</p>
+<p>
+We reached Many Glaciers late that afternoon, and Tish rode right up to
+the hotel. Our arrival created the most intense excitement, and Tish,
+although pleased, was rather surprised. It was not, however, until a
+large man elbowed his way through the crowd and took possession of the
+prisoners that we understood.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'll take them now," he said. "Well, George, how are you?"
+</p>
+<p>
+This was to the leader, who merely muttered in reply.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I'd like to leave them here for a short time," Tish stated. "They
+should be taught a severe lesson and nothing stings like ridicule. After
+that you can turn them free, but I think they ought to be discharged."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Turn them free!" he said in a tone of amazement. "Discharged! My dear
+madam, they will get fifteen years' hard labor, I hope. And that's too
+good for them."
+</p>
+<p>
+Then suddenly the crowd began to cheer. It was some time before Tish
+realized that they were cheering us. And even then, I shall have to
+confess, we did not understand until the young man explained to me.
+</p>
+<p>
+"You see," he said, "I didn't like to say anything sooner, for fear of
+making you nervous. You'd done it all so well that I wanted you to
+finish it. You've been in the right church all along, but the wrong
+pew. Those fellows aren't movie actors, except Oliver, who will be
+freed now, and come after me with a gun, as like as not! They're real
+dyed-in-the-wool desperadoes and there's a reward of five thousand
+dollars for capturing them."
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish went rather white, but said nothing. Aggie, however, went into a
+paroxysm of sneezing, and did not revive until given aromatic ammonia
+to inhale.
+</p>
+<p>
+"I was fooled at first too," the young man said. "We'd been expecting a
+holdup and when it came we thought it was the faked one. But the
+person"&mdash;he paused and looked round&mdash;"the person who had the real jolt
+was Helen. She followed them, since they didn't take her for ransom, as
+had been agreed in the plot.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Then, when she found her mistake, they took her along, for fear she'd
+ride off and raise the alarm. All in all," he said reflectively, "it has
+been worth about a million dollars to me."
+</p>
+<p>
+We went into the hotel, with the crowd following us, and the first thing
+we saw was Mrs. Ostermaier, sitting dejectedly by the fire. When she saw
+us, she sprang to her feet and came to meet us.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Oh, Miss Tish, Miss Tish!" she said. "What I have been through!
+Attacked on a lonely mountain-top and robbed of everything. My reason is
+almost gone. And my earrings, my beautiful earrings!"
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish said nothing, but, reaching into her reticule, which she had taken
+from the horn of her saddle, she drew out a number of things.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Here," she said. "Are your earrings. Here also is Mr. Ostermaier's
+cigar-case, but empty. Here is some money too. I'll keep that, however,
+until I know how much you lost."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Tish!" screeched Mrs. Ostermaier. "You found them!"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Yes," Tish said somewhat wearily, "we found them. We found a number of
+things, Mrs. Ostermaier,&mdash;four bandits, and two lovers, or rather three,
+but so no longer, and your things, and a reward of five thousand
+dollars, and an engagement ring. I think," she said, "that I'd like a
+hot bath and something to eat."
+</p>
+<p>
+Mrs. Ostermaier was gloating over her earrings, but she looked up at
+Tish's tired and grimy face, at the mud encrusted on me from my accident
+the day before, at Aggie in her turban.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Go and wash, all of you," she said kindly, "and I'll order some hot
+tea."
+</p>
+<p>
+But Tish shook her head. "Tea nothing!" she said firmly. "I want a
+broiled sirloin steak and potatoes. And"&mdash;she looked Mrs. Ostermaier
+full in the eye&mdash;"I am going to have a cocktail. I need it."
+</p>
+<p>
+Late that evening Aggie came to Tish's room, where I was sitting with
+her. Tish was feeling entirely well, and more talkative than I can
+remember her in years. But the cocktail, which she felt, she said, in no
+other way, had gone to her legs.
+</p>
+<p>
+"It is not," she observed, "that I cannot walk. I can, perfectly well.
+But I am obliged to keep my eyes on my feet, and it might be noticed."
+</p>
+<p>
+"I just came in," Aggie said, "to say that Helen and her lover have made
+it up. They are down by the lake now, and if you will look out you can
+see them."
+</p>
+<p>
+I gave Tish an arm to the window, and the three of us stood and looked
+out. The moon was rising over the snow-capped peaks across the lake, and
+against its silver pathway the young people stood outlined. As we looked
+he stooped and kissed her. But it was a brief caress, as if he had just
+remembered the strong hand and being a doormat long enough.
+</p>
+<p>
+Tish drew a long breath.
+</p>
+<p>
+"What," she said, "is more beautiful than young love? It will be a
+comfort to remember that we brought them together. Let go of me now,
+Lizzie. If I keep my eye on the bedpost I think I can get back."
+</p>
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #3464 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/3464)
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Tish, The Chronicle of Her Escapades and
+Excursions, by Mary Roberts Rinehart
+
+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: Tish, The Chronicle of Her Escapades and Excursions
+
+Author: Mary Roberts Rinehart
+
+Release Date: February 16, 2005 [EBook #3464]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK TISH ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Lynn Hill
+
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: "The outside edge, by George!" said Charlie Sands. "The
+old sport!"]
+
+
+
+
+
+TISH
+
+The Chronicle of Her Escapades and Excursions
+
+By MARY ROBERTS RINEHART
+
+
+_With Illustrations_
+_by May Wilson Preston_
+
+
+
+1916
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+MIND OVER MOTOR
+
+LIKE A WOLF ON THE FOLD
+
+THE SIMPLE LIFERS
+
+TISH'S SPY
+
+MY COUNTRY TISH OF THEE--
+
+
+
+
+ILLUSTRATIONS
+
+
+"The outside edge, by George!" said Charlie Sands. "The old sport!"
+
+Without cutting down her speed, bumped home the winner
+
+The real meaning of what was occurring did not penetrate to any of us
+
+It ended with Tish stalking off into the woods with the rabbit in one
+hand and the knife in the other
+
+As fast as she wet a bit of lawn, we followed with the pails
+
+"Get the canoe and follow. I'm heading for Island Eleven"
+
+"It's well enough for you, Tish Carberry, to talk about gripping a horse
+with your knees"
+
+"The older I get, Aggie Pilkington, the more I realize that to take you
+anywhere means ruin"
+
+"It would be just like the woman to refuse to come any farther and spoil
+everything"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+MIND OVER MOTOR
+
+HOW TISH BROKE THE LAW AND SOME RECORDS
+
+I
+
+
+So many unkind things have been said of the affair at Morris Valley
+that I think it best to publish a straightforward account of everything.
+The ill nature of the cartoon, for instance, which showed Tish in a pair
+of khaki trousers on her back under a racing-car was quite uncalled
+for. Tish did not wear the khaki trousers; she merely took them along
+in case of emergency. Nor was it true that Tish took Aggie along as
+a mechanician and brutally pushed her off the car because she was not
+pumping enough oil. The fact was that Aggie sneezed on a curve and fell
+out of the car, and would no doubt have been killed had she not been
+thrown into a pile of sand.
+
+It was in early September that Eliza Bailey, my cousin, decided to go
+to London, ostensibly for a rest, but really to get some cretonne at
+Liberty's. Eliza wrote me at Lake Penzance asking me to go to Morris
+Valley and look after Bettina.
+
+I must confess that I was eager to do it. We three were very comfortable
+at Mat Cottage, "Mat" being the name Charlie Sands, Tish's nephew, had
+given it, being the initials of "Middle-Aged Trio." Not that I regard
+the late forties as middle-aged. But Tish, of course, is fifty. Charlie
+Sands, who is on a newspaper, calls us either the "M.A.T." or the
+"B.A.'s," for "Beloved Aunts," although Aggie and I are not related
+to him.
+
+Bettina's mother's note:--
+
+ Not that she will allow you to do it, or because she isn't entirely
+ able to take care of herself; but because the people here are a talky
+ lot. Bettina will probably look after you. She has come from college
+ with a feeling that I am old and decrepit and must be cared for. She
+ maddens me with pillows and cups of tea and woolen shawls. She thinks
+ Morris Valley selfish and idle, and is disappointed in the church,
+ preferring her Presbyterianism pure. She is desirous now of learning
+ how to cook. If you decide to come I'll be grateful if you can keep
+ her out of the kitchen.
+
+ Devotedly, ELIZA.
+
+ P.S. If you can keep Bettina from getting married while I'm away
+ I'll be very glad. She believes a woman should marry and rear a
+ large family!
+
+ E.
+
+
+We were sitting on the porch of the cottage at Lake Penzance when I
+received the letter, and I read it aloud. "Humph!" said Tish, putting
+down the stocking she was knitting and looking over her spectacles at
+me--"Likes her Presbyterianism pure and believes in a large family! How
+old is she? Forty?"
+
+"Eighteen or twenty," I replied, looking at the letter. "I'm not anxious
+to go. She'll probably find me frivolous."
+
+Tish put on her spectacles and took the letter. "I think it's your duty,
+Lizzie," she said when she'd read it through. "But that young woman
+needs handling. We'd better all go. We can motor over in half a day."
+
+That was how it happened that Bettina Bailey, sitting on Eliza Bailey's
+front piazza, decked out in chintz cushions,--the piazza, of course,--saw
+a dusty machine come up the drive and stop with a flourish at the steps.
+And from it alight, not one chaperon, but three.
+
+After her first gasp Bettina was game. She was a pretty girl in a white
+dress and bore no traces in her face of any stern religious proclivities.
+
+"I didn't know--" she said, staring from one to the other of us. "Mother
+said--that is--won't you go right upstairs and have some tea and lie
+down?" She had hardly taken her eyes from Tish, who had lifted the
+engine hood and was poking at the carbureter with a hairpin.
+
+"No, thanks," said Tish briskly. "I'll just go around to the garage and
+oil up while I'm dirty. I've got a short circuit somewhere. Aggie, you
+and Lizzie get the trunk off."
+
+Bettina stood by while we unbuckled and lifted down our traveling trunk.
+She did not speak a word, beyond asking if we wouldn't wait until the
+gardener came. On Tish's saying she had no time to wait, because she
+wanted to put kerosene in the cylinders before the engine cooled,
+Bettina lapsed into silence and stood by watching us.
+
+Bettina took us upstairs. She had put Drummond's "Natural Law in the
+Spiritual World" on my table and a couch was ready with pillows and a
+knitted slumber robe. Very gently she helped us out of our veils and
+dusters and closed the windows for fear of drafts.
+
+"Dear mother is so reckless of drafts," she remarked. "Are you sure you
+won't have tea?"
+
+"We had some blackberry cordial with us," Aggie said, "and we all had a
+little on the way. We had to change a tire and it made us thirsty."
+
+"Change a tire!"
+
+Aggie had taken off her bonnet and was pinning on the small lace cap she
+wears, away from home, to hide where her hair is growing thin. In her
+cap Aggie is a sweet-faced woman of almost fifty, rather ethereal. She
+pinned on her cap and pulled her crimps down over her forehead.
+
+"Yes," she observed. "A bridge went down with us and one of the nails
+spoiled a new tire. I told Miss Carberry the bridge was unsafe, but she
+thought, by taking it very fast--"
+
+Bettina went over to Aggie and clutched her arm. "Do you mean to say,"
+she quavered, "that you three women went through a bridge--"
+
+"It was a small bridge," I put in, to relieve her mind; "and only a foot
+or two of water below. If only the man had not been so disagreeable--"
+
+"Oh," she said, relieved, "you had a man with you!"
+
+"We never take a man with us," Aggie said with dignity. "This one was
+fishing under the bridge and he was most ungentlemanly. Quite refused
+to help, and tried to get the license number so he could sue us."
+
+"Sue you!"
+
+"He claimed his arm was broken, but I distinctly saw him move it."
+Aggie, having adjusted her cap, was looking at it in the mirror. "But
+dear Tish thinks of everything. She had taken off the license plates."
+
+Bettina had gone really pale. She seemed at a loss, and impatient at
+herself for being so. "You--you won't have tea?" she asked.
+
+"No, thank you."
+
+"Would you--perhaps you would prefer whiskey and soda."
+
+Aggie turned on her a reproachful eye. "My dear girl," she said, "with
+the exception of a little home-made wine used medicinally we drink
+nothing. I am the secretary of the Woman's Prohibition Party."
+
+Bettina left us shortly after that to arrange for putting up Letitia
+and Aggie. She gave them her mother's room, and whatever impulse she
+may have had to put the Presbyterian Psalter by the bed, she restrained
+it. By midnight Drummond's "Natural Law" had disappeared from my table
+and a novel had taken its place. But Bettina had not lost her air of
+bewilderment.
+
+That first evening was very quiet. A young man in white flannels called,
+and he and Letitia spent a delightful evening on the porch talking
+spark-plugs and carbureters. Bettina sat in a corner and looked at the
+moon. Spoken to, she replied in monosyllables in a carefully sweet tone.
+The young man's name was Jasper McCutcheon.
+
+It developed that Jasper owned an old racing-car which he kept in the
+Bailey garage, and he and Tish went out to look it over. They very
+politely asked us all to go along, but Bettina refusing, Aggie and I sat
+with her and looked at the moon.
+
+Aggie in her capacity as chaperon, or as one of an association of
+chaperons, used the opportunity to examine Bettina on the subject of
+Jasper.
+
+"He seems a nice boy," she remarked. Aggie's idea of a nice boy is one
+who in summer wears fresh flannels outside, in winter less conspicuously.
+"Does he live near?"
+
+"Next door," sweetly but coolly.
+
+"He is very good-looking."
+
+"Ears spoil him--too large."
+
+"Does he come around--er--often?"
+
+"Only two or three times a day. On Sunday, of course, we see more of
+him."
+
+Aggie looked at me in the moonlight. Clearly the young man from the next
+door needed watching. It was well we had come.
+
+"I suppose you like the same things?" she suggested. "Similar tastes
+and--er--all that?"
+
+Bettina stretched her arms over her head and yawned.
+
+"Not so you could notice it," she said coolly. "I can't thick of
+anything we agree on. He is an Episcopalian; I'm a Presbyterian. He
+approves of suffrage for women; I do not. He is a Republican; I'm a
+Progressive. He disapproves of large families; I approve of them, if
+people can afford them."
+
+Aggie sat straight up. "I hope you don't discuss that!" she exclaimed.
+
+Bettina smiled. "How nice to find that you are really just nice elderly
+ladies after all!" she said. "Of course we discuss it. Is it anything to
+be ashamed of?"
+
+"When I was a girl," I said tartly, "we married first and discussed
+those things afterward."
+
+"Of course you did, Aunt Lizzie," she said, smiling alluringly. She was
+the prettiest girl I think I have ever seen, and that night she was
+beautiful. "And you raised enormous families who religiously walked to
+church in their bare feet to save their shoes!"
+
+"I did nothing of the sort," I snapped.
+
+"It seems to me," Aggie put in gently, "that you make very little of
+love." Aggie was once engaged to be married to a young man named
+Wiggins, a roofer by trade, who was killed in the act of inspecting a
+tin gutter, on a rainy day. He slipped and fell over, breaking his neck
+as a result.
+
+Bettina smiled at Aggie. "Not at all," she said. "The day of blind love
+is gone, that's all--gone like the day of the chaperon."
+
+Neither of us cared to pursue this, and Tish at that moment appearing
+with Jasper, Aggie and I made a move toward bed. But Jasper not going,
+and none of us caring to leave him alone with Bettina, we sat down
+again.
+
+We sat until one o'clock.
+
+At the end of that time Jasper rose, and saying something about its
+being almost bedtime strolled off next door. Aggie was sound asleep in
+her chair and Tish was dozing. As for Bettina, she had said hardly a
+word after eleven o'clock.
+
+Aggie and Tish, as I have said, were occupying the same room. I went to
+sleep the moment I got into bed, and must have slept three or four hours
+when I was awakened by a shot. A moment later a dozen or more shots were
+fired in rapid succession and I sat bolt upright in bed. Across the
+street some one was raising a window, and a man called "What's the
+matter?" twice.
+
+There was no response and no further sound. Shaking in every limb, I
+found the light switch and looked at the time. It was four o'clock in
+the morning and quite dark.
+
+Some one was moving in the hall outside and whimpering. I opened the
+door hurriedly and Aggie half fell into the room.
+
+"Tish is murdered, Lizzie!" she said, and collapsed on the floor in a
+heap.
+
+"Nonsense!"
+
+"She's not in her room or in the house, and I heard shots!"
+
+Well, Aggie was right. Tish was not in her room. There was a sort of
+horrible stillness everywhere as we stood there clutching at each other
+and listening.
+
+"She's heard burglars downstairs and has gone down after them, and this
+is what has happened! Oh, Tish! brave Tish!" Aggie cried hysterically.
+
+And at that Bettina came in with her hair over her shoulders and asked
+us if we had heard anything. When we told her about Tish, she insisted
+on going downstairs, and with Aggie carrying her first-aid box and I
+carrying the blackberry cordial, we went down.
+
+The lower floor was quiet and empty. The man across the street had put
+down his window and gone back to bed, and everything was still. Bettina
+in her dressing-gown went out on the porch and turned on the light. Tish
+was not there, nor was there a body lying on the lawn.
+
+"It was back of the house by the garage," Bettina said. "If only
+Jasper--"
+
+And at that moment Jasper came into the circle of light. He had a
+Norfolk coat on over his pajamas and a pair of slippers, and he was
+running, calling over his shoulder to some one behind as he ran.
+
+"Watch the drive!" he yelled. "I saw him duck round the corner."
+
+We could hear other footsteps now and somebody panting near us. Aggie
+was sitting huddled in a porch chair, crying, and Bettina, in the hall,
+was trying to get down from the wall a Moorish knife that Eliza Bailey
+had picked up somewhere.
+
+"John!" we heard Jasper calling. "John! Quick! I've got him!"
+
+He was just at the corner of the porch. My heart stopped and then rushed
+on a thousand a minute. Then:--
+
+"Take your hands off me!" said Tish's voice.
+
+The next moment Tish came majestically into the circle of light and
+mounted the steps. Jasper, with his mouth open, stood below looking up,
+and a hired man in what looked like a bed quilt was behind in the
+shadow.
+
+Tish was completely dressed in her motoring clothes, even to her
+goggles. She looked neither to the right nor left, but stalked across
+the porch into the house and up the stairway. None of us moved until we
+heard the door of her room slam above.
+
+"Poor old dear!" said Bettina. "She's been walking in her sleep!"
+
+"But the shots!" gasped Aggie. "Some one was shooting at her!"
+
+Conscious now of his costume, Jasper had edged close to the veranda and
+stood in its shadow.
+
+"Walking in her sleep, of course!" he said heartily. "The trip to-day was
+too much for her. But think of her getting into that burglar-proof
+garage with her eyes shut--or do sleep-walkers have their eyes
+shut?--and actually cranking up my racer!"
+
+Aggie looked at me and I looked at Aggie.
+
+"Of course," Jasper went on, "there being no muffler on it, the racket
+wakened her as well as the neighborhood. And then the way we chased
+her!"
+
+"Poor old dear!" said Bettina again. "I'm going in to make her some
+tea."
+
+"I think," said Jasper, "that I need a bit of tea too. If you will put
+out the porch lights I'll come up and have some."
+
+But Aggie and I said nothing. We knew Tish never walked in her sleep.
+She had meant to try out Jasper's racing-car at dawn, forgetting that
+racers have no mufflers, and she had been, as one may say, hoist with
+her own petard--although I do not know what a petard is and have never
+been able to find out.
+
+We drank our tea, but Tish refused to have any or to reply to our
+knocks, preserving a sulky silence. Also she had locked Aggie out and
+I was compelled to let her sleep in my room.
+
+I was almost asleep when Aggie spoke:--
+
+"Did you think there was anything queer about the way that Jasper boy
+said good-night to Bettina?" she asked drowsily.
+
+"I didn't hear him say good-night."
+
+"That was it. He didn't. I think"--she yawned--"I think he kissed her."
+
+
+
+
+II
+
+
+Tish was down early to breakfast that morning and her manner forbade any
+mention of the night before. Aggie, however, noticed that she ate her
+cereal with her left hand and used her right arm only when absolutely
+necessary. Once before Tish had almost broken an arm cranking a car and
+had been driven to arnica compresses for a week; but this time we dared
+not suggest anything.
+
+Shortly after breakfast she came down to the porch where Aggie and I
+were knitting.
+
+"I've hurt my arm, Lizzie," she said. "I wish you'd come out and crank
+the car."
+
+"You'd better stay at home with an arm like that," I replied stiffly.
+
+"Very well, I'll crank it myself."
+
+"Where are you going?"
+
+"To the drug store for arnica."
+
+Bettina was not there, so I turned on Tish sharply. "I'll go, of
+course," I said; "but I'll not go without speaking my mind, Letitia
+Carberry. By and large, I've stood by you for twenty-five years, and
+now in the weakness of your age I'm not going to leave you. But I warn
+you, Tish, if you touch that racing-car again, I'll send for Charlie
+Sands."
+
+"I haven't any intention of touching it again," said Tish, meekly
+enough. "But I wish I could buy a second-hand racer cheap."
+
+"What for?" Aggie demanded.
+
+Tish looked at her with scorn. "To hold flowers on the dining-table,"
+she snapped.
+
+It being necessary, of course, to leave a chaperon with Bettina, because
+of the Jasper person's habit of coming over at any hour of the day, we
+left Aggie with instructions to watch them both.
+
+Tish and I drove to the drug store together, and from there to a garage
+for gasoline. I have never learned to say "gas" for gasoline. It seems
+to me as absurd as if I were to say "but" for butter. Considering that
+Aggie was quite sulky at being left, it is absurd for her to assume an
+air of virtue over what followed that day. Aggie was only like a lot of
+people--good because she was not tempted; for it was at the garage that
+we met Mr. Ellis.
+
+We had stopped the engine and Tish was quarreling with the man about
+the price of gasoline when I saw him--a nice-looking young man in a
+black-and-white checked suit and a Panama hat. He came over and stood
+looking at Tish's machine.
+
+"Nice lines to that car," he said. "Built for speed, isn't she? What do
+you get out of her?"
+
+Tish heard him and turned. "Get out of her?" she said. "Bills mostly."
+
+"Well, that's the way with most of them," he remarked, looking steadily
+at Tish. "A machine's a rich man's toy. The only way to own one is to
+have it endowed like a university. But I meant speed. What can you
+make?"
+
+"Never had a chance to find out," Tish said grimly. "Between nervous
+women in the machine and constables outside I have the twelve-miles-an-
+hour habit. I'm going to exchange the speedometer for a vacuum bottle."
+
+He smiled. "I don't think you're fair to yourself. Mostly--if you'll
+forgive me--I can tell a woman's driving as far off as I can see the
+machine; but you are a very fine driver. The way you brought that car
+in here impressed me considerably."
+
+"She need not pretend she crawls along the road," I said with some
+sarcasm. "The bills she complains of are mostly fines for speeding."
+
+"No!" said the young man, delighted. "Good! I'm glad to hear it. So are
+mine!"
+
+After that we got along famously. He had his car there--a low gray thing
+that looked like an armored cruiser.
+
+"I'd like you ladies to try her," he said. "She can move, but she is as
+gentle as a lamb. A lady friend of mine once threaded a needle as an
+experiment while going sixty-five miles an hour."
+
+"In this car?"
+
+"In this car."
+
+Looking back, I do not recall just how the thing started. I believe Tish
+expressed a desire to see the car go, and Mr. Ellis said he couldn't let
+her out on the roads, but that the race-track at the fair-ground was
+open and if we cared to drive down there in Tish's car he would show us
+her paces, as he called it.
+
+From that to going to the race-track, and from that to Tish's getting in
+beside him on the mechanician's seat and going round once or twice, was
+natural. I refused; I didn't like the look of the thing.
+
+Tish came back with a cinder in her eye and full of enthusiasm. "It was
+magnificent, Lizzie," she said. "The only word for it is sublime. You
+see nothing. There is just the rush of the wind and the roar of the
+engine and a wonderful feeling of flying. Here! See if you can find this
+cinder."
+
+"Won't you try it, Miss--er--Lizzie?"
+
+"No, thanks," I replied. "I can get all the roar and rush of wind I want
+in front of an electric fan, and no danger."
+
+He stood by, looking out over the oval track while I took three cinders
+from Tish's eye.
+
+"Great track!" he said. "It's a horse-track, of course, but it's in
+bully shape--the county fair is held there and these fellows make a big
+feature of their horse-races. I came up here to persuade them to hold an
+automobile meet, but they've got cold feet an the proposition."
+
+"What was the proposition?" asked Tish.
+
+"Well," he said, "it was something like this. I've been turning the
+trick all over the country and it works like a charm. The town's ahead
+in money and business, for an automobile race always brings a big crowd;
+the track owners make the gate money and the racing-cars get the prizes.
+Everybody's ahead. It's a clean sport too."
+
+"I don't approve of racing for money," Tish said decidedly.
+
+But Mr. Ellis shrugged his shoulders. "It's really hardly racing for
+money," he explained. "The prizes cover the expenses of the racing-cars,
+which are heavy naturally. The cars alone cost a young fortune."
+
+"I see," said Tish. "I hadn't thought of it in that light. Well, why
+didn't Morris Valley jump at the chance?"
+
+He hesitated a moment before he answered. "It was my fault really," he
+said. "They were willing enough to have the races, but it was a matter
+of money. I made them a proposition to duplicate whatever prize money
+they offered, and in return I was to have half the gate receipts and the
+betting privileges."
+
+Tish quite stiffened. "Clean sport!" she said sarcastically. "With
+betting privileges!"
+
+"You don't quite understand, dear lady," he explained. "Even in the
+cleanest sport we cannot prevent a man's having an opinion and backing
+it with his own money. What I intended to do was to regulate it.
+Regulate it."
+
+Tish was quite mollified. "Well, of course," she said, "I suppose since
+it must be, it is better--er,--regulated. But why haven't you
+succeeded?"
+
+"An unfortunate thing happened just as I had the deal about to close,"
+he replied, and drew a long breath. "The town had raised twenty-five
+hundred. I was to duplicate the amount. But just at that time a--a young
+brother of mine in the West got into difficulties, and I--but why go
+into family matters? It would have been easy enough for me to pay my
+part of the purse out of my share of the gate money; but the committee
+demands cash on the table. I haven't got it."
+
+Tish stood up in her car and looked out over the track.
+
+"Twenty-five hundred dollars is a lot of money, young man."
+
+"Not so much when you realize that the gate money will probably amount
+to twelve thousand."
+
+Tish turned and surveyed the grandstand.
+
+"That thing doesn't seat twelve hundred."
+
+"Two thousand people in the grandstand--that's four thousand dollars.
+Four thousand standing inside the ropes at a dollar each, four thousand
+more. And say eight hundred machines parked in the oval there at five
+dollars a car, four thousand more. That's twelve thousand for the gate
+money alone. Then there are the concessions to sell peanuts, toy
+balloons, lemonade and palm-leaf fans, the lunch-stands, merry-go-round
+and moving-picture permits. It's a bonanza! Fourteen thousand anyhow."
+
+"Half of fourteen thousand is seven," said Tish dreamily. "Seven
+thousand less twenty-five hundred is thirty-five hundred dollars
+profit."
+
+"Forty-five hundred, dear lady," corrected Mr. Ellis, watching her.
+"Forty-five hundred dollars profit to be made in two weeks, and nothing
+to do to get it but sit still and watch it coming!"
+
+I can read Tish like a book and I saw what was in her mind. "Letitia
+Carberry!" I said sternly. "You take my warning and keep clear of this
+foolishness. If money comes as easy as that it ain't honest."
+
+"Why not?" demanded Mr. Ellis. "We give them their money's worth,
+don't we? They'd pay two dollars for a theater seat without half
+the thrills--no chances of seeing a car turn turtle or break its
+steering-knuckle and dash into the side-lines. Two dollars' worth?
+It's twenty!"
+
+But Tish had had a moment to consider, and the turning-turtle business
+settled it. She shook her head. "I'm not interested, Mr. Ellis," she
+said coldly. "I couldn't sleep at night if I thought I'd been the cause
+of anything turning turtle or dashing into the side-lines."
+
+"Dear lady!" he said, shocked; "I had no idea of asking you to help
+me out of my difficulties. Anyhow, while matters are at a standstill
+probably some shrewd money-maker here will come forward before long and
+make a nice profit on a small investment."
+
+As we drove away from the fair grounds Tish was very silent; but just as
+we reached the Bailey place, with Bettina and young Jasper McCutcheon
+batting a ball about on the tennis court, Tish turned to me.
+
+"You needn't look like that, Lizzie," she said. "I'm not even thinking
+of backing an automobile race--although I don't see why I shouldn't, so
+far as that goes. But it's curious, isn't it, that I've got twenty-five
+hundred dollars from Cousin Angeline's estate not even earning four per
+cent?"
+
+I got out grimly and jerked at my bonnet-strings.
+
+"You put it in a mortgage, Tish," I advised her with severity in every
+tone. "It may not be so fast as an automobile race or so likely to turn
+turtle or break its steering-knuckle, but it's safe."
+
+"Huh!" said Tish, reaching for the gear lever. "And about as exciting as
+a cold pork chop."
+
+"And furthermore," I interjected, "if you go into this thing now that
+your eyes are open, I'll send for Charlie Sands!"
+
+"You and Charlie Sands," said Tish viciously, jamming at her gears,
+"ought to go and live in an old ladies' home away from this cruel
+world."
+
+Aggie was sitting under a sunshade in the broiling sun at the tennis
+court. She said she had not left Bettina and Jasper for a moment, and
+that they had evidently quarreled, although she did not know when,
+having listened to every word they said. For the last half-hour, she
+said, they had not spoken at all.
+
+"Young people in love are very foolish," she said, rising stiffly. "They
+should be happy in the present. Who knows what the future may hold?"
+
+I knew she was thinking of Mr. Wiggins and the icy roof, so I patted her
+shoulder and sent her up to put cold cloths on her head for fear of
+sunstroke. Then I sat down in the broiling sun and chaperoned Bettina
+until luncheon.
+
+
+
+
+III
+
+
+Jasper took dinner with us that night. He came across the lawn, freshly
+shaved and in clean white flannels, just as dinner was announced, and
+said he had seen a chocolate cake cooling on the kitchen porch and that
+it was a sort of unwritten social law that when the Baileys happened to
+have a chocolate cake at dinner they had him also.
+
+There seemed to be nothing to object to in this. Evidently he was right,
+for we found his place laid at the table. The meal was quite cheerful,
+although Jasper ate the way some people play the piano, by touch, with
+his eyes on Bettina. And he gave no evidence at dessert of a fondness
+for chocolate cake sufficient to justify a standing invitation.
+
+After dinner we went out on the veranda, and under cover of showing me a
+sunset Jasper took me round the corner of the house. Once there, he
+entirely forgot the sunset.
+
+"Miss Lizzie," he began at once, "what have I done to you to have you
+treat me like this?"
+
+"I?" I asked, amazed.
+
+"All three of you. Did--did Bettina's mother warn you against me?"
+
+"The girl has to be chaperoned."
+
+"But not jailed, Miss Lizzie, not jailed! Do you know that I haven't had
+a word with Bettina alone since you came?"
+
+"Why should you want to say anything we cannot hear?"
+
+"Miss Lizzie," he said desperately, "do you want to hear me propose to
+her? For I've reached the point where if I don't propose to Bettina
+soon, I'll--I'll propose to somebody. You'd better be warned in time. It
+might be you or Miss Aggie."
+
+I weakened at that. The Lord never saw fit to send me a man I could care
+enough about to marry, or one who cared enough about me, but I couldn't
+look at the boy's face and not be sorry for him.
+
+"What do you want me to do?" I asked.
+
+"Come for a walk with us," he begged. "Then sprain your ankle or get
+tired, I don't care which. Tell us to go on and come back for you later.
+Do you see? You can sit down by the road somewhere."
+
+"I won't lie," I said firmly. "If I really get tired I'll say so. If I
+don't--"
+
+"You will." He was gleeful. "We'll walk until you do! You see it's like
+this, Miss Lizzie. Bettina was all for me, in spite of our differing on
+religion and politics and--"
+
+"I know all about your differences," I put in hastily.
+
+"Until a new chap came to town--a fellow named Ellis. Runs a sporty car
+and has every girl in the town lashed to the mast. He's a novelty and
+I'm not. So far I have kept him away from Bettina, but at any time they
+may meet, and it will be one-two-three with me."
+
+I am not defending my conduct; I am only explaining. Eliza Bailey
+herself would have done what I did under the circumstances. I went for a
+walk with Bettina and Jasper shortly after my talk with Jasper, leaving
+Tish with the evening paper and Aggie inhaling a cubeb cigarette, her
+hay fever having threatened a return. And what is more, I tired within
+three blocks of the house, where I saw a grassy bank beside the road.
+
+Bettina wished to stay with me, but I said, in obedience to Jasper's
+eyes, that I liked to sit alone and listen to the crickets, and for them
+to go on. The last I saw of them Jasper had drawn Bettina's arm through
+his and was walking beside her with his head bent, talking. I sat for
+perhaps fifteen minutes and was growing uneasy about dew and my
+rheumatism when I heard footsteps and, looking up, I saw Aggie coming
+toward me. She was not surprised to see me and addressed me coldly.
+
+"I thought as much!" she said. "I expected better of you, Lizzie. That
+boy asked me and I refused. I dare say he asked Tish also. For you, who
+pride yourself on your strength of mind--"
+
+"I was tired," I said. "I was to sprain my ankle," she observed
+sarcastically. "I just thought as I was sitting there alone--"
+
+"Where's Tish?"
+
+"A young man named Ellis came and took her out for a ride," said Aggie.
+"He couldn't take us both, as the car holds only two."
+
+I got up and stared at Aggie in the twilight. "You come straight home
+with me, Aggie Pilkington," I said sternly.
+
+"But what about Bettina and Jasper?"
+
+"Let 'em alone," I said; "they're safe enough. What we need to keep an
+eye on is Letitia Carberry and her Cousin Angeline's legacy."
+
+But I was too late. Tish and Mr. Ellis whirled up to the door at
+half-past eight and Tish did not even notice that Bettina was absent.
+She took off her veil and said something about Mr. Ellis's having heard
+a grinding in the differential of her car that afternoon and that he
+suspected a chip of steel in the gears. They went out together to the
+garage, leaving Aggie and me staring at each other. Mr. Ellis was
+carrying a box of tools.
+
+Jasper and Bettina returned shortly after, and even in the dusk I knew
+things had gone badly for him. He sat on the steps, looking out across
+the dark lawn, and spoke in monosyllables. Bettina, however, was very
+gay.
+
+It was evident that Bettina had decided not to take her Presbyterianism
+into the Episcopal fold. And although I am a Presbyterian myself I felt
+sorry.
+
+Tish and Mr. Ellis came round to the porch about ten o'clock and he was
+presented to Bettina. From that moment there was no question in my mind
+as to how affairs were going, or in Jasper's either. He refused to move
+and sat doggedly on the steps, but he took little part in the
+conversation.
+
+Mr. Ellis was a good talker, especially about himself.
+
+"You'll be glad to know," he said to me, "that I've got this race matter
+fixed up finally. In two weeks from now we'll have a little excitement
+here."
+
+I looked toward Tish, but she said nothing.
+
+"Excitement is where I live," said Mr. Ellis. "If I don't find any
+waiting I make it."
+
+"If you are looking for excitement, we'll have to find you some," Jasper
+said pointedly.
+
+Mr. Ellis only laughed. "Don't put yourself out, dear boy," he said.
+"I have enough for present necessities. If you think an automobile race
+is an easy thing to manage, try it. Every man who drives a racing-car
+has a _coloratura_ soprano beaten to death for temperament. Then every
+racing-car has quirky spells; there's the local committee to propitiate;
+the track to look after; and if that isn't enough, there's the promotion
+itself, the advertising. That's my stunt--the advertising."
+
+"It's a wonderful business, isn't it?" asked Bettina. "To take a mile
+or so of dirt track and turn it into a sort of stage, with drama every
+minute and sometimes tragedy!"
+
+"Wait a moment," said Mr. Ellis; "I want to put that down. I'll use it
+somewhere in the advertising." He wrote by the light of a match, while
+we all sat rather stunned by both his personality and his alertness.
+"Everything's grist that comes to my mill. I suppose you all remember
+when I completed the speedway at Indianapolis and had the Governor of
+Indiana lay a gold brick at the entrance? Great stunt that! But the best
+part of that story never reached the public."
+
+Bettina was leaning forward, all ears and thrills. "What was that?" she
+asked.
+
+"I had the gold brick stolen that night--did it myself and carried the
+brick away in my pocket--only gold-plated, you know. Cost eight or nine
+dollars, all told, and brought a million dollars in advertising. But the
+papers were sore about some passes and wouldn't use the story. Too bad
+we can't use the brick here. Still have it kicking about somewhere."
+
+It was then, I think, that Jasper yawned loudly, apologized, said
+good-night and lounged away across the lawn. Bettina hardly knew he was
+going. She was bending forward, her chin in her palms, listening to Mr.
+Ellis tell about a driver in a motor race breaking his wrist cranking a
+car, and how he--Ellis--had jumped into the car and driven it to
+victory. Even Aggie was enthralled. It seemed as if, in the last hour,
+the great world of stress and keen wits and endeavor and mad speed had
+sat down on our door-step.
+
+As Tish said when we were going up to bed, why shouldn't Mr. Ellis brag?
+He had something to brag about.
+
+
+
+
+IV
+
+
+Although I felt quite sure that Tish had put up the prize money for Mr.
+Ellis, I could not be certain. And Tish's attitude at that time did not
+invite inquiry. She took long rides daily with the Ellis man in his gray
+car, and I have reason to believe that their objective point was always
+the same--the race-track.
+
+Mr. Ellis was the busiest man in Morris Valley. In the daytime he was
+superintending putting the track in condition, writing what he called
+"promotion stuff," securing entries and forming the center of excited
+groups at the drug store and one or other of the two public garages.
+In the evenings he was generally to be found at Bettina's feet.
+
+Jasper did not come over any more. He sauntered past, evening after
+evening, very much white-flanneled and carrying a tennis racket. And
+once or twice he took out his old racing-car, and later shot by the
+house with a flutter of veils and a motor coat beside him.
+
+Aggie was exceedingly sorry for him, and even went the length of having
+the cook bake a chocolate cake and put it on the window sill to cool. It
+had, however, no perceptible effect, except to draw from Mr. Ellis, who
+had been round at the garage looking at Jasper's old racer, a remark
+that he was exceedingly fond of cake, and if he were urged--
+
+That was, I believe, a week before the race. The big city papers had
+taken it up, according to Mr. Ellis, and entries were pouring in.
+
+"That's the trouble on a small track," he said--"we can't crowd 'em.
+A dozen cars will be about the limit. Even with using the cattle pens
+for repair pits we can't look after more than a dozen. Did I tell you
+Heckert had entered his Bonor?"
+
+"No!" we exclaimed. As far as Aggie and I were concerned, the Bonor
+might have been a new sort of dog.
+
+"Yes, and Johnson his Sampler. It's going to be some race--eh, what!"
+
+Jasper sauntered over that evening, possibly a late result of the cake,
+after all. He greeted us affably, as if his defection of the past week
+had been merely incidental, and sat down on the steps.
+
+"I've been thinking, Ellis," he said, "that I'd like to enter my car."
+
+"What!" said Ellis. "Not that--"
+
+"My racer. I'm not much for speed, but there's a sort of feeling in the
+town that the locality ought to be represented. As I'm the only owner of
+a speed car--"
+
+"Speed car!" said Ellis, and chuckled. "My dear boy, we've got Heckert
+with his ninety-horse-power Bonor!"
+
+"Never heard of him." Jasper lighted a cigarette. "Anyhow, what's that
+to me? I don't like to race. I've got less speed mania than any owner of
+a race car you ever met. But the honor of the town seems to demand a
+sacrifice, and I'm it."
+
+"You can try out for it anyhow," said Ellis. "I don't think you'll make
+it; but, if you qualify, all right. But don't let any other town people,
+from a sense of mistaken local pride, enter a street roller or a
+traction engine."
+
+Jasper colored, but kept his temper.
+
+Aggie, however, spoke up indignantly. "Mr. McCutcheon's car was a very
+fine racer when it was built."
+
+"_De mortuis nil nisi bonum_," remarked Mr. Ellis, and getting up said
+good-night.
+
+Jasper sat on the steps and watched him disappear. Then he turned to
+Tish.
+
+"Miss Letitia," he said, "do you think you are wise to drive that racer
+of his the way you have been doing?"
+
+Aggie gave a little gasp and promptly sneezed, as she does when she is
+excited.
+
+"I?" said Tish.
+
+"You!" he smiled. "Not that I don't admire your courage. I do. But the
+other day, now, when you lost a tire and went into the ditch--"
+
+"Tish!" from Aggie.
+
+"--you were fortunate. But when a racer turns over the results are not
+pleasant."
+
+"As a matter of fact," said Tish coldly, "it was a wheat-field, not a
+ditch."
+
+Jasper got up and threw away his cigarette. "Well, our departing friend
+is not the only one who can quote Latin," he said. "_Verbum sap._, Miss
+Tish. Good-night, everybody. Good-night, Bettina."
+
+Bettina's good-night was very cool. As I went up to bed that night, I
+thought Jasper's chances poor indeed. As for Tish, I endeavored to speak
+a few word of remonstrance to her, but she opened her Bible and began to
+read the lesson for the day and I was obliged to beat a retreat.
+
+
+It was that night that Aggie and I, having decided the situation was
+beyond us, wrote a letter to Charlie Sands asking him to come up. Just
+as I was sealing it Bettina knocked and came in. She closed the door
+behind her and stood looking at us both.
+
+"Where is Miss Tish?" she asked.
+
+"Reading her Bible," I said tartly. "When Tish is up to some mischief,
+she generally reads an extra chapter or two as atonement."
+
+"Is she--is she always like this?"
+
+"The trouble is," explained Aggie gently, "Miss Letitia is an
+enthusiast. Whatever she does, she does with all her heart."
+
+"I feel so responsible," said Bettina. "I try to look after her, but
+what can I do?"
+
+"There is only one thing to do," I assured her--"let her alone. If she
+wants to fly, let her fly; if she wants to race, let her race--and trust
+in Providence."
+
+"I'm afraid Providence has its hands full!" said Bettina, and went to
+bed.
+
+For the remainder of that week nothing was talked of in Morris Valley
+but the approaching race. Some of Eliza Bailey's friends gave fancy-work
+parties for us, which Aggie and I attended. Tish refused, being now
+openly at the race-track most of the day. Morris Valley was much
+excited. Should it wear motor clothes, or should it follow the example
+of the English Derby and the French races and wear its afternoon
+reception dress with white kid gloves? Or--it being warm--wouldn't
+lingerie clothes and sunshades be most suitable?
+
+Some of the gossip I retailed to Jasper, oil-streaked and greasy, in the
+Baileys' garage where he was working over his car.
+
+"Tell 'em to wear mourning," he said pessimistically. "There's always a
+fatality or two. If there wasn't a fair chance of it nothing would make
+'em sit for hours watching dusty streaks going by."
+
+The race was scheduled for Wednesday. On Sunday night the cars began to
+come in. On Monday Tish took us all, including Bettina, to the track.
+There were half a dozen tents in the oval, one of them marked with a
+huge red cross.
+
+"Hospital tent," said Tish calmly. We even, on permission from Mr.
+Ellis, went round the track. At one spot Tish stopped the car and got
+out.
+
+"Nail," she said briefly. "It's been a horse-racing track for years, and
+we've gathered a bushel of horse-shoe nails."
+
+Aggie and I said nothing, but we looked at each other. Tish had said
+"we." Evidently Cousin Angeline's legacy was not going into a mortgage.
+
+The fair-grounds were almost ready. Peanut and lunch stands had sprung
+up everywhere. The oval, save by the tents and the repair pits, was
+marked off into parking-spaces numbered on tall banners. Groups of dirty
+men in overalls, carrying machine wrenches, small boys with buckets of
+water, onlookers round the tents and track-rollers made the place look
+busy and interesting. Some of the excitement, I confess, got into my
+blood. Tish, on the contrary, was calm and businesslike. We were sorry
+we had sent for Charlie Sands. She no longer went out in Mr. Ellis's
+car, and that evening she went back to the kitchen and made a boiled
+salad dressing.
+
+We were all deceived.
+
+Charlie Sands came the next morning. He was on the veranda reading a
+paper when we got down to breakfast. Tish's face was a study.
+
+"Who sent for you?" she demanded.
+
+"Sent for me! Why, who would send for me? I'm here to write up the race.
+I thought, if you haven't been out to the track, we'd go out this
+morning."
+
+"We've been out," said Tish shortly, and we went in to breakfast. Once
+or twice during the meal I caught her eye on me and on Aggie and she was
+short with us both. While she was upstairs I had a word with Charlie
+Sands.
+
+"Well," he said, "what is it this time? Is she racing?"
+
+"Worse than that," I replied. "I think she's backing the thing!"
+
+"No!"
+
+"With her cousin Angeline's legacy." With that I told him about our
+meeting Mr. Ellis and the whole story. He listened without a word.
+
+"So that's the situation," I finished. "He has her hypnotized, Charlie.
+What's more, I shouldn't be surprised to see her enter the race under an
+assumed name."
+
+Charlie Sands looked at the racing list in the Morris Valley Sun.
+
+"Good cars all of them," he said. "She's not here among the drivers,
+unless she's--Who are these drivers anyhow? I never heard of any of
+them."
+
+"It's a small race," I suggested. "I dare say the big men--"
+
+"Perhaps." He put away his paper and got up. "I'll just wander round the
+town for an hour or two, Aunt Lizzie," he said. "I believe there's a
+nigger in this woodpile and I'm a right nifty little nigger-chaser."
+
+When he came back about noon, however, he looked puzzled. I drew him
+aside.
+
+"It seems on the level," he said. "It's so darned open it makes me
+suspicious. But she's back of it all right. I got her bank on the
+long-distance 'phone."
+
+We spent that afternoon at the track, with the different cars doing what
+I think they called "trying out heats." It appeared that a car, to
+qualify, must do a certain distance in a certain time. It grew
+monotonous after a while. All but one entry qualified and Jasper just
+made it. The best showing was made by the Bonor car, according to
+Charlie Sands.
+
+Jasper came to our machine when it was over, smiling without any
+particular good cheer.
+
+"I've made it and that's all," he said. "I've got about as much chance
+as a watermelon at a colored picnic. I'm being slaughtered to make a
+Roman holiday."
+
+"If you feel that way why do you do it?" demanded Bettina coldly. "If
+you go in expecting to slaughtered--"
+
+He was leaning on the side of the car and looked up at her with eyes
+that made my heart ache, they were so wretched.
+
+"What does it matter?" he said. "I'll probably trail in at the last,
+sound in wind and limb. If I don't, what does it matter?"
+
+He turned and left us at that, and I looked at Bettina. She had her lips
+shut tight and was blinking hard. I wished that Jasper had looked back.
+
+
+
+
+V
+
+
+Charlie Sands announced at dinner that he intended to spend the night at
+the track.
+
+Tish put down her fork and looked at him. "Why?" she demanded.
+
+"I'm going to help the boy next door watch his car," he said calmly.
+"Nothing against your friend Mr. Ellis, Aunt Tish, but some enemy of
+true sport might take a notion in the night to slip a dope pill into
+the mouth of friend Jasper's car and have her go to sleep on the track
+to-morrow."
+
+We spent a quiet evening. Mr. Ellis was busy, of course, and so was
+Jasper. The boy came to the house to get Charlie Sands and, I suppose,
+for a word with Bettina, for when he saw us all on the porch he looked,
+as you may say, thwarted.
+
+When Charlie Sands had gone up for his pajamas and dressing-gown, Jasper
+stood looking up at us.
+
+"Oh, Association of Chaperons!" he said, "is it permitted that my lady
+walk to the gate with me--alone?"
+
+"I am not your lady," flashed Bettina.
+
+"You've nothing to say about that," he said recklessly. "I've selected
+you; you can't help it. I haven't claimed that you have selected me."
+
+"Anyhow, I don't wish to go to the gate," said Bettina.
+
+He went rather white at that, and Charlie Sands coming down at that
+moment with a pair of red-and-white pajamas under his arm and a
+toothbrush sticking out of his breast pocket, romance, as Jasper said
+later in referring to it, "was buried in Sands."
+
+Jasper went up to Bettina and held out his hand. "You'll wish me luck,
+won't you?"
+
+"Of course." She took his hand. "But I think you're a bit of a coward,
+Jasper!"
+
+He eyed her. "Coward!" he said. "I'm the bravest man you know. I'm doing
+a thing I'm scared to death to do!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The race was to begin at two o'clock in the afternoon. There were small
+races to be run first, but the real event was due at three.
+
+From early in the morning a procession of cars from out of town poured
+in past Eliza Bailey's front porch, and by noon her cretonne cushions
+were thick with dust. And not only automobiles came, but hay-wagons,
+side-bar buggies, delivery carts--anything and everything that could
+transport the crowd.
+
+At noon Mr. Ellis telephoned Tish that the grand-stand was sold out and
+that almost all the parking-places that had been reserved were taken.
+Charlie Sands came home to luncheon with a curious smile on his face.
+
+"How are you betting, Aunt Tish?" he asked.
+
+"Betting!"
+
+"Yes. Has Ellis let you in on the betting?"
+
+"I don't know what you are talking about," Tish said sourly. "Mr. Ellis
+controls the betting so that it may be done in an orderly manner. I am
+sure I have nothing to do with it."
+
+"I'd like to bet a little, Charlie," Aggie put in with an eye on Tish.
+"I'd put all I win on the collection plate on Sunday."
+
+"Very well." Charlie Sands took out his notebook. "On what car and how
+much?"
+
+"Ten dollars on the Fein. It made the best time at the trial heats."
+
+"I wouldn't if I were you," said Charlie Sands. "Suppose we put it on
+our young friend next door."
+
+Bettina rather sniffed. "On Jasper!" she exclaimed.
+
+"On Jasper," said Charlie Sands gravely.
+
+Tish, who had hardly heard us, looked up from her plate.
+
+"Bettina is betting," she snapped. "Putting it on the collection plate
+doesn't help any." But with that she caught Charlie Sands' eye and he
+winked at her. Tish colored. "Gambling is one thing, clean sport is
+another," she said hotly.
+
+I believe, however, that whatever Charlie Sands may have suspected, he
+really knew nothing until the race had started. By that time it was too
+late to prevent it, and the only way he could think of to avoid getting
+Tish involved in a scandal was to let it go on.
+
+We went to the track in Tish's car and parked in the oval. Not near the
+grandstand, however. Tish had picked out for herself a curve at one end
+of the track which Mr. Ellis had said was the worst bit on the course.
+"He says," said Tish, as we put the top down and got out the vacuum
+bottle--oh, yes, Mr. Ellis had sent Tish one as a present--"that if
+there are any smashups they'll occur here."
+
+Aggie is not a bloodthirsty woman ordinarily, but her face quite lit up.
+
+"Not really!" she said.
+
+"They'll probably turn turtle," said Tish. "There is never a race
+without a fatality or two. No racer can get any life insurance. Mr.
+Ellis says four men were killed at the last race he promoted."
+
+"Then I think Mr. Ellis is a murderer," Bettina cried. We all looked at
+her. She was limp and white and was leaning back among the cushions with
+her eyes shut. "Why didn't you tell Jasper about this curve?" she
+demanded of Tish.
+
+But at that moment a pistol shot rang out and the races were on.
+
+The Fein won two of the three small races. Jasper was entered only for
+the big race. In the interval before the race was on, Jasper went round
+the track slowly, looking for Bettina. When he saw us he waved, but did
+not stop. He was number thirteen.
+
+I shall not describe the race. After the first round or two, what with
+dust in my eyes and my neck aching from turning my head so rapidly, I
+just sat back and let them spin in front of me.
+
+It was after a dozen laps or so, with number thirteen doing as well as
+any of them, that Tish was arrested.
+
+Charlie Sands came up beside the car with a gentleman named Atkins, who
+turned out to be a county detective. Charlie Sands was looking stern and
+severe, but the detective was rather apologetic.
+
+"This is Miss Carberry," said Charlie Sands. "Aunt Tish, this gentleman
+wishes to speak to you."
+
+"Come around after the race," Tish observed calmly.
+
+"Miss Carberry," said the detective gently, "I believe you are back of
+this race, aren't you?"
+
+"What if I am?" demanded Tish.
+
+Charlie Sands put a hand on the detective's arm. "It's like this, Aunt
+Tish," he said; "you are accused of practicing a short-change game,
+that's all. This race is sewed up. You employ those racing-cars with
+drivers at an average of fifty dollars a week. They are hardly worth it,
+Aunt Tish. I could have got you a better string for twenty-five."
+
+Tish opened her mouth and shut it again without speaking.
+
+"You also control the betting privileges. As you own all the racers you
+have probably known for a couple of weeks who will win the race. Having
+made the Fein favorite, you can bet on a Brand or a Bonor, or whatever
+one you chance to like, and win out. Only I take it rather hard of you,
+Aunt Tish, not to have let the family in. I'm hard up as the dickens."
+
+"Charlie Sands!" said Tish impressively. "If you are joking--"
+
+"Joking! Did you ever know a county detective to arrest a prominent
+woman at a race-track as a little jest between friends? There's no joke,
+Aunt Tish. You've financed a phony race. The permit is taken in your
+name--L.L. Carberry. Whatever car wins, you and Ellis take the prize
+money, half the gate receipts, and what you have made out of the
+betting--"
+
+Tish rose in the machine and held out both her hands to Mr. Atkins.
+
+"Officer, perform your duty," she said solemnly. "Ignorance is no
+defense and I know it. Where are the handcuffs?"
+
+"We'll not bother about them, Miss Carberry", he said. "If you like I'll
+get into the car and you can tell me all about it while we watch the
+race. Which car is to win?"
+
+"I may have been a fool, Mr. County Detective," she said coldly; "but
+I'm not a knave. I have not bet a dollar on the race."
+
+We were very silent for a time. The detective seemed to enjoy the race
+very much and ate peanuts out of his pocket. He even bought a
+red-and-black pennant, with "Morris Valley Races" on it, and fastened it
+to the car. Charlie Sands, however, sat with his arms folded, stiff and
+severe.
+
+Once Tish bent forward and touched his arm.
+
+"You--you don't think it will get in the papers, do you?" she quavered.
+
+Charlie Sands looked at her with gloom. "I shall have to send it myself,
+Aunt Tish," he said; "it is my duty to my paper. Even my family pride,
+hurt to the quick and quivering as it is, must not interfere with my
+duty."
+
+It was Bettina who suggested a way out--Bettina, who had sat back as
+pale as Tish and heard that her Mr. Ellis was, as Charlie Sands said
+later, as crooked as a pretzel.
+
+"But Jasper was not--not subsidized," she said. "If he wins, it's all
+right, isn't it?"
+
+The county detective turned to her.
+
+"Jasper?" he said.
+
+"A young man who lives here." Bettina colored.
+
+"He is--not to be suspected?"
+
+"Certainly not," said Bettina haughtily; "he is above suspicion.
+Besides, he--he and Mr. Ellis are not friends."
+
+Well, the county detective was no fool. He saw the situation that
+minute, and smiled when he offered Bettina a peanut. "Of course," he
+said cheerfully, "if the race is won by a Morris Valley man, and not by
+one of the Ellis cars, I don't suppose the district attorney would care
+to do anything about it. In fact," he said, smiling at Bettina, "I don't
+know that I'd put it up to the district attorney at all. A warning to
+Ellis would get him out of the State."
+
+It was just at that moment that car number thirteen, coming round the
+curve, skidded into the field, threw out both Jasper McCutcheon and his
+mechanician, and after standing on two wheels for an appreciable moment
+of time, righted herself, panting, with her nose against a post.
+
+Jasper sat up almost immediately and caught at his shoulder. The
+mechanician was stunned. He got up, took a step or two and fell down,
+weak with fright.
+
+I do not recall very distinctly what happened next. We got out of the
+machine, I remember, and Bettina was cutting off Jasper's sweater with
+Charlie Sands' penknife, and crying as she did it. And Charlie Sands was
+trying to prevent Jasper from getting back into his car, while Jasper
+was protesting that he could win in two or more laps and that he could
+drive with one hand--he'd only broken his arm.
+
+The crowd had gathered round us, thick. Suddenly they drew back, and
+in a sort of haze I saw Tish in Jasper's car, with Aggie, as white as
+death, holding to Tish's sleeve and begging her not to get in. The next
+moment Tish let in the clutch of the racer and Aggie took a sort of
+flying leap and landed beside her in the mechanician's seat.
+
+Charlie Sands saw it when I did, but we were both too late. Tish was
+crossing the ditch into the track again, and the moment she struck level
+ground she put up the gasoline.
+
+It was just then that Aggie fell out, landing, as I have said before, in
+a pile of sand. Tish said afterward that she never missed her. She had
+just discovered that this was not Jasper's old car, which she knew
+something about, but a new racer with the old hood and seat put on in
+order to fool Mr. Ellis. She didn't know a thing about it.
+
+Well, you know the rest--how Tish, trying to find how the gears worked,
+side-swiped the Bonor car and threw it off the field and out of the
+race; how, with the grandstand going crazy, she skidded off the track
+into the field, turned completely round twice, and found herself on the
+track again facing the way she wanted to go; how, at the last lap, she
+threw a tire and, without cutting down her speed, bumped home the
+winner, with the end of her tongue nearly bitten off and her spine
+fairly driven up into her skull.
+
+[Illustration: Without cutting down her speed, bumped home the winner]
+
+All this is well known now, as is also the fact that Mr. Ellis
+disappeared from the judges' stand after a word or two with Mr. Atkins,
+and was never seen at Morris Valley again.
+
+Tish came out of the race ahead by half the gate money--six thousand
+dollars--by a thousand dollars from concessions, and a lame back that
+she kept all winter. Even deducting the twenty-five hundred she had put
+up, she was forty-five hundred dollars ahead, not counting the prize
+money. Charlie Sand brought the money from the track that night, after
+having paid off Mr. Ellis's racing-string and given Mr. Atkins a small
+present. He took over the prize money to Jasper and came back with it,
+Jasper maintaining that it belonged to Tish, and that he had only raced
+for the honor of Morris Valley. For some time the money went begging,
+but it settled itself naturally enough, Tish giving it to Jasper in the
+event of--but that came later.
+
+On the following evening--Bettina, in the pursuit of learning to cook,
+having baked a chocolate cake--we saw Jasper, with his arm in a sling,
+crossing the side lawn.
+
+Jasper stopped at the foot of the steps. "I see a chocolate cake cooling
+on the kitchen porch," he said. "Did you order it, Miss Lizzie?"
+
+I shook my head.
+
+"Miss Tish? Miss Aggie?"
+
+"I ordered it," said Bettina defiantly--"or rather I baked it."
+
+"And you did that, knowing what it entailed? He was coming up the steps
+slowly and with care.
+
+"What does it entail?" demanded Bettina.
+
+"Me."
+
+"Oh, that!" said Bettina. "I knew that."
+
+Jasper threw his head back and laughed. Then:--
+
+"Will the Associated Chaperons," he said, "turn their backs?"
+
+"Not at all," I began stiffly. "If I--"
+
+"She baked it herself!" said Jasper exultantly. "One--two. When I say
+three I shall kiss Bettina."
+
+And I have every reason to believe he carried out his threat.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Eliza Bailey forwarded me this letter from London where Bettina had sent
+it to her:--
+
+ _Dearest Mother_: I hope you are coming home soon. I really think you
+ should. Aunt Lizzie is here and she brought two friends, and, mother,
+ I feel so responsible for them! Aunt Lizzie is sane enough, if somewhat
+ cranky; but Miss Tish is almost more than I can manage--I never know
+ what she is going to do next--and I am worn out with chaperoning her.
+ And Miss Aggie, although she is very sweet, is always smoking cubeb
+ cigarettes for hay fever, and it looks terrible! The neighbors do not
+ know they are cubeb, and, anyhow, that's a habit, mother. And yesterday
+ Miss Tish was arrested, and ran a motor race and won it, and to-day she
+ is knitting a stocking and reciting the Twenty-third Psalm. Please,
+ mother, I think you should come home.
+
+ Lovingly, BETTINA.
+
+ P.S. I think I shall marry Jasper after all. He says he likes the
+ Presbyterian service.
+
+
+I looked up from reading Eliza's letter. Tish was knitting quietly and
+planning to give the money back to the town in the shape of a library,
+and Aggie was holding a cubeb cigarette to her nose. Down on the tennis
+court Jasper and Bettina were idly batting a ball round.
+
+"I'm glad the Ellis man did not get her," said Aggie. And then, after a
+sneeze, "How Jasper reminds me of Mr. Wiggins."
+
+The library did not get the money after all. Tish sent it, as a wedding
+present, to Bettina.
+
+
+
+
+LIKE A WOLF ON THE FOLD
+
+I
+
+
+Aggie has always been in the habit of observing the anniversary of Mr.
+Wiggins's death. Aggie has the anniversary habit, anyhow, and her life
+is a succession: of small feast-days, on which she wears mental crape or
+wedding garments--depending on the occasion. Tish and I always remember
+these occasions appropriately, sending flowers on the anniversaries of
+the passing away of Aggie's parents; grandparents; a niece who died in
+birth; her cousin, Sarah Webb, who married a missionary and was
+swallowed whole by a large snake,--except her shoes, which the reptile
+refused and of which Aggie possesses the right, given her by the
+stricken husband; and, of course, Mr. Wiggins.
+
+For Mr. Wiggins Tish and I generally send the same things each
+year--Tish a wreath of autumn foliage and I a sheaf of wheat tied with a
+lavender ribbon. The program seldom varies. We drive to the cemetery in
+the afternoon and Aggie places the sheaf and the wreath on Mr. Wiggins's
+last resting-place, after first removing the lavender ribbon, of which
+she makes cap bows through the year and an occasional pin-cushion or
+fancy-work bag; then home to chicken and waffles, which had been Mr.
+Wiggins's favorite meal. In the evening Charlie Sands generally comes in
+and we play a rubber or two of bridge.
+
+On the thirtieth anniversary of Mr. Wiggins's falling off a roof and
+breaking his neck, Tish was late in arriving, and I found Aggie sitting
+alone, dressed in black, with a tissue-paper bundle in her lap. I put my
+sheaf on the table and untied my bonnet-strings.
+
+"Where's Tish?" I asked.
+
+"Not here yet."
+
+Something in Aggie's tone made me look at her. She was eyeing the bundle
+in her lap.
+
+"I got a paler shade of ribbon this time," I said, seeing she made no
+comment on the sheaf. "It's a better color for me if you're going to
+make my Christmas present out of it this year again. Where's Tish's
+wreath?"
+
+"Here." Aggie pointed dispiritedly to the bundle in her lap and went on
+rocking.
+
+"That! That's no wreath."
+
+In reply Aggie lifted the tissue paper and shook out, with hands that
+trembled with indignation, a lace-and-linen centerpiece. She held it up
+before me and we eyed each other over it. Both of us understood.
+
+"Tish is changed, Lizzie," Aggie said hollowly. "Ask her for bread these
+days and she gives you a Cluny-lace fandangle. On mother's anniversary
+she sent me a set of doilies; and when Charlie Sands was in the hospital
+with appendicitis she took him a pair of pillow shams. It's that Syrian!"
+
+Both of us knew. We had seen Tish's apartment change from a sedate and
+spinsterly retreat to a riot of lace covers on the mantel, on the backs
+of chairs, on the stands, on the pillows--everywhere. We had watched
+her Marseilles bedspreads give way to hem-stitched covers, with bolsters
+to match. We had seen Tish go through a cold winter clad in a succession
+of sleazy silk kimonos instead of her flannel dressing-gown; terrible
+kimonos--green and yellow and red and pink, that looked like fruit
+salads and were just as heating.
+
+"It's that dratted Syrian!" cried Aggie--and at that Tish came in. She
+stood inside the door and eyed us.
+
+"What about him?" she demanded. "If I choose to take a poor starving
+Christian youth and assist him by buying from him what I need--what I
+need!--that's my affair, isn't it? Tufik was starving and I took him
+in."
+
+"He took you in, all right!" Aggie sniffed. "A great, mustached, dirty,
+palavering foreigner, who's probably got a harem at home and no respect
+for women!"
+
+Tish glanced at my sheaf and at the centerpiece. She was dressed as she
+always dressed on Mr. Wiggins's day--in black; but she had a new lace
+collar with a jabot, and we knew where she had got it. She saw our eyes
+on it and she had the grace to flush.
+
+"Once for all," she snapped, "I intend to look after this unfortunate
+Syrian! If my friends object, I shall be deeply sorry; but, so far as
+I care, they may object until they are purple in the face and their
+tongues hang out. I've been sending my money to foreign missions long
+enough; I'm doing my missionary work at home now."
+
+"He'll marry you!" This from Aggie.
+
+Tish ignored her. "His father is an honored citizen of Beirut, of the
+nobility. The family is impoverished, being Christian, and grossly
+imposed on by the Turks. Tufik speaks French and English as well as
+Mohammedan. They offered him a high government position if he would
+desert the Christian faith; but he refused firmly. He came to this
+country for religious freedom; at any moment they may come after him and
+take him back."
+
+A glint of hope came to me. I made a mental note to write to the mayor,
+or whatever they call him over there, and tell him where he could locate
+his wandering boy.
+
+"He loves the God of America," said Tish.
+
+"Money!" Aggie jeered.
+
+"And he is so pathetic, so grateful! I told Hannah at noon to-day--that's
+what delayed me--to give him his lunch. He was starving; I thought we'd
+never fill him. And when it was over, he stooped in the sweetest way,
+while she was gathering up the empty dishes, and kissed her hand. It was
+touching!"
+
+"Very!" I said dryly. "What did Hannah do?"
+
+"She's a fool! She broke a cup on his head."
+
+Mr. Wiggins's anniversary was not a success. Part of this was due to
+Tish, who talked of Tufik steadily--of his youth; of the wonderful
+bargains she secured from him; of his belief that this was the land of
+opportunity--Aggie sniffed; of his familiarity with the Bible and
+Biblical places; of the search the Turks were making for him. The
+atmosphere was not cleared by Aggie's taking the Cluny-lace centerpiece
+to the cemetery and placing it, with my sheaf, on Mr. Wiggins's grave.
+
+As we got into Tish's machine to go back, Aggie was undeniably peevish.
+She caught cold, too, and was sneezing--as she always does when she is
+irritated or excited.
+
+"Where to?" asked Tish from the driving-seat, looking straight ahead and
+pulling on her gloves. From where we sat we could still see the dot of
+white on the grass that was the centerpiece.
+
+"Back to the house," Aggie snapped, "to have some chicken and waffles
+and Tufik for dinner!"
+
+Tish drove home in cold silence. As well as we could tell from her back,
+she was not so much indignant as she was determined. Thus we do not
+believe that she willfully drove over every rut and thank-you-ma'am on
+the road, scattering us generously over the tonneau, and finally, when
+Aggie, who was the lighter, was tossed against the top and sprained her
+neck, eliciting a protest from us. She replied in an abstracted tone,
+which showed where her mind was.
+
+"It would be rougher on a camel," she said absently. "Tufik was telling
+me the other day--"
+
+Aggie had got her head straight by that time and was holding it with
+both hands to avoid jarring. She looked goaded and desperate; and, as
+she said afterward, the thing slipped out before she knew she was more
+than thinking it.
+
+"Oh, damn Tufik!" she said.
+
+Fortunately at that moment we blew out a tire and apparently Tish did
+not hear her. While I was jacking up the car and Tish was getting the
+key of the toolbox out of her stocking, Aggie sat sullenly in her place
+and watched us.
+
+"I suppose," she gibed, "a camel never blows out a tire!"
+
+"It might," Tish said grimly, "if it heard an oath from the lips of a
+middle-aged Sunday-school teacher!"
+
+We ate Mr. Wiggins's anniversary dinner without any great hilarity.
+Aggie's neck was very stiff and she had turned in the collar of her
+dress and wrapped flannels wrung out of lamp oil round it. When she
+wished to address either Tish or myself she held her head rigid and
+turned her whole body in her chair; and when she felt a sneeze coming on
+she clutched wildly at her head with both hands as if she expected it to
+fly off.
+
+Tufik was not mentioned, though twice Tish got as far as Tu-- and then
+thought better of it; but her mind was on him and we knew it. She worked
+the conversation round to Bible history and triumphantly demanded
+whether we knew that Sodom and Gomorrah are towns to-day, and that a
+street-car line is contemplated to them from some place or other--it
+developed later that she meant Tyre and Sidon. Once she suggested that
+Aggie's sideboard needed new linens, but after a look at Aggie's rigid
+head she let it go at that.
+
+No one was sorry when, with dinner almost over, and Aggie lifting her
+ice-cream spoon straight up in front of her and opening her mouth with
+a sort of lockjaw movement, the bell rang. We thought it was Charlie
+Sands. It was not. Aggie faced the doorway and I saw her eyes widen.
+Tish and I turned.
+
+A boy stood in the doorway--a shrinking, timid, brown-eyed young
+Oriental, very dark of skin, very white of teeth, very black of hair--a
+slim youth of eighteen, possibly twenty, in a shabby blue suit, broken
+shoes, and a celluloid collar. Twisting between nervous brown fingers,
+not as clean as they might have been, was a tissue-paper package.
+
+"My friends!" he said, and smiled.
+
+Tish is an extraordinary woman. She did not say a word. She sat still
+and let the smile get in its work. Its first effect was on Aggie's neck,
+which she forgot. Tufik's timid eyes rested for a moment on Tish and
+brightened. Then like a benediction they turned to mine, and came to a
+stop on Aggie. He took a step farther into the room.
+
+"My friend's friend are my friend," he said. "America is my friend--this
+so great God's country!"
+
+Aggie put down her ice-cream spoon and closed her mouth, which had been
+open.
+
+"Come in, Tufik," said Tish; "and I am sure Miss Pilkington would like
+you to sit down."
+
+Tufik still stood with his eyes fixed on Aggie, twisting his package.
+
+"My friend has said," he observed--he was quite calm and divinely
+trustful--"My friend has said that this is for Miss Pilk a sad day. My
+friend is my mother; I have but her and God. Unless--but perhaps I have
+two new friend also--no?"
+
+"Of course we are your friends," said Aggie, feeling for the table-bell
+with her foot. "We are--aren't we, Lizzie?"
+
+Tufik turned and looked at me wistfully. It came over me then what an
+awful thing it must be to be so far from home and knowing nobody, and
+having to wear trousers and celluloid collars instead of robes and
+turbans, and eat potatoes and fried things instead of olives and figs
+and dates, and to be in danger of being taken back and made into a
+Mohammedan and having to keep a harem.
+
+"Certainly," I assented. "If you are good we will be your friends."
+
+He flashed a boyish smile at me.
+
+"I am good," he said calmly--"as the angels I am good. I have here a
+letter from a priest. I give it to you. Read!"
+
+He got a very dirty envelope from his pocket and brought it round the
+table to me. "See!" he said. "The priest says: 'Of all my children Tufik
+lies next my heart.'"
+
+He held the letter out to me; but it looked as if it had been copied
+from an Egyptian monument and was about as legible as an outbreak of
+measles.
+
+"This," he said gently, pointing, "is the priest's blessing. I carry
+it ever. It brings me friends." He put the paper away and drew a long
+breath; then surveyed us all with shining eyes. "It has brought me you."
+
+We were rather overwhelmed. Aggie's maid having responded to the bell,
+Aggie ordered ice cream for Tufik and a chair drawn to the table; but
+the chair Tufik refused with a little, smiling bow.
+
+"It is not right that I sit," he said. "I stand in the presence of my
+three mothers. But first--I forget--my gift! For the sadness, Miss
+Pilk!"
+
+He held out the tissue-paper package and Aggie opened it. Tufik's gift
+proved to be a small linen doily, with a Cluny-lace border!
+
+We were gone from that moment--I know it now, looking back. Gone! We
+were lost the moment Tufik stood in the doorway, smiling and bowing.
+Tish saw us going; and with the calmness of the lost sat there nibbling
+cake and watching us through her spectacles--and raised not a hand.
+
+Aggie looked at the doily and Tufik looked at her.
+
+"That's--that's really very nice of you," said Aggie. "I thank you."
+
+Tufik came over and stood beside her.
+
+"I give with my heart," he said shyly. "I have had nobody--in all so
+large this country--nobody! And now--I have you!" Aggie saw--but too
+late. He bent over and touched his lips to her hands. "The Bible says:
+'To him that overcometh I will give the morning star!' I have
+overcometh--ah, so much!--the sea; the cold, wet England; the Ellis
+Island; the hunger; the aching of one who has no love, no money! And
+now--I have the morning star!"
+
+He looked at us all three at once--Charlie Sands said this was
+impossible, until he met Tufik. Aggie was fairly palpitant and Tish was
+smug, positively smug. As for me, I roused with a start to find myself
+sugaring my ice cream.
+
+Charlie Sands was delayed that night. He came in about nine o'clock and
+found Tufik telling us about his home and his people and the shepherds
+on the hills about Damascus and the olive trees in sunlight. We
+half-expected Tufik to adopt Charlie Sands as a father; but he contented
+himself with a low Oriental salute, and shortly after he bowed himself
+away.
+
+Charlie Sands stood looking after him and smiling to himself. "Pretty
+smooth boy, that!" he said.
+
+"Smooth nothing!" Tish snapped, getting the bridge score. "He's a
+sad-hearted and lonely boy; and we are going to do the kindest thing--we
+are going to help him to help himself."
+
+"Oh, he'll help himself all right!" observed Charlie Sands. "But, since
+his people are Christians, I wish you'd tell me how he knows so much
+about the inside of a harem!"
+
+Seeing that comment annoyed us, he ceased, and we fell to our bridge
+game; but more than once his eye fell on Aggie's doily, and he muttered
+something about the Assyrian coming down like a wolf on the fold.
+
+
+
+
+II
+
+
+The problem of Tufik's future was a pressing one. Tish called a meeting
+of the three of us next morning, and we met at her house. We found her
+reading about Syria in the encyclopdia, while spread round her on
+chairs and tables were numbers of silk kimonos, rolls of crocheted lace,
+shirt-waist patterns, and embroidered linens.
+
+Hannah let us in. She looked surly and had a bandage round her head, a
+sure sign of trouble--Hannah always referring a pain in her temper to
+her ear or her head or her teeth. She clutched my arm in the hall and
+held me back.
+
+"I'm going to poison him!" she said. "Miss Lizzie, that little snake
+goes or I go!"
+
+"I'm ashamed of you, Hannah!" I replied sternly. "If out of the breadth
+of her charity Miss Tish wishes to assist a fellow man--"
+
+Hannah reeled back and freed my arm.
+
+"My God!" she whispered. "You too!"
+
+I am very fond of Hannah, who has lived with Tish for many years; but I
+had small patience with her that morning.
+
+"I cannot see how it concerns you, anyhow, Hannah," I observed severely.
+
+Hannah put her apron to her eyes and sniffled into it.
+
+"Oh, you can't, can't you!" she wailed. "Don't I give him half his
+meals, with him soft-soapin' Miss Tish till she can't see for suds?
+Ain't I fallin' over him mornin', noon, and night, and the postman
+telling all over the block he's my steady company--that snip that's not
+eighteen yet? And don't I do the washin'? And will you look round the
+place and count the things I've got to do up every week? And don't he
+talk to me in that lingo of his, so I don't know whether he's askin' for
+a cup of coffee or insultin' me?"
+
+I patted Hannah on the arm. After all, none of the exaltation of a good
+deed upheld Hannah as it sustained us.
+
+"We are going to help him help himself, Hannah," I said kindly. "He
+hasn't found himself. Be gentle with him. Remember he comes from the
+land of the Bible."
+
+"Humph!" said Hannah, who reads the newspapers. "So does the plague!"
+
+The problem we had set ourselves we worked out that morning. As Tish
+said, the boy ought to have light work, for the Syrians are not a
+laboring people.
+
+"Their occupation is--er--mainly pastoral," she said, with the authority
+of the encyclopdia. "Grazing their herds and gathering figs and olives.
+If we knew some one who needed a shepherd--"
+
+Aggie opposed the shepherd idea, however. As she said, and with reason,
+the climate is too rigorous. "It's all well enough in Syria," she said,
+"where they have no cold weather; but he'd take his death of pneumonia
+here."
+
+We put the shepherd idea reluctantly aside. My own notion of finding a
+camel for him to look after was negatived by Tish at once, and properly
+enough I realized.
+
+"The only camels are in circuses," she said, "and our duty to the boy is
+moral as well as physical. Circuses are dens of immorality. Of course
+the Syrians are merchants, and we might get him work in a store. But
+then again--what chance has he of rising? Once a clerk, always a clerk."
+She looked round at the chairs and tables, littered with the contents of
+Tufik's pasteboard suitcase, which lay empty at her feet. "And there is
+nothing to canvassing from door to door. Look at these exquisite
+things!--and he cannot sell them. Nobody buys. He says he never gets
+inside a house door. If you had seen his face when I bought a kimono
+from him!"
+
+At eleven o'clock, having found nothing in the "Help Wanted" column to
+fit Tufik's case, Tish called up Charlie Sands and offered Tufik as a
+reporter, provided he was given no nightwork. But Charlie Sands said it
+was impossible--that the editors and owners of the paper were always
+putting on their sons and relatives, and that when there was a vacancy
+the big advertisers got it. Tish insisted--she suggested that Tufik
+could run an Arabian column, like the German one, and bring in a lot of
+new subscribers. But Charlie Sands stood firm.
+
+At noon Tufik came. We heard a skirmish at the door and Hannah talking
+between her teeth.
+
+"She's out," she said.
+
+"Well, I think she is not out," in Tufik's soft tones.
+
+"You'll not get in."
+
+"Ah, but my toes are in. See, my foot wishes to enter!" Then something
+soft, coaxing, infinitely wistful, in Arabian followed by a slap. The
+next moment Hannah, in tears, rushed back to the kitchen. There was no
+sound from the hallway. No smiling Tufik presented himself in the
+doorway.
+
+Tish rose in the majesty of wrath. "I could strangle that woman!" she
+said, and we followed her into the hall.
+
+Tufik was standing inside the door with his arms folded, staring ahead.
+He took no notice of us.
+
+"Tufik!" Aggie cried, running to him. "Did she--did she dare--Tish, look
+at his cheek!"
+
+"She is a bad woman!" Tufik said somberly. "I make my little prayer to
+see Miss Tish, my mother, and she--I kill her!"
+
+We had a hard time apologizing to him for Hanna. Tish got a basin of
+cold water so he might bathe his face; and Aggie brought a tablespoonful
+of blackberry cordial, which is soothing. When the poor boy was calmer
+we met in Tish's bedroom and Tish was quite firm on one point--Hannah
+must leave!
+
+Now, this I must say in my own defense--I was sorry for Tufik; and it is
+quite true I bought him a suit and winter flannels and a pair of yellow
+shoes--he asked for yellow. He said he was homesick for a bit of
+sunshine, and our so somber garb made him heart-sad. But I would never
+have dismissed a cook like Hannah for him.
+
+"I shall have to let her go," Tish said. "He is Oriental and passionate.
+He has said he will kill her--and he'll do it. They hold life very
+lightly."
+
+"Humph!" I said. "Very well, Tish, that holding life lightly isn't a
+Christian trait. It's Mohammedan--every Mohammedan wants to die and go
+to his heaven, which is a sort of sublimated harem. The boy's probably a
+Christian by training, but he's a Mohammedan by blood."
+
+Aggie thought my remark immoral and said so. And just then Hannah solved
+her own problem by stalking into the room with her things on and a
+suitcase in her hand.
+
+"I'm leaving, Miss Tish!" she said with her eye-rims red. "God knows I
+never expected to be put out of this place by a dirty dago! You'll find
+your woolen stockings on the stretchers, and you've got an appointment
+with the dentist tomorrow morning at ten. And when that little
+blackguard has sucked you dry, and you want him killed to get rid of
+him, you'll find me at my sister's."
+
+She picked up her suitcase and Tish flung open the door. "You're a
+hard-hearted woman, Hannah Mackintyre!" Tish snapped. "Your sister can't
+keep you. You'll have to work."
+
+Hannah turned in the doorway and sneered at the three of us.
+
+"Oh, no!" she said. "I'm going to hunt up three soft-headed old maids
+and learn to kiss their hands and tell 'em I have nobody but them and
+God!"
+
+She slammed out at that, leaving us in a state of natural irritation.
+But our rage soon faded. Tufik was not in the parlor; and Tish,
+tiptoeing back, reported that he was in the kitchen and was mixing up
+something in a bowl.
+
+"He's a dear boy!" she said. "He feels responsible for Hannah's leaving
+and he's getting luncheon! Hannah is a wicked and uncharitable woman!"
+
+ "Man's inhumanity to man,
+ Makes countless thousands mourn!"
+
+quoted Aggie softly. From the kitchen came the rhythmic beating of a
+wooden spoon against the side of a bowl; a melancholy chant--quite
+archaic, as Tish said--kept time with the spoon, and later a smell of
+baking flour and the clatter of dishes told us that our meal was
+progressing.
+
+"'The Syrians,'" read Tish out of her book, "'are a peaceful and
+pastoral people. They have not changed materially in nineteen centuries,
+and the traveler in their country finds still the life of Biblical
+times.' Something's burning!"
+
+Shortly after, Tufik, beaming with happiness and Hannah clearly
+forgotten, summoned us to the dining-room. Tufik was not a cook. We
+realized that at once. He had made coffee in the Oriental way--strong
+enough to float an egg, very sweet and full of grounds; and after a bite
+of the cakes he had made, Tish remembered the dentist the next day and
+refused solid food on account of a bad tooth. The cakes were made of
+lard and flour, without any baking-powder or flavoring, and the tops
+were sprinkled thick with granulated sugar. Little circles of grease
+melted out of them on to the plate, and Tufik, wide-eyed with triumph,
+sweetly wistful over Tish's tooth, humble and joyous in one minute,
+stood by the cake plate and fed them to us!
+
+I caught Aggie's agonized eye, but there was nothing else to do. Were we
+not his friends? And had he not made this delicacy for us? On her third
+cake, however, Aggie luckily turned blue round the mouth and had to go
+and lie down. This broke up the meal and probably saved my life, though
+my stomach has never been the same since. Tish says the cakes are
+probably all right in the Orient, where it is hot and the grease does
+not get a chance to solidify. She thinks that Tufik is probably a good
+cook in his own country. But Aggie says that a good many things in the
+Bible that she never understood are made plain to her if that is what
+they ate in Biblical times--some of the things they saw in visions, and
+all that. She dropped asleep on Tish's lounge and distinctly saw Tufik
+murdering Hannah by forcing one of his cakes down her throat.
+
+The next month was one of real effort. We had planned to go to Panama,
+and had our passage engaged; but when we broke the news to Tufik he
+turned quite pale.
+
+"You go--away?" he said wistfully.
+
+"Only for a month," Tish hastened to apologize. "You see, we--we are all
+very tired, and the Panama Canal--"
+
+"Canal? I know not a canal."
+
+"It is for ships--"
+
+"You go there in a ship?"
+
+"Yes. A canal is a--"
+
+"You go far--in a ship--and I--I stay here?"
+
+"Only for a month," Aggie broke in. "We will leave you enough money to
+live on; and perhaps when we come back you will have found something to
+do--"
+
+"For a month," he said brokenly. "I have no friends, no Miss Tish, no
+Miss Liz, no Miss Pilk. I die!"
+
+He got up and walked to the window. It was Aggie who realized the awful
+truth. The poor lonely boy was weeping--and Charlie Sands may say what
+he likes! He was really crying--when he turned, there were large tears
+on his cheeks. What made it worse was that he was trying to smile.
+
+"I wish you much happiness on the canal," he said. "I am wicked; but my
+sad heart--it ache that my friends leave me. I am sad! If only my
+seester--"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+That was the first we had known of Tufik's sister, back in Beirut,
+wearing a veil over her face and making lace for the bazaars. We were to
+know more.
+
+Well, between getting ready to go to Panama and trying to find something
+Tufik could do, we were very busy for the next month. Tufik grew
+reconciled to our going, but he was never cheerful about it; and finding
+that it pained him we never spoke about it in his presence.
+
+He was with us a great deal. In the morning he would go to Tish, who
+would give him a list of her friends to see. Then Tish would telephone
+and make appointments for him, and he would start off hopefully,
+with his pasteboard suitcase. But he never sold anything--except a
+shirt-waist pattern to Mrs. Ostermaier, the minister's wife. We took day
+about giving him his carfare, but this was pauperizing and we knew it.
+Besides, he was very sensitive and insisted on putting down everything
+we gave him in a book, to be repaid later when he had made a success.
+
+The allowance idea was mine and it worked well. We figured that,
+allowing for his washing,--which was not much, as he seemed to prefer
+the celluloid collar,--he could live in a sort of way on nine dollars a
+week. We subscribed equally to this; and to save his pride we mailed it
+to him weekly by check.
+
+His failure to sell his things hurt him to the soul. More than once we
+caught tears in his eyes. And he was not well--he could not walk any
+distance at all and he coughed. At last Tish got Charlie Sands to take
+him to a lung specialist, a stupid person, who said it was a cigarette
+cough. This was absurd, as Tufik did not smoke.
+
+At last the time came for the Panama trip. Tish called me up the day she
+packed and asked me to come over.
+
+"I can't. I'm busy, Tish," I said.
+
+She was quite disagreeable. "This is your burden as well as mine," she
+snapped. "Come over and talk to that wretched boy while I pack my trunk.
+He stands and watches everything I put in, and I haven't been able to
+pack a lot of things I need."
+
+I went over that afternoon and found Tufik huddled on the top step of
+the stairs outside Tish's apartment, with his head in his hands.
+
+"She has put me out!" he said, looking up at me with tragic eyes. "My
+mother has put me out! She does not love Tufik! No one loves Tufik! I am
+no good. I am a dirty dago!"
+
+I was really shocked. I rang the bell and Tish let me in. She had had no
+maid since Hannah's departure and was taking her meals out. She saw
+Tufik and stiffened.
+
+"I thought I sent you away!" she said, glaring at him.
+
+He looked at her pitifully.
+
+"Where must I--go?" he asked, and coughed.
+
+Tish sighed and flung the door wide open. "Bring him in," she said with
+resignation, "but for Heaven's sake lock him in a closet until I get my
+underwear packed. And if he weeps--slap him."
+
+The poor boy was very repentant, and seeing that his cough worried us he
+fought it back bravely. I mixed the white of an egg with lemon juice and
+sugar, and gave it to him. He was pathetically grateful and kissed my
+hand. At five o'clock we sent him away firmly, having given him
+thirty-six dollars. He presented each of us with a roll of crocheted
+lace to take with us and turned in the doorway to wave a wistful final
+good-bye.
+
+We met at Tish's that night so that we might all go together to the
+train. Charlie Sands had agreed to see us off and to keep an eye on
+Tufik during our absence. Aggie was in a palpitating travel ecstasy,
+clutching a patent seasick remedy and a map of the Canal Zone; Tish was
+seeing that the janitor shut off the gas and water in the apartment; and
+Charlie Sands was jumping on top of a steamer trunk to close it. The
+taxicab was at the door and we had just time to make the night train.
+The steamer sailed early the next morning.
+
+"All ready!" cried Charlie Sands, getting the lid down finally. "All off
+for the Big Ditch!"
+
+We all heard a noise in the hall--a sort of scuffling, with an
+occasional groan. Tish rushed over and threw open the door. On the top
+step, huddled and shivering, with streams of water running off his hair
+down over his celluloid collar, pouring out of his sleeves and cascading
+down the stairs from his trousers legs, was Tufik. The policeman on the
+beat was prodding at him with his foot, trying to make him get up. When
+he saw us the officer touched his hat.
+
+"Evening, Miss Tish," he said, grinning. "This here boy of yours has
+been committing suicide. Just fished him out of the lake in the park!"
+
+"Get up!" snapped Charlie Sands. "You infernal young idiot! Get up and
+stop sniveling!"
+
+He stooped and took the poor boy by the collar. His brutality roused us
+all out of our stupor. Tish and I rushed forward and commanded him to
+stand back; and Aggie, with more presence of mind than we had given her
+credit for, brought a glass containing a tablespoonful of blackberry
+cordial into which she had poured ten drops of seasickness remedy. Tufik
+was white and groaning, but he revived enough to sit up and stare at us
+with his sad brown eyes.
+
+"I wish to die!" he said brokenly. "Why you do not let me die? My
+friends go on the canal! I am alone! My heart is empty!"
+
+Tish wished to roll him on a barrel, but we had no barrel; so, with
+Charlie Sands standing by with his watch in his hand, refusing to assist
+and making unkind remarks, we got him to Tish's room and laid out on her
+mackintosh on the bed. He did not want to live. We could hardly force
+him to drink the hot coffee Tish made for him. He kept muttering things
+about his loneliness and being only a dirty dago; and then he turned
+bitter and said hard things about this great America, where he could
+find no work and must be a burden on his three mothers, and could not
+bring his dear sister to be company for him. Aggie quite broke down and
+had to lie down on the sofa in the parlor and have a cracker and a cup
+of tea.
+
+When Tish and I had succeeded in making Tufik promise to live, and had
+given him one of his own silk kimonos to put on until his clothing could
+be dried--Charlie Sands having disagreeably refused to lend his
+overcoat--and when we had given the officer five dollars not to arrest
+the boy for attempting suicide, we met in the parlor to talk things
+over.
+
+Charlie Sands was sitting by the lamp in his overcoat. He had put our
+railway and steamer tickets on the table, and was holding his cigarette
+so that Aggie could inhale the fumes, she having hay fever and her
+cubebs being on their way to Panama.
+
+"I suppose you know," he said nastily, "that your train has gone and
+that you cannot get the boat tomorrow?"
+
+Tish was in an exalted mood--and she took off her things and flung them
+on a chair.
+
+"What is Panama," she demanded, "to saving a life? Charlie, we must plan
+something for this boy. If you will take off your overcoat--"
+
+"And see you put it on that little parasite? Not if I melt! Do you know
+how deep the lake is? Three feet!"
+
+"One can drown in three feet of water," said Aggie sadly, "if one is
+very tired of life. People drown themselves in bathtubs."
+
+Tish's furious retort to this was lost, Tufik choosing that moment to
+appear in the doorway. He wore a purple-and-gold kimono that had given
+Tish bronchitis early in the winter, and he had twisted a bath towel
+round the waist. He looked very young, very sad, very Oriental. He
+ignored Charlie Sands, but made at once for Tish and dropped on one knee
+beside her.
+
+"Miss Tish!" he begged. "Forgive, Miss Tish! Tufik is wicked. He has the
+bad heart. He has spoil the going on the canal. No?"
+
+"Get up!" said Tish. "Don't be a silly child. Go and take your shoes out
+of the oven. We are not going to Panama. When you are better, I am going
+to give you a good scolding."
+
+Charlie Sands put the cigarette on a book under Aggie's nose and stood
+up.
+
+"I guess I'll go," he said. "My nerves are not what they used to be and
+my disposition feels the change."
+
+Tufik had risen and the two looked at each other. I could not quite make
+out Tufik's expression; had I not known his gentleness I would have
+thought his expression a mixture of triumph and disdain.
+
+"'The Assyrian came down like a wolf on the fold, and his cohorts were
+gleaming in purple and gold!'" said Charlie Sands, and went out,
+slamming the door.
+
+
+
+
+III
+
+
+The next day was rainy and cold. Aggie sneezed all day and Tish had
+neuralgia. Being unable to go out for anything to eat and the exaltation
+of the night before having passed, she was in a bad humor. When I got
+there she was sitting in her room holding a hot-water bottle to her
+face, and staring bitterly at the plate containing a piece of burned
+toast and Tufik's specialty--a Syrian cake crusted with sugar.
+
+"I wish he had drowned!" she said. "My stomach's gone, Lizzie! I ate one
+of those cakes for breakfast. You've got to eat this one."
+
+"I'll do nothing of the sort! This is your doing, Tish Carberry. If it
+hadn't been for you and your habit of picking up stray cats and dogs and
+Orientals and imposing them on your friends we'd be on the ocean to-day,
+on our way to a decent climate. The next time your duty to your brother
+man overwhelms you, you'd better lock yourself in your room and throw
+the key out the window."
+
+Tish was not listening, however. Her eye and her mind both were on the
+cake.
+
+"If you would eat it and then take some essence of pepsin--" she
+hazarded. But I looked her full it the eye and she had the grace to
+color. "He loves to make them," she said--"he positively beamed when he
+brought it. He has another kind he is making now--of pounded beans, or
+something like that. Listen!" I listened.
+
+From back in the kitchen came a sound of hammering and Tufik's voice
+lifted in a low, plaintive chant. "He says that song is about the
+valleys of Lebanon," said Tish miserably. "Lizzie, if you'll eat half of
+it, I'll eat the rest."
+
+My answer was to pick up the plate and carry it into the bathroom.
+Heroic measures were necessary: Tish was not her resolute self; and,
+indeed, through all the episode of Tufik, and the shocking denouement
+that followed, Tish was a spineless individual who swayed to and fro
+with every breeze.
+
+She divined my purpose and followed me to the bathroom door.
+
+"Leave some crumbs on the plate!" she whispered. "It will look more
+natural. Get rid of the toast too."
+
+I turned and faced her, the empty plate in my hands.
+
+"Tish," I said sternly, "this is hypocrisy, which is just next door to
+lying. It's the first step downward. I have a feeling that this boy is
+demoralizing us! We shall have to get rid of him."
+
+"As for instance?" she sarcastically asked.
+
+"Send him back home," I said with firmness. "He doesn't belong here; he
+isn't accustomed to anything faster than a camel. He doesn't know how to
+work--none of them do. He comes from a country where they can eat food
+like this because digestion is one of their occupations."
+
+I was right and Tish knew it. Even Tufik was satisfied when we put it up
+to him. He spread his hands in his Oriental way and shrugged his
+shoulders.
+
+"If my mothers think best," he said softly. "In my own land Tufik is
+known--I sell in the bazaar the so fine lace my sister make. I drink
+wine, not water. My stomach--I cannot eat in this America. But--I have
+no money."
+
+"We will furnish the money," Tish said gently. "But you must promise one
+thing, Tufik. You must not become a Mohammedan."
+
+"Before that I die!" he said proudly.
+
+"And--there is something else, Tufik,--something rather personal. But I
+want you to promise. You are only a boy; but when you are a man--" Tish
+stopped and looked to me for help.
+
+"Miss Tish means this," I put in, "you are to have only one wife, Tufik.
+We are not sending you back to start a harem. We--we disapprove strongly
+of--er--anything like that."
+
+"Tufik takes but one wife," he said. "Our people--we have but one wife.
+My first child--it is called Tish; my next, Lizzie; and my next, Aggie
+Pilk. All for my so kind friends. And one I call Charlie Sands; and one
+shall be Hannah. So that Tufik never forget America."
+
+Aggie was rather put out when we told her what we had done; but after
+eating one of the cakes made of pounded beans and sugar, under Tufik's
+triumphant eyes, she admitted that it was probably for the best. That
+evening, while Tufik took his shrunken and wrinkled clothing to be
+pressed by a little tailor in the neighborhood who did Tish's repairing,
+the three of us went back to the kitchen and tried to put it in order.
+It was frightful--flour and burned grease over everything, every pan
+dirty, dishes all over the place and a half-burned cigarette in the
+sugar bin. But--it touched us all deeply--he had found an old photograph
+of the three of us and had made a sort of shrine of the clock-shelf--the
+picture in front of the clock and in front of the picture a bunch of red
+geraniums.
+
+While we were looking at the picture and Aggie was at the sink putting
+water in the glass that held the geraniums, Tufik having forgotten to do
+so, Tish's neighbor from the apartment below, an elderly bachelor, came
+up the service staircase and knocked at the door. Tish opened it.
+
+"Humph!" said the gentleman from below. "Gone is he?"
+
+"Is who gone?"
+
+"Your thieving Syrian, madam!"
+
+Tish stiffened.
+
+"Perhaps," she said, "if you will explain--"
+
+"Perhaps," snarled the visitor, "you will explain what you have done
+with my geraniums! Why don't you raise your own flowers?"
+
+Tish was quite stunned and so was I. After all, it was Aggie who came to
+the rescue. She slammed the lid on to the teakettle and set it on the
+stove with a bang.
+
+"If you mean," she said indignantly, "that you think we have any
+geraniums of yours--"
+
+"Think! Didn't my cook see your thieving servant steal 'em off the box
+on the fire-escape?"
+
+"Then, perhaps," Aggie suggested, "you will look through the apartment
+and see if they are here. You will please look everywhere!"
+
+Tish and I gasped. It was not until the visitor had made the rounds of
+the apartment, and had taken an apologetic departure, that Tish and I
+understood. The teakettle was boiling and from its spout coming a spicy
+and familiar odor. Aggie took it off the stove and removed the lid. The
+geraniums, boiled to a pulp, were inside.
+
+"Back to Syria that boy goes!" said Tish, viewing the floral remains.
+"He did it out of love and we must not chide him. But we have our own
+immortal souls to think of."
+
+The next morning two things happened. We gave Tufik one hundred and
+twenty dollars to buy a ticket back to Syria and to keep him in funds on
+the way. And Tish got a note from Hannah:--
+
+ _Dear Miss Tish_: I here you still have the dago--or, as my sister's
+ husband says, he still has you. I am redy to live up to my bargen if
+ you are.
+
+ HANNAH.
+
+ P.S. I have lerned a new salud--very rich, but delissious.
+
+ H.
+
+
+In spite of herself, Tish looked haunted. It was the salad, no doubt.
+She said nothing, but she looked round the untidy rooms, where
+everything that would hold it had a linen cover with a Cluny-lace
+edge--all of them soiled and wrinkled. She watched Tufik, chanting about
+the plains of Lebanon and shoving the carpet-sweeper with a bang against
+her best furniture; and, with Hannah's salad in mind, she sniffed a
+warning odor from the kitchen that told of more Syrian experiments with
+her digestion. Tish surrendered: that morning she wrote to Hannah that
+Tufik was going back to Syria, and to come and bring the salad recipe
+with her.
+
+That was, I think, on a Monday. Tufik's steamer sailed on Thursday. On
+Tuesday Aggie and I went shopping; and in a spirit of repentance--for we
+felt we were not solving Tufik's question but getting rid of him--we
+bought him a complete new outfit. He almost disgraced us by kissing
+our hands in the store, and while we were buying him some ties he
+disappeared--to come back later with the rims of his eyes red from
+weeping. His gentle soul was touched with gratitude. Aggie had to tell
+him firmly that if he kissed any more hands he would get his ears boxed.
+
+The clerks in the store were all interested, and two or three cash-boys
+followed us round and stood, open-mouthed, staring at us. Neither Aggie
+nor I knew anything about masculine attire, and Tufik's idea was a suit,
+with nothing underneath, a shirt-front and collar of celluloid, and a
+green necktie already tied and hooking on to his collar-button. He was
+dazed when we bought him a steamer trunk and a rug, and disappeared
+again, returning in a few moments with a small paper bag full of
+gumdrops. We were quite touched.
+
+That, as I say, was on Tuesday. Tufik had been sleeping in Tish's
+guest-room since his desperate attempt at suicide, and we sent his
+things to Tish's apartment. That evening Tufik asked permission to spend
+the night with a friend in the restaurant business--a Damascan. Tish let
+him go against my advice.
+
+"He'll eat a lot of that Syrian food," I objected, "and get sick and
+miss his boat, and we'll have the whole thing over again!"
+
+But Tish was adamant. "It's his last night," she said, "and he has
+promised not to smoke any cigarettes and I've given him two pepsin
+tablets. This is the land of the free, Lizzie."
+
+We were to meet Tufik at the station next morning and we arranged a
+lunch for him to eat on the train, Aggie bringing fried chicken and I
+sandwiches and cake. Tish's domestic arrangements being upset, she
+supplied fruit, figs and dates mostly, to make him think of home.
+
+The train left early, and none of us felt very cheerful at having to be
+about. Aggie sat in the station and sneezed; Tish had a pain above her
+eye and sat by a heater. We had the luncheon in a large shoebox, wrapped
+in oiled paper to keep it moist.
+
+He never appeared! The train was called, filled up, and left. People
+took to staring at us as we sat there. Aggie sneezed and Tish held her
+eye. And no Tufik! In a sort of helpless, breakfastless rage we called a
+taxicab and went to Tish's. No one said much. We were all thinking.
+
+We were hungry; so we spread out the shoebox lunch on one of the
+Cluny-lace covers and ate it, mostly in silence. The steamer trunk and
+the rug had gone. We let them go. They might go to Jerusalem, as far as
+we were concerned! After we had eaten,--about eleven o'clock, I
+think,--Tish got up and surveyed the apartment. Then, with a savage
+gleam in her eye, she whisked off all the fancy linens, the Cluny laces,
+the hemstitched bedspreads, and piled them in a heap on the floor. Aggie
+and I watched her in silence. She said nothing, but kicked the whole lot
+into the bottom of a cupboard. When she had slammed the door, she turned
+and faced us grimly.
+
+"That roll of fiddle-de-dees has cost me about five hundred dollars,"
+she said. "It's been worth it if it teaches me that I'm an old fool and
+that you are two others! If that boy shows his face here again, I'll
+hand him over to the police."
+
+However, as it happened, she did nothing of the sort. At four o'clock
+that afternoon there was a timid ring at the doorbell and I answered it.
+Outside was Tufik, forlorn and drooping, and held up by main force by a
+tall, dark-skinned man with a heavy mustache.
+
+"I bring your boy!" said the mustached person, smiling. "He has great
+trouble--sorrow; he faint with grief."
+
+I took a good look at Tufik then. He was pale and shaky, and his new
+suit looked as if he had slept in it. His collar was bent and wilted,
+and the green necktie had been taken off and exchanged for a ragged
+black one.
+
+"Miss Liz!" he said huskily. "I die; the heart is gone! My parent--"
+
+He broke down again; and leaning against the door jamb he buried his
+face in a handkerchief that I could not believe was one of the lot we
+had bought only yesterday. I hardly knew what to do. Tish had said she
+was through with the boy. I decided to close them out in the hallway
+until we had held a council; but Tufik's foot was on the sill, and the
+more I asked him to move it, the harder he wept.
+
+The mustached person said it was quite true. Tufik's father had died of
+the plague; the letter had come early that morning. Beirut was full of
+the plague. He waved the letter at me; but I ordered him to burn it
+immediately--on account of germs. I brought him a shovel to burn it on;
+and when that was over Tufik had worked out his own salvation. He was at
+the door of Tish's room, pouring out to Aggie and Tish his grief, and
+offering the black necktie as proof.
+
+We were just where we had started, but minus one hundred and twenty
+dollars; for, the black-mustached gentleman having gone after trying to
+sell Tish another silk kimono, I demanded Tufik's ticket--to be
+redeemed--and was met with two empty hands, outstretched.
+
+"Oh, my friends,--my Miss Tish, my Miss Liz, my Miss Ag,--what must I
+say? I have not the ticket! I have been wikkid--but for my sister--only
+for my sister! She must not die--she so young, so little girl!"
+
+"Tufik," said Tish sternly, "I want you to tell us everything this
+minute, and get it over."
+
+"She ees so little!" he said wistfully. "And the body of my
+parent--could I let it lie and rot in the so hot sun? Ah, no; Miss Tish,
+Miss Liz, Miss Ag,--not so. To-day I take back my ticket, get the
+money, and send it to my sister. She will bury my parent, and then--she
+comes to this so great America, the land of my good friends!"
+
+There was a moment's silence. Then Aggie sneezed!
+
+
+
+
+IV
+
+
+I shall pass over the next month, with its unpleasantnesses; over
+Charlie Sands's coming one evening with a black tie and, on the strength
+of having killed a dog with his machine, asking for money to bury it,
+and bring another one from Syria! I shall not more than mention Hannah,
+who kept Tish physically comfortable and well fed and mentally wretched,
+having a teakettle of boiling water always ready if Tufik came to the
+apartment; I shall say nothing of our success in getting him employment
+in the foreign department of a bank, and his ending up by washing its
+windows; or of the position Tish got him as elevator boy in her
+hospital, where he jammed the car in some way and held up four surgeons
+and three nurses and a patient on his way to the operating-room--until
+the patient changed his mind and refused to be operated on.
+
+Aggie had a brilliant idea about the census--that he could make the
+census reports in the Syrian district. To this end she worked for some
+time, coaching Tufik for the examination, only to have him fail--fail
+absolutely and without hope. He was staying in the Syrian quarter at
+that time, on account of Hannah; and he brought us various tempting
+offers now and then--a fruit stand that could be bought for a hundred
+dollars; a restaurant for fifty; a tailor's shop for twenty-five. But,
+as he knew nothing of fruits or restaurants or tailoring, we refused to
+invest. Tish said that we had been a good while getting to it, but that
+we were being businesslike at last. We gave the boy nine dollars a week
+and not a penny more; and we refused to buy any more of his silly linens
+and crocheted laces. We were quite firm with him.
+
+And now I come to the arriving of Tufik's little sister--not that she
+was really little. But that comes later.
+
+Tufik had decided at last on what he would be in our so great America.
+Once or twice, when he was tired or discouraged, Tish had taken him out
+in her machine, and he had been thrilled--really thrilled. He did not
+seem able to learn how to crank it--Tish's car is hard to crank--but he
+learned how to light the lamps and to spot a policeman two blocks away.
+Several times, when we were going into the country, Tish took him
+because it gave her a sense of security to have a man along.
+
+Having come from a country where the general travel is by camel,
+however, he had not the first idea of machinery. He thought Tish made
+the engine go by pressing on the clutch with her foot, like a sewing
+machine, and he regarded her strength with awe. And once, when we were
+filling a tire from an air bottle and the tube burst and struck him, he
+declared there was a demon in the air bottle and said a prayer in the
+middle of the road. About that time Tish learned of a school for
+chauffeurs, and the three of us decided to divide the expense and send
+him.
+
+"In three months," Tish explained, "we can get him a state license and
+he can drive a taxicab. It will suit him, because he can sit to do it."
+
+So Tufik went to an automobile school and stood by while some one drew
+pictures of parts of the engine on a blackboard, and took home lists of
+words that he translated into Arabic at the library, and learned
+everything but why and how the engine of an automobile goes. He still
+thought--at the end of two months--that the driver did it with his
+foot! But we were ignorant of all that. He would drop round in the
+evenings, when Hannah was out or in bed, and tell us what "magneto" was
+in Arabic, and how he would soon be able to care for Tish's car and
+would not take a cent for it, doing it at night when the taxicab was
+resting.
+
+At the end of six weeks we bought him a chauffeur's outfit. The next
+day the sister arrived and Tufik brought her to Aggie's, where we were
+waiting. We had not told Hannah about the sister; she would not have
+understood.
+
+Charlie Sands telephoned while we were waiting and asked if he might
+come over and help receive the girl. We were to greet her and welcome
+her to America; then she was to go to the home of the Syrian with the
+large mustache. Charlie Sands came in and shook hands all round,
+surveying each of us carefully.
+
+"Strange!" he muttered. "Curious is no name for it! What do we know of
+the vagaries of the human mind? Three minds and one obsession!" he said
+with the utmost gentleness. "Three maiden ladies who have lived
+impeccable lives for far be it from me to say how many years; and
+now--this! Oh, Aunt Tish! Dear Aunt Tish!"
+
+He got out his handkerchief and wiped his eyes. Tish was speechless with
+rage, but I rose to our defense.
+
+"We don't want to do it and you know it!" I said tartly. "But when the
+Lord sends want and suffering to one's very door--"
+
+"Want, with large brown eyes and a gentle voice!" he retorted. "My dear
+ladies, it's your money; and I dare say it costs you less than bridge at
+five cents a point, or the Gay White Way. But, for Heaven's sake, my
+respected but foolish virgins, why not an American that wants a real
+job? Why let a sticky Oriental pull your legs--"
+
+"Charlie Sands!" cried Tish, rising in her wrath. "I will not endure
+such vulgarity. And when Tufik takes you out in a taxicab--"
+
+"God forbid!" said Charlie Sands, and sat down to wait for Tufik's
+sister.
+
+She did not look like Tufik and she was tired and dirty from the
+journey; but she had big brown eyes and masses of dark hair and she
+spoke not a single word of English. Tufik's joy was boundless; his soft
+eyes were snapping with excitement; and Aggie, who is sentimental, was
+obliged to go out and swallow half a glass of water without breathing to
+keep from crying. Charlie Sands said nothing, but sat back in a corner
+and watched us all; and once he took out his notebook and made a
+memorandum of something. He showed it to us later.
+
+Tufik's sister was the calmest of us all, I believe. She sat on a stiff
+chair near the door and turned her brown eyes from one to the other.
+Tish said that proper clothing would make her beautiful; and Aggie,
+disappearing for a few minutes, came back with her last summer's foulard
+and a jet bonnet. When the poor thing understood they were for her, she
+looked almost frightened, the thing being unexpected; and Tufik, in a
+paroxysm of delight, kissed all our hands and the girl on each cheek.
+
+Tish says our vulgar lip-osculation is unknown in the Orient and that
+they rub noses by way of greeting. I think, however, that she is
+mistaken in this and that the Australians are the nose-rubbers. I recall
+a returned missionary's telling this, but I cannot remember just where
+he had been stationed.
+
+Things were very quiet for a couple of weeks. Tufik came round only
+once--to tell us that, having to pay car fare to get to the automobile
+school, his nine dollars were not enough. We added a dollar a week under
+protest; and Tish suggested with some asperity that as he was only busy
+four hours a day he might find some light employment for the balance of
+the day. He spread out his hands and drew up his shoulders.
+
+"My friends are angry," he said sadly. "It is not enough that I study? I
+must also work? Ver' well, I labor. I sell the newspaper. But, to buy
+newspapers, one must have money--a dollar; two dollars. Ver' leetle;
+only--I have it not."
+
+We gave him another dollar and he went out smiling and hopeful. It
+seemed that at last we had solved his problem. Tish recalled one of her
+Sunday-school scholars who sold papers and saved enough to buy a
+second-hand automobile and rear a family. But our fond hopes were dashed
+to the ground when, the next morning, Hannah, opening the door at Tish's
+to bring in the milk bottles, found a huge stack of the night-before's
+newspapers and a note on top addressed to Tish, which said:-
+
+ _Deer Mother Tish_: You see now that I am no good. I wish to die!
+ I hav one papier sold, and newsboys kell me on sight. I hav but you
+ and God--and God has forget!
+
+ TUFIK.
+
+
+We were discouraged and so, clearly, was Tufik. For ten days we did not
+hear from him, except that a flirty little Syrian boy called for the ten
+dollars on Saturday and brought a pair of Tufik's shoes for us to have
+resoled. But one day Tish telephoned in some excitement and said that
+Tufik was there and wanted us to go to a wedding.
+
+"His little sister's wedding!" she explained. "The dear child is all
+excited. He says it has been going on for two days and this is the day
+of the ceremony."
+
+Aggie was spending the afternoon with me, and spoke up hastily.
+
+"Ask her if I have time to go home and put on my broadcloth," she said.
+"I'm not fixed for a wedding."
+
+Tish said there was no time. She would come round with the machine and
+we were to be ready in fifteen minutes. Aggie hesitated on account of
+intending to wash her hair that night and so not having put up her
+crimps; but she finally agreed to go and Tish came for us. Tufik was in
+the machine. He looked very tidy and wore the shoes we had had repaired,
+a pink carnation in his buttonhole, and an air of suppressed excitement.
+
+"At last," he said joyously while Tish cranked the car--"at last my
+friends see my three mothers! They think Tufik only talks--now they
+see! And the priest will bless my mothers on this so happy day."
+
+Tish having crawled panting from her exertion into the driver's seat and
+taken the wheel, in sheer excess of boyish excitement he leaned over and
+kissed the hand nearest him.
+
+The janitor's small boy was on the curb watching, and at that he set up
+a yell of joy. We left him calling awful things after us and Tish's face
+was a study; but soon the care of the machine made her forget everything
+else.
+
+The Syrian quarter was not impressive. It was on a hillside above the
+Russian Jewish colony, and consisted of a network of cobble-paved
+alleys, indescribably dirty and incredibly steep. In one or two of these
+alleys Tish was obliged to turn the car and go up backward, her machine
+climbing much better on the reverse gear. Crowds of children followed
+us; dogs got under the wheels and apparently died, judging by the
+yelps--only to follow us with undiminished energy after they had picked
+themselves up. We fought and won a battle with a barrel of ashes and
+came out victorious but dusty; and at last, as Tufik made a lordly
+gesture, we stopped at an angle of forty-five degrees and Tufik bowed us
+out of the car. He stood by visibly glowing with happiness, while Tish
+got a cobblestone and placed it under a wheel, and Aggie and I took in
+our surroundings.
+
+We were in an alley ten feet wide and paved indiscriminately with stones
+and tin cans, babies and broken bottles. Before us was a two-story brick
+house with broken windows and a high, railed wooden stoop, minus two
+steps. Under the stoop was a door leading into a cellar, and from this
+cellar was coming a curious stamping noise and a sound as of an animal
+in its death throes.
+
+Aggie caught my arm. "What's that?" she quavered.
+
+I had no time to reply. Tufik had thrown open the door and stood aside
+to let us pass.
+
+"They dance," he said gravely. "There is always much dancing before a
+wedding. The music one hears is of Damascus and he who dances now is a
+sheik among his people."
+
+Reassured as to the sounds, we stepped down into the basement. That was
+at four o'clock in the afternoon.
+
+I have never been fairly clear as to what followed and Aggie's memory
+is a complete blank. I remember a long, boarded-in and floored cellar,
+smelling very damp and lighted by flaring gas jets. The center was empty
+save for a swarthy gentleman in a fez and his shirt-sleeves, wearing a
+pair of green suspenders and dancing alone--a curious stamping dance
+that kept time to a drum. I remember the musicians too--three of them
+in a corner: one playing on a sort of pipes-of-Pan affair of reeds,
+one on a long-necked instrument that looked like a guitar with zither
+ambitions, and a drummer who chanted with his eyes shut and kept time
+to his chants by beating on a sheepskin tied over the mouth of a brass
+bowl. Round three sides of the room were long, oil cloth-covered tables;
+and in preparation for the ceremony a little Syrian girl was sweeping up
+peanut shells, ashes, and beer bottles, with absolute disregard of the
+guests.
+
+All round the wall, behind rows of beer bottles, dishes of bananas,
+and plates of raw liver, were men,--soft-eyed Syrians with white
+teeth gleaming and black hair plastered close and celluloid
+collars,--gentle-voiced, urbane-mannered Orientals, who came up gravely
+one by one and shook hands with us; who pressed on us beer and peanuts
+and raw liver.
+
+Aggie, speaking between sneezes and over the chanting and the drum, bent
+toward me. "It's a breath of the Orient!" she said ecstatically. "Oh,
+Lizzie, do you think I could buy that drum for my tabouret?"
+
+"Orient!" observed Tish, coughing. "I'm going out and take the
+switch-key out of that car. And I wish I'd brought Charlie Sands!"
+
+It was in vain we reminded her that the Syrians are a pastoral people
+and that they come from the land of the Bible. She looked round her
+grimly.
+
+"They look like a lot of bandits to me," she sniffed. "And there's
+always a murder at a wedding of this sort. There isn't a woman here but
+ourselves!"
+
+She was exceedingly disagreeable and Aggie and I began to get
+uncomfortable. But when Tufik brought us little thimble-sized glasses
+filled with a milky stuff and assured us that the women had only gone to
+prepare the bride, we felt reassured. He said that etiquette demanded
+that we drink the milky white stuff.
+
+Tish was inclined to demur. "Has it any alcohol in it?" she demanded.
+Tufik did not understand, but he said it was harmless and given to all
+the Syrian babies; and while we were still undecided Aggie sniffed it.
+
+"It smells like paregoric, Tish," she said. "I'm sure it's harmless."
+
+We took it then. It tasted sweet and rather spicy, and Aggie said it
+stopped her sneezing at once. It was very mild and pleasant, and rather
+medicinal in its flavor. We each had two little glasses--and Tish said
+she would not bother about the switch-key. The car was insured against
+theft.
+
+A little later Aggie said she used to do a little jig step when she was
+a girl, and if they would play slower she would like to see if she had
+forgotten it. Tish did not hear this--she was talking to Tufik, and a
+moment later she got up and went out.
+
+Aggie had decided to ask the musicians to play a little slower and I had
+my hands full with her; so it was with horror that, shortly after, I
+heard the whirring of the engine and through the cellar window caught a
+glimpse of Tish's machine starting off up the hill. I rose excitedly,
+but Tufik was before me, smiling and bowing.
+
+"Miss Tish has gone for the bride," he said softly. "The taxicab hav'
+not come. Soon the priest arrive, and so great shame--the bride is not
+here! Miss Tish is my mother, my heart's delight!"
+
+When Aggie realized that Tish had gone, she was rather upset--she
+depends a great deal on Tish--and she took another of the little glasses
+of milky stuff to revive her.
+
+I was a little bit nervous with Tish gone and the sun setting and
+another tub of beer bottles brought in--though the people were orderly
+enough and Tufik stood near. But Aggie began to feel very strange,
+and declared that the man with the sheepskin drum was winking at her and
+that her head was twitching round on her shoulders. And when a dozen or
+so young Syrians formed a circle, their hands on each other's shoulders,
+and sang a melancholy chant, stamping to beat time, she wept with sheer
+sentiment.
+
+"Ha! Hoo! Ta, Ta, Ta!" they chanted in unison; and Tufik bent over us,
+his soft eyes beaming.
+
+"They are shepherds and the sons of shepherds from Palestine," he
+whispered. "That is the shepherd's call to his sheep. In my country many
+are shepherds. Perhaps some day you go with me back to my country, and
+we hear the shepherd call his sheep--'Ha! Hoo! Ta, Ta, Ta!'--and we hear
+the sleepy sheep reply: 'Maaaa!'"
+
+"It is too beautiful!" murmured Aggie. "It is the Holy Land all over
+again! And we should never have known this but for you, Tufik!"
+
+Just then some one near the door clapped his hands and all the noise
+ceased. Those who were standing sat down. The little girl with the broom
+swept the accumulations of the room under a chair and put the broom in a
+corner. The music became loud and stirring.
+
+Aggie swayed toward me. "I'm sick, Lizzie!" she gasped. "That paregoric
+stuff has poisoned me. Air!"
+
+I took one arm and Tufik the other, and we got her out and seated on one
+of the wooden steps. She was a blue-green color and the whites of her
+eyes were yellow. But I had little time for Aggie. Tufik caught my hand
+and pointed.
+
+Tish's machine was coming down the alley. Beside her sat Tufik's sister,
+sobbing at the top of her voice and wearing Aggie's foulard, a pair of
+cotton gloves, and a lace curtain over her head. Behind in the tonneau
+were her maid of honor, a young Syrian woman with a baby in her arms and
+four other black-eyed children about her. But that was not all. In front
+of the machine, marching slowly and with dignity, were three bearded
+gentlemen, two in coats and one in a striped vest, blowing on curious
+double flutes and making a shrill wailing noise. And all round were
+crowds of women and children, carrying tin pans and paper bags full of
+parched peas, which they were flinging with all their might.
+
+I caught Tish's eye as the procession stopped, and she looked
+subdued--almost stunned. The pipers still piped. But the bride refused
+to move. Instead, her wails rose higher; and Aggie, who had paid no
+attention so far, but was sitting back with her eyes shut, looked up.
+
+"Lizzhie," she said thickly, "Tish looks about the way I feel." And with
+that she fell to laughing awful laughter that mingled with the bride's
+cries and the wail of the pipes.
+
+The bride, after a struggle, was taken by force from the machine and
+placed on a chair against the wall. Her veil was torn and her wreath
+crooked, and she observed a sulky silence. To our amazement, Tufik was
+still smiling, urbane and cheerful.
+
+"It is the custom of my country, my mothers," he said. "The bride leave
+with tears the home of her good parents or of her friends; and she speak
+no word--only weep--until she is marriaged. Ah--the priest!"
+
+The rest of the story is short and somewhat blurred. Tish having broken
+her glasses, Aggie being, as one may say, _hors de combat_, and I having
+developed a frightful headache in the dust and bad air, the real meaning
+of what was occurring did not penetrate to any of us. The priest
+officiated from a table in the center of the room, on which he placed
+two candles, an Arabic Bible, and a sacred picture, all of which he took
+out of a brown valise. He himself wore a long black robe and a beard,
+and looked, as Tish observed, for all the world as if he had stepped
+from an Egyptian painting. Before him stood Tufik's sister, the maid of
+honor with her baby, the black-mustached friend who had brought Tufik to
+us after his tragic attempt at suicide, and Tufik himself.
+
+[Illustration: The real meaning of what was occurring did not penetrate
+to any of us]
+
+Everybody held lighted candles, and the heat was frightful. The music
+ceased, there was much exhorting in Arabic, much reading from the book,
+many soft replies indiscriminately from the four principals--and then
+suddenly Tish turned and gripped my arm.
+
+"Lizzie," she said hoarsely, "that little thief and liar has done us
+again! That isn't his sister at all. He's marrying her--for us to keep!"
+
+Luckily Aggie grew faint again at that moment, and we led her out into
+the open air. Behind us the ceremony seemed to be over; the drum was
+beating, the pipes screaming, the lute thrumming.
+
+Tish let in the clutch with a vicious jerk, and the whir of the engine
+drowned out the beating of the drum and the clapping of the hands.
+Twilight hid the tin cans and ash-barrels, and the dogs slept on the
+cool pavements. In the doorways soft-eyed Syrian women rocked their
+babies to drowsy chants. The air revived Aggie. She leaned forward and
+touched Tish on the shoulder.
+
+"After all," she said softly, "if he loves her very much, and there was
+no other way--Do you remember that night she arrived--how he looked at
+her?"
+
+"Yes," Tish snapped. "And I remember the way he looked at us every time
+he wanted money. We've been a lot of sheep and we've been sheared good
+and proper! But we needn't bleat with joy about it!"
+
+As we drew up at my door, Tish pulled out her watch.
+
+"It's seven o'clock," she said brusquely. "I am going to New York on the
+nine-forty train and I shall take the first steamer outward bound--I
+need a rest! I'll go anywhere but to the Holy Land!"
+
+We went to Panama.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Two months afterward, in the dusk of a late spring evening, Charlie
+Sands met us at the station and took us to Tish's in a taxicab. We were
+homesick, tired, and dirty; and Aggie, who had been frightfully seasick,
+was clamoring for tea.
+
+As the taxicab drew up at the curb, Tish clutched my arm and Aggie
+uttered a muffled cry and promptly sneezed. Seated on the doorstep,
+celluloid collar shining, the brown pasteboard suitcase at his feet, was
+Tufik. He sat calmly smoking a cigarette, his eyes upturned in placid
+and Oriental contemplation of the heavens.
+
+"Drive on!" said Tish desperately. "If he sees us we are lost!"
+
+"Drive where?" demanded Charlie.
+
+Tufik's gaze had dropped gradually--another moment and his brown eyes
+would rest on us. But just then a diversion occurred. A window overhead
+opened with a slam and a stream of hot water descended. It had been
+carefully aimed--as if with long practice. Tufik was apparently not
+surprised. He side-stepped it with a boredom as of many repetitions,
+and, picking up his suitcase, stood at a safe distance looking up.
+First, in his gentle voice he addressed the window in Arabic; then from
+a safer distance in English.
+
+"You ugly old she-wolf!" he said softly. "When my three old women come
+back I eat you, skin and bones,--and they shall say nothing! They love
+me--Tufik! I am their child. Aye! And my child--which comes--will be
+their grandchild!"
+
+He kissed his fingers to the upper window which closed with a slam.
+Tufik stooped, picked up his suitcase, and saw the taxi for the first
+time. Even in the twilight we saw his face change, his brown eyes
+brighten, his teeth show in his boyish smile. The taxicab driver had
+stalled his engine and was cranking it.
+
+"Sh!" I said desperately, and we all cowered back into the shadows.
+
+Tufik approached, uncertainty changing to certainty. The engine was
+started now. Oh, for a second of time! He was at the window now, peering
+into the darkness.
+
+"Miss Tish!" he said breathlessly. No one answered. We hardly breathed.
+And then suddenly Aggie sneezed! "Miss Pilk!" he shouted in delight. "My
+mothers! My so dear friends--"
+
+The machine jerked, started, moved slowly off. He ran beside it, a hand
+on the door. Tish bent forward to speak, but Charlie Sands put his hand
+over her mouth.
+
+And so we left him, standing in the street undecided, staring after us
+wistfully, uncertainly--the suitcase, full of Cluny-lace centerpieces,
+crocheted lace, silk kimonos, and embroidered bedspreads, in his hand.
+
+That night we hid in a hotel and the next day we started for Europe. We
+heard nothing from Tufik; but on the anniversary of Mr. Wiggins's death,
+while we were in Berlin, Aggie received a small package forwarded from
+home. It was a small lace doily, and pinned to it was a card. It read:--
+
+ For the sadness, Miss Pilk!
+
+ TUFIK.
+
+
+Aggie cried over it.
+
+
+
+
+THE SIMPLE LIFERS
+
+I
+
+
+I suppose there is something in all of us that harks back to the soil.
+When you come to think of it, what are picnics but outcroppings of
+instinct? No one really enjoys them or expects to enjoy them, but with
+the first warm days some prehistoric instinct takes us out into the
+woods, to fry potatoes over a strangling wood fire and spend the next
+week getting grass stains out of our clothes. It must be instinct; every
+atom of intelligence warns us to stay at home near the refrigerator.
+
+Tish is really a child of instinct. She is intelligent enough, but in a
+contest between instinct and brains, she always follows her instinct.
+Aggie under the same circumstances follows her heart. As for me, I
+generally follow Tish and Aggie, and they've led me into some curious
+places.
+
+This is really a sort of apology, because, whereas usually Tish leads
+off and we follow her, in the adventure of the Simple Life we were all
+equally guilty. Tish made the suggestion, but we needed no urging. As
+you know, this summer two years ago was a fairly good one, as summers
+go,--plenty of fair weather, only two or three really hot spells, and
+not a great deal of rain. Charlie Sands, Tish's nephew, went over to
+England in June to report the visit of the French President to London
+for his newspaper, and Tish's automobile had been sent to the factory to
+be gone over. She had been teaching Aggie to drive it, and owing to
+Aggie's thinking she had her foot on the brake when it was really on the
+gas, they had leaped a four-foot ditch and gone down into a deep ravine,
+from which both Tish and Aggie had had to be pulled up with ropes.
+
+Well, with no machine and Charlie Sands away, we hardly knew how to plan
+the summer. Tish thought at first she would stay at home and learn to
+ride. She thought her liver needed stirring up. She used to ride, she
+said, and it was like sitting in a rocking-chair, only perhaps more so.
+Aggie and I went out to her first lesson; but when I found she had
+bought a divided skirt and was going to try a man's saddle, I could not
+restrain my indignation.
+
+"I'm going, Tish," I said firmly, when she had come out of the
+dressing-room and I realized the situation. "I shan't attempt to
+restrain you, but I shall not remain to witness your shame."
+
+Tish eyed me coldly. "When you wish to lecture me," she snapped, "about
+revealing to the public that I have two legs, if I do wear a skirt,
+don't stand in a sunny doorway in that linen dress of yours. I am going
+to ride; every woman should ride. It's good for the liver."
+
+I think she rather wavered when they brought the horse, which looked
+larger than usual and had a Roman nose. The instructor handed Tish four
+lines and she grabbed them nervously in a bunch.
+
+"Just a moment!" said the instructor, and slipped a line between each
+two of her fingers.
+
+Tish looked rather startled. "When I used to ride--" she began with
+dignity.
+
+But the instructor only smiled. "These two are for the curb," he
+said--"if he bolts or anything like that, you know. Whoa, Viper! Still,
+old man!"
+
+"Viper!" Tish repeated, clutching at the lines. "Is--is he--er--nasty?"
+
+"Not a bit of it," said the instructor, while he prepared to hoist her
+up. "He's as gentle as a woman to the people he likes. His only fault is
+that he's apt to take a little nip out of the stablemen now and then.
+He's very fond of ladies."
+
+"Humph!" said Tish. "He's looking at me rather strangely, don't you
+think? Has he been fed lately?"
+
+"Perhaps he sees that divided skirt," I suggested.
+
+Tish gave me one look and got on the horse. They walked round the ring
+at first and Tish seemed to like it. Then a stableman put a nickel into
+a player-piano and that seemed to be a signal for the thing to trot.
+Tish said afterward that she never hit the horse's back twice in the
+same place. Once, she says, she came down on his neck, and several times
+she was back somewhere about his tail. Every time she landed, wherever
+it might be, he gave a heave and sent her up again. She tried to say
+"Whoa," but it came out in pieces, so to speak, and the creature seemed
+to be encouraged by it and took to going faster. By that time, she said,
+she wasn't coming down at all, but was in the air all the time, with the
+horse coming up at the rate of fifty revolutions a second. She had
+presence of mind enough to keep her mouth shut so she wouldn't bite her
+tongue off.
+
+After four times round the music stopped and the horse did also. They
+were just in front of us, and Tish looked rather dazed.
+
+"You did splendidly!" said Aggie. "Honestly, Tish, I was frightened at
+first, but you and that dear horse seemed one piece. Didn't they,
+Lizzie?"
+
+Tish straightened out the fingers of her left hand with her right and
+extricated the lines. Then she turned her head slowly from right to left
+to see if she could.
+
+"Help me down, somebody," she said in a thin voice, "and call an
+osteopath. There is something wrong with my spine!"
+
+She was in bed three days, having massage and a vibrator and being
+rubbed with chloroform liniment. At the end of that time she offered me
+her divided skirt, but I refused.
+
+"Riding would be good for your liver, Lizzie," she said, sitting up in
+bed with pillows all about her.
+
+"I don't intend to detach it to do it good," I retorted. "What your
+liver and mine and most of the other livers need these days isn't to be
+sent out in a divided skirt and beaten to a jelly: they need rest--less
+food and simpler food. If instead of taking your liver on a horse you'd
+put it in a tent and feed it nuts and berries, you wouldn't be the color
+you are to-day, Tish Carberry."
+
+That really started the whole thing, although at the time Tish said
+nothing. She has a way of getting an idea and letting it simmer on the
+back of her brain, as you may say, when nobody knows it's been cooking
+at all, and then suddenly bringing it out cooked and seasoned and ready
+to serve.
+
+On the day Tish sat up for the first time, Aggie and I went over to see
+her. Hannah, the maid, had got her out of bed to a window, and Tish was
+sitting there with books all about her. It is in times of enforced
+physical idleness that most of Tish's ideas come to her, and Aggie had
+reminded me of that fact on the way over.
+
+"You remember, Lizzie," she said, "how last winter when she was getting
+over the grippe she took up that correspondence-school course in
+swimming. She's reading, watch her books. It'll probably be suffrage or
+airships."
+
+Tish always believes anything she reads. She had been quite sure she
+could swim after six correspondence lessons. She had all the movements
+exactly, and had worried her trained nurse almost into hysteria for a
+week by turning on her face in bed every now and then and trying the
+overhand stroke. She got very expert, and had decided she'd swim
+regularly, and even had Charlie Sands show her the Australian crawl
+business so she could go over some time and swim the Channel. It was a
+matter of breathing and of changing positions, she said, and was up to
+intelligence rather than muscle.
+
+Then when she was quite strong, she had gone to the natatorium. Aggie
+and I went along, not that we were any good in emergency, but because
+Tish had convinced us there would be no emergency. And Tish went in at
+the deep end of the pool, head first, according to diagram, and _did not
+come up_.
+
+Well, there seemed to be nothing threatening in what Tish was reading
+this time. She had ordered some books for Maria Lee's children and was
+looking them over before she sent them. The "Young Woods-man" was one
+and "Camper Craft" was another. How I shudder when I recall those names!
+
+Aggie had baked an angel cake and I had brought over a jar of cookies.
+But Tish only thanked us and asked Hannah to take them out. Even then we
+were not suspicious. Tish sat back among her pillows and said very
+little. The conversation was something like this:--
+
+ _Aggie_: Well, you're up again: I hope to goodness it will be a lesson
+ to you. If you don't mind, I'd like Hannah to cut that cake. It fell
+ in the middle.
+
+ _Tish_: Do you know that the Indians never sweetened their food and that
+ they developed absolutely perfect teeth?
+
+ _Aggie_: Well, they never had any automobiles either, but they didn't
+ develop wings.
+
+ _Lizzie_: Don't you want that window closed? I'm in a draft.
+
+ _Tish_: Air in motion never gave any one a cold. We do not catch cold;
+ we catch heat. It's ridiculous the way we shut ourselves up in houses
+ and expect to remain well.
+
+ _Aggie_: Well, I'b catchig sobethig.
+
+ _Lizzie_ (_changing the subject_): Would you like me to help you dress?
+ It might rest your back to have your corset on.
+
+ _Tish_ (_firmly_): I shall never wear a corset again.
+
+ _Aggie_ (_sneezing_): Why? Didn't the Iddiads wear theb?
+
+
+Tish is very sensitive to lack of sympathy and she shut up like a clam.
+She was coldly polite to us for the remainder of our visit, but she did
+not again refer to the Indians, which in itself was suspicious.
+
+Fortunately for us, or unfortunately, Tish's new scheme was one she
+could not very well carry out alone. I believe she tried to induce
+Hannah to go with her, and only when Hannah failed her did she turn to
+us. Hannah was frightened and came to warn us.
+
+I remember the occasion very well. It was Mr. Wiggins's birthday
+anniversary, and we usually dine at Aggie's and have a cake with thirty
+candles on it. Tish was not yet able to be about, so Aggie and I ate
+together. She always likes to sit until the last candle is burned out,
+which is rather dispiriting and always leaves me low in my mind.
+
+Just as it flickered and went out, Hannah came in.
+
+"Miss Tish sent over Mr. Charlie's letter from London," said Hannah, and
+put it in front of Aggie. Then she sat down on a chair and commenced to
+cry.
+
+"Why, Hannah!" said Aggie. "What in the world has happened?"
+
+"She's off again!" sniveled Hannah; "and she's worse this time than she's
+ever been. No sugar, no tea, only nuts and fruit, and her windows open
+all night, with the curtains getting black. I wisht I had Mr. Charlie by
+the neck."
+
+I suppose it came over both of us at the same time--the "Young
+Woodsman," and the "Camper Craft," and no stays, and all that. I reached
+for Charlie Sands's letter, which was always sent to Tish and meant for
+all of us. He wrote:--
+
+ _Dear Three of a Kind_: Well, the French President has came and went,
+ and London has taken down all the brilliant flags which greeted him,
+ such tactful bits as bore Cressy and Agincourt, and the pretty little
+ smallpox and "plague here" banners, and has gone back to such innocent
+ diversions as baiting cabinet ministers, blowing up public buildings, or
+ going out into the woods seeking the Simple Life.
+
+ The Simple Lifers travel in bands--and little else. They go barefooted,
+ barearmed, bareheaded and barenecked. They wear one garment, I believe,
+ let their hair hang and their beards grow, eat only what Nature
+ provides, such as nuts and fruits, sleep under the stars, and drink
+ from Nature's pools. Rather bully, isn't it? They're a handsome lot
+ generally, brown as nuts. And I saw a girl yesterday--well, if you do
+ not hear from me for a time it will be because I have discarded the
+ pockets in which I carry my fountain pen and my stamps and am wandering
+ barefoot through the Elysian fields.
+
+ Yours for the Simple Life,
+
+ CHARLIE SANDS.
+
+
+As I finished reading the letter aloud, I looked at Aggie in dismay.
+"That settles it," I said hopelessly. "She had some such idea before,
+and now this young idiot--" I stopped and stared across the table at
+Aggie. She was sitting rapt, her eyes fixed on the smouldering wicks of
+Mr. Wiggins's candles.
+
+"Barefoot through the Elysian fields!" she said.
+
+
+
+
+II
+
+
+I am not trying to defend myself. I never had the enthusiasm of the
+other two, but I rather liked the idea. And I did restrain them. It was
+my suggestion, for instance, that we wear sandals without stockings,
+instead of going in our bare feet, which was a good thing, for the first
+day out Aggie stepped into a hornet's nest. And I made out the lists.
+
+The idea, of course, is not how much one can carry, but how little. The
+"Young Woodsman" told exactly how to manage in the woods if one were
+lost there and had nothing in the world but a bootlace and a wire
+hairpin.
+
+With the hairpin one could easily make a fair fish-hook--and with a
+bootlace or a good hemp cord one could make a rabbit snare.
+
+"So you see," Tish explained, "there's fish and meat with no trouble at
+all. And there will be berries and nuts. That's a diet for a king."
+
+I was making a list of the necessaries at the time and under bootlaces
+and hairpins I put down "spade."
+
+"What in Heaven's name is the spade for?" Tish demanded.
+
+"You've got to dig bait, haven't you?"
+
+Tish eyed me with disgust.
+
+"Grasshoppers!" she said tersely.
+
+There was really nothing Tish was not prepared for. I should never have
+thought of grasshoppers.
+
+"The idea is simply this," observed Tish: "We have surrounded ourselves
+with a thousand and one things we do not need and would be better
+without--houses, foolish clothing, electric light, idiotic
+servants--Hannah, get away from that door!--rich foods, furniture and
+crowds of people. We've developed and cared for our bodies instead of
+our souls. What we want is to get out into the woods and think; to
+forget those pampered bodies of ours and to let our souls grow and
+assert themselves."
+
+We decided finally to take a blanket apiece, rolled on our shoulders,
+and Tish and I each took a strong knife. Aggie, instead of the knife,
+took a pair of scissors. We took a small bottle of blackberry cordial
+for emergencies, a cake of soap, a salt-cellar for seasoning the fish
+and rabbits, two towels, a package of court-plaster, Aggie's hay-fever
+remedy, a bottle of oil of pennyroyal to use against mosquitoes, and
+a large piece of canvas, light but strong, cut like the diagram.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+Tish said it was the regulation Indian tepee, and that a squaw could set
+one up in an hour and have dinner cooked inside it in thirty minutes
+after. She said she guessed we could do it if an Indian squaw could, and
+that after we'd cut the poles once, we could carry them with us if we
+wished to move. She said the tent ought to be ornamented, but she had
+had no time, and we could paint designs on it with colored clay in the
+woods when we had nothing more important to do!
+
+It made a largish bundle, but we did not intend to travel much. We
+thought we could find a good place by a lake somewhere and put up the
+tent, and set a few snares, and locate the nearest berry-bushes and
+mushroom-patches, and then, while the rabbits were catching themselves,
+we should have time to get acquainted with our souls again.
+
+Tish put it in her terse manner most intelligently. "We intend to
+prove," she stated to Mrs. Ostermaier, the minister's wife, who came to
+call and found us all sitting on the floor trying to get used to it, for
+of course there would be no chairs, "we shall prove that the trappings
+of civilization are a delusion and a snare. We shall bring back 'Mens
+sana in corpore sano'."
+
+The minister's wife thought this was a disease, for she said, "I hope
+not, I'm sure," very hastily.
+
+"We shall make our own fire and our own shelter," said Tish from the
+floor. "We shall wear one garment, loose enough to allow entire freedom
+of movement. We shall bathe in Nature's pools and come out cleansed. On
+the Sabbath we shall attend divine service under the Gothic arches of
+the trees, read sermons in stones, and instead of that whining tenor in
+the choir we shall listen to the birds singing praise, overhead."
+
+Mrs. Ostermaier looked rather bewildered. "I'm sure I hope so," she said
+vaguely. "I don't like camping myself. There are so many bugs."
+
+As Tish said, some ideas are so large that the average person cannot see
+them at all.
+
+We had fixed on Maine. It seemed to combine all the necessary qualities:
+woods and lakes, rabbits, game and fish, and--solitude. Besides,
+Aggie's hay fever is better the farther north she gets. On the day we
+were leaving, Mr. Ostermaier came to see us.
+
+"I--I really must protest, ladies," he said. "That sort of thing may be
+all right for savages, but--"
+
+"Are we not as intelligent as savages?" Tish demanded.
+
+"Primitive people are inured to hardships, and besides, they have
+methods of their own. They can make fire--" "So can I," retorted Tish.
+"Any fool can make a fire with a rubbing-stick. It's been done in
+thirty-one seconds."
+
+"If you would only take some matches," he wailed, "and a good revolver,
+Miss Letitia. And--you must pardon this, but I have your well-being at
+heart--if I could persuade you to take along some--er--flannels and warm
+clothing!"
+
+"Clothing," said Tish loftily, "is a matter of habit, Mr. Ostermaier."
+
+I think he got the idea from this that we intended to discard clothing
+altogether, for he went away almost immediately, looking rather upset,
+and he preached on the following Sunday from "Consider the lilies of the
+field.... Even Solomon in all his glory was not arrayed like one of
+these."
+
+We left on Monday evening, and by Tuesday at noon we were at our
+destination, as far as the railroad was concerned. Tish had a map with
+the lake we'd picked out, and we had figured that we'd drive out to
+within ten miles or so of it and then send the driver back. The lake was
+in an uninhabited neighborhood, with the nearest town twenty-five miles
+away. We had one suitcase containing our blankets, sandals, short
+dresses, soap, hairpins, salt-box, knives, scissors, and a compass, and
+the leather thongs for rabbit snares that we had had cut at a harness
+shop. In the other suitcase was the tepee.
+
+We ate a substantial breakfast at Tish's suggestion, because we expected
+to be fairly busy the first day, and there would be no time for hunting.
+We had to walk ten miles, set up the tent, make a fire and gather nuts
+and berries. It was about that time, I think, that I happened to recall
+that it was early for nuts. Still there would be berries, and Tish had
+added mushrooms to our menu.
+
+We found a man with a spring wagon to drive us out and Tish showed him
+the map.
+
+"I guess I can get you out that way," he said, "but I ain't heard of no
+camp up that direction."
+
+"Who said anything about a camp?" snapped Tish. "How much to drive us
+fifteen miles in that direction?"
+
+"Fifteen miles! Well, about five dollars, but I think--"
+
+"How much to drive us fifteen miles without thinking?"
+
+"Ten dollars," said the man; and as he had the only wagon in the town we
+had to pay it.
+
+It was a lovely day, although very warm. The morning sun turned the
+woods to fairylike glades. Tish sat on the front seat, erect and staring
+ahead.
+
+Aggie bent over and touched my arm lightly. "Isn't she wonderful!" she
+whispered; "like some adventurer of old--Balboa discovering the Pacific
+Ocean, or Joan of Arc leading the what-you-call-'ems."
+
+But somehow my enthusiasm was dying. The sun was hot and there were no
+berry-bushes to be seen. Aggie's fairy glades in the woods were filled,
+not with dancing sprites, but with gnats. I wanted a glass of iced tea,
+and some chicken salad, and talcum powder down my neck. The road was
+bad, and the driver seemed to have a joke to himself, for every now and
+then he chuckled, and kept his eyes on the woods on each side, as if he
+expected to see something. His manner puzzled us all.
+
+"You can trust me not to say anything, ladies," he said at last, "but
+don't you think you're playing it a bit low down? This ain't quite up to
+contract, is it?"
+
+"You've been drinking!" said Tish shortly.
+
+After that he let her alone, but soon after he turned round to me and
+made another venture.
+
+"In case you need grub, lady," he said,"--and them two suitcases don't
+hold a lot,--I'll bring out anything you say: eggs and butter and garden
+truck at market prices. I'm no phylanthropist," he said, glaring at
+Tish, "but I'd be glad to help the girl, and that's the truth. I been
+married to this here wife o' mine quite a spell, and to my first one for
+twenty years, and I'm a believer in married life."
+
+"What girl?" I asked.
+
+He turned right round in the seat and winked at me.
+
+"All right," he said. "I'll not butt in unless you need me. But I'd like
+to know one thing: He hasn't got a mother, he says, so I take it you're
+his aunts. Am I on, ladies?"
+
+We didn't know what he was talking about, and we said so. But he only
+smiled. A mile or so from our destination the horse scared up a rabbit,
+and Tish could hardly be restrained from running after it with a leather
+thong. Aggie, however, turned a little pale.
+
+"I'll never be able to eat one, never!" she confided to me. "Did you see
+its eyes? Lizzie, do you remember Mr. Wiggins's eyes? and the way he
+used to move his nose, just like that?"
+
+At the end of fifteen miles the driver drew up his horses and took a
+fresh chew of tobacco.
+
+"I guess this is about right," he said. "That trail there'll take you to
+the lake. How long do you reckon it'll be before you'll need some fresh
+eggs?"
+
+"We are quite able to look after ourselves," said Tish with hauteur, and
+got out of the wagon. She paid him off at once and sat down on her
+suitcase until he had driven out of sight. He drove slowly, looking back
+every now and then, and his last view of us must have been
+impressive--three middle-aged and determined women ready to conquer the
+wilderness, as Tish put it, and two suitcases.
+
+It was as solitary a place as we could have wished. We had not seen a
+house in ten miles, and when the last creak of the wagon had died away
+there was a silence that made our city-broke ears fairly ache. Tish
+waited until the wagon was out of sight; then she stood up and threw out
+her arms.
+
+"At last!" she said. "Free to have a lodge in some vast wilderness--to
+think, to breathe, to expand! Lizzie, do you suppose if we go back we
+can get that rabbit?"
+
+I looked at my watch. It was one o'clock and there was not a berry-bush
+in sight. The drive had made me hungry, and I'd have eaten a rabbit that
+looked like Mr. Wiggins and called me by name if I'd had it. But there
+was absolutely no use going back for the one we'd seen on our drive.
+
+Aggie was opening her suitcase and getting out her costume, which was a
+blue calico with short sleeves and a shoe-top skirt.
+
+"Where'll I put it on?" she asked, looking about her.
+
+"Right here!" Tish replied. "For goodness sake, Aggie, try to discard
+false modesty and false shame. We're here to get close to the great
+beating heart of Nature. Take off your switch before you do another
+thing."
+
+None of us looked particularly well, I admit; but it was wonderful how
+much more comfortable we were. Aggie, who is very thin, discarded a part
+of her figure, and each of us parted with some pet hypocrisy. But I
+don't know that I have ever felt better. Only, of course we were hungry.
+
+We packed our things in the suitcases and hid them in a hollow tree, and
+Tish suggested looking for a spring. She said water was always the first
+requisite and fire the second.
+
+"Fire!" said Aggie. "What for? We've nothing to cook."
+
+Well, that was true enough, so we sent Aggie to look for water and Tish
+and I made a rabbit snare. We made a good many snares and got to be
+rather quick at it. They were all made like this illustration.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+First Tish, with her book open in front of her, made a running noose out
+of one of the buckskin thongs. Next we bent down a sapling and tied the
+noose to it, and last of all we bound the free part of the thong round a
+snag and thus held the sapling down. The idea is that a rabbit, bounding
+along, presumably with his eyes shut, will stick his head through the
+noose, kick the line clear of the snag and be drawn violently into the
+air. Tish figured that by putting up half a dozen snares we'd have
+three or four rabbits at least each day.
+
+It was about three when we finished, and we drew off to a safe distance
+to watch the rabbit bound to his doom. But no rabbits came along.
+
+I was very empty and rather faint, but Tish said she had never been able
+to think so clearly, and that we were all overfed and stodgy and would
+be better for fasting.
+
+Aggie came in at three-thirty with a hornet sting and no water. She said
+there were no springs, but that she had found a place where a spring had
+existed before the dry spell, and there was a naked footprint in the
+mud, quite fresh! We all went to look at it, and Tish was quite positive
+it was not a man's footprint at all, but only a bear's.
+
+"A bear!" said Aggie.
+
+"What of it?" Tish demanded. "The 'Young Woodsman' says that no bear
+attacks a human unless he is hungry, and at this time of the year with
+the woods full of food--"
+
+"Humph!"--I could not restrain myself--"I wish you would show me a
+little of it. If no rabbit with acute melancholia comes along to commit
+suicide by hanging on that gallows of yours, I think we'll starve to
+death."
+
+"There will be a rabbit," Tish said tersely; and we started back to the
+snare.
+
+I was never so astonished in my life. There was a rabbit! It seems we
+had struck a runway without knowing it, although Tish said afterward
+that she had recognized it at once from the rabbit tracks. Anyhow,
+whether it died of design or curiosity, our supper was kicking at the
+top of the sapling, and Tish pretended to be calm and to have known all
+along that we'd get one. But it was not dead.
+
+We got it down somehow or other and I held it by the ears while it
+kicked and scratched. I was hungry enough to have eaten it alive, but
+Aggie began to cry.
+
+"You'll be murderers, nothing else," she wailed. "Look at his little
+white tail and pitiful baby eyes!"
+
+"Good gracious, Aggie," Tish snapped, "get a knife and cut its throat
+while I make a fire. If it's any help to you, we're not going to eat
+either its little white tail or its pitiful baby eyes."
+
+As a matter of fact Aggie wouldn't touch the rabbit and I did not care
+much about it myself. I do not like to kill things. My Aunt Sarah
+Mackintosh once killed a white hen that lived twenty minutes without its
+head; two weeks later she dreamed that that same hen, without a head,
+was sitting on the footboard of the bed, and the next day she got word
+that her cousin's husband in Sacramento had died of the hiccoughs.
+
+It ended with Tish giving me the fire-making materials and stalking off
+into the woods with the rabbit in one hand and the knife in the other.
+
+[Illustration: It ended with Tish stalking off into the woods with the
+rabbit in one hand and the knife in the other]
+
+Tish is nothing if not thorough, but she seemed to me inconsistent. She
+brought blankets and a canvas tepee and sandals and an aluminum kettle,
+but she disdained matches. I rubbed with that silly drill and a sort of
+bow arrangement until my wrists ached, but I did not get even a spark of
+fire. When Tish came back with the rabbit there was no fire, and Aggie
+had taken out her watch crystal and was holding it in the sun over a
+pile of leaves.
+
+Tish got out the "Young Woodsman" from the suitcase. It seems I had
+followed cuts I and II, but had neglected cut III, which is: Hold the
+left wrist against the left shin, and the left foot on the fireblock. I
+had got my feet mixed and was trying to hold my left wrist against my
+right shin, which is exceedingly difficult. Tish got a fire in fourteen
+minutes and thirty-one seconds by Aggie's watch, and had to wear a
+bandage on her hand for a week.
+
+But we had a fire. We cooked the rabbit, which proved to be much older
+than Aggie had thought, and ate what we could. Personally I am not fond
+of rabbit, and our enjoyment was rather chastened by the fear that some
+mushrooms Tish had collected and added to the stew were toadstools
+_incognito_. To make things worse, Aggie saw some goldenrod nearby and
+began to sneeze.
+
+It was after five o'clock, but it seemed wisest to move on toward the
+lake.
+
+"Even if we don't make it," said Tish, "we'll be on our way, and while
+that bear is likely harmless we needn't thrust temptation in his way."
+
+We carried the fire with us in the kettle and we took turns with the
+tepee, which was heavy. Our suitcases with our city clothes in them we
+hid in a hollow tree, and one after the other, with Aggie last, we
+started on.
+
+The trail, which was a sort of wide wagon road at first, became a
+footpath; as we went on even that disappeared at times under fallen
+leaves. Once we lost it entirely, and Aggie, falling over a hidden root,
+stilled the fire. She became exceedingly disagreeable at about that
+time, said she was sure Tish's mushrooms were toadstools because she
+felt very queer, and suddenly gave a yell and said she had seen
+something moving in the bushes.
+
+We all looked, and the bushes were moving.
+
+
+
+
+III
+
+
+It was dusk by that time and the path was only a thread between masses
+of undergrowth. Tish said if it was the bear he would be afraid of the
+fire, so we put dry leaves in the kettle and made quite a blaze. By its
+light Tish read that bears in the summer are full fed and really
+frolicsome and that they are awful cowards. We felt quite cheered and
+brave, and Tish said if he came near to throw the fire kettle at him and
+he'd probably die of fright.
+
+It was too late to put up the tepee, so we found a clearing near the
+path and decided to spend the night there. Aggie still watched the
+bushes and wanted to spend the night in a tree; but Tish's calmness was
+a reproach to us both, and after we had emptied the kettle and made
+quite a fire to keep off animals, we unrolled our blankets and prepared
+for sleep. I could have slept anywhere, although I was still rather
+hungry. My last view was of Tish in the firelight grimly bending down a
+sapling and fastening a rabbit snare to it.
+
+During the night I was wakened by somebody clutching my arm. It was
+Aggie who lay next to me. When I raised my head she pointed off into the
+woods to our left. At a height of perhaps four feet from the ground a
+ghastly red glow was moving rapidly away from us. It was not a torch; it
+was more a radiance, and it moved not evenly, but jerkily. I could feel
+the very hair rising on my head and it was all I could do to call Tish.
+When we had roused her, however, the glow had faded entirely and she
+said we had had a nightmare.
+
+The snare the next morning contained a skunk, and we moved on as quickly
+as possible, without attempting to secure the thong, of which we had
+several. We gathered some puffballs to soak for breakfast and in a
+clearing I found some blackberry bushes. We were very cheerful that
+morning, for if we could capture rabbits and skunks, we were sure of
+other things, also, and soon we would be able to add fish to our menu.
+True, we had not had much time to commune with our souls, and Aggie's
+arms were so sunburned that she could not bend them at the elbows. But,
+as Tish said, we had already proved our contention that we could get
+along without men or houses or things. Things, she said, were the curse
+of modern life; we filled our lives with things instead of thoughts.
+
+It was when we were ready to cook the puffballs that we missed the
+kettle! Tish was very angry; she said it was evident that the bear was
+mischievous and that all bears were thieves. (See the "Young Woodsman.")
+But I recalled the glow of the night before, and more than once I caught
+Aggie's eyes on me, filled with consternation. For we had seen that
+kettle leaving the camp with some of our fire in it, and bears are
+afraid of fire!
+
+We reached the lake at noon and it seemed as if we might soon have time
+to sit down and rest. But there was a great deal to do. Aggie was of no
+assistance on account of her arms, so Tish and I put up the tent. The
+"Young Woodsman" said it was easy. First you tied three long poles
+together near the top and stood them up so they made a sort of triangle.
+Then you cut about a dozen and filled in between the three. That looked
+easy, but it took an afternoon, and our first three looked like this
+first cut.
+
+[Illustration:
+ AS THE FIRST THREE LOOKED
+ AS THEY SHOULD HAVE LOOKED]
+
+We had caught a rabbit by noon, and Aggie being unfit for other work,
+and the kettle being gone, Tish set her to roasting it. It was not
+very good, but we ate some, being ravenous. The method was simplicity
+itself--two forked sticks in the ground, one across to hang the rabbit
+to and a fire beneath. It tasted rather smoky.
+
+In the afternoon we finished putting up the tepee, and Tish made a
+fishhook out of a hairpin and tied it to a strong creeper I had found.
+But we caught no fish. We had more rabbit for supper, with some
+puffballs smoked and a few huckleberries. But by that time the very
+sight of a rabbit sickened me, and Aggie began to talk about broiled
+beefsteak and fried spring chicken.
+
+We had seen no sign of the bear, or whatever it was, all day, and it
+seemed likely we were not to be again disturbed. But a most mysterious
+thing occurred that very night.
+
+As I have said, we had caught no fish. The lake was full of them. We sat
+on a bank that evening and watched them playing leapfrog, and talked
+about frying them on red-hot stones, but nothing came near the hairpin.
+At last Tish made a suggestion.
+
+"We need worms," she said. "A grasshopper loses all his spirit after
+he's been immersed for an hour, but a worm will keep on wriggling and
+attracting attention for half a day."
+
+"I wanted to bring a spade," said I.
+
+But Tish had read of a scheme for getting worms that she said the game
+warden of some place or other had guaranteed officially.
+
+"You stick a piece of wood about two feet into the ground in a likely
+spot," she said, "and rub a rough piece of bark or plank across the top.
+This man claims, and it sounds reasonable, that the worms think it is
+raining and come up for water. All you have to do is to gather them up."
+
+Tish found a pole for the purpose on the beach and set to work, while
+Aggie and I prepared several hooks and lines. The fish were jumping
+busily, and it seemed likely we should have more than we could do to
+haul them in.
+
+The experiment, however, failed entirely, for not a single worm
+appeared. Tish laid it to the fact that it was very late and that the
+worms were probably settled down for the night. It may have been that,
+or it may have been the wrong kind of wood.
+
+The mysterious happening was this: We rose quite early because the tepee
+did not seem to be well anchored and fell down on us at daybreak. Tish
+went down to the beach to examine the lines that had been out all night,
+and found nothing. She was returning rather dispirited to tell us that
+it would be rabbit again for breakfast, when she saw lying on a flat
+stone half a dozen beautiful fish, one or two still gasping, in our lost
+kettle!
+
+Tish said she stood there, opening and shutting her mouth like the fish.
+Then she gave a whoop and we came running. At first we thought they
+might have been jumping and leaped out on to the beach by accident, but,
+as Tish said, they would hardly have landed all together and into a
+kettle that had been lost for two nights and a day. The queer thing was
+that they had not been caught with a hook at all. They hadn't a mark on
+them.
+
+We were so hungry that we ate every one of them for breakfast. It was
+only when we had eaten, and were sitting gorged and not caring whether
+the tent was set up again or not, that we fell to wondering about the
+fish. Tish fancied it might have been the driver of the spring wagon,
+but decided he'd have sold us the fish at thirty cents a pound live
+weight.
+
+All day long we watched for a sign of our benefactor, but we saw
+nothing. Tish set up more rabbit snares; not that she wanted rabbits,
+but it had become a mania with her, and there were so many of them that
+as they grew accustomed to us they sat round our camp in a ring and
+criticized our housekeeping. She thought if she got a good many skins
+she could have a fur robe made for her automobile. As a matter of fact
+she found another use for them.
+
+It was that night, then, that we were sitting round the camp-fire on
+stones that we had brought up from the beach. We had seen nothing more
+of the bear, and if we had been asked we should have said that the
+nearest human being was twenty-five miles away.
+
+Suddenly a voice came out of the woods just behind us, a man's voice.
+
+"Please don't be alarmed," said the voice. "But may I have a little of
+your fire? Mine has gone out again."
+
+"G-g-g-good gracious!" said Aggie. "T-Tish, get your revolver!"
+
+This was for effect. Tish had no revolver.
+
+All of us had turned and were staring into the woods behind, but we
+could see no one. After Aggie's speech about the revolver it was some
+time before the voice spoke again.
+
+"Never mind, Aggie," Tish observed, very loud. "The revolver is here and
+loaded--as nice a little thirty-six as any one needs here in the woods."
+
+She said afterward that she knew all the time there was no thirty-six
+caliber revolver, but in the excitement she got it mixed with her bust
+measure. Having replied to Aggie, Tish then turned in the direction of
+the voice.
+
+"Don't skulk back there," she called. "Come out, where we can see you.
+If you look reliable, we'll give you some fire, of course."
+
+There was another pause, as if the stranger were hesitating. Then:--
+
+"I think I'd better not," he said with reluctance in his voice. "Can't
+you toss a brand this way?"
+
+By that time we had grown accustomed to the darkness, and I thought I
+could see in the shadow of a tree a lightish figure. Aggie saw it at the
+same instant and clutched my arm.
+
+"Lizzie!" she gasped.
+
+It was at that moment that Tish tossed the brand. It fell far short, but
+her movement caught the stranger unawares. He ducked behind the tree,
+but the flare of light had caught him. With the exception of what looked
+like a pair of bathing-trunks he was as bare as my hand!
+
+There was a sort of astonished silence. Then the voice called out:--"Why
+in the world didn't you warn me?" it said, aggrieved. "I didn't know you
+were going to throw the blamed thing."
+
+We had all turned our backs at once and Tish's face was awful.
+
+"Take it and go," she said, without turning. "Take it and go."
+
+From the crackling of leaves and twigs we judged that he had come out
+and got the brand, and when he spoke again it was from farther back in
+the woods.
+
+"You know," he said, "I don't like this any more than you do. I've got
+forty-two mosquito bites on my left arm."
+
+He waited, as if for a reply; but getting none he evidently retreated.
+The sound of rustling leaves and crackling twigs grew fainter, fainter
+still, died away altogether. We turned then with one accord and gazed
+through the dark arches of the forest. A glowing star was retreating
+there--a smouldering fire, that seemed to move slowly and with an
+appearance of dejection.
+
+It was the second time Aggie and I had seen fire thus carried through
+the wood; but whereas about the kettle there had been a glow and
+radiance that was almost triumphant, the brand we now watched seemed
+smouldering, dejected, ashamed. Even Tish felt it.
+
+"The wretch!" she exclaimed. "Daring to come here like that! No wonder
+he's ashamed."
+
+But Aggie, who is very romantic, sat staring after the distant torch.
+
+"Mr. Wiggins suffered so from mosquitoes," she said softly.
+
+
+
+
+IV
+
+
+The next morning we found more fish awaiting us, and on the smooth sand
+of the beach was a message written with a stick:--
+
+ If you will leave a wire hairpin or two on this stone I can get
+ bigger fish. What do you mean to do with all those rabbit skins?
+
+ (Signed) P.
+
+
+Tish was touched by the fish, I think. She smoothed off the sand
+carefully and wrote a reply:--
+
+ Here are the hairpins. Thank you. Do you want the rabbit skins?
+
+ L.C.
+
+
+All day we were in a state of expectancy. The mosquitoes were very bad,
+and had it not been for the excitement of the P---- person I should have
+given up and gone home. I wanted mashed potatoes and lima beans with
+butter dressing, and a cup of hot tea, and muffins, and ice--in fact,
+I cannot think of anything I did not want, except rabbits and fish and
+puffballs and such blackberries as the birds did not fancy. Although we
+were well enough--almost too well--the better I felt the hungrier I got.
+
+Tish thought the time had now come to rest and invite our souls. She
+set the example that day by going out on a flat rock in the lake and
+preparing to think all the things she'd been waiting most of her life
+to consider.
+
+"I am ready to form my own opinions about some things," she said.
+"I realize now that all my life the newspapers and stupid people and
+books have formed my opinions. Now I'm going to think along my own
+lines. Is there another life after this? Do I really desire the
+suffrage? Why am I a Baptist?"
+
+Aggie said she would like to invite her soul that day also, not to form
+any opinions,--Tish always does that for her,--but she had to get some
+clothes in September and she might as well think them out.
+
+So it happened that I was alone when I met the P---- person's young
+woman.
+
+I had intended to wander only a short way along the trail, but after I
+had gone a mile or two it occurred to me as likely that the spring-wagon
+driver would come back that way before long out of curiosity, and I
+thought I might leave a message for him to bring out some fresh eggs and
+leave them there. I could tell Tish I had found a nest, or perhaps,
+since that would be lying, I could put them in a nest and let her find
+them. I'd have ordered tea, too, if I could have thought of any way to
+account for it.
+
+"I'm going to do some meditating myself to-day," I remarked, "but I
+think better when I'm moving. If I don't come back in an hour or so
+don't imagine I've been kidnaped."
+
+Tish turned on her stone and looked at me.
+
+"You will not be kidnaped," she said shortly. "I cannot imagine any one
+safer than you are in that costume."
+
+Well, I made my way along the trail as rapidly as I could. It was twenty
+miles there and back and I've seen the day when two city blocks would
+send me home to soak my feet in hot water. But the sandals were easy to
+walk in and my calico skirt was short and light.
+
+I had no paper to write my message on, of course, but on the way I
+gathered a large white fungus and I scraped a note on it with a pin.
+With the fungus under my arm I walked briskly along, planning an omelet
+with the eggs, if we got any, and gathering mushrooms here and there. It
+was the mushrooms that led me to the discovery of a camping-place that
+was prehistoric in its primitiveness--a clearing, surrounded by low
+bushes, and in the center a fireplace of stones with a fire smouldering.
+At one side a heap of leaves and small twigs for a bed, a stump for a
+seat, and lying on top of it a sort of stone axe, made by inserting a
+sharp stone into the cleft of a sapling and tying it into place with a
+wild-grape tendril. Pegged out on the ground to cure was a rabbit skin,
+indifferently scraped. It made our aluminum kettle and canvas tepee look
+like a marble-vestibuled apartment on Riverside Drive.
+
+The whole thing looked pitiful, hungry. I thought of Tish sitting on a
+stone inviting her soul, while rabbits came from miles round to stick
+their heads through our nooses and hang themselves for our dinner; and
+it seemed to me that we should share our plenty. I thought it probable
+that the gentleman of the woods lived here, and from the appearance of
+the place he carried all his possessions with him when he wore his
+bathing-trunks. If I had been in any doubt, the sight of Aggie's wire
+hairpin, sharpened and bent into a serviceable fishhook, decided me. I
+scratched a message for him on another fungus and left it:--
+
+ If you need anything come to the Indian tepee at the lake. We have
+ no clothing to spare, but are always glad to help in time of trouble.
+
+ (Signed) ONE OF THE SIMPLE LIFERS.
+
+
+I went on after that and about noon reached our point of exodus from the
+wagon. I was tired and hot and I kept thinking of my little dining-room
+at home, with the electric fan going, and iced cantaloupe, and nobody
+worrying about her soul or thinking her own thoughts, and no rabbits.
+
+Our suitcases were safe enough in the hollow tree, and I thought the
+spring wagon had been back already, for there were fresh tracks. This
+discouraged me and I sat down on a log to rest. It was then that I heard
+the girl crying.
+
+She was crying softly, but in the woods sounds travel. I found her on
+her face on the pine needles about twenty yards away, wailing her heart
+out into a pink automobile veil, and she was so absorbed in her misery
+that I had to stoop and touch her before she looked up.
+
+"Don't cry," I said. "If you are lost, I can direct you to a
+settlement."
+
+She looked up at me, and from being very red and suffused she went quite
+pale. It seems that with my bare legs and sandals and my hair down,
+which was Tish's idea for making it come in thick and not gray, and what
+with my being sunburned and stained with berries, she thought I was a
+wild woman. I realized what was wrong.
+
+"Don't be alarmed," I said somewhat grimly. "I'm rational enough; if I
+hop about instead of walking, it's because I'm the tomb of more rabbits
+than I care to remember, but aside from that I'm all right. Are you
+lost?"
+
+She sat up, still staring, and wiped her eyes.
+
+"No. I have a machine over there among the trees. Are there--are there
+plenty of rabbits in the woods?"
+
+"Thousands." She was a pretty little thing, very young, and dressed in a
+white motor coat with white shoes and hat.
+
+"And--and berries?"
+
+"There aren't many berries," I admitted. "The birds eat 'em. We get the
+ones they don't fancy."
+
+Now I didn't think for a moment that she was worried about my diet, but
+she was worried about the food supply in the woods, that was sure. So I
+sat down on a stump and told her about puffballs, and what Tish had read
+about ants being edible but acid, and that wood mice, roasted and not
+cooked too dry, were good food, but that Aggie had made us liberate the
+only ones we had caught, because a man she was once engaged to used to
+carry a pet mouse in his pocket.
+
+Nothing had really appealed to her until I mentioned Mr. Wiggins. Then
+unexpectedly she began to cry again. And after that I got the whole
+story.
+
+It seems she was in love with a young man who was everything a young man
+ought to be and had money as well. But the money was the barrier really,
+for the girl's father wouldn't believe that a youth who played polo, and
+did not have to work for a living, and led cotillons, and paid calls in
+the afternoon could have really good red blood in him. He had a man in
+view for her, she said, one who had made his money himself, and had to
+have his valet lay out his clothes for fear he'd make a mistake. Once
+the valet had to go to have a tooth pulled and the man had to decline
+a dinner.
+
+"Father said," finished the little girl tearfully, "that if
+Percy--that's his name, and it counted against him too--that if Percy
+was a real man he'd do something. And then he hap-happened on a book of
+my small brother's, telling how people used to live in the woods, and
+kill their own food and make their own fire--"
+
+"The 'Young Woodsman,' of course," I put in.
+
+"And how the strong survived, but the weak succumbed, and he said if
+Percy was a man, and not a t-tailor's dummy, he'd go out in the woods,
+j-just primitive man, without anything but a pair of bathing trunks,
+and keep himself alive for a month. If he s-stood the test father was
+willing to forget the 'Percy.' He said that he knew Mr. Willoughby could
+do it--that's the other man--and that he'd come in at the end of the
+time with a deed for the forest and mortgages on all the surrounding
+camps."
+
+"And Percy agreed?"
+
+"He didn't want to. He said it took mentality and physical endurance as
+well as some courage to play polo. Father said it did--on the part of
+the pony. Then s-some of the men heard of it, and there were bets on
+it--ten to one he wouldn't do it and twenty to one he couldn't do it. So
+Percy decided to try. Father was so afraid that some of the campers and
+guides would help him that he had notices sent out at Mr. Willoughby's
+suggestion offering a reward if Percy could be shown to have asked any
+assistance. Oh, I know he's sick in there somewhere, or starving
+or--dead!"
+
+I had had a great light break over me, and now I stooped and patted the
+girl on the shoulder.
+
+"Dead! Certainly not," I said. "I saw him last night."
+
+"Saw him!"
+
+"Well, not exactly saw him--there wasn't much light. But he's alive and
+well, and--do you really want him to win?"
+
+"Do I?" She sat up with shining eyes. "I don't care whether he owns
+anything in the world but the trunks. If I didn't think I'd add to his
+troubles I'd go into the woods this minute and find him and suffer with
+him."
+
+"You'd have to be married to him first," I objected, rather startled.
+
+But she looked at me with her cheeks as red strawberries. "Why?" she
+demanded. "Father's crazy about primitive man--did primitive man take
+his woman to church to be married, with eight brides maids and a
+reception after the ceremony? Of course not. He grabbed her and carried
+her off."
+
+"Good Heavens! You're not in earnest?" "I think I am," she said slowly.
+"I'd rather live in the woods with Percy and no ceremony than live
+without him anywhere in the world. And I'll bet primitive man would have
+been wiped off the earth if he hadn't had primitive woman to add her
+wits to his strength. If Percy only had a woman to help him!"
+
+"My dear," I said solemnly, "he has! He has, not one, but three!"
+
+It took me some time to explain that Percy was not supporting a harem in
+the Maine woods; but when at last she got my idea and that the other two
+classed with me in beauty and attractiveness, she was overjoyed.
+
+"But Percy promised not to ask for help," she said suddenly.
+
+"He needn't. My dear, go away and stop worrying about Percy--he's all
+right. When is the time up?"
+
+"In three weeks."
+
+"I suppose father and the Willoughby person will come to meet him?"
+
+"Yes, and all the fellows from the club who have put money up on him.
+We're going to motor over and father's bringing the physical director of
+the athletic club. He's not only got to survive, but he's got to be in
+good condition."
+
+"He'll be in good condition," I said grimly. "Does he drink and smoke?"
+
+"A little, not too much. Oh, yes, I had forgotten!" She opened up a
+little gold cigarette case, which she took from her pocket, and
+extracted a handful of cigarettes.
+
+"If you are going to see him," she said, "you might put them where he'll
+find them?"
+
+"Certainly not."
+
+"But that's not giving them to him."
+
+"My dear child," I said sternly, "Percy is going to come out of these
+woods so well and strong that he may not have to work, but he'll want
+to. And he'll not smoke anything stronger than corn-silk, if we're to
+take charge of this thing."
+
+She understood quickly enough and I must say she was grateful. She was
+almost radiant with joy when I told her how capable Tish was, and that
+she was sure to be interested, and about Aggie's hay fever and Mr.
+Wiggins and the rabbit snares. She leaned over and kissed me
+impulsively.
+
+"You dear old thing!" she cried. "I know you'll look after him and make
+him comfortable and--how old is Miss Letitia?"
+
+"Something over fifty and Aggie Pilkington's about the same, although
+she won't admit it."
+
+She kissed me again at that, and after looking at her wrist watch she
+jumped to her feet.
+
+"Heavens!" she said. "It's four o'clock and my engine has been running
+all this time!"
+
+She got a smart little car from somewhere up the road, and the last I
+saw of her she was smiling back over her shoulder and the car running on
+the edge of a ditch.
+
+"You are three darlings!" she called back. "And tell Percy I love
+him--love him--love him!"
+
+I thought I'd never get back to the lake. I was tired to begin with, and
+after I'd gone about four miles and was limping with a splinter in my
+heel and no needle to get it out with, I found I still had the fungus
+message to the spring-wagon person under my arm.
+
+It was dark when I got back and my nerves were rather unstrung, what
+with wandering from the path here and there, with nothing to eat since
+morning, and running into a tree and taking the skin off my nose. When I
+limped into camp at last, I didn't care whether Percy lived or died, and
+the thought, of rabbit stew made my mouth water.
+
+It was not rabbit, however. Aggie was sitting alone by the fire, waving
+a brand round her head to keep off mosquitoes, and in front of her,
+dangling from the spit, were a dozen pairs of frogs' legs in a row.
+
+I ate six pairs without a question and then I asked for Tish.
+
+"Catching frogs," said Aggie laconically, and flourished the brand.
+
+"Where?"
+
+"Pulling them off the trees. Where do you think she gets them?" she
+demanded.
+
+A large mosquito broke through her guard at that moment and she flung
+the torch angrily at the fire.
+
+"I'm eaten alive!" she snapped. "I wish to Heaven I had smallpox or
+something they could all take and go away and die."
+
+The frogs' legs were heavenly, although in a restaurant I loathe the
+things. I left Aggie wondering if her hay fever wasn't contagious
+through the blood and hoping the mosquitoes would get it and sneeze
+themselves to death, and went to find Tish.
+
+She was standing in the margin of the lake up to her knees in water,
+with a blazing torch in one hand and one of our tent poles in the other.
+Tied to the end the pole was a grapevine line, and a fishing-hook made
+of a hairpin was attached to it.
+
+Her method, which it seems she'd heard from Charlie Sands and which was
+not in the "Young Woodsman," was simple and effectual.
+
+"Don't move," she said tensely when she heard me on the bank. "There's
+one here as big as a chicken!"
+
+She struck the flare forward, and I could see the frog looking at it and
+not blinking. He sat in a sort of heavenly ecstasy, like a dog about to
+bay at the moon, while the hook dangled just at his throat.
+
+"I'm half-ashamed to do it, Lizzie, it's so easy," she said calmly,
+still tickling the thing's throat with the hook. "Grab him as I throw
+him at you. They slip off sometimes."
+
+The next instant she jerked the hook up and caught the creature by the
+lower jaw. It was the neatest thing I have ever seen. Tish came wading
+over to where I stood and examined the frog.
+
+"If we only had some Tartare sauce!" she said regretfully. "I wish you'd
+look at my ankle, Lizzie. There's something stuck to it."
+
+The something was a leech. It refused to come off, and so she carried
+both frog and leech back to the camp. Aggie said on no account to pull a
+leech off, it left its teeth in and the teeth went on burrowing, or laid
+eggs or something. One must leave it on until it was full and round and
+couldn't hold any more, and then it dropped off.
+
+So all night Tish kept getting up and going to the fire to see if it was
+swelling. But toward morning she fell asleep and it dropped off, and we
+had a terrible feeling that it was somewhere in our blankets.
+
+But the leech caused less excitement that evening than my story of Percy
+and the little girl in the white coat. Aggie was entranced, and Tish had
+made Percy a suit of rabbit skin with a cap to match and outlined a set
+of exercises to increase his chest measure before I was half through
+with my story.
+
+But Percy did not appear, although we had an idea that he was not far
+off in the woods. We could hear a crackling in the undergrowth, but when
+we called there was no reply. Tish was eating a frog's leg when the idea
+came to her.
+
+"He'll never come out under ordinary circumstances in that--er--costume,"
+she said. "Suppose we call for help. He'll probably come bounding.
+Help!" she yelled, between bites, as one may say.
+
+"Help! Fire! Police!"
+
+"Help!" cried Aggie. "Percy, help!" It sounded like "Mercy, help!"
+
+It worked like a charm. The faint cracking became louder, nearer, turned
+from a suspicion to a certainty and from a certainty to a fact. The
+bushes parted and Percy stood before us. All he saw was three elderly
+women eating frogs' legs round a fire under a cloud of mosquitoes. He
+stopped, dumbfounded, and in that instant we saw that he didn't need the
+physical exercises, but that, of course, he did need the rabbit-skin
+suit.
+
+"Great Scott!" he panted. "I thought I heard you calling for help."
+
+"So we did," said Tish, "but we didn't need it. Won't you sit down?"
+
+He looked dazed and backed toward the bushes.
+
+"I--I think," he said, "if there's nothing wrong I'd better not--"
+
+"Fiddlesticks!" Tish snapped. "Are you ashamed of the body the Lord
+gave you? Don't you suppose we've all got skins? And didn't I thrash my
+nephew, Charlie Sands, when he was almost as big as you and had less on,
+for bathing in the river? Sit down, man, and don't be a fool."
+
+He edged toward the fire, looking rather silly, and Aggie passed him a
+frog's leg on a piece of bark.
+
+"Try this, Percy," she said, smiling.
+
+At the name he looked ready to run. "I guess you've seen the notices,"
+he said, "so you'll understand I cannot accept any food or assistance.
+I'm very grateful to you, anyhow."
+
+"You may take what food you find, surely," said Aggie. "If you find a
+roasted frog's leg on the ground--so--there's nothing to prevent you
+eating it, is there?"
+
+"Nothing at all," said Percy, and picked it up. "Unless, of course--"
+
+"It's not a trap, young man," said Tish. "Eat it and enjoy it. There are
+lots more where it came from."
+
+He relaxed at that, and on Tish's bringing out a blanket from the tent
+to throw over his shoulders he became almost easy. He was much surprised
+to learn that we knew his story, and when I repeated the "love him"
+message, he seemed to grow a foot taller and his eyes glowed.
+
+"I'm holding out all right," he said. "I'm fit physically. But the thing
+that gets my goat is that I'm to come out clothed. Dorothea's father
+says that primitive man, with nothing but his hands and perhaps a stone
+club, fed himself, made himself a shelter, and clothed himself in skins.
+Skins! I'm so big that two or three bears would hardly be enough. I did
+find a hole that I thought a bear or two might fall into, and got almost
+stung to death robbing a bee tree to bait the thing with honey. But
+there aren't any bears, and if there were how'd I kill 'em? Wait until
+they starve to death?"
+
+"Rabbits!" said Tish.
+
+He looked down at himself and he seemed very large in the firelight.
+"Dear lady," he said, "there aren't enough rabbits in the county to
+cover me, and how'd I put 'em together? I was a fool to undertake the
+thing, that's all."
+
+"But aren't you in love with her?" asked Aggie.
+
+"Well, I guess I am. It isn't that, you know. I'm a good bit worse than
+crazy about her. A man might be crazy about a mint julep or a power
+boat, but--he'd hardly go into the woods in his skin and live on fish
+until he's scaly for either of them. If I don't get her, I don't want to
+live. That's all."
+
+He looked so gloomy and savage that we saw he meant it, and Aggie was
+perceptibly thrilled. Trish, however, was thinking hard, her eyes on the
+leech. "Was there anything in the agreement to prevent your accepting
+any suggestions?"
+
+He pondered. "No, I was to be given no food, drink, shelter, or any
+weapon. The old man forgot fire--that's how I came to beg some."
+
+"Fire and brains," reflected Tish. "We've given you the first and we've
+plenty of the second to offer. Now, young man, this is my plan. We'll
+give you nothing but suggestions. If now and then you find a cooked meal
+under that tree, that's accident, not design, and you'd better eat it.
+Can you sew?"
+
+"I'm like the Irishman and the fiddle--I never tried, but I guess I
+can." He was much more cheerful.
+
+"Do you have to be alone?"
+
+"I believe he took that for granted, in this costume."
+
+"Will it take you long to move over here?"
+
+"I think I can move without a van," he said, grinning. "My sole worldly
+possessions are a stone hatchet and a hairpin fishhook."
+
+"Get them and come over," commanded Tish. "When you leave this forest at
+the end of the time you are going to be fed and clothed and carry a
+tent; you will have with you smoked meat and fish; you will carry under
+your arm an Indian clock or sundial; you will have a lamp--if we can
+find a clamshell or a broken bottle--and you will have a fire-making
+outfit with your monogram on it."
+
+"But, my dear friend," he said, "I am not supposed to have any
+assistance and--"
+
+"Assistance!" Tish snapped. "Who said assistance? I'm providing the
+brains, but you'll do it all yourself."
+
+He moved over an hour or so later and Tish and I went into the tent to
+bed. Somewhat later, when she limped to the fire to see how the leech
+was filling up, he and Aggie were sitting together talking, he of
+Dorothea and Aggie of Mr. Wiggins. Tish said they were both talking at
+the same time, neither one listening to the other, and that it sounded
+like this:--"She's so sweet and trusting and honest--well, I'd believe
+what she said if she--"
+
+"--fell off a roof on a rainy day and was picked up by a man with a
+horse and buggy quite unconscious."
+
+
+
+
+V
+
+
+The next three weeks were busy times for Percy. He wore Tish's blanket
+for two days, and then, finding it in the way, he discarded it
+altogether. Seen in daylight it was easy to understand why little
+Dorothea was in love with him. He was a handsome young giant, although
+much bitten by mosquitoes and scratched with briers.
+
+The arrangement was a good one all round. He knew of things in the wood
+we'd never heard of--wild onions and artichokes, and he had found a
+clump of wild cherry trees. He made snares of the fibers of tree bark,
+and he brought in turtles and made plates out of the shells. And all the
+time he was working on his outfit, curing rabbit skins and sewing them
+together with fibers under my direction.
+
+When he'd made one sleeve of his coat we had a sort of celebration.
+He'd found an empty bottle somewhere in the woods, and he had made a
+wild-cherry decoction that he declared was cherry brandy, keeping it in
+the sun to ferment. Well, he insisted on opening the brandy that day and
+passing it round. We had cups made of leaves and we drank to his sleeve,
+although the stuff was villainous. He had put the sleeve on, and it
+looked rather inadequate. "Here's fun," he said joyously. "If my English
+tailor could see this sleeve he'd die of envy. A sleeve's not all of a
+coat, but what's a coat without a sleeve? Look at it--grace, ease of
+line, and beauty of material."
+
+Aggie lifted her leaf.
+
+"To Dorothea!" she said. "And may the sleeve soon be about her."
+
+Tish thought this toast was not delicate, but Percy was enchanted with
+it.
+
+It was on the evening of the fourth day of Percy's joining our camp that
+the Willoughby person appeared. It happened at a most inauspicious time.
+We had eaten supper and were gathered round the camp-fire and Tish had
+put wet leaves on the blaze to make a smudge that would drive the
+mosquitoes away. We were sitting there, Tish and I coughing and Aggie
+sneezing in the smoke, when Percy came running through the woods and
+stopped at the foot of a tree near by.
+
+"Bring a club, somebody," he yelled. "I've treed the back of my coat."
+
+Tish ran with one of the tent poles. A tepee is inconvenient for that
+reason. Every time any one wants a fishing-pole or a weapon, the tent
+loses part of its bony structure and sags like the face of a stout woman
+who has reduced. And it turned out that Percy had treed a coon. He
+climbed up after it, taking Tish's pole with him to dislodge it, and it
+was at that moment that a man rode into the clearing and practically
+fell off his horse. He was dirty and scratched with brambles, and his
+once immaculate riding-clothes were torn. He was about to take off his
+hat when he got a good look at us and changed his mind.
+
+"Have you got anything to eat?" he asked. "I've been lost since noon
+yesterday and I'm about all in."
+
+The leaves caught fire suddenly and sent a glow into Percy's tree. I
+shall never forget Aggie's agonized look or the way Tish flung on more
+wet leaves in a hurry.
+
+"I'm sorry," she said, "but supper's over."
+
+"But surely a starving man--"
+
+"You won't starve inside of a week," Tish snapped. "You've got enough
+flesh on you for a month."
+
+He stared at her incredulously.
+
+"But, my good woman," he said, "I can pay for my food. Even you
+itinerant folk need money now and then, don't you? Come, now, cook me a
+fish; I'll pay for it. My name is Willoughby--J.K. Willoughby. Perhaps
+you've heard of me."
+
+Tish cast a swift glance into the tree. It was in shadow again and she
+drew a long breath. She said afterward that the whole plan came to her
+in the instant of that breath.
+
+"We can give you something," she said indifferently. "We have a stewed
+rabbit, if you care for it."
+
+There was a wild scramble in the tree at that moment, and we thought all
+was over. We learned later that Percy had made a move to climb higher,
+out of the firelight, and the coon had been so startled that he almost
+fell out. But instead of looking up to investigate, the stranger backed
+toward the fire.
+
+"Only a wildcat," said Tish. "They'll not come near the fire."
+
+"Near!" exclaimed Mr. Willoughby. "If they came any nearer, they'd have
+to get into it!"
+
+"I think," said Tish, "that if you are afraid of them--although you are
+safe enough if you don't get under the trees; they jump down, you
+know--that you would better stay by the fire to-night. In the morning
+we'll start you toward a road."
+
+All night with Percy in the tree! I gave her a savage glance, but she
+ignored me.
+
+The Willoughby looked up nervously, and of course there were trees all
+about.
+
+"I guess I'll stay," he agreed. "What about that rabbit?"
+
+I did not know Tish's plan at that time, and while Aggie was feeding the
+Willoughby person and he was grumbling over his food, I took Tish aside.
+
+"Are you crazy?" I demanded. "Just through your idiocy Percy will have
+to stay in that tree all night--and he'll go to sleep, likely, and fall
+out."
+
+Tish eyed me coldly.
+
+"You are a good soul, Lizzie," she observed, "but don't overwork your
+mind. Go back and do something easy--let the Willoughby cross your palm
+with silver, and tell his fortune. If he asks any questions I'm queen of
+the gypsies, and give him to understand that we're in temporary hiding
+from the law. The worse he thinks of us the better. Remember, we haven't
+seen Percy."
+
+"I'm not going to lie," I said sternly.
+
+"Pooh!" Tish sneered. "That wretch came into the woods to gloat over his
+rival's misery. The truth's too good for him."
+
+I did my best, and I still have the silver dollar he gave me. I told him
+I saw a small girl, who loved him but didn't realize it yet, and there
+was another man.
+
+"Good gracious," I said, "there must be something wrong with your palm.
+I see the other man, but he seems to be in trouble. His clothing has
+been stolen, for he has none, and he is hungry, very hungry."
+
+"Ha!" said Mr. Willoughby, looking startled. "You old gypsies beat the
+devil! Hungry, eh? Is that all?"
+
+The light flared up again and I could see clearly the pale spot in the
+tree, which was Percy. But Mr. Willoughby's eyes were on his palm.
+
+"He has about decided to give up something--I cannot see just what," I
+said loudly. "He seems to be in the air, in a tree, perhaps. If he
+wishes to be safe he should go higher."
+
+Percy took the hint and moved up, and I said that was all there was in
+the palm. Soon after that Mr. Willoughby stretched out on the ground by
+the fire, and before long he was asleep.
+
+During the night I heard Tish moving stealthily about in the tepee and
+she stepped on my ankle as she went out. I fell asleep again as soon as
+it stopped aching. Just at dawn Tish came back and touched me on the
+shoulder.
+
+"Where's the blackberry cordial?" she whispered I sat up instantly.
+
+"Has Percy fallen out of the tree?"
+
+"No. Don't ask any questions, Lizzie. I want it for myself. That dratted
+horse fell on me."
+
+She refused to say any more and lay down groaning. But I was too worried
+to sleep again. In the morning Percy was gone from the tree. Mr.
+Willoughby had more rabbit and prepared to leave the forest. He offered
+Tish a dollar for the two meals and a bed, and Tish, who was moving
+about stiffly, said that she and her people took no money for their
+hospitality. Telling fortunes was one thing, bread and salt was another.
+She looked quite haughty, and the Willoughby person apologized and went
+into the woods to get his horse.
+
+The horse was gone!
+
+It was rather disagreeable for a time. He plainly thought we'd taken it,
+although Tish showed him that the end of the strap had been chewed
+partly through and then jerked free.
+
+"If the creature smelled a wildcat," she said, "nothing would hold it.
+None of my people ever bring a horse into this part of the country."
+
+"Humph!" said Mr. Willoughby. "Well, I'll bet they take a few out!"
+
+He departed on foot shortly after, very disgusted and suspicious. We
+showed him the trail, and the last we saw of him he was striding along,
+looking up now and then for wildcats.
+
+When he was well on his way, Percy emerged from the bushes. I had
+thought that he had helped Tish to take the Willoughby horse, but it
+seems he had not, and he was much amazed when Tish came through the wood
+leading the creature by the broken strap.
+
+"I'll turn it loose," she said to Percy, "and you can capture it. It
+will make a good effect for you to emerge from the forest on horseback,
+and anyhow, what with the rabbit skin, the tent, and the sundial and the
+other things, you have a lot to carry. You can say you found it straying
+in the woods and captured it."
+
+Percy looked at her with admiration not unmixed with reverence. "Miss
+Letitia," he said solemnly, "if it were not for Dorothea, I should ask
+you to marry me. I'd like to have you in my family."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I am very nearly to the end of my narrative.
+
+Toward the last Percy was obliged to work far into the night, for of
+course we could not assist him. He made a full suit of rabbit skins
+sewed with fibers, and a cap and shoes of coonskin to match. The shoes
+were cut from a bedroom-slipper pattern that Tish traced in the sand on
+the beach, and the cap had an eagle feather in it. He made a birch-bark
+knapsack to hold the fish he smoked and a bow and arrow that looked well
+but would not shoot. When he had the outfit completed, he put it on,
+with the stone hatchet stuck into a grapevine belt and the bow and arrow
+over his shoulder, and he looked superb.
+
+"The question is," he reflected, trying to view himself in the edge of
+the lake: "Will Dorothea like it? She's very keen about clothes. And
+gee, how she hates a beard!"
+
+"You could shave as the Indians do," Tish said.
+
+"How?"
+
+"With a clamshell."
+
+He looked dubious, but Tish assured him it was feasible. So he hunted a
+clamshell, a double one, Tish requested, and brought it into camp.
+
+"I'd better do it for you," said Tish. "It's likely to be slow, but it
+is sure."
+
+He was eyeing the clamshell and looking more and more uneasy.
+
+"You're not going to scrape it off?" he asked anxiously. "You know,
+pumice would be better for that, but somehow I don't like the idea."
+
+"Nothing of the sort," said Tish. "The double clamshell merely forms a
+pair of Indian nippers. I'm going to pull it out."
+
+But he made quite a fuss about it, and said he didn't care whether the
+Indians did it or not, he wouldn't. I think he saw how disappointed Tish
+was and was afraid she would attempt it while he slept, for he threw the
+Indian nippers into the lake and then went over and kissed her hand.
+
+"Dear Miss Tish," he said; "no one realizes more than I your inherent
+nobility of soul and steadfastness of purpose. I admire them both. But
+if you attempt the Indian nipper business, or to singe me like a chicken
+while I sleep, I shall be--forgive me, but I know my impulsiveness of
+disposition--I shall be really vexed with you."
+
+Toward the last we all became uneasy for fear hard work was telling on
+him physically. He used to sit cross-legged on the ground, sewing for
+dear life and singing Hood's "Song of the Shirt" in a doleful tenor.
+
+"You know," he said, "I've thought once or twice I'd like to do
+something--have a business like other fellows. But somehow dressmaking
+never occurred to me. Don't you think the expression of this right pant
+is good? And shall I make this gore bias or on the selvage?"
+
+He wanted to slash one trouser leg.
+
+"Why not?" he demanded when Tish frowned him down. "It's awfully
+fetching, and beauty half-revealed, you know. Do you suppose my
+breastbone will ever straighten out again? It's concave from stooping."
+
+It was after this that Tish made him exercise morning and evening and
+then take a swim in the lake. By the time he was to start back, he was
+in wonderful condition, and even the horse looked saucy and shiny, owing
+to our rubbing him down each day with dried grasses.
+
+The actual leave-taking was rather sad. We'd grown to think a lot of the
+boy and I believe he liked us. He kissed each one of us twice, once for
+himself and once for Dorothea, and flushed a little over doing it, and
+Aggie's eyes were full of tears.
+
+He rode away down the trail like a mixture of Robinson Crusoe and Indian
+brave, his rubbing-fire stick, his sundial with burned figures, and his
+bow and arrow jingling, his eagle feather blowing back in the wind, and
+his moccasined feet thrust into Mr. Willoughby's stirrups, and left us
+desolate. Tish watched him out of sight with set lips and Aggie was
+whimpering on a bank.
+
+"Tish," she said brokenly, "does he recall anything to you?"
+
+"Only my age," said Tish rather wearily, "and that I'm an elderly
+spinster teaching children to defy their parents and committing larceny
+to help them."
+
+"To me," said Aggie softly, "he is young love going out to seek his
+mate. Oh, Tish, do you remember how Mr. Wiggins used to ride by taking
+his work horses to be shod!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+We went home the following day, which was the time the spring-wagon man
+was to meet us. We started very early and were properly clothed and
+hatted when we saw him down the road.
+
+The spring-wagon person came on without hurry and surveyed us as he
+came.
+
+"Well, ladies," he said, stopping before us, "I see you pulled it off
+all right."
+
+"We've had a very nice time, thank you," said Tish, drawing on her
+gloves. "It's been rather lonely, of course."
+
+The spring-wagon person did not speak again until he had reached the
+open road. Then he turned round.
+
+"The horse business was pretty good," he said. "You ought to hev seen
+them folks when he rode out of the wood. Flabbergasted ain't the word.
+They was ding-busted."
+
+Tish whispered to us to show moderate interest and to say as little as
+possible, except to protest our ignorance. And we got the story at last
+like this:--
+
+It seems the newspapers had been full of the attempt Percy was to make,
+and so on the day before quite a crowd had gathered to see him come out
+of the wood.
+
+"Ten of these here automobiles," said the spring-wagon person, "and a
+hay-wagon full of newspaper fellows from the city with cameras, and
+about half the village back home walked out or druv and brought their
+lunches--sort of a picnic. I kep' my eye on the girl and on a Mr.
+Willoughby.
+
+"The story is that Willoughby who was the father's choice--Willoughby
+was pale and twitching and kep' moving about all the time. But the girl,
+she just kep' her eyes on the trail and waited. Noon was the time set,
+or as near it as possible.
+
+"The father talked to the newspaper men mostly. 'I don't think he'll
+do it, boys!' he said. 'He's as soft as milk and he's surprised me by
+sticking it out as long as he has. But mark my words, boys,' he said,
+'he's been living on berries and things he could pick up off the ground,
+and if his physical condition's bad he loses all bets!"
+
+It seems that, just as he said it, somebody pulled out a watch and
+announced "noon." And on the instant Percy was seen riding down the
+trail and whistling. At first they did not know it was he, as they had
+expected him to arrive on foot, staggering with fatigue probably. He
+rode out into the sunlight, still whistling, and threw an unconcerned
+glance over the crowd.
+
+He looked at the trees, and located north by the moss on the trunks, the
+S.-W.P. said, and unslinging his Indian clock he held it in front of
+him, pointing north and south. It showed exactly noon. It was then, and
+not until then, that Percy addressed the astonished crowd.
+
+"Twelve o'clock, gentlemen," he said. "My watch is quite accurate."
+
+Nobody said anything, being, as the S.-W.P. remarked, struck dumb. But
+a moment afterward the hay-wagon started a cheer and the machines took
+it up. Even the father "let loose," as we learned, and the little girl
+sat back in her motor car and smiled through her tears.
+
+But Willoughby was furious. It seems he had recognized the horse.
+"That's my horse," he snarled. "You stole it from me."
+
+"As a matter of fact," Percy retorted, "I found the beast wandering
+loose among the trees and I'm perfectly willing to return him to you. I
+brought him out for a purpose."
+
+"To make a Garrison finish!"
+
+"Not entirely. To prove that you violated the contract by going into the
+forest to see if you could find me and gloat over my misery. Instead you
+found--By the way, Willoughby, did you see any wild-cats?"
+
+"Those three hags are in this!" said Willoughby furiously. "Are you
+willing to swear you made that silly outfit?"
+
+"I am, but not to you."
+
+"And at that minute, if you'll believe me," said the S.-W.P., "the girl
+got out of her machine and walked right up to the Percy fellow. I was
+standing right by and I heard what she said. It was, curious, seeing
+he'd had no help and had gone in naked, as you may say, and came out
+clothed head to foot, with a horse and weapons and a watch, and able to
+make fire in thirty-one seconds, and a tent made of about a thousand
+rabbit skins."
+
+Tish eyed him coldly.
+
+"What did she say?" she demanded severely. "She said: 'Those three dear
+old things!'" replied the S.-W.P. "And she said: 'I hope you kissed
+them for me.'"
+
+"He did indeed," said Aggie dreamily, and only roused when Tish nudged
+her in a rage.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Charlie Sands came to have tea with us yesterday at Tish's. He is just
+back from England and full of the subject.
+
+"But after all," he said, "the Simple Lifers take the palm. Think of it,
+my three revered and dearly beloved spinster friends; think of the
+peace, the holy calm of it! Now, if you three would only drink less tea
+and once in a while would get back to Nature a bit, it would be good for
+you. You're all too civilized."
+
+"Probably," said Tish, pulling down her sleeves to hide her sunburned
+hands. "But do you think people have so much time in the--er--woods?"
+
+"Time!" he repeated. "Why, what is there to do?"
+
+Just then the doorbell rang and a huge box was carried in. Tish had a
+warning and did not wish to open it, but Charlie Sands insisted and cut
+the string. Inside were three sets of sable furs, handsomer than any in
+the church, Tish says, and I know I've never seen any like them.
+
+Tish and I hid the cards, but Aggie dropped hers and Charlie Sands
+pounced on it.
+
+"'The sleeve is now about Dorothea,'" he read aloud, and then, turning,
+eyed us all sternly.
+
+"Now, then," said Charlie Sands, "out with it! What have you been up to
+this time?"
+
+Tish returned his gaze calmly. "We have been in the Maine woods in the
+holy calm," she said. "As for those furs, I suppose a body may buy a set
+of furs if she likes." This, of course, was not a lie. "As for that
+card, it's a mistake." Which it was indeed.
+
+"But--Dorothea!" persisted Charlie Sands.
+
+"Never in my life knew anybody named Dorothea. Did you, Aggie?"
+
+"Never," said Aggie firmly.
+
+Charlie Sands apologized and looked thoughtful. On Tish's remaining
+rather injured, he asked us all out to dinner that night, and almost the
+first thing he ordered was frogs' legs. Aggie got rather white about the
+lips.
+
+"I--I think I'll not take any," she said feebly. "I--I keep thinking of
+Tish tickling their throats with the hairpin, and how Percy--"
+
+We glared at her, but it was too late. Charlie Sands drew up his chair
+and rested his elbows on the table.
+
+"So there was a Percy as well as a Dorothea!" he said cheerfully. "I
+might have known it. Now we'll have the story!"
+
+
+
+
+TISH'S SPY
+
+THE ADVENTURE OF THE RED-HEADED DETECTIVE, THE LADY CHAUFFEUR, AND THE
+MAN WHO COULD NOT TELL THE TRUTH
+
+I
+
+
+It is easy enough, of course, to look back on our Canadian experience
+and see where we went wrong. What I particularly resent is the attitude
+of Charlie Sands.
+
+I am writing this for his benefit. It seems to me that a clean statement
+of the case is due to Tish, and, in less degree, to Aggie and myself.
+
+It goes back long before the mysterious cipher. Even the incident of our
+abducting the girl in the pink tam-o'-shanter was, after all, the
+inevitable result of the series of occurrences that preceded it.
+
+It is my intention to give this series of occurrences in their proper
+order and without bias. Herbert Spencer says that every act of one's
+life is the unavoidable result of every act that has preceded it.
+
+Naturally, therefore, I begin with the engagement by Tish of a girl as
+chauffeur; but even before that there were contributing causes. There
+was the faulty rearing of the McDonald youth, for instance, and Tish's
+sthetic dancing. And afterward there was Aggie's hay fever, which made
+her sneeze and let go of a rope at a critical moment. Indeed, Aggie's
+hay fever may be said to be one of the fundamental causes, being the
+reason we went to Canada.
+
+It was like this: Along in June of the year before last, Aggie suddenly
+announced that she was going to spend the summer in Canada.
+
+"It's the best thing in the world for hay fever," she said, avoiding
+Tish's eye. "Mrs. Ostermaier says she never sneezed once last year. The
+Northern Lights fill the air with ozone, or something like that."
+
+"Fill the air with ozone!" Tish scoffed. "Fill Mrs. Ostermaier's skull
+with ozone, instead of brains, more likely!"
+
+Tish is a good woman--a sweet woman, indeed; but she has a vein of
+gentle irony, which she inherited from her maternal grandfather, who was
+on the Supreme Bench of his country. However, that spring she was
+inclined to be irritable. She could not drive her car, and that was
+where the trouble really started.
+
+Tish had taken up sthetic dancing in Mareb, wearing no stays and a
+middy blouse and short skirt; and during a fairy dance, where she was to
+twirl on her right toes, keeping the three other limbs horizontal, she
+twisted her right lower limb severely. Though not incapacitated, she
+could not use it properly; and, failing one day to put on the brake
+quickly, she drove into an open-front butter-and-egg shop.
+
+[This was the time one of the newspapers headed the article: "Even the
+Eggs Scrambled."]
+
+When Tish decided to have a chauffeur for a time she advertised. There
+were plenty of replies, but all of the applicants smoked cigarettes--a
+habit Tish very properly deplores. The idea of securing a young woman
+was, I must confess, mine.
+
+"Plenty of young women drive cars," I said, "and drive well. And, at
+least, they don't light a cigarette every time one stops to let a train
+go by."
+
+"Huh!" Tish commented. "And have a raft of men about all the time!"
+
+Nevertheless, she acted on the suggestion, advertising for a young woman
+who could drive a car and had no followers. Hutchins answered.
+
+She was very pretty and not over twenty; but, asked about men, her face
+underwent a change, almost a hardening. "You'll not be bothered with
+men," she said briefly. "I detest them!"
+
+And this seemed to be the truth. Charlie Sands, for instance, for whose
+benefit this is being written, absolutely failed to make any impression
+on her. She met his overtures with cold disdain. She was also adamant
+to the men at the garage, succeeding in having the gasoline filtered
+through a chamois skin to take out the water, where Tish had for years
+begged for the same thing without success.
+
+Though a dashing driver, Hutchins was careful. She sat on the small of
+her back and hurled us past the traffic policemen with a smile.
+
+[Her name was really Hutchinson; but it took so long to say it at the
+rate she ran the car that Tish changed it to Hutchins.]
+
+Really the whole experiment seemed to be an undoubted success, when
+Aggie got the notion of Canada into her head. Now, as it happened,
+owing to Tish's disapproval, Aggie gave up the Canada idea in favor
+of Nantucket, some time in June; but she had not reckoned with Tish's
+subconscious self. Tish was interested that spring in the subconscious
+self.
+
+You may remember that, only a year or so before, it had been the fourth
+dimension.
+
+[She became convinced that if one were sufficiently earnest one could go
+through closed doors and see into solids. In the former ambition she was
+unsuccessful, obtaining only bruises and disappointment; but she did
+develop the latter to a certain extent, for she met the laundress going
+out one day and, without a conscious effort, she knew that she had the
+best table napkins pinned to her petticoat. She accused the woman
+sternly--and she had six!]
+
+"Nantucket!" said Tish. "Why Nantucket?"
+
+"I have a niece there, and you said you hated Canada."
+
+"On the contrary," Tish replied, with her eyes partly shut, "I find
+that my subconscious self has adopted and been working on the Canadian
+suggestion. What a wonderful thing is this buried and greater ego!
+Worms, rifles, fishing-rods, 'The Complete Angler,' mosquito netting,
+canned goods, and sleeping-bags, all in my mind and in orderly array!"
+
+"Worms!" I said, with, I confess, a touch of scorn in my voice. "If you
+will tell me, Tish Carberry--"
+
+"Life preservers," chanted Tish's subconscious self, "rubber blankets,
+small tent, folding camp-beds, a camp-stove, a meat-saw, a wood-saw,
+and some beads and gewgaws for placating the Indians." Then she opened
+her eyes and took up her knitting. "There are no worms in Canada,
+Lizzie, just as there are no snakes in Ireland. They were all destroyed
+during the glacial period."
+
+"There are plenty of worms in the United States," I said with spirit.
+"I dare say they could crawl over the border--unless, of course, they
+object to being British subjects."
+
+She ignored me, however, and, getting up, went to one of her bureau
+drawers. We saw then that her subconscious self had written down
+lists of various things for the Canadian excursion. There was one
+headed Foodstuffs. Others were: Necessary Clothing: Camp Outfit;
+Fishing-Tackle; Weapons of Defense: and Diversions. Under this last
+heading it had placed binoculars, yarn and needles, life preservers,
+a prayer-book, and a cribbage-board.
+
+"Boats," she said, "we can secure from the Indians, who make them, I
+believe, of hollow logs. And I shall rent a motor boat. Hutchins says
+she can manage one. When she's not doing that she can wash dishes."
+
+[We had been rather chary of motor boats, you may remember, since the
+time on Lake Penzance, when something jammed on our engine, and we had
+gone madly round the lake a number of times, with people on various
+docks trying to lasso us with ropes.]
+
+Considering that it was she who had started the whole thing, and got
+Tish's subconscious mind to working, Aggie was rather pettish.
+
+"Huh!" she said. "I can't swim, and you know it, Tish. Those canoe
+things turn over if you so much as sneeze in them."
+
+"You'll not sneeze," said Tish. "The Northern Lights fill the air with
+ozone."
+
+Aggie looked at me helplessly; but I could do nothing. Only the year
+before, Tish, as you may recall, had taken us out into the Maine woods
+without any outfit at all, and we had lived on snared rabbits, and
+things that no Christian woman ought to put into her stomach. This time
+we were at least to go provisioned and equipped.
+
+"Where are we going?" Aggie asked.
+
+"Far from a white man," said Tish. "Away from milk wagons and children
+on velocipedes and the grocer calling up every morning for an order.
+We'll go to the Far North, Aggie, where the red man still treads his
+native forests; we'll make our camp by some lake, where the deer come at
+early morning to drink and fish leap to see the sunset."
+
+Well, it sounded rather refreshing, though I confess that, until Tish
+mentioned it, I had always thought that fish leaped in the evening to
+catch mosquitoes.
+
+We sent for Hutchins at once. She was always respectful, but never
+subservient. She stood in the doorway while Tish explained.
+
+"How far north?" she said crisply. Tish told her. "We'll have no
+cut-and-dried destination," she said. "There's a little steamer goes up
+the river I have in mind. We'll get off when we see a likely place."
+
+"Are you going for trout or bass?"
+
+Tish was rather uncertain, but she said bass on a chance, and Hutchins
+nodded her approval.
+
+"If it's bass, I'll go," she said. "I'm not fond of trout-fishing."
+
+"We shall have a motor boat. Of course I shall not take the car."
+
+Hutchins agreed indifferently. "Don't you worry about the motor boat,"
+she said. "Sometimes they go, and sometimes they don't. And I'll help
+round the camp; but I'll not wash dishes."
+
+"Why not?" Tish demanded.
+
+"The reason doesn't really matter, does it? What really concerns you is
+the fact."
+
+Tish stared at her; but instead of quailing before Tish's majestic eye
+she laughed a little.
+
+"I've camped before," she said. "I'm very useful about a camp. I like to
+cook; but I won't wash dishes. I'd like, if you don't mind, to see the
+grocery order before it goes."
+
+Well, Aggie likes to wash dishes if there is plenty of hot water; and
+Hannah, Tish's maid, refusing to go with us on account of Indians, it
+seemed wisest to accept Hutchins's services.
+
+Hannah's defection was most unexpected. As soon as we reached our
+decision, Tish ordered beads for the Indians; and in the evenings we
+strung necklaces, and so on, while one of us read aloud from the works
+of Cooper. On the second evening thus occupied, Hannah, who is allowed
+to come into Tish's sitting-room in the evening and knit, suddenly
+burst into tears and refused to go.
+
+"My scalp's as good to me as it is to anybody, Miss Tish," she said
+hysterically; and nothing would move her.
+
+She said she would run no risk of being cooked over her own camp-fire;
+and from that time on she would gaze at Tish for long periods
+mournfully, as though she wanted to remember how she looked when she was
+gone forever.
+
+Except for Hannah, everything moved smoothly. Tish told Charlie Sands
+about the plan, and he was quite enthusiastic.
+
+"Great scheme!" he said. "Eat a broiled black bass for me. And take the
+advice of one who knows: don't skimp on your fishing-tackle. Get the
+best. Go light on the canned goods, if necessary; but get the best reels
+and lines on the market. Nothing in life hurts so much," he said
+impressively, "as to get a three-pound bass to the top of the water and
+have your line break. I've had a big fellow get away like that and chase
+me a mile with its thumb on its nose." This last, of course, was purely
+figurative.
+
+He went away whistling. I wish he had been less optimistic. When we came
+back and told him the whole story, and he sat with his mouth open and
+his hair, as he said, crackling at the roots, I reminded him with some
+bitterness that he had encouraged us. His only retort was to say that
+the excursion itself had been harmless enough; but that if three elderly
+ladies, church members in good standing, chose to become freebooters and
+pirates the moment they got away from a corner policeman, they need not
+blame him.
+
+The last thing he said that day in June was about fishing-worms.
+
+"Take 'em with you," he said. "They charge a cent apiece for them up
+there, assorted colors, and there's something stolid and British about a
+Canadian worm. The fish aren't crazy about 'em. On the other hand, our
+worms here are--er--vivacious, animated. I've seen a really brisk and
+on-to-its-job United States worm reach out and clutch a bass by the
+gills."
+
+I believe it was the next day that Tish went to the library and read
+about worms. Aggie and I had spent the day buying tackle, according to
+Charlie Sands's advice. We got some very good rods with nickel-plated
+reels for two dollars and a quarter, a dozen assorted hooks for each
+person, and a dozen sinkers. The man wanted to sell us what he called a
+"landing net," but I took a good look at it and pinched Aggie.
+
+"I can make one out of a barrel hoop and mosquito netting," I whispered;
+so we did not buy it.
+
+Perhaps he thought we were novices, for he insisted on showing us all
+sorts of absurd things--trolling-hooks, he called them; gaff hooks for
+landing big fish and a spoon that was certainly no spoon and did not
+fool us for a minute, being only a few hooks and a red feather. He asked
+a dollar and a quarter for it!
+
+[I made one that night at home, using a bit of red feather from a
+duster. It cost me just three cents. Of that, as of Hutchins, more
+later.]
+
+Aggie, whose idea of Canada had been the Hotel Frontenac, had grown
+rather depressed as our preparations proceeded. She insisted that night
+on recalling the fact that Mr. Wiggins had been almost drowned in
+Canada.
+
+"He went with the Roof and Gutter Club, Lizzie," she said, "and he was a
+beautiful swimmer; but the water comes from the North Pole, freezing
+cold, and the first thing he knew--"
+
+The telephone bell rang just then. It was Tish.
+
+"I've just come from the library, Lizzie," she said. "We'd better raise
+the worms. We've got a month to do it in. Hutchins and I will be round
+with the car at eight o'clock to-night. Night is the time to get them."
+
+She refused to go into details, but asked us to have an electric flash
+or two ready and a couple of wooden pails. Also she said to wear
+mackintoshes and rubbers. Just before she rang off, she asked me to see
+that there was a package of oatmeal on hand, but did not explain. When I
+told Aggie she eyed me miserably.
+
+"I wish she'd be either more explicit or less," she said. "We'll be
+arrested again. I know it!"
+
+[Now and then Tish's enthusiasms have brought us into collision with the
+law--not that Tish has not every respect for law and order, but that she
+is apt to be hasty and at times almost unconventional.]
+
+"You remember," said Aggie, "that time she tried to shoot the sheriff,
+thinking he was a train robber? She started just like this--reading up
+about walking-tours, and all that. I--I'm nervous, Lizzie."
+
+I was staying with Aggie for a few days while my apartment was being
+papered. To soothe Aggie's nerves I read aloud from Gibbon's "Rome"
+until dinner-time, and she grew gradually calmer.
+
+"After all, Lizzie," she said, "she can't get us into mischief with two
+wooden pails and a package of oatmeal."
+
+Tish and Hutchins came promptly at eight and we got into the car. Tish
+wore the intent and dreamy look that always preceded her enterprises.
+There was a tin sprinkling-can, quite new, in the tonneau, and we placed
+our wooden pails beside it and the oatmeal in it. I confess I was
+curious, but to my inquiries Tish made only one reply:--
+
+"Worms!"
+
+Now I do not like worms. I do not like to touch them. I do not even like
+to look at them. As the machine went along I began to have a creepy
+loathing of them. Aggie must have been feeling the same way, for when my
+hand touched hers she squealed.
+
+Over her shoulder Tish told her plan. She said it was easy to get
+fishing-worms at night and that Hutchins knew of a place a few miles out
+of town where the family was away and where there would be plenty.
+
+"We'll put them in boxes of earth," she said, "and feed them coffee or
+tea grounds one day and oatmeal water the next. They propagate rapidly.
+We'll have a million to take with us. If we only have a hundred thousand
+at a cent apiece, that's a clear saving of a thousand dollars."
+
+"We could sell some," I suggested sarcastically; for Tish's enthusiasms
+have a way of going wrong.
+
+But she took me seriously. "If there are any fishing clubs about," she
+said, "I dare say they'll buy them; and we can turn the money over to
+Mr. Ostermaier for the new organ."
+
+Tish had bought the organ and had an evening concert with it before we
+turned off the main road into a private drive.
+
+"This is the place," Hutchins said laconically.
+
+Tish got out and took a survey. There was shrubbery all round and a very
+large house, quite dark, in the foreground.
+
+"Drive onto the lawn, Hutchins," she said. "When the worms come up, the
+lamps will dazzle them and they'll be easy to capture."
+
+We bumped over a gutter and came to a stop in the middle of the lawn.
+
+"It would be better if it was raining," Tish said. "You know, yourself,
+Lizzie, how they come up during a gentle rain. Give me the
+sprinkling-can."
+
+I do not wish to lay undue blame on Hutchins, who was young; but it was
+she who suggested that there would probably be a garden hose somewhere
+and that it would save time. I know she went with Tish round the corner
+of the house, and that they returned in ten minutes or so, dragging a
+hose.
+
+"I broke a tool-house window," Tish observed, "but I left fifty cents
+on the sill to replace it. It's attached at the other end. Run back,
+Hutchins, and turn on the water; but not too much. We needn't drown the
+little creatures."
+
+Well, I have never seen anything work better. Aggie, who had refused to
+put a foot out of the car, stood up in it and held the hose. As fast as
+she wet a bit of lawn, we followed with the pails. I spread my
+mackintosh out and knelt on it.
+
+[Illustration: As fast as she wet a bit of lawn, we followed with the
+pails]
+
+The thing took skill. The worms had a way of snapping back into their
+holes like lightning.
+
+Tish got about three to my one, and talked about packing them in moss
+and ice, and feeding them every other day. Hutchins, however, stood on
+the lawn, with her hands in her pockets, and watched the house.
+
+Suddenly, without warning, Aggie turned the hose directly on my left ear
+and held it there.
+
+"There's somebody coming!" she cried. "Merciful Heavens, what'll I do
+with the hose?"
+
+"You can turn it away from me!" I snapped.
+
+So she did, and at that instant a young man emerged from the shrubbery.
+
+He did not speak at once. Probably he could not. I happened to look at
+Hutchins, and, for all her usual _savoir-faire_, as Charlie Sands called
+it, she was clearly uncomfortable.
+
+Tish, engaged in a struggle at that moment and sitting back like a
+robin, did not see him at once.
+
+"Well!" said the young man; and again: "Well, upon my word!"
+
+He seemed out of breath with surprise; and he took off his hat and
+mopped his head with a handkerchief. And, of course, as though things
+were not already bad enough, Aggie sneezed at that instant, as she
+always does when she is excited; and for just a second the hose was
+on him.
+
+It was unexpected and he almost staggered. He looked at all of us,
+including Hutchins, and ran his handkerchief round inside his collar.
+Then he found his voice.
+
+"Really," he said, "this is awfully good of you. We do need rain--don't
+we?"
+
+Tish was on her feet by that time, but she could not think of anything
+to say.
+
+"I'm sorry if I startled you," said the young man. "I--I'm a bit
+startled myself."
+
+"There is nothing to make a fuss about!" said Hutchins crisply. "We are
+getting worms to go fishing."
+
+"I see," said the young man. "Quite natural, I'm sure. And where are you
+going fishing?"
+
+Hutchins surprised us all by rudely turning her back on him. Considering
+we were on his property and had turned his own hose on him, a little
+tact would have been better.
+
+Tish had found her voice by that time. "We broke a window in the
+tool-house," she said; "but I put fifty cents on the sill."
+
+"Thank you," said the young man.
+
+Hutchins wheeled at that and stared at him in the most disagreeable
+fashion; but he ignored her.
+
+"We are trespassing," said Tish; "but I hope you understand. We thought
+the family was away."
+
+"I just happened to be passing through," he explained. "I'm awfully
+attached to the place--for various reasons. Whenever I'm in town I spend
+my evenings wandering through the shrubbery and remembering--er--happier
+days."
+
+"I think the lamps are going out," said Hutchins sharply. "If we're to
+get back to town--"
+
+"Ah!" he broke in. "So you have come out from the city?"
+
+"Surely," said Hutchins to Tish, "it is unnecessary to give this
+gentleman any information about ourselves! We have done no damage--"
+
+"Except the window," he said.
+
+"We've paid for that," she said in a nasty tone; and to Tish: "How do we
+know this place is his? He's probably some newspaper man, and if you
+tell him who you are this whole thing will be in the morning paper, like
+the eggs."
+
+"I give you my word of honor," he said, "that I am nothing of the sort;
+in fact, if you will give me a little time I'd--I'd like to tell all
+about myself. I've got a lot to say that's highly interesting, if you'll
+only listen."
+
+Hutchins, however, only gave him a cold glance of suspicion and put the
+pails in the car. Then she got in and sat down.
+
+"I take it," he said to her, "that you decline either to give or to
+receive any information."
+
+"Absolutely!"
+
+He sighed then, Aggie declares.
+
+"Of course," he said, "though I haven't really the slightest curiosity,
+I could easily find out, you know. Your license plates--"
+
+"Are under the cushion I'm sitting on," said Hutchins, and started the
+engine.
+
+"Really, Hutchins," said Tish, "I don't see any reason for being so
+suspicious. I have always believed in human nature and seldom have I
+been disappointed. The young man has done nothing to justify rudeness.
+And since we are trespassing on his place--"
+
+"Huh!" was all Hutchins said.
+
+The young man sauntered over to the car, with his hands thrust into this
+coat pockets. He was nice-looking, especially then, when he was smiling.
+
+"Hutchins!" he said. "Well, that's a clue anyhow. It--it's an uncommon
+name. You didn't happen to notice a large 'No-Trespassing!' sign by the
+gate, did you?"
+
+Hutchins only looked ahead and ignored him. As Tish said afterward, we
+had a good many worms, anyhow; and, as the young man and Hutchins had
+clearly taken an awful dislike to each other at first sight, the best
+way to avoid trouble was to go home. So she got into the car. The young
+man helped her and took off his hat.
+
+"Come out any time you like," he said affably. "I'm not here at all in
+the daytime, and the grounds are really rather nice. Come out and get
+some roses. We've some pretty good ones--English importations. If you
+care to bring some children from the tenements out for a picnic, please
+feel free to do it. We're not selfish."
+
+Hutchins rudely started the car before he had finished; but he ignored
+her and waved a cordial farewell to the rest of us.
+
+"Bring as many as you like," he called. "Sunday is a good day. Ask
+Miss--Miss Hutchins to come out and bring some friends along."
+
+We drove back at the most furious rate. Tish was at last compelled to
+remonstrate with Hutchins.
+
+"Not only are we going too fast," she said, "but you were really rude to
+that nice young man."
+
+"I wish I had turned the hose on him and drowned him!" said Hutchins
+between her teeth.
+
+
+
+
+II
+
+
+Hutchins brought a newspaper to Tish the next morning at breakfast, and
+Tish afterwards said her expression was positively malevolent in such a
+young and pretty woman.
+
+The newspaper said that an attempt had been made to rob the Newcomb
+place the night before, but that the thieves had apparently secured
+nothing but a package of oatmeal and a tin sprinkling-can, which they
+had abandoned on the lawn. Some color, however, was lent to the fear
+that they had secured an amount of money, from the fact that a silver
+half-dollar had been found on the window sill of a tool-house. The
+Newcomb family was at its summer home on the Maine coast.
+
+"You see," Hutchins said to Tish, "that man didn't belong there at all.
+He was just impertinent and--laughing in his sleeve."
+
+Tish was really awfully put out, having planned to take the Sunday
+school there for a picnic. She was much pleased, however, at Hutchins's
+astuteness.
+
+"I shall take her along to Canada," she said to me. "The girl has
+instinct, which is better than reason. Her subconsciousness is unusually
+active."
+
+Looking back, as I must, and knowing now all that was in her small head
+while she whistled about the car, or all that was behind her smile,
+one wonders if women really should have the vote. So many of them are
+creatures of sex and guile. A word from her would have cleared up so
+much, and she never spoke it!
+
+Well, we spent most of July in getting ready to go. Charlie Sands said
+the mosquitoes and black flies would be gone by August, and we were in
+no hurry.
+
+We bought a good tent, with a diagram of how to put it up, some folding
+camp-beds, and a stove. The day we bought the tent we had rather a
+shock, for as we left the shop the suburban youth passed us. We ignored
+him completely, but he lifted his hat. Hutchins, who was waiting in
+Tish's car, saw him, too, and went quite white with fury.
+
+Shortly after that, Hannah came in one night and said that a man was
+watching Tish's windows. We thought it was imagination, and Tish gave
+her a dose of sulphur and molasses--her liver being sluggish.
+
+"Probably an Indian, I dare say," was Tish's caustic comment.
+
+In view of later developments, however, it is a pity we did not
+investigate Hannah's story; for Aggie, going home from Tish's late one
+night in Tish's car, had a similar experience, declaring that a small
+machine had followed them, driven by a heavy-set man with a mustache.
+She said, too, that Hutchins, swerving sharply, had struck the smaller
+machine a glancing blow and almost upset it.
+
+It was about the middle of July, I believe, that Tish received the
+following letter:--
+
+ _Madam_: Learning that you have decided to take a fishing-trip in
+ Canada, I venture to offer my services as guide, philosopher, and
+ friend. I know Canada thoroughly; can locate bass, as nearly as it
+ lies in a mortal so to do; can manage a motor launch; am thoroughly
+ at home in a canoe; can shoot, swim, and cook--the last indifferently
+ well; know the Indian mind and my own--and will carry water and chop
+ wood.
+
+ I do not drink, and such smoking as I do will, if I am engaged, be
+ done in the solitude of the woods.
+
+ I am young and of a cheerful disposition. My object is not money, but
+ only expenses paid and a chance to forget a recent and still poignant
+ grief. I hope you will see the necessity for such an addition to your
+ party, and allow me to subscribe myself, madam,
+
+ Your most obedient servant,
+
+ J. UPDIKE.
+
+
+Tish was much impressed; but Hutchins, in whose judgment she began to
+have the greatest confidence, opposed the idea.
+
+"I wouldn't think of it," she said briefly.
+
+"Why? It's a frank, straightforward letter."
+
+"He likes himself too much. And you should always be suspicious of
+anything that's offered too cheap."
+
+So the Updike application was refused. I have often wondered since what
+would have been the result had we accepted it!
+
+The worms were doing well, though Tish found that Hannah neglected them,
+and was compelled to feed them herself. On the day before we started, we
+packed them carefully in ice and moss, and fed them. That was the day
+the European war was declared.
+
+"Canada is at war," Tish telephoned. "The papers say the whole country
+is full of spies, blowing up bridges and railroads."
+
+"We can still go to the seashore," I said. "The bead things will do for
+the missionary box to Africa."
+
+"Seashore nothing!" Tish retorted. "We're going, of course,--just as we
+planned. We'll keep our eyes open; that's all. I'm not for one side or
+the other, but a spy's a spy."
+
+Later that evening she called again to say there were rumors that the
+Canadian forests were bristling with German wireless outfits.
+
+"I've a notion to write J. Updike, Lizzie, and find out whether he knows
+anything about wireless telegraphy," she said, "only there's so little
+time. Perhaps I can find a book that gives the code."
+
+[This is only pertinent as showing Tish's state of mind. As a matter of
+fact, she did not write to Updike at all.]
+
+Well, we started at last, and I must say they let us over the border
+with a glance; but they asked us whether we had any firearms. Tish's
+trunk contained a shotgun and a revolver; but she had packed over the
+top her most intimate personal belongings, and they were not disturbed.
+
+"Have you any weapons?" asked the inspector.
+
+"Do we look like persons carrying weapons?" Tish demanded haughtily. And
+of course we did not. Still, there was an untruth of the spirit and none
+of us felt any too comfortable. Indeed, what followed may have been a
+punishment on us for deceit and conspiracy.
+
+Aggie had taken her cat along--because it was so fond of fish, she said.
+And, between Tish buying ice for the worms and Aggie getting milk for
+the cat, the journey was not monotonous; but on returning from one of
+her excursions to the baggage-car, Tish put a heavy hand on my shoulder.
+
+"That boy's on the train, Lizzie!" she said. "He had the impudence to
+ask me whether I still drive with the license plates under a cushion.
+English roses--importations!" said Tish, and sniffed. "You don't suppose
+he went into that tent shop and asked about us?"
+
+"He might," I retorted; "but, on the other hand, there's no reason why
+our going to Canada should keep the rest of the United States at home!"
+
+However, the thing did seem queer, somehow. Why had he told us things
+that were not so? Why had he been so anxious to know who we were? Why,
+had he asked us to take the Sunday-school picnic to a place that did not
+belong to him?
+
+"He may be going away to forget some trouble. You remember what he said
+about happier days," said Tish.
+
+"That was Updike's reason too," I relied. "Poignant grief!"
+
+For just a moment our eyes met. The same suspicion had occurred to us
+both. Well, we agreed to say nothing to Aggie or Hutchins, for fear of
+upsetting them, and the next hour or so was peaceful.
+
+Hutchins read and Aggie slept. Tish and I strung beads for the Indians,
+and watched the door into the next car. And, sure enough, about the
+middle of the afternoon he appeared and stared in at us. He watched us
+for quite a time, smoking a cigarette as he did so. Then he came in and
+bent down over Tish.
+
+"You didn't take the children out for the picnic, did you?" he said.
+
+"I did not!" Tish snapped.
+
+"I'm sorry. Never saw the place look so well!"
+
+"Look here," Tish said, putting down her beads; "what were you doing
+there that night anyhow? You don't belong to the family."
+
+He looked surprised and then grieved.
+
+"You've discovered that, have you?" he said. "I did, you know--word of
+honor! They've turned me off; but I love the old place still, and on
+summer nights I wander about it, recalling happier days."
+
+Hutchins closed her book with a snap, and he sighed.
+
+"I perceive that we are overheard," he said. "Some time I hope to tell
+you the whole story. It's extremely sad. I'll not spoil the beginning of
+your holiday with it."
+
+All the time he had been talking he held a piece of paper in his hand.
+When he left us Tish went back thoughtfully to her beads.
+
+"It just shows, Lizzie," she said, "how wrong we are to trust to
+appearances. That poor boy--"
+
+I had stooped into the aisle and was picking up the piece of paper which
+he had accidentally dropped as he passed Hutchins. I opened it and read
+aloud to Tish and Aggie, who had wakened:--
+
+"'Afraid you'll not get away with it! The red-haired man in the car
+behind is a plain-clothes man.'"
+
+Tish has a large fund of general knowledge, gained through Charlie
+Sands; so what Aggie and I failed to understand she interpreted at once.
+
+"A plain-clothes man," she explained, "is a detective dressed as a
+gentleman. It's as plain as pikestaff! The boy's received this warning
+and dropped it. He has done something he shouldn't and is escaping to
+Canada!"
+
+I do not believe, however, that we should have thought of his being a
+political spy but for the conductor of the train. He proved to be a very
+nice person, with eight children and a toupee; and he said that Canada
+was honeycombed with spies in the pay of the German Government.
+
+"They're sending wireless messages all the time, probably from remote
+places," he said. "And, of course, their play now is to blow up the
+transcontinental railroads. Of course the railroads have an army of
+detectives on the watch."
+
+"Good Heavens!" Aggie said, and turned pale.
+
+Well, our pleasure in the journey was ruined. Every time the whistle
+blew on the engine we quailed, and Tish wrote her will then and there on
+the back of an envelope. It was while she was writing that the truth
+came to her.
+
+"That boy!" she said. "Don't you see it all? That note was a warning to
+him. He's a spy and the red-haired man is after him."
+
+None of us slept that night though Tish did a very courageous thing
+about eleven o'clock, when she was ready for bed. I went with her. We
+had put our dressing-gowns over our nightrobes, and we went back to the
+car containing the spy.
+
+He had not retired, but was sitting alone, staring ahead moodily. The
+red-haired man was getting ready for bed, just opposite. Tish spoke
+loudly, so the detective should hear.
+
+"I have come back," Tish said, "to say that we know everything. A word
+to the wise, Mister Happier Days! Don't try any of your tricks!"
+
+He sat, with his mouth quite open, and stared at us: but the red-haired
+man pretended to hear nothing and took off his other shoe.
+
+None of us slept at all except Hutchins. Though we had told her nothing,
+she seemed inherently to distrust the spy. When, on arriving at the town
+where we were to take the boat, he offered to help her off with Aggie's
+cat basket, which she was carrying, she snubbed him.
+
+"I can do it myself," she said coldly; "and if you know when you're well
+off you'll go back to where you came from. Something might happen to you
+here in the wilderness."
+
+"I wish it would," he replied in quite a tragic manner.
+
+[As Tish said then, a man is probably often forced by circumstances into
+hateful situations. No spy can really want to be a spy with every brick
+wall suggesting, as it must, a firing-squad.]
+
+Well, to make a long story short, we took the little steamer that goes
+up the river three times a week to take groceries and mail to the
+logging-camps, and the spy and the red-haired detective went along. The
+spy seemed to have quite a lot of luggage, but the detective had only a
+suitcase.
+
+Tish, watching the detective, said his expression grew more and more
+anxious as we proceeded up the river. Cottages gave place to
+logging-camps and these to rocky islands, with no sign of life; still,
+the spy stayed on the steamer, and so, of course, did the detective.
+
+Tish went down and examined the luggage. She reported that the spy was
+traveling under the name of McDonald and that the detective's suitcase
+was unmarked. Mr. McDonald had some boxes and a green canoe. The
+detective had nothing at all. There were no other passengers.
+
+We let Aggie's cat out on the boat and he caught a mouse almost
+immediately, and laid it in the most touching manner at the detective's
+feet; but he was in a very bad humor and flung it over the rail. Shortly
+after that he asked Tish whether she intended to go to the Arctic
+Circle.
+
+"I don't know that that's any concern of yours," Tish said. "You're not
+after me, you know."
+
+He looked startled and muttered something into his mustache.
+
+"It's perfectly clear what's wrong with him," Tish said. "He's got to
+stick to Mr. McDonald, and he hasn't got a tent in that suitcase, or
+even a blanket. I don't suppose he knows where his next meal's coming
+from."
+
+She was probably right, for I saw the crew of the boat packing a box or
+two of crackers and an old comfort into a box; and Aggie overheard the
+detective say to the captain that if he would sell him some fishhooks he
+would not starve anyhow.
+
+Tish found an island that suited her about three o'clock that afternoon,
+and we disembarked. Mr. McDonald insisted on helping the crew with our
+stuff, which they piled on a large flat rock; but the detective stood on
+the upper deck and scowled down at us. Tish suggested that he was a
+woman-hater.
+
+"They know so many lawbreaking women," she said, "it's quite natural."
+
+Having landed us, the boat went across to another island and deposited
+Mr. McDonald and the green canoe. Tish, who had talked about a lodge in
+some vast wilderness, complained at that; but when the detective got off
+on a little tongue of the mainland, in sight of both islands, she said
+the place was getting crowded and she had a notion to go farther.
+
+The first thing she did was to sit on a box and open a map. The Canadian
+Pacific was only a few miles away through the woods!
+
+Hutchins proved herself a treasure. She could work all round the three
+of us; she opened boxes and a can of beans for supper with the same
+hatchet, and had tea made and the beans heated while Tish was selecting
+a site for the tent.
+
+But--and I remembered this later--she watched the river at intervals,
+with her cheeks like roses from the exertion. She was really a pretty
+girl--only, when no one was looking, her mouth that day had a way of
+setting itself firmly, and she frowned at the water.
+
+We, Hutchins and I, set up the stove against a large rock, and when the
+teakettle started to boil it gave the river front a homey look. Sitting
+on my folding-chair beside the stove, with a cup of tea in my hand and
+a plate of beans on a doily on a packing-box beside me, I was entirely
+comfortable. Through the glasses I could see the red-haired man on
+the other shore sitting on a rock, with his head in his hands; but Mr.
+McDonald had clearly located on the other side of his island and was
+not in sight.
+
+Aggie and Tish were putting up the tent, and Hutchins was feeding the
+tea grounds to the worms, which had traveled comfortably, when I saw a
+canoe coming up the river. I called to Tish about it.
+
+"An Indian!" she said calmly. "Get the beads, Aggie; and put my shotgun
+on that rock, where he can see it." She stood and watched him.
+"Primitive man, every inch of him!" she went on. "Notice his uncovered
+head. Notice the freedom, almost the savagery, of the way he uses that
+paddle. I wish he would sing. You remember, in Hiawatha, how they sing
+as they paddle along?"
+
+She got the beads and went to the water's edge; but the Indian stooped
+just then and, picking up a Panama hat, put it on his head.
+
+"I have called," he said, "to see whether I can interest you in a set of
+books I am selling. I shall detain you only a moment. Sixty-three steel
+engravings by well-known artists; best hand-made paper; and the work
+itself is of high educational value."
+
+Tish suddenly put the beads behind her back and said we did not expect
+to have any time to read. We had come into the wilderness to rest our
+minds.
+
+"You are wrong, I fear," said the Indian. "Personally I find that I can
+read better in the wilds than anywhere else. Great thoughts in great
+surroundings! I take Nietzsche with me when I go fishing."
+
+Tish had the wretched beads behind her all the time; and, to make
+conversation, more than anything else, she asked about venison. He
+shrugged his shoulders. J. Fenimore Cooper had not prepared us for an
+Indian who shrugged his shoulders.
+
+"We Indians are allowed to kill deer," he said; "but I fear you are
+prohibited. I am not even permitted to sell it."
+
+"I should think," said Tish sharply, "that, since we are miles from a
+game warden, you could safely sell us a steak or two."
+
+He gazed at her disapprovingly. "I should not care to break the law,
+madam," he said.
+
+Then he picked up his paddle and took himself and his scruples and his
+hand-made paper and his sixty-three steel engravings down the river.
+
+"Primitive man!" I said to Tish, from my chair. "Notice the freedom,
+almost the savagery, with which he swings that paddle."
+
+We had brought a volume of Cooper along, not so much to read as to
+remind us how to address the Indians. Tish said nothing, but she got the
+book and flung it far out into the river.
+
+There were a number of small annoyances the first day or two. Hutchins
+was having trouble with the motor launch, which the steamer had towed up
+the day we came, and which she called the "Mebbe." And another civilized
+Indian, with a gold watch and a cigarette case, had rented us a leaky
+canoe for a dollar a day.
+
+[We patched the leak with chewing gum, which Aggie always carried for
+indigestion; and it did fairly well, so long as the gum lasted.]
+
+Then, on the second night, there was a little wind, and the tent
+collapsed on us, the ridgepole taking Aggie across the chest. It was
+that same night, I think, when Aggie's cat found a porcupine in the
+woods, and came in looking like a pincushion.
+
+What with chopping firewood for the stove, and carrying water, and
+bailing out the canoe, and with the motor boat giving one gasp and then
+dying for every hundred times somebody turned over the engine, we had no
+time to fish for two days.
+
+The police agent fished all day from a rock, for, of course, he had
+no boat; but he seemed to catch nothing. At times we saw him digging
+frantically, as though for worms. What he dug with I do not know; but,
+of course, he got no worms. Tish said if he had been more civil she
+would have taken something to him and a can of worms; but he had been
+rude, especially to Aggie's cat, and probably the boat would bring him
+things.
+
+What with getting settled and everything, we had not much time to think
+about the spy. It was on the third day, I believe, that he brought his
+green canoe to the open water in front of us and anchored there, just
+beyond earshot.
+
+He put out a line and opened a book; and from that time on he was a part
+of the landscape every day from 10 A.M. to 4 P.M. At noon he would eat
+some sort of a lunch, reading as he ate.
+
+He apparently never looked toward us, but he was always there. It was
+the most extraordinary thing. At first we thought he had found a
+remarkable fishing-place; but he seemed to catch very few fish. It was
+Tish, I think, who found the best explanation.
+
+"He's providing himself with an alibi," she stated. "How can he be a spy
+when we see him all day long? Don't you see how clever it is?"
+
+It was the more annoying because we had arranged a small cove for
+soap-and-water bathing, hanging up a rod for bath-towels and suspending
+a soap-dish and a sponge-holder from an overhanging branch. The cove was
+well shielded by brush and rocks from the island, but naturally was open
+to the river.
+
+It was directly opposite this cove that Mr. McDonald took up his
+position.
+
+This compelled us to bathe in the early morning, while the water was
+still cold, and resulted in causing Aggie a most uncomfortable half-hour
+on the fourth morning of our stay.
+
+She was the last one in the pool, and Tish absent-mindedly took her
+bathrobe and slippers back to the camp when she went. Tish went out
+in the canoe shortly after. She was learning to use one, with a life
+preserver on--Tish, of course, not the canoe. And Mr. McDonald arriving
+soon after, Aggie was compelled to sit in the water for two hours and
+twenty minutes. When Hutchins found her she was quite blue.
+
+This was the only disagreement we had all summer: Aggie's refusing to
+speak to Tish that entire day. She said Mr. McDonald had seen her head
+and thought it was some sort of swimming animal, and had shot at her.
+
+Mr. McDonald said afterward he knew her all the time, and was uncertain
+whether she was taking a cure for something or was trying to commit
+suicide. He said he spent a wretched morning. At five o'clock that
+evening we began to hear a curious tapping noise from the spy's island.
+It would last for a time, stop, and go on.
+
+Hutchins said it was woodpeckers; but Tish looked at me significantly.
+
+"Wireless!" she said. "What did I tell you?"
+
+That decided her next move, for that evening she put some tea and canned
+corn and a rubber blanket into the canoe; and in fear and trembling I
+went with her.
+
+"It's going to rain, Lizzie," she said, "and after all, that detective
+may be surly; but he's doing his duty by his country. It's just as
+heroic to follow a spy up here, and starve to death watching him, as it
+is to storm a trench--and less showy. And I've something to tell him."
+
+The canoe tilted just then, and only by heroic effort, were we able to
+calm it.
+
+"Then why not go comfortably in the motor boat?"
+
+Tish stopped, her paddle in the air. "Because I can't make that dratted
+engine go," she said, "and because I believe Hutchins would drown us all
+before she'd take any help to him. It's my belief that she's known him
+somewhere. I've seen her sit on a rock and look across at him with
+murder in her eyes."
+
+A little wind had come up, and the wretched canoe was leaking, the
+chewing gum having come out. Tish was paddling; so I was compelled to
+sit over the aperture, thus preventing water from coming in. Despite my
+best efforts, however, about three inches seeped in and washed about me.
+It was quite uncomfortable.
+
+The red-haired man was asleep when we landed. He had hung the comfort
+over a branch, like a tent, and built a fire at the end of it. He had
+his overcoat on, buttoned to the chin, and his head was on his
+suit-case. He sat up and looked at us, blinking.
+
+"We've brought you some tea and some canned corn," Tish said; "and a
+rubber blanket. It's going to rain."
+
+He slid out of the tent, feet first, and got up; but when he tried to
+speak he sneezed. He had a terrible cold.
+
+"I might as well say at once," Tish went on, "that we know why you are
+here--"
+
+"The deuce you do!" he said hoarsely.
+
+"We do not particularly care about you, especially since the way you
+acted to a friendly and innocent cat--one can always judge a man by the
+way he treats dumb animals; but we sympathize with your errand. We'll
+even help if we can."
+
+"Then the--the person in question has confided in you?"
+
+"Not at all," said Tish loftily. "I hope we can put two and two
+together. Have you got a revolver?"
+
+He looked startled at that. "I have one," he said; "but I guess I'll not
+need it. The first night or two a skunk hung round; two, in fact--mother
+and child--but I think they're gone."
+
+"Would you like some fish?"
+
+"My God, no!"
+
+This is a truthful narrative. That is exactly what he said.
+
+"I'll tell you what I do need, ladies," he went on: "If you've got
+a spare suit of underwear over there, I could use it. It'd stretch,
+probably. And I'd like a pen and some ink. I must have lost my fountain
+pen out of my pocket stooping over the bank to wash my face."
+
+"Do you know the wireless code?" Tish asked suddenly.
+
+"Wireless?"
+
+"I have every reason to believe," she said impressively, "that one of
+the great trees on that island conceals a wireless outfit."
+
+"I see!" He edged back a little from us both.
+
+"I should think," Tish said, eyeing him, "that a knowledge of the
+wireless code would be essential to you in your occupation."
+
+"We--we get a smattering of all sorts of things," he said; but he was
+uneasy--you could see that with half an eye.
+
+He accompanied us down to the canoe; but once, when Tish turned
+suddenly, he ducked back as though he had been struck and changed color.
+He thanked us for the tea and corn, and said he wished we had a spare
+razor--but, of course, he supposed not. Then:--
+
+"I suppose the--the person in question will stay as long as you do?" he
+asked, rather nervously.
+
+"It looks like it," said Tish grimly. "I've no intention of being driven
+away, if that's what you mean. We'll stay as long as the fishing's
+good."
+
+He groaned under his breath. "The whole d--d river is full of fish," he
+said. "They crawled up the bank last night and ate all the crackers I'd
+saved for to-day. Oh, I'll pay somebody out for this, all right! Good
+gracious, ladies, your boat's full of water!"
+
+"It has a hole in it," Tish replied and upturned it to empty it.
+
+When he saw the hole his eyes stuck out. "You can't go out in that leaky
+canoe! It's suicidal!"
+
+"Not at all," Tish assured him. "My friend here will sit on the leak.
+Get in quick, Lizzie. It's filling."
+
+The last we saw of the detective that night he was standing on the bank,
+staring after us. Afterward, when a good many things were cleared up, he
+said he decided that he'd been asleep and dreamed the whole thing--the
+wireless, and my sitting on the hole in the canoe, and the wind tossing
+it about, and everything--only, of course, there was the tea and the
+canned corn!
+
+We did our first fishing the next day. Hutchins had got the motor boat
+going, and I put over the spoon I had made from the feather duster.
+After going a mile or so slowly I felt a tug, and on drawing my line in
+I found I had captured a large fish. I wrapped the line about a part of
+the engine and Tish put the barrel hoop with the netting underneath it.
+The fish was really quite large--about four feet, I think--and it broke
+through the netting. I wished to hit it with the oar, but Hutchins said
+that might break the fin and free it. Unluckily we had not brought
+Tish's gun, or we might have shot it.
+
+At last we turned the boat round and went home, the fish swimming
+alongside, with its mouth open. And there Aggie, who is occasionally
+almost inspired, landed the fish by the simple expedient of getting out
+of the boat, taking the line up a bank and wrapping it round a tree. By
+all pulling together we landed the fish successfully. It was forty-nine
+inches by Tish's tape measure.
+
+Tish did not sleep well that night. She dreamed that the fish had a red
+mustache and was a spy in disguise. When she woke she declared there was
+somebody prowling round the tent.
+
+She got her shotgun and we all sat up in bed for an hour or so.
+
+Nothing happened, however, except that Aggie cried out that there was a
+small animal just inside the door of the tent. We could see it, too,
+though faintly. Tish turned the shotgun on it and it disappeared; but
+the next morning she found she had shot one of her shoes to pieces.
+
+
+
+
+III
+
+
+It was the day Tish began her diary that we discovered the red-haired
+man's signal. Tish was compelled to remain at home most of the day,
+breaking in another pair of shoes, and she amused herself by watching
+the river and writing down interesting things. She had read somewhere of
+the value of such records of impressions:--
+
+ 10 A.M. Gull on rock. Very pretty. Frightened away by the McDonald
+ person, who has just taken up his customary position. Is he reading
+ or watching this camp?
+
+ 10.22. Detective is breakfasting--through glasses, he is eating canned
+ corn. Aggie--pickerel, from bank.
+
+ 10.40. Aggie's cat, beside her, has caught a small fish. Aggie declares
+ that the cat stole one of her worms and held it in the water. I think
+ she is mistaken.
+
+ 11. Most extraordinary thing--Hutchins has asked permission to take pen
+ and ink across to the detective! Have consented.
+
+ 11.20. Hutchins is still across the river. If I did not know differently
+ I should say she and the detective are quarreling. He is whittling
+ something. Through glasses, she appears to stamp her foot.
+
+ 11.30. Aggie has captured a small sunfish. Hutchins is still across the
+ river. He seems to be appealing to her for something--possibly the
+ underwear. We have none to spare.
+
+ 11.40. Hutchins is an extraordinary girl. She hates men, evidently. She
+ has had some sort of quarrel with the detective and has returned flushed
+ with battle. Mr. McDonald called to her as she passed, but she ignored
+ him.
+
+ 12, noon. Really, there is something mysterious about all this. The
+ detective was evidently whittling a flagpole. He has erected it now,
+ with a red silk handkerchief at end. It hangs out over the water.
+ Aggie--bass, but under legal size.
+
+ 1.15 P.M. The flag puzzles Hutchins. She is covertly watching it. It is
+ evidently a signal--but to whom? Are the secret-service men closing in
+ on McDonald?
+
+ 1. Aggie--pike!
+
+ 2. On consulting map find unnamed lake only a few miles away. Shall
+ investigate to-morrow.
+
+ 3. Steamer has just gone. Detective now has canoe, blue in color. Also
+ food. He sent off his letter.
+
+ 4. Fed worms. Lizzie thinks they know me. How kindness is its own
+ reward! Mr. McDonald is drawing in his anchor, which is a large stone
+ fastened to a rope. Shall take bath.
+
+
+Tish's notes ended here. She did not take the bath after all, for Mr.
+McDonald made us a call that afternoon.
+
+He beached the green canoe and came up the rocks calmly and smilingly.
+Hutchins gave him a cold glance and went on with what she was doing,
+which was chopping a plank to cook the fish on. He bowed cheerfully to
+all of us and laid a string of fish on a rock.
+
+"I brought a little offering," he said, looking at Hutchins's back.
+"The fishing isn't what I expected but if the young lady with the hatchet
+will desist, so I can make myself heard, I've found a place where there
+are fish! This biggest fellow is three and a quarter pounds."
+
+Hutchins chopped harder than ever, and the plank flew up, striking her
+in the chest; but she refused all assistance, especially from Mr.
+McDonald, who was really concerned. He hurried to her and took the
+hatchet out of her hand, but in his excitement he was almost uncivil.
+
+"You obstinate little idiot!" he said. "You'll kill yourself yet."
+
+To my surprise, Hutchins, who had been entirely unemotional right along,
+suddenly burst into tears and went into the tent. Mr. McDonald took a
+hasty step or two after her, realizing, no doubt, that he had said more
+than he should to a complete stranger; but she closed the fly of the
+tent quite viciously and left him standing, with his arms folded,
+staring at it.
+
+It was at that moment he saw the large fish, hanging from a tree. He
+stood for a moment staring at it and we could see that he was quite
+surprised.
+
+"It is a fish, isn't it?" he said after a moment. "I--I thought for a
+moment it was painted on something."
+
+He sat down suddenly on one of our folding-chairs and looked at the
+fish, and then at each of us in turn.
+
+"You know," he said, "I didn't think there were such fish! I--you
+mustn't mind my surprise." He wiped his forehead with his handkerchief.
+"Just kick those things I brought into the river, will you? I apologize
+for them."
+
+"Forty-nine inches," Tish said. "We expect to do better when we really
+get started. This evening we shall go after its mate, which is probably
+hanging round."
+
+"Its mate?" he said, rather dazed. "Oh, I see. Of course!"
+
+He still seemed to doubt his senses, for he went over and touched it
+with his finger. "Ladies," he said, "I'm not going after the--the mate.
+I couldn't land it if I did get it. I am going to retire from the
+game--except for food; but I wish, for the sake of my reason, you'd tell
+me what you caught it with."
+
+Well, you may heartily distrust a person; but that is no reason why you
+should not answer a simple question. So I showed him the thing I had
+made--and he did not believe me!
+
+"You're perfectly right," he said. "Every game has its secrets. I had no
+business to ask. But you haven't caught me with that feather-duster
+thing any more than you caught that fish with it. I don't mind your not
+telling me. That's your privilege. But isn't it rather rubbing it in to
+make fun of me?"
+
+"Nothing of the sort!" Aggie said angrily. "If you had caught it--"
+
+"My dear lady," he said, "I couldn't have caught it. The mere shock of
+getting such a bite would have sent me out of my boat in a swoon." He
+turned to Tish. "I have only one disappointment," he said, "that it
+wasn't one of _our_ worms that did the work."
+
+Tish said afterward she was positively sorry for him, he looked so
+crestfallen. So, when he started for his canoe she followed him.
+
+"Look here," she said; "you're young, and I don't want to see you get
+into trouble. Go home, young man! There are plenty of others to take
+your place."
+
+He looked rather startled. "That's it exactly," he said, after a moment.
+"As well as I can make out there are about a hundred. If you think," he
+said fiercely, raising his voice, "that I'm going to back out and let
+somebody else in, I'm not. And that's flat."
+
+"It's a life-and-death matter," said Tish.
+
+"You bet it's a life-and-death matter."
+
+"And--what about the--the red-headed man over there?"
+
+His reply amazed us all. "He's harmless," he said. "I don't like him,
+naturally; but I admire the way he holds on. He's making the best of a
+bad business."
+
+"Do you know why he's here?"
+
+He looked uneasy for once.
+
+"Well, I've got a theory," he replied; but, though his voice was calm,
+he changed color.
+
+"Then perhaps you'll tell me what that signal means?"
+
+Tish gave him the glasses and he saw the red flag. I have never seen a
+man look so unhappy.
+
+"Holy cats!" he said, and almost dropped the glasses. "Why, he--he must
+be expecting somebody!"
+
+"So I should imagine," Tish commented dryly. "He sent a letter by the
+boat to-day."
+
+"The h--l he did!" And then: "That's ridiculous! You're mistaken. As
+a--as a matter of fact, I went over there the other night and
+commandeered his fountain pen."
+
+So it had not fallen out of his pocket!
+
+"I'll be frank, ladies," he said. "It's my object just now to keep that
+chap from writing letters. It doesn't matter why, but it's vital."
+
+He was horribly cast down when we told him about Hutchins and the pen
+and ink.
+
+"So that's it!" he said gloomily. "And the flag's a signal, of course.
+Ladies, you have done it out of the kindness of your hearts, I know; but
+I think you have wrecked my life."
+
+He took a gloomy departure and left us all rather wrought up. Who were
+we, as Tish said, to imperil a fellow man? And another thing--if there
+was a reward on him, why should we give it to a red-haired detective,
+who was rude to harmless animals and ate canned corn for breakfast?
+
+With her customary acumen Tish solved the difficulty that very evening.
+
+"The simplest thing," she said, "of course, would be to go over
+during the night and take the flag away; but he may have more red
+handkerchiefs. Then, too, he seems to be a light sleeper, and it would
+be awkward to have him shoot at us."
+
+She sat in thought for quite a while. Hutchins was watching the sunset,
+and seemed depressed and silent. Tish lowered her voice.
+
+"There's no reason why we shouldn't have a red flag, too," she said. "It
+gives us an even chance to get in on whatever is about to happen. We can
+warn Mr. McDonald, for one thing, if any one comes here. Personally I
+think he is unjustly suspected."
+
+[But Tish was to change her mind very soon.]
+
+We made the flag that night, by lantern light, out of Tish's red silk
+petticoat. Hutchins was curious, I am sure; but we explained nothing.
+And we fastened it obliquely over the river, like the one on the other
+side.
+
+Tish's change of heart, which occurred the next morning, was due
+to a most unfortunate accident that happened to her at nine o'clock.
+Hutchins, who could swim like a duck, was teaching Tish to swim, and
+she was learning nicely. Tish had put a life-preserver on, with a
+clothes-line fastened to it, and Aggie was sitting on the bank holding
+the rope while she went through the various gestures.
+
+Having completed the lesson Hutchins went into the woods for red
+raspberries, leaving Tish still practicing in the water with Aggie
+holding the rope. Happening to sneeze, the line slipped out of her hand,
+and she had the agonizing experience of seeing Tish carried away by the
+current.
+
+I was washing some clothing in the river a few yards down the stream
+when Tish came floating past. I shall never forget her expression or my
+own sense of absolute helplessness.
+
+"Get the canoe," said Tish, "and follow. I'm heading for Island Eleven."
+
+[Illustration: "Get the canoe and follow. I'm heading for Island Eleven"]
+
+She was quite calm, though pale; but, in her anxiety to keep well above
+the water, she did what was almost a fatal thing--she pushed the
+life-preserver lower down round her body. And having shifted the
+floating center, so to speak, without warning her head disappeared and
+her feet rose in the air.
+
+For a time it looked as though she would drown in that position; but
+Tish rarely loses her presence of mind. She said she knew at once what
+was wrong. So, though somewhat handicapped by the position, she replaced
+the cork belt under her arms and emerged at last.
+
+Aggie had started back into the woods for Hutchins; but, with one thing
+and another, it was almost ten before they returned together. Tish by
+that time was only a dot on the horizon through the binocular, having
+missed Island Eleven, as she explained later, by the rope being caught
+on a submerged log, which deflected her course.
+
+We got into the motor boat and followed her, and, except for a most
+unjust sense of irritation that I had not drowned myself by following
+her in the canoe, she was unharmed. We got her into the motor boat and
+into a blanket, and Aggie gave her some blackberry cordial at once. It
+was some time before her teeth ceased chattering so she could speak.
+When she did it was to announce that she had made a discovery.
+
+"He's a spy, all right!" she said. "And that Indian is another. Neither
+of them saw me as I floated past. They were on Island Eleven. Mr.
+McDonald wrote something and gave it to the Indian. It wasn't a letter
+or he'd have sent it by the boat. He didn't even put it in an envelope,
+so far as I could see. It's probably in cipher."
+
+Well, we took her home, and she had a boiled egg at dinner.
+
+The rest of us had fish. It is one of Tish's theories that fish should
+only be captured for food, and that all fish caught must be eaten. I do
+not know when I have seen fish come as easy. Perhaps it was the worms,
+which had grown both long and fat, so that one was too much for a hook;
+and we cut them with scissors, like tape or ribbon. Aggie and I finally
+got so sick of fish that while Tish's head was turned we dropped in our
+lines without bait. But, even at that, Aggie, reeling in her line to go
+home, caught a three-pound bass through the gills and could not shake
+it off.
+
+We tried to persuade Tish to lie down that afternoon, but she refused.
+
+"I'm not sick," she said, "even if you two idiots did try to drown me.
+And I'm on the track of something. If that was a letter, why didn't he
+send it by the boat?"
+
+Just then her eye fell on the flagpole, and we followed her horrified
+gaze. The flag had been neatly cut away!
+
+Tish's eyes narrowed. She looked positively dangerous; and within five
+minutes she had cut another flag out of the back breadth of the
+petticoat and flung it defiantly in the air. Who had cut away the
+signal--McDonald or the detective? We had planned to investigate the
+nameless lake that afternoon, Tish being like Colonel Roosevelt in her
+thirst for information, as well as in the grim pugnacity that is her
+dominant characteristic; but at the last minute she decided not to go.
+
+"You and Aggie go, Lizzie," she said. "I've got something on hand."
+
+"Tish!" Aggie wailed. "You'll drown yourself or something."
+
+"Don't be a fool!" Tish snapped. "There's a portage, but you and Lizzie
+can carry the canoe across on your heads. I've seen pictures of it. It's
+easy. And keep your eyes open for a wireless outfit. There's one about,
+that's sure!"
+
+"Lots of good it will do to keep our eyes open," I said with some
+bitterness, "with our heads inside the canoe!"
+
+We finally started and Hutchins went with us. It was Hutchins, too, who
+voiced the way we all felt when we had crossed the river and were
+preparing for what she called the portage.
+
+"She wants to get us out of the way, Miss Lizzie," she said. "Can you
+imagine what mischief she's up to?"
+
+"That is not a polite way to speak of Miss Tish, Hutchins," I said
+coldly. Nevertheless, my heart sank.
+
+Hutchins and I carried the canoe. It was a hot day and there was no
+path. Aggie, who likes a cup of hot tea at five o'clock, had brought
+along a bottle filled with tea, and a small basket containing sugar and
+cups.
+
+Personally I never had less curiosity about a lake. As a matter of fact
+I wished there was no lake. Twice--being obliged, as it were, to walk
+blindly and the canoe being excessively heavy--I, who led the way, ran
+the front end of the thing against the trunk of a tree, and both
+Hutchins and I sat down violently, under the canoe as a result of the
+impact.
+
+To add to the discomfort of the situation Aggie declared that we were
+being followed by a bear, and at the same instant stepped into a swamp
+up to her knees. She became calm at once, with the calmness of despair.
+
+"Go and leave me, Lizzie!" she said. "He is just behind those bushes. I
+may sink before he gets me--that's one comfort."
+
+Hutchins found a log and, standing on it, tried to pull her up; but she
+seemed firmly fastened. Aggie went quite white; and, almost beside
+myself, I poured her a cup of hot tea, which she drank. I remember she
+murmured Mr. Wiggins's name, and immediately after she yelled that the
+bear was coming.
+
+It was, however, the detective who emerged from the bushes. He got Aggie
+out with one good heave, leaving both her shoes gone forever; and while
+she collapsed, whimpering, he folded his arms and stared at all of us
+angrily.
+
+"What sort of damnable idiocy is this?" he demanded in a most unpleasant
+tone.
+
+Aggie revived and sat upright.
+
+"That's our affair, isn't it?" said Hutchins curtly.
+
+"Not by a blamed sight!" was his astonishing reply.
+
+"The next time I am sinking in a morass, let me sink," Aggie said, with
+simple dignity.
+
+He did not speak another word, but gave each of us a glance of the most
+deadly contempt, and finished up with Hutchins.
+
+"What I don't understand," he said furiously, "is why you have to lend
+yourself to this senile idiocy. Because some old women choose to sink
+themselves in a swamp is no reason why you should commit suicide!"
+
+Aggie said afterward only the recollection that he had saved her life
+prevented her emptying the tea on him. I should hardly have known
+Hutchins.
+
+"Naturally," she said in a voice thick with fury, "you are in a position
+to insult these ladies, and you do. But I warn you, if you intend to
+keep on, this swamp is nothing. We like it here. We may stay for months.
+I hope you have your life insured."
+
+Perhaps we should have understood it all then. Of course Charlie Sands,
+for whom I am writing this, will by this time, with his keen mind,
+comprehend it all; but I assure you we suspected nothing.
+
+How simple, when you line it up: The country house and the garden hose;
+the detective, with no camp equipment; Mr. McDonald and the green
+canoe; the letter on the train; the red flag; the girl in the pink
+tam-o'-shanter--who has not yet appeared, but will shortly; Mr.
+McDonald's incriminating list--also not yet, but soon.
+
+How inevitably they led to what Charlie Sands has called our crime!
+
+The detective, who was evidently very strong, only glared at her. Then
+he swung the canoe up on his head and, turning about, started back the
+way we had come. Though Hutchins and Aggie were raging, I was resigned.
+My neck was stiff and my shoulders ached. We finished our tea in silence
+and then made our way back to the river.
+
+I have now reached Tish's adventure. It is not my intention in this
+record to defend Tish. She thought her conclusions were correct. Charlie
+Sands says she is like Shaw--she has got a crooked point of view, but
+she believes she is seeing straight. And, after a while, if you look her
+way long enough you get a sort of mental astigmatism.
+
+So I shall confess at once that, at the time, I saw nothing immoral in
+what she did that afternoon while we were having our adventure in the
+swamp.
+
+I was putting cloths wrung out of arnica and hot water on my neck when
+she came home, and Hutchins was baking biscuit--she was a marvelous
+cook, though Aggie, who washed the dishes, objected to the number of
+pans she used.
+
+Tish ignored both my neck and the biscuits, and, marching up the bank,
+got her shotgun from the tent and loaded it.
+
+"We may be attacked at any time," she said briefly; and, getting the
+binocular, she searched the river with a splendid sweeping glance. "At
+any time. Hutchins, take these glasses, please, and watch that we are
+not disturbed."
+
+"I'm baking biscuit, Miss Letitia."
+
+"Biscuit!" said Tish scornfully. "Biscuit in times like these?"
+
+She walked up to the camp stove and threw the oven door open; but,
+though I believe she had meant to fling them into the river, she changed
+her mind when she saw them.
+
+"Open a jar of honey, Hutchins," she said, and closed the oven; but
+her voice was abstracted. "You can watch the river from the stove,
+Hutchins," she went on. "Miss Aggie and Miss Lizzie and I must confer
+together."
+
+So we went into the tent, and Tish closed and fastened it.
+
+"Now," she said, "I've got the papers."
+
+"Papers?"
+
+"The ones Mr. McDonald gave that Indian this morning. I had an idea he'd
+still have them. You can't hurry an Indian. I waited in the bushes until
+he went in swimming. Then I went through his pockets."
+
+"Tish Carberry!" cried Aggie.
+
+"These are not times to be squeamish," Tish said loftily. "I'm neutral;
+of course; but Great Britain has had this war forced on her and I'm
+going to see that she has a fair show. I've ordered all my stockings
+from the same shop in London, for twenty years, and squarer people never
+lived. Look at these--how innocent they look, until one knows!"
+
+She produced two papers from inside her waist. I must confess that, at
+first glance, I saw nothing remarkable.
+
+"The first one looks," said Tish, "like a grocery order. It's meant to
+look like that. It's relieved my mind of one thing--McDonald's got no
+wireless or he wouldn't be sending cipher messages by an Indian."
+
+It was written on a page torn out of a pocket notebook and the page was
+ruled with an inch margin at the left. This was the document:--
+
+ 1 Dozen eggs.
+ 20 Yards fishing-line.
+ 1 pkg. Needles--anything to sew a button on.
+ 1 doz. A B C bass hooks.
+ 3 lbs. Meat--anything so it isn't fish.
+ 1 bot. Ink for fountain pen.
+ 3 Tins sardines.
+ 1 Extractor.
+
+
+Well, I could not make anything of it; but, of course, I have not Tish's
+mind. Aggie was almost as bad.
+
+"What's an extractor?" she asked.
+
+"Exactly!" said Tish. "What is an extractor? Is the fellow going to pull
+teeth? No! He needed an _e_; so he made up a word."
+
+She ran her finger down the first letters of the second column.
+"D-y-n-a-m-i-t-e!" she said triumphantly. "Didn't I tell you?"
+
+
+
+
+IV
+
+
+Well, there it was--staring at us. I felt positively chilled. He looked
+so young and agreeable, and, as Aggie said, he had such nice teeth. And
+to know him for what he was--it was tragic! But that was not all.
+
+"Add the numbers!" said Tish. "Thirty-one tons, perhaps, of dynamite!
+And that's only part," said Tish. "Here's the most damning thing of
+all--a note to his accomplice!"
+
+"Damning" is here used in the sense of condemnatory. We are none of us
+addicted to profanity.
+
+We read the other paper, which had been in a sealed envelope, but
+without superscription. It is before me as I write, and I am copying it
+exactly:--
+
+ I shall have to see you. I'm going crazy! Don't you realize that this
+ is a matter of life and death to me? Come to Island Eleven to-night,
+ won't you? And give me a chance to talk, anyhow. Something has got to
+ be done and done soon. I'm desperate!
+
+
+Aggie sneezed three times in sheer excitement; for anyone can see how
+absolutely incriminating the letter was. It was not signed, but it was
+in the same writing as the list.
+
+Tish, who knows something about everything, said the writing denoted an
+unscrupulous and violent nature.
+
+"The _y_ is especially vicious," she said. "I wouldn't trust a man who
+made a _y_ like that to carry a sick child to the doctor!"
+
+The thing, of course, was to decide at once what measures to take. The
+boat would not come again for two days, and to send a letter by it to
+the town marshal or sheriff, or whatever the official is in Canada who
+takes charge of spies, would be another loss of time.
+
+"Just one thing," said Tish. "I'll plan this out and find some way to
+deal with the wretch; but I wouldn't say anything to Hutchins. She's a
+nice little thing, though she is a fool about a motor boat. There's no
+case in scaring her."
+
+For some reason or other, however, Hutchins was out of spirits that
+night.
+
+"I hope you're not sick, Hutchins?" said Tish.
+
+"No, indeed, Miss Tish."
+
+"You're not eating your fish."
+
+"I'm sick of fish," she said calmly. "I've eaten so much fish that when
+I see a hook I have a mad desire to go and hang myself on it."
+
+"Fish," said Tish grimly, "is good for the brain. I do not care to
+boast, but never has my mind been so clear as it is to-night."
+
+Now certainly, though Tish's tone was severe, there was nothing in it to
+hurt the girl; but she got up from the cracker box on which she was
+sitting, with her eyes filled with tears.
+
+"Don't mind me. I'm a silly fool," she said; and went down to the river
+and stood looking out over it.
+
+It quite spoiled our evening. Aggie made her a hot lemonade and, I
+believe, talked to her about Mr. Wiggins, and how, when he was living,
+she had had fits of weeping without apparent cause. But if the girl was
+in love, as we surmised, she said nothing about it. She insisted that it
+was too much fish and nervous strain about the Mebbe.
+
+"I never know," she said, "when we start out whether we're going to get
+back or be marooned and starve to death on some island."
+
+Tish said afterward that her subconscious self must have taken the word
+"marooned" and played with it; for in ten minutes or so her plan popped
+into her head.
+
+"'Full-panoplied from the head of Jove,' Lizzie," she said. "Really, it
+is not necessary to think if one only has faith. The supermind does it
+all without effort. I do not dislike the young man; but I must do my
+duty."
+
+Tish's plan was simplicity itself. We were to steal his canoe.
+
+"Then we'll have him," she finished. "The current's too strong there for
+him to swim to the mainland."
+
+"He might try it and drown," Aggie objected. "Spy or no spy, he's
+somebody's son."
+
+"War is no time to be chicken-hearted," Tish replied.
+
+I confess I ate little all that day. At noon Mr. McDonald came and
+borrowed two eggs from us.
+
+"I've sent over to a store across country, by my Indian guide,
+philosopher, and friend," he said, "for some things I needed; but I dare
+say he's reading Byron somewhere and has forgotten it."
+
+"Guide, philosopher, and friend!" I caught Tish's eye. McDonald had
+written the Updike letter! McDonald had meant to use our respectability
+to take him across the border!
+
+We gave him the eggs, but Tish said afterward she was not deceived for a
+moment.
+
+"The Indian has told him," she said, "and he's allaying our suspicions.
+Oh, he's clever enough! 'Know the Indian mind and my own!'" she quoted
+from the Updike letter. "'I know Canada thoroughly.' 'My object is not
+money.' I should think not!"
+
+Tish stole the green canoe that night. She put on the life preserver and
+we tied the end of the rope that Aggie had let slip to the canoe. The
+life-preserver made it difficult to paddle, Tish said, but she felt
+more secure. If she struck a rock and upset, at least she would not
+drown; and we could start after her at dawn with the Mebbe.
+
+"I'll be somewhere down the river," she said, "and safe enough, most
+likely, unless there are falls."
+
+Hutchins watched in a puzzled way, for Tish did not leave until dusk.
+
+"You'd better let me follow you with the launch, Miss Tish," she said.
+"Just remember that if the canoe sinks you're tied to it."
+
+"I'm on serious business to-night, Hutchins," Tish said ominously. "You
+are young, and I refuse to trouble your young mind; but your ears are
+sharp. If you hear any shooting, get the boat and follow me."
+
+The mention of shooting made me very nervous. We watched Tish as long as
+we could see her; then we returned to the tent, and Aggie and I
+crocheted by the hanging lantern. Two hours went by. At eleven o'clock
+Tish had not returned and Hutchins was in the motor boat, getting it
+ready to start.
+
+"I like courage, Miss Lizzie," she said to me; "but this thing of
+elderly women, with some sort of bug, starting out at night in canoes is
+too strong for me. Either she's going to stay in at night or I'm going
+home."
+
+"Elderly nothing!" I said, with some spirit. "She is in the prime of
+life. Please remember, Hutchins, that you are speaking of your employer.
+Miss Tish has no bug, as you call it."
+
+"Oh, she's rational enough," Hutchins retorted: "but she is a woman of
+one idea and that sort of person is dangerous."
+
+I was breathless at her audacity.
+
+"Come now, Miss Lizzie," she said, "how can I help when I don't know
+what is being done? I've done my best up here to keep you comfortable
+and restrain Miss Tish's recklessness; but I ought to know something."
+
+She was right; and, Tish or no Tish, then and there I told her. She was
+more than astonished. She sat in the motor boat, with a lantern at her
+feet, and listened.
+
+"I see," she said slowly. "So the--so Mr. McDonald is a spy and has sent
+for dynamite to destroy the railroad! And--and the red-haired man is a
+detective! How do you know he is a detective?"
+
+I told her then about the note we had picked up from beside her in the
+train, and because she was so much interested she really seemed quite
+thrilled. I brought the cipher grocery list and the other note down to
+her.
+
+"It's quite convincing, isn't it?" she said. "And--and exciting! I don't
+know when I've been so excited."
+
+She really was. Her cheeks were flushed. She looked exceedingly pretty.
+
+"The thing to do," she said, "is to teach him a lesson. He's young. He
+mayn't always have had to stoop to such--such criminality. If we can
+scare him thoroughly, it might do him a lot of good."
+
+I said I was afraid Tish took a more serious view of things and would
+notify the authorities. And at that moment there came two or three
+shots--then silence.
+
+I shall never forget the ride after Tish and how we felt when we failed
+to find her; for there was no sign of her. The wind had come up, and,
+what with seeing Tish tied to that wretched canoe and sinking with it or
+shot through the head and lying dead in the bottom of it, we were about
+crazy. As we passed Island Eleven we could see the spy's camp-fire and
+his tent, but no living person.
+
+At four in the morning we gave up and started back, heavy-hearted.
+What, therefore, was our surprise to find Tish sitting by the fire in
+her bathrobe, with a cup of tea in her lap and her feet in a foot-tub of
+hot water! Considering all we had gone through and that we had obeyed
+orders exactly, she was distinctly unjust. Indeed, at first she quite
+refused to speak to any of us.
+
+"I do think, Tish," Aggie said as she stood shivering by the fire, "that
+you might at least explain where you have been. We have been going up
+and down the river for hours, burying you over and over."
+
+Tish took a sip of tea, but said nothing.
+
+"You said," I reminded her, "that if there was shooting, we were to
+start after you at once. When we heard the shots, we went, of course."
+
+Tish leaned over and, taking the teakettle from the fire, poured more
+water into the foot-tub. Then at last she turned to speak.
+
+"Bring some absorbent cotton and some bandages, Hutchins," she said. "I
+am bleeding from a hundred wounds. As for you"--she turned fiercely on
+Aggie and me--"the least you could have done was to be here when I
+returned, exhausted, injured, and weary; but, of course, you were
+gallivanting round the lake in an upholstered motor boat."
+
+Here she poured more water into the foot-tub and made it much too hot.
+This thawed her rather, and she explained what was wrong. She was
+bruised, scratched to the knees, and with a bump the size of an egg on
+her forehead, where she had run into a tree.
+
+The whole story was very exciting. It seems she got the green canoe
+without any difficulty, the spy being sound asleep in his tent; but
+about that time the wind came up and Tish said she could not make an
+inch of progress toward our camp.
+
+The chewing gum with which we had repaired our canoe came out at that
+time and the boat began to fill, Tish being unable to sit over the leak
+and paddle at the same time. So, at last, she gave up and made for the
+mainland.
+
+"The shooting," Tish said with difficulty, "was by men from the Indian
+camp firing at me. I landed below the camp, and was making my way as
+best I could through the woods when they heard me moving. I believe they
+thought it was a bear."
+
+I think Tish was more afraid of the Indians, in spite of their
+sixty-three steel engravings and the rest of it, than she pretended,
+though she said she would have made herself known, but at that moment
+she fell over a fallen tree and for fifteen minutes was unable to speak
+a word. When at last she rose the excitement was over and they had gone
+back to their camp.
+
+"Anyhow," she finished, "the green canoe is hidden a couple of miles
+down the river, and I guess Mr. McDonald is safe for a time. Lizzie, you
+can take a bath to-morrow safely."
+
+Tish sat up most of the rest of the night composing a letter to the
+authorities of the town, telling them of Mr. McDonald and enclosing
+careful copies of the incriminating documents she had found.
+
+During the following morning the river was very quiet. Through the
+binocular we were able to see Mr. McDonald standing on the shore of his
+island and looking intently in our direction, but naturally we paid no
+attention to him.
+
+The red-haired man went in swimming that day and necessitated our
+retiring to the tent for an hour and a half; but at noon Aggie's
+naturally soft heart began to assert itself.
+
+"Spy or no spy," she said to Tish, "we ought to feed him."
+
+"Huh!" was Tish's rejoinder. "There is no sense is wasting good food on
+a man whose hours are numbered."
+
+We were surprised, however, to find that Hutchins, who had detested Mr.
+McDonald, was rather on Aggie's side.
+
+"The fact that he has but a few more hours," she said to Tish, "is an
+excellent reason for making those hours as little wretched as possible."
+
+It was really due to Hutchins, therefore, that Mr. McDonald had a
+luncheon. The problem of how to get it to him was a troublesome one, but
+Tish solved it with her customary sagacity.
+
+"We can make a raft," she said, "a small one, large enough to hold a
+tray. By stopping the launch some yards above the island we can float
+his luncheon to him quite safely."
+
+That was the method we ultimately pursued and it worked most
+satisfactorily.
+
+Hutchins baked hot biscuits; and, by putting a cover over the pan, we
+were enabled to get them to him before they cooled.
+
+We prepared a really appetizing luncheon of hot biscuits, broiled ham,
+marmalade, and tea, adding, at Aggie's instructions, a jar of preserved
+peaches, which she herself had put up.
+
+Tish made the raft while we prepared the food, and at exactly half-past
+twelve o'clock we left the house. Mr. McDonald saw us coming and was
+waiting smilingly at the upper end of the island.
+
+"Great Scott!" he said. "I thought you were never going to hear me.
+Another hour and I'd have made a swim for it, though it's suicidal with
+this current. I'll show you where you can come in so you won't hit a
+rock."
+
+Hutchins had stopped the engine of the motor boat and we threw out the
+anchor at a safe distance from the shore.
+
+"We are not going to land," said Tish, "and I think you know perfectly
+well the reason why."
+
+"Oh, now," he protested; "surely you are going to land! I've had an
+awfully uncomfortable accident--my canoe's gone."
+
+"We know that," Tish said calmly. "As a matter of fact, we took it."
+
+Mr. McDonald sat down suddenly on a log at the water's edge and looked
+at us.
+
+"Oh!" he said.
+
+"You may not believe it," Tish said, "but we know everything--your
+dastardly plot, who the red-haired man is, and all the destruction and
+wretchedness you are about to cause."
+
+"Oh, I say!" he said feebly. "I wouldn't go as far as that. I'm--I'm
+not such a bad sort."
+
+"That depends on the point of view," said Tish grimly.
+
+Aggie touched her on the arm then and reminded her that the biscuits
+were getting cold; but Tish had a final word with him.
+
+"Your correspondence has fallen into my hands, young man," she said,
+"and will be turned over to the proper authorities."
+
+"It won't tell them anything they don't know," he said doggedly. "Look
+here, ladies: I am not ashamed of this thing. I--I am proud of it. I am
+perfectly willing to yell it out loud for everybody to hear. As a matter
+of fact, I think I will."
+
+Mr. McDonald stood up suddenly and threw his head back; but here
+Hutchins, who had been silent, spoke for the first time.
+
+"Don't be an idiot!" she said coldly. "We have something here for you to
+eat if you behave yourself."
+
+He seemed to see her then for the first time, for he favored her with a
+long stare.
+
+"Ah!" he said. "Then you are not entirely cold and heartless?"
+
+She made no reply to this, being busy in assisting Aggie to lower the
+raft over the side of the boat.
+
+"Broiled ham, tea, hot biscuits, and marmalade," said Aggie gently. "My
+poor fellow, we are doing what we consider our duty; but we want you to
+know that it is hard for us--very hard."
+
+When he saw our plan, Mr. McDonald's face fell; but he stepped out into
+the water up to his knees and caught the raft as it floated down.
+
+Before he said "Thank you" he lifted the cover of the pan and saw the
+hot biscuits underneath.
+
+"Really," he said, "it's very decent of you. I sent off a grocery order
+yesterday, but nothing has come."
+
+Tish had got Hutchins to start the engine by that time and we were
+moving away. He stood there, up to his knees in water, holding the tray
+and looking after us. He was really a pathetic figure, especially in
+view of the awful fate we felt was overtaking him.
+
+He called something after us. On account of the noise of the engine, we
+could not be certain, but we all heard it the same way.
+
+"Send for the whole d--d outfit!" was the way it sounded to us. "It
+won't make any difference to me."
+
+
+
+
+V
+
+
+The last thing I recall of Mr. McDonald that day is seeing him standing
+there in the water, holding the tray, with the teapot steaming under his
+nose, and gazing after us with an air of bewilderment that did not
+deceive us at all.
+
+As I look back, there is only one thing we might have noticed at the
+time. This was the fact that Hutchins, having started the engine, was
+sitting beside it on the floor of the boat and laughing in the cruelest
+possible manner. As I said to Aggie at the time: "A spy is a spy and
+entitled to punishment if discovered; but no young woman should laugh
+over so desperate a situation."
+
+I come now to the denouement of this exciting period. It had been Tish's
+theory that the red-haired man should not be taken into our confidence.
+If there was a reward for the capture of the spy, we ourselves intended
+to have it.
+
+The steamer was due the next day but one. Tish was in favor of not
+waiting, but of at once going in the motor boat to the town, some thirty
+miles away, and telling of our capture; but Hutchins claimed there was
+not sufficient gasoline for such an excursion. That afternoon we went in
+the motor launch to where Tish had hidden the green canoe and, with a
+hatchet, rendered it useless.
+
+The workings of the subconscious mind are marvelous. In the midst of
+chopping, Tish suddenly looked up.
+
+"Have you noticed," she said, "that the detective is always watching our
+camp?"
+
+"That's all he has to do," Aggie suggested.
+
+"Stuff and nonsense! Didn't he follow you into the swamp? Does Hutchins
+ever go out in the canoe that he doesn't go out also? I'll tell you what
+has happened: She's young and pretty, and he's fallen in love with her."
+
+I must say it sounded reasonable. He never bothered about the motor
+boat, but the instant she took the canoe and started out he was hovering
+somewhere near.
+
+"She's noticed it," Tish went on. "That's what she was quarreling about
+with him yesterday."
+
+"How are we to know," said Aggie, who was gathering up the scraps of the
+green canoe and building a fire under them--"how are we to know they are
+not old friends, meeting thus in the wilderness? Fate plays strange
+tricks, Tish. I lived in the same street with Mr. Wiggins for years, and
+never knew him until one day when my umbrella turned wrong side out in a
+gust of wind."
+
+"Fate fiddlesticks!" said Tish. "There's no such thing as fate in
+affairs of this sort. It's all instinct--the instinct of the race to
+continue itself."
+
+This Aggie regarded as indelicate and she was rather cool to Tish the
+balance of the day.
+
+Our prisoner spent most of the day at the end of the island toward us,
+sitting quietly, as we could sec through the glasses. We watched
+carefully, fearing at any time to see the Indian paddling toward him.
+
+[Tish was undecided what to do in such an emergency, except to intercept
+him and explain, threatening him also with having attempted to carry the
+incriminating papers. As it happened, however, the entire camp had gone
+for a two-days' deer hunt, and before they returned the whole thing had
+come to its surprising end.]
+
+Late in the afternoon Tish put her theory of the red-haired man to the
+test.
+
+"Hutchins," she said, "Miss Lizzie and I will cook the dinner if you
+want to go in the canoe to Harvey's Bay for water-lilies."
+
+Hutchins at once said she did not care a rap for water-lilies; but,
+seeing a determined glint in Tish's eye, she added that she would go for
+frogs if Tish wanted her out of the way.
+
+"Don't talk like a child!" Tish retorted. "Who said I wanted you out of
+the way?"
+
+It is absolutely true that the moment Hutchins put her foot into the
+canoe the red-haired man put down his fishing-rod and rose. And she had
+not taken three strokes with the paddle before he was in the blue canoe.
+
+Hutchins saw him just then and scowled. The last we saw of her she was
+moving rapidly up the river and the detective was dropping slowly
+behind. They both disappeared finally into the bay and Tish drew a long
+breath.
+
+"Typical!" she said curtly. "He's sent here to watch a dangerous man and
+spends his time pursuing the young woman who hates the sight of him.
+When women achieve the suffrage they will put none but married men in
+positions of trust."
+
+Hutchins and the detective were still out of sight when supper-time
+came. The spy's supper weighed on us, and at last Tish attempted to
+start the motor launch. We had placed the supper and the small raft
+aboard, and Aggie was leaning over the edge untying the painter,--not a
+man, but a rope,--when unexpectedly the engine started at the first
+revolution of the wheel.
+
+It darted out to the length of the rope, where it was checked abruptly,
+the shock throwing Aggie entirely out and into the stream. Tish caught
+the knife from the supper tray to cut us loose, and while Tish cut I
+pulled Aggie in, wet as she was. The boat was straining and panting,
+and, on being released, it sprang forward like a dog unleashed.
+
+Aggie had swallowed a great deal of water and was most disagreeable; but
+the Mebbe was going remarkably well, and there seemed to be every
+prospect that we should get back to the camp in good order. Alas, for
+human hopes! Mr. McDonald was not very agreeable.
+
+"You know," he said as he waited for his supper to float within reach,
+"you needn't be so blamed radical about everything you do! If you object
+to my hanging round, why not just say so? If I'm too obnoxious I'll
+clear out."
+
+"Obnoxious is hardly the word," said Tish. "How long am I to be a
+prisoner?"
+
+"I shall send letters off by the first boat."
+
+He caught the raft just then and examined the supper with interest.
+
+"Of course things might be worse," he said; "but it's dirty treatment,
+anyhow. And it's darned humiliating. Somebody I know is having a good
+time at my expense. It's heartless! That's what it is--heartless!"
+
+Well, we left him, the engine starting nicely and Aggie being wrapped in
+a tarpaulin; but about a hundred yards above the island it began to slow
+down, and shortly afterward it stopped altogether. As the current caught
+us, we luckily threw out the anchor, for the engine refused to start
+again. It was then we saw the other canoes.
+
+The girl in the pink tam-o'-shanter was in the first one.
+
+They glanced at us curiously as they passed, and the P.T.S.--that is the
+way we grew to speak of the pink tam-o'-shanter--raised one hand in the
+air, which is a form of canoe greeting, probably less upsetting to the
+equilibrium than a vigorous waving of the arm.
+
+It was just then, I believe, that they saw our camp and headed for it.
+The rest of what happened is most amazing. They stopped at our landing
+and unloaded their canoes. Though twilight was falling, we could see
+them distinctly. And what we saw was that they calmly took possession
+of the camp.
+
+"Good gracious!" Tish cried. "The girls have gone into the tent! And
+somebody's working at the stove. The impertinence!"
+
+Our situation was acutely painful. We could do nothing but watch. We
+called, but our voices failed to reach them. And Aggie took a chill,
+partly cold and partly fury. We sat there while they ate the entire
+supper!
+
+They were having a very good time. Now and then somebody would go into
+the tent and bring something out, and there would be shrieks of
+laughter.
+
+[We learned afterward that part of the amusement was caused by Aggie's
+false front, which one of the wretches put on as a beard.]
+
+It was while thus distracted that Aggie suddenly screamed, and a moment
+later Mr. McDonald climbed over the side and into the boat, dripping.
+
+"Don't be alarmed!" he said. "I'll go back and be a prisoner again just
+as soon as I've fired the engine. I couldn't bear to think of the lady
+who fell in sitting here indefinitely and taking cold." He was examining
+the engine while he spoke. "Have visitors, I see," he observed, as
+calmly as though he were not dripping all over the place.
+
+"Intruders, not visitors!" Tish said angrily. "I never saw them before."
+
+"Rather pretty, the one with the pink cap. May I examine the gasoline
+supply?" There was no gasoline. He shrugged his shoulders. "I'm afraid
+no amount of mechanical genius I intended to offer you will start her,"
+he said; "but the young lady--Hutchins is her name, I believe?--will
+see you here and come after you, of course."
+
+Well, there was no denying that, spy or no spy, his presence was a
+comfort. He offered to swim back to the island and be a prisoner again,
+but Tish said magnanimously that there was no hurry. On Aggie's offering
+half of her tarpaulin against the wind, which had risen, he accepted.
+
+"Your Miss Hutchins is reckless, isn't she?" he said when he was
+comfortably settled. "She's a strong swimmer; but a canoe is uncertain
+at the best."
+
+"She's in no danger," said Tish. "She has a devoted admirer watching out
+for her."
+
+"The deuce she has!" His voice was quite interested. "Why, who on
+earth--"
+
+"Your detective," said Aggie softly. "He's quite mad about her. The way
+he follows her and the way he looks at her--it's thrilling!"
+
+Mr. McDonald said nothing for quite a while. The canoe party had
+evidently eaten everything they could find, and somebody had brought out
+a banjo and was playing.
+
+Tish, unable to vent her anger, suddenly turned on Mr. McDonald. "If you
+think," she said, "that the grocery list fooled us, it didn't!"
+
+"Grocery list?"
+
+"That's what I said."
+
+"How did you get my grocery list?"
+
+So she told him, and how she had deciphered it, and how the word
+"dynamite" had only confirmed her early suspicions.
+
+His only comment was to say, "Good Heavens!" in a smothered voice.
+
+"It was the extractor that made me suspicious," she finished. "What were
+you going to extract? Teeth?"
+
+"And so, when my Indian was swimming, you went through his things! It's
+the most astounding thing I ever--My dear lady, an extractor is used to
+get the hooks out of fish. It was no cipher, I assure you. I needed an
+extractor and I ordered it. The cipher you speak of is only a remarkable
+coincidence."
+
+"Huh!" said Tish. "And the paper you dropped in the train--was that a
+coincidence?"
+
+"That's not my secret," he said, and turned sulky at once.
+
+"Don't tell me," Tish said triumphantly, "that any young man comes here
+absolutely alone without a purpose!"
+
+"I had a purpose, all right; but it was not to blow up a railroad
+train."
+
+Apparently he thought he had said too much, for he relapsed into silence
+after that, with an occasional muttering.
+
+It was eight o'clock when Hutchins's canoe came into sight. She was
+paddling easily, but the detective was far behind and moving slowly.
+
+She saw the camp with its uninvited guests, and then she saw us. The
+detective, however, showed no curiosity; and we could see that he made
+for his landing and stumbled exhaustedly up the bank. Hutchins drew up
+beside us. "He'll not try that again, I think," she said in her crisp
+voice. "He's out of training. He panted like a motor launch. Who are our
+visitors?"
+
+Here her eyes fell on Mr. McDonald and her face set in the dusk.
+
+"You'll have to go back and get some gasoline, Hutchins."
+
+"What made you start out without looking?"
+
+"And send the vandals away. If they wait until I arrive, I'll be likely
+to do them some harm. I have never been so outraged."
+
+"Let me go for gasoline in the canoe," said Mr. McDonald. He leaned over
+the thwart and addressed Hutchins. "You're worn out," he said. "I
+promise to come back and be a perfectly well-behaved prisoner again."
+
+"Thanks, no."
+
+"I'm wet. The exercise will warm me."
+
+"Is it possible," she said in a withering tone that was lost on us at
+the time, "that you brought no dumb-bells with you?"
+
+If we had had any doubts they should have been settled then; but we
+never suspected. It is incredible, looking back.
+
+The dusk was falling and I am not certain of what followed. It was,
+however, something like this: Mr. McDonald muttered something angrily
+and made a motion to get into the canoe. Hutchins replied that she would
+not have help from him if she died for it. The next thing we knew she
+was in the launch and the canoe was floating off on the current. Aggie
+squealed; and Mr. McDonald, instead of swimming after the thing, merely
+folded his arms and looked at it.
+
+"You know," he said to Hutchins, "you have so unpleasant a disposition
+that somebody we both know of is better off than he thinks he is!"
+
+Tish's fury knew no bounds, for there we were marooned and two of us wet
+to the skin. I must say for Hutchins, however, that when she learned
+about Aggie she was bitterly repentant, and insisted on putting her own
+sweater on her. But there we were and there we should likely stay.
+
+It was quite dark by that time, and we sat in the launch, rocking
+gently. The canoeing party had lighted a large fire on the beach, using
+the driftwood we had so painfully accumulated.
+
+We sat in silence, except that Tish, who was watching our camp, said
+once bitterly that she was glad there were three beds in the tent. The
+girls of the canoeing party would be comfortable.
+
+After a time Tish turned on Mr. McDonald sharply. "Since you claim to be
+no spy," she said, "perhaps you will tell us what brings you alone to
+this place? Don't tell me it's fish--I've seen you reading, with a line
+out. You're no fisherman."
+
+He hesitated. "No," he admitted. "I'll be frank, Miss Carberry. I did
+not come to fish."
+
+"What brought you?"
+
+"Love," he said, in a low tone. "I don't expect you to believe me, but
+it's the honest truth."
+
+"Love!" Tish scoffed.
+
+"Perhaps I'd better tell you the story," he said. "It's long and--and
+rather sad."
+
+"Love stories," Hutchins put in coldly, "are terribly stupid, except to
+those concerned."
+
+"That," he retorted, "is because you have never been in love. You are
+young and--you will pardon the liberty?--attractive; but you are totally
+prosaic and unromantic."
+
+"Indeed!" she said, and relapsed into silence.
+
+"These other ladies," Mr. McDonald went on, "will understand the
+strangeness of my situation when I explain that the--the young lady I
+care for is very near; is, in fact, within sight."
+
+"Good gracious!" said Aggie. "Where?"
+
+"It is a long story, but it may help to while away the long night hours;
+for I dare say we are here for the night. Did any one happen to notice
+the young lady in the first canoe, in the pink tam-o'-shanter?"
+
+We said we had--all except Hutchins, who, of course, had not seen her.
+Mr. McDonald got a wet cigarette from his pocket and, finding a box of
+matches on the seat, made an attempt to dry it over the flames; so his
+story was told in the flickering light of one match after another.
+
+
+
+
+VI
+
+
+"I am," Mr. McDonald said, as the cigarette steamed, "the son of poor
+but honest parents. All my life I have been obliged to labor. You may
+say that my English is surprisingly pure, under such conditions. As a
+matter of fact, I educated myself at night, using a lantern in the top
+of my father's stable."
+
+"I thought you said he was poor," Hutchins put in nastily. "How did he
+have a stable?"
+
+"He kept a livery stable. Any points that are not clear I will explain
+afterward. Once the thread of a narrative is broken, it is difficult to
+resume, Miss Hutchins. Near us, in a large house, lived the lady of my
+heart."
+
+"The pink tam-o'-shanter girl!" said Aggie. "I begin to understand."
+
+"But," he added, "near us also lived a red-headed boy. She liked him
+very much, and even in the long-ago days I was fiercely jealous of him.
+It may surprise you to know that in those days I longed--fairly
+longed--for red hair and a red mustache."
+
+"I hate to interrupt," said Hutchins; "but did he have a mustache as a
+boy?"
+
+He ignored her. "We three grew up together. The girl is
+beautiful--you've probably noticed that--and amiable. The one thing I
+admire in a young woman is amiability. It would not, for instance, have
+occurred to her to isolate an entire party on the bosom of a northern
+and treacherous river out of pure temper."
+
+"To think," said Aggie softly, "that she is just over there by the
+camp-fire! Don't you suppose, if she loves you, she senses your
+nearness?"
+
+"That's it exactly," he replied in a gloomy voice, "if she loves me! But
+does she? In other words, has she come up the river to meet me or to
+meet my rival? She knows we are here. Both of us have written her. The
+presence of one or the other of us is the real reason for this excursion
+of hers. But again the question is--which?"
+
+Here the match he was holding under the cigarette burned his fingers and
+he flung it overboard with a violent gesture.
+
+"The detective, of course," said Tish. "I knew it from the beginning of
+your story."
+
+"The detective," he assented. "You see his very profession attracts.
+There's an element of romance in it. I myself have kept on with my
+father and now run the--er--livery stable. My business is a handicap
+from a romantic point of view.
+
+"I am aware," Mr. McDonald went on, "that it is not customary to speak
+so frankly of affairs of this sort; but I have two reasons. It hurts me
+to rest under unjust suspicion. I am no spy, ladies. And the second
+reason is even stronger. Consider my desperate position: In the morning
+my rival will see her; he will paddle his canoe to the great rock below
+your camp and sing his love song from the water. In the morning I shall
+sit here helpless--ill, possibly--and see all that I value in life slip
+out of my grasp. And all through no fault of my own! Things are so
+evenly balanced, so little will shift the weight of her favor, that
+frankly the first one to reach her will get her."
+
+I confess I was thrilled. And even Tish was touched; but she covered her
+emotion with hard common sense.
+
+"What's her name?" she demanded.
+
+"Considering my frankness I must withhold that. Why not simply refer to
+her as the pink tam-o'-shanter--or, better still and more briefly, the
+P.T.S.? That may stand for pink tam-o'-shanter, or the Person That
+Smiles,--she smiles a great deal,--or--or almost anything."
+
+"It also stands," said Hutchins, with a sniff, "for Pretty Tall Story."
+
+Tish considered her skepticism unworthy in one so young, and told her
+so; on which she relapsed into a sulky silence.
+
+In view of what we knew, the bonfire at our camp and the small figure
+across the river took on a new significance.
+
+As Aggie said, to think of the red-haired man sleeping calmly while his
+lady love was so near and his rival, so to speak, _hors de combat!_
+Shortly after finishing his story, Mr. McDonald went to the stern of the
+boat and lifted the anchor rope.
+
+"It is possible," he said, "that the current will carry us to my island
+with a little judicious management. Even though we miss it, we'll hardly
+be worse off than we are."
+
+It was surprising we had not thought of it before, for the plan
+succeeded admirably. By moving a few feet at a time and then anchoring,
+we made slow but safe progress, and at last touched shore. We got out,
+and Mr. McDonald built a large fire, near which we put Aggie to steam.
+His supper, which he had not had time to eat, he generously divided, and
+we heated the tea. Hutchins, however, refused to eat.
+
+Warmth and food restored Tish's mind to its usual keenness. I recall now
+the admiration in Mr. McDonald's eyes when she suddenly put down the
+sandwich she was eating and exclaimed:--
+
+"The flags, of course! He told her to watch for a red flag as she came
+up the river; so when the party saw ours they landed. Perhaps they still
+think it is his camp and that he is away overnight."
+
+"That's it, exactly," he said. "Think of the poor wretch's excitement
+when he saw your flag!"
+
+Still, on looking back, it seems curious that we overlooked the way the
+red-headed man had followed Hutchins about. True, men are polygamous
+animals, Tish says, and are quite capable of following one woman about
+while they are sincerely in love with somebody else. But, when you think
+of it, the detective had apparently followed Hutchins from the start,
+and had gone into the wilderness to be near her, with only a suitcase
+and a mackintosh coat; which looked like a mad infatuation.
+
+[Tish says she thought of this at the time, and that; from what she had
+seen of the P.T.S., Hutchins was much prettier. But she says she decided
+that men often love one quality in one girl and another in another; that
+he probably loved Hutchins's beauty and the amiability of the P.T.S.
+Also, she says, she reflected that the polygamy of the Far East is
+probably due to this tendency in the male more than to a preponderance
+of women.]
+
+Tish called me aside while Mr. McDonald was gathering firewood. "I'm a
+fool and a guilty woman, Lizzie," she said. "Because of an unjust
+suspicion I have possibly wrecked this poor boy's life."
+
+I tried to soothe her. "They might have been wretchedly unhappy
+together, Tish," I said; "and, anyhow, I doubt whether he is able to
+support a wife. There's nothing much in keeping a livery stable
+nowadays."
+
+"There's only one thing that still puzzles me," Tish observed: "granting
+that the grocery order was a grocery order, what about the note?"
+
+We might have followed this line of thought, and saved what occurred
+later, but that a new idea suddenly struck Tish. She is curious in that
+way; her mind works very rapidly at times, and because I cannot take her
+mental hurdles, so to speak, she is often impatient.
+
+"Lizzie," she said suddenly, "did you notice that when the anchor was
+lifted, we drifted directly to this island? Don't stare at me like that.
+Use your wits."
+
+When I failed instantly to understand, however, she turned abruptly and
+left me, disappearing in the shadows.
+
+For the next hour nothing happened. Tish was not in sight and Aggie
+slept by the fire. Hutchins sat with her chin cupped in her hands, and
+Mr. McDonald gathered driftwood.
+
+Hutchins only spoke once. "I'm awfully sorry about the canoe, Miss
+Lizzie," she said; "it was silly and--and selfish. I don't always act
+like a bad child. The truth is, I'm rather upset and nervous. I hate to
+be thwarted--I'm sorry I can't explain any further."
+
+I was magnanimous. "I'm sure, until to-night, you've been perfectly
+satisfactory," I said; "but it seems extraordinary that you should
+dislike men the way you do."
+
+She only eyed me searchingly.
+
+It is my evening custom to prepare for the night by taking my switch off
+and combing and braiding my hair; so, as we seemed to be settled for the
+night, I asked Mr. McDonald whether the camp afforded an extra comb. He
+brought out a traveling-case at once from the tent and opened it.
+
+"Here's a comb," he said. "I never use one. I'm sorry this is all I can
+supply."
+
+My eyes were glued to the case. It was an English traveling-case, with
+gold-mounted fittings. He saw me staring at it and changed color.
+
+"Nice bag, isn't it?" he said. "It was a gift, of course. The--the
+livery stable doesn't run much to this sort of thing."
+
+But the fine edge of suspicion had crept into my mind again.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Tish did not return to the fire for some time. Before she came back we
+were all thoroughly alarmed. The island was small, and a short search
+convinced us that she was not on it!
+
+We wakened Aggie and told her, and the situation was very painful. The
+launch was where we had left it. Mr. McDonald looked more and more
+uneasy.
+
+"My sane mind tells me she's perfectly safe," he said. "I don't know
+that I've ever met a person more able to take care of herself; but it's
+darned odd--that's all I can say."
+
+Just as he spoke a volley of shots sounded from up the river near our
+camp, two close together and then one; and somebody screamed.
+
+It was very dark. We could see lanterns flashing at our camp and
+somebody was yelling hoarsely. One lantern seemed to run up and down the
+beach in mad excitement, and then, out of the far-off din, Aggie, whose
+ears are sharp, suddenly heard the splash of a canoe paddle.
+
+I shall tell Tish's story of what happened as she told it to Charlie
+Sands two weeks or so later.
+
+"It is perfectly simple," she said, "and it's stupid to make such a fuss
+over it. Don't talk to me about breaking the law! The girl came; I
+didn't steal her."
+
+Charlie Sands, I remember, interrupted at that moment to remind her that
+she had shot a hole in the detective's canoe; but this only irritated
+her.
+
+"Certainly I did," she snapped; "but it's perfectly idiotic of him to
+say that it took off the heel of his shoe. In that stony country it's
+always easy to lose a heel."
+
+But to return to Tish's story:--
+
+"It occurred to me," she said, "that, if the launch had drifted to Mr.
+McDonald's island, the canoe might have done so too; so I took a look
+round. I'd been pretty much worried about having called the boy a spy
+when he wasn't, and it worried me to think that he couldn't get away
+from the place. I never liked the red-haired man. He was cruel to
+Aggie's cat--but we've told you that.
+
+"I knew that in the morning the detective would see the P.T.S., as we
+called her, and he could get over and propose before breakfast. But when
+I found the canoe--yes, I found it--I didn't intend to do anything more
+than steal the detective's boat."
+
+"Is that all?" said Charlie Sands sarcastically. "You disappoint me,
+Aunt Letitia! With all the chances you had--to burn his pitiful little
+tent, for instance, or steal his suitcase--"
+
+"But on my way," Tish went on with simple dignity, "it occurred to me
+that I could move things a step farther by taking the girl to Mr.
+McDonald and letting him have his chance right away. Things went well
+from the start, for she was standing alone, looking out over the river.
+It was dark, except for the starlight, and I didn't know it was she. I
+beached the canoe and she squealed a little when I spoke to her."
+
+"Just what," broke in Charlie Sands, "does one say under such
+circumstances? Sometime I may wish to abduct a young woman and it is
+well to be prepared."
+
+"I told her the young man she had expected was on Island Eleven and had
+sent me to get her. She was awfully excited. She said they'd seen his
+signal, but nothing of him. And when they'd found a number of feminine
+things round they all felt a little--well, you can understand. She went
+back to get a coat, and while she was gone I untied the canoes and
+pushed them out into the river. I'm thorough, and I wasn't going to have
+a lot of people interfering before we got things fixed."
+
+It was here, I think, that Charlie Sands gave a low moan and collapsed
+on the sofa. "Certainly!" he said in a stifled voice. "I believe in
+being thorough. And, of course, a few canoes more or less do not
+matter."
+
+"Later," Tish said, "I knew I'd been thoughtless about the canoes; but,
+of course, it was too late then."
+
+"And when was it that you assaulted the detective?"
+
+"He fired first," said Tish. "I never felt more peaceable in my life.
+It's absurd for him to say that he was watching our camp, as he had
+every night we'd been there. Who asked him to guard us? And the idea of
+his saying he thought we were Indians stealing things, and that he fired
+into the air! The bullets sang past me. I had hardly time to get my
+revolver out of my stocking."
+
+"And then?" asked Charlie Sands.
+
+"And then," said Tish, "we went calmly down the river to Island Eleven.
+We went rapidly, for at first the detective did not know I had shot a
+hole in his canoe, and he followed us. It stands to reason that if I'd
+shot his heel off he'd have known there was a hole in the boat. Luckily
+the girl was in the bottom of the canoe when she fainted or we might
+have been upset."
+
+It was at this point, I believe, that Charlie Sands got his hat and
+opened the door.
+
+"I find," he said, "that I cannot stand any more at present, Aunt Tish.
+I shall return when I am stronger."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+So I shall go back to my own narrative. Really my justification is
+almost complete. Any one reading to this point will realize the
+injustice of the things that have been said about us.
+
+We were despairing of Tish, as I have said, when we heard the shots and
+then the approach of a canoe. Then Tish hailed us.
+
+"Quick, somebody!" she said. "I have a cramp in my right leg."
+
+[The canoeing position, kneeling as one must, had been always very
+trying for her. She frequently developed cramps, which only a hot
+footbath relieved.]
+
+Mr. McDonald waded out into the water. Our beach fire illuminated the
+whole scene distinctly, and when he saw the P.T.S. huddled in the canoe
+he stopped as though he had been shot.
+
+"How interesting!" said Hutchins from the bank, in her cool voice.
+
+I remember yet Tish, stamping round on her cramped limb and smiling
+benevolently at all of us. The girl, however, looked startled and
+unhappy, and a little dizzy. Hutchins helped her to a fallen tree.
+
+"Where--where is he?" said the P.T.S.
+
+Tish stared at her. "Bless the girl!" she said. "Did you think I meant
+the other one?"
+
+"I--What other one?"
+
+Tish put her hand on Mr. McDonald's arm. "My dear girl," she said, "this
+young man adores you. He's all that a girl ought to want in the man she
+loves. I have done him a grave injustice and he has borne it nobly. Come
+now--let me put your hand in his and say you will marry him."
+
+"Marry him!" said the P.T.S. "Why, I never saw him in my life before!"
+
+We had been so occupied with this astounding scene that none of us had
+noticed the arrival of the detective. He limped rapidly up the
+bank--having lost his heel, as I have explained--and, dripping with
+water, confronted us. When a red-haired person is pale, he is very pale.
+And his teeth showed.
+
+He ignored all of us but the P.T.S., who turned and saw him, and went
+straight into his arms in the most unmaidenly fashion.
+
+"By Heaven," he said, "I thought that elderly lunatic had taken you off
+and killed you!"
+
+He kissed her quite frantically before all of us; and then, with one arm
+round her, he confronted Tish.
+
+"I'm through!" he said. "I'm done! There isn't a salary in the world
+that will make me stay within gunshot of you another day." He eyed her
+fiercely. "You are a dangerous woman, madam," he said. "I'm going to
+bring a charge against you for abduction and assault with intent to
+kill. And if there's any proof needed I'll show my canoe, full of water
+to the gunwale."
+
+Here he kissed the girl again.
+
+"You--you know her?" gasped Mr. McDonald, and dropped on a tree-trunk,
+as though he were too weak to stand.
+
+"It looks like it, doesn't it?"
+
+Here I happened to glance at Hutchins, and she was convulsed with mirth!
+Tish saw her, too, and glared at her; but she seemed to get worse. Then,
+without the slightest warning, she walked round the camp-fire and kissed
+Mr. McDonald solemnly on the top of his head.
+
+"I give it up!" she said. "Somebody will have to marry you and take care
+of you. I'd better be the person."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"But why was the detective watching Hutchins?" said Charlie Sands. "Was
+it because he had heard of my Aunt Letitia's reckless nature? I am still
+bewildered."
+
+"You remember the night we got the worms?"
+
+"I see. The detective was watching all of you because you stole the
+worms."
+
+"Stole nothing!" Tish snapped. "That's the girl's house. She's the Miss
+Newcomb you read about in the papers. Now do you understand?"
+
+"Certainly I do. She was a fugitive from justice because the cat found
+dynamite in the woods. Or--perhaps I'm a trifle confused, but--Now I
+have it! She had stolen a gold-mounted traveling-bag and given it to
+McDonald. Lucky chap! I was crazy about Hutchins myself. You might tip
+her the word that I'm badly off for a traveling-case myself. But what
+about the P.T.S.? How did she happen on the scene?"
+
+"She was engaged to the detective, and she was camping down the river.
+He had sent her word where he was. The red flag was to help her find
+him."
+
+Tish knows Charlie Sands, so she let him talk. Then:--
+
+"Mr. McDonald was too wealthy, Charlie," she said; "so when she wanted
+him to work and be useful, and he refused, she ran off and got a
+situation herself to teach him a lesson. She could drive a car. But her
+people heard about it, and that wretched detective was responsible for
+her safety. That's why he followed her about."
+
+"I should like to follow her about myself," said Charlie Sands. "Do you
+think she's unalterably decided to take McDonald, money and all? He's
+still an idler. Lend me your car, Aunt Tish. There's a theory there;
+and--who knows?"
+
+"He is going to work for six months before she marries him," Tish said.
+"He seems to like to work, now he has started."
+
+She rang the bell and Hannah came to the door.
+
+"Hannah," said Tish calmly, "call up the garage and tell McDonald to
+bring the car round. Mr. Sands is going out."
+
+
+
+
+MY COUNTRY TISH OF THEE--
+
+
+We had meant to go to Europe this last summer, and Tish would have gone
+anyhow, war or no war, if we had not switched her off onto something
+else. "Submarines fiddlesticks!" she said. "Give me a good life
+preserver, with a bottle of blackberry cordial fastened to it, and the
+sea has no terrors for me."
+
+She said the proper way to do, in case the ship was torpedoed, was to go
+up on an upper deck, and let the vessel sink under one.
+
+"Then without haste," she explained, "as the water rises about one,
+strike out calmly. The life-belt supports one, but swim gently for the
+exercise. It will prevent chilling. With a waterproof bag of crackers,
+and mild weather, one could go on comfortably for a day or two."
+
+I still remember the despairing face Aggie turned to me. It was December
+then, and very cold.
+
+However, she said nothing more until January. Early in that month
+Charlie Sands came to Tish's to Sunday dinner, and we were all there.
+The subject came up then.
+
+It was about the time Tish took up vegetarianism, I remember that,
+because the only way she could induce Charlie Sands to come to dinner
+was to promise to have two chops for him. Personally I am not a
+vegetarian. I am not and never will be. I took a firm stand except when
+at Tish's home. But Aggie followed Tish's lead, of course, and I believe
+lived up to it as far as possible, although it is quite true that,
+stopping in one day unexpectedly to secure a new crochet pattern, I
+smelled broiling steak. But Aggie explained that she merely intended to
+use the juice from a small portion, having had one of her weak spells,
+the balance to go to the janitor's dog.
+
+However, this is a digression.
+
+"Europe!" said Charlie Sands. "Forget it! What in the name of the
+gastric juice is this I'm eating?"
+
+It was a mixture of bran, raisins, and chopped nuts, as I recall it,
+moistened with water and pressed into a compact form. It was Tish's own
+invention. She called it "Bran-Nut," and was talking of making it in
+large quantities for sale.
+
+Charlie Sands gave it up with a feeble gesture. "I'm sorry, Aunt
+Letitia," he said at last; "I'm a strong man ordinarily, but by the time
+I've got it masticated I'm too weak to swallow it. If--if one could
+have a stream of water playing on it while working, it would facilitate
+things."
+
+"The Ostermaiers," said Aggie, "are going West."
+
+"Good for the Ostermaiers," said Charlie Sands. "Great idea. See America
+first. 'My Country Tish of Thee,' etc. Why don't you three try it?"
+
+Tish relinquished Europe slowly.
+
+"One would think," Charlie Sands said, "that you were a German being
+asked to give up Belgium."
+
+"What part of the West?" she demanded. "It's all civilized, isn't it?"
+
+"The Rocky Mountains," said Charlie Sands, "will never be civilized."
+
+Tish broke off a piece of Bran-Nut, and when she thought no one was
+looking poured a little tea over it. There was a gleam in her eye that
+Aggie and I have learned to know.
+
+"Mountains!" she said. "That ought to be good for Aggie's hay fever."
+
+"I'd rather live with hay fever," Aggie put in sharply, "than cure it by
+falling over a precipice."
+
+"You'll have to take a chance on that, of course," Charlie Sands said.
+"I'm not sure it will be safe, but I am sure it will be interesting."
+
+Oh, he knew Tish well enough. Tell her a thing was dangerous, and no
+power could restrain her.
+
+I do not mind saying that I was not keen about the thing. I had my
+fortune told years ago, and the palmist said that if a certain line had
+had a bend in it I should have been hanged. But since it did not, to be
+careful of high places.
+
+"It's a sporting chance," said Charlie Sands, although I was prodding
+him under the table. "With some good horses and a bag of
+this--er--concentrated food, you would have the time of your young
+lives."
+
+This was figurative. We are all of us round fifty.
+
+"The--the Bran-Nut," he said, "would serve for both food and ammunition.
+I can see you riding along, now and then dropping a piece of it on the
+head of some unlucky mountain goat, and watching it topple over into
+eternity. I can see--"
+
+"Riding!" said Aggie. "Then I'm not going. I have never been on a horse
+and I never intend to be."
+
+"Don't be a fool," Tish snapped. "If you've never been on a horse, it's
+time and to spare you got on one."
+
+Hannah had been clearing the table with her lips shut tight. Hannah is
+an old and privileged servant and has a most unfortunate habit of
+speaking her mind. So now she stopped beside Tish.
+
+"You take my advice and go, Miss Tish," she said. "If you ride a horse
+round some and get an appetite, you'll go down on your knees and
+apologize to your Maker for the stuff we've been eating the last four
+weeks." She turned to Charlie Sands, and positively her chin was
+quivering. "I'm a healthy woman," she said, "and I work hard and need
+good nourishing food. When it's come to a point where I eat the cat's
+meat and let it go hungry," she said, "it's time either I lost my
+appetite or Miss Tish went away."
+
+Well, Tish dismissed Hannah haughtily from the room, and the
+conversation went on. None of us had been far West, although Tish has a
+sister-in-law in, Toledo, Ohio. But owing to a quarrel over a pair of
+andirons that had been in the family for a time, she had never visited
+her.
+
+"You'll like it, all of you," Charlie Sands said as we waited for the
+baked apples. "Once get started with a good horse between your knees,
+and--"
+
+"I hope," Tish interrupted him, "that you do not think we are going to
+ride astride!"
+
+"I'm darned sure of it."
+
+That was Charlie Sands's way of talking. He does not mean to be rude,
+and he is really a young man of splendid character. But, as Tish says,
+contact with the world, although it has not spoiled him, has roughened
+his speech.
+
+"You see," he explained, "there are places out there where the horses
+have to climb like goats. It's only fair to them to distribute your
+weight equally. A side saddle is likely to turn and drop you a mile or
+two down a crack."
+
+Aggie went rather white and sneezed violently.
+
+But Tish looked thoughtful. "It sounds reasonable," she said. "I've felt
+for along time that I'd be glad to discard skirts. Skirts," she said,
+"are badge of servitude, survivals of the harem, reminders of a time
+when nothing was expected of women but parasitic leisure."
+
+I tried to tell her that she was wrong about the skirts. Miss
+MacGillicuddy, our missionary in India, had certainly said that the
+women in harems wore bloomers. But Tish left the room abruptly,
+returning shortly after with a volume of the encyclopdia, and looked up
+the Rocky Mountains.
+
+I remember it said that the highest ranges were, as compared with the
+size and shape of the earth, only as the corrugations on the skin of an
+orange. Either the man who wrote that had never seen an orange or he had
+never seen the Rocky Mountains. Orange, indeed! If he had said the upper
+end of a pineapple it would have been more like it. I wish the man who
+wrote it would go to Glacier Park. I am not a vindictive woman, but I
+know one or two places where I would like to place him and make him
+swallow that orange. I'd like to see him on a horse, on the brink of a
+caon a mile deep, and have his horse reach over the edge for a stray
+plant or two, or standing in a cloud up to his waist, so that, as Aggie
+so plaintively observed, "The lower half of one is in a snowstorm while
+the upper part is getting sunburned."
+
+For we went. Oh, yes, we went. It is not the encyclopdia's fault that
+we came back. But now that we are home, and nothing wrong except a touch
+of lumbago that Tish got from sleeping on the ground, and, of course,
+Aggie's unfortunate experience with her teeth, I look back on our
+various adventures with pleasure. I even contemplate a return next year,
+although Aggie says she will die first. But even that is not to be taken
+as final. The last time I went to see her, she had bought a revolver
+from the janitor and was taking lessons in loading it.
+
+The Ostermaiers went also. Not with us, however. The congregation made
+up a purse for the purpose, and Tish and Aggie and I went further, and
+purchased a cigar-case for Mr. Ostermaier and a quantity of cigars.
+Smoking is the good man's only weakness.
+
+I must say, however, that it is absurd to hear Mrs. Ostermaier boasting
+of the trip. To hear her talk, one would think they had done the whole
+thing, instead of sitting in an automobile and looking up at the
+mountains. I shall never forget the day they were in a car passing along
+a road, and we crossed unexpectedly ahead of them and went on straight
+up the side of a mountain.
+
+Tish had a sombrero on the side of her head, and was resting herself in
+the saddle by having her right leg thrown negligently over the horse's
+neck. With the left foot she was kicking our pack-horse, a creature so
+scarred with brands that Tish had named her Jane, after a cousin of hers
+who had had so many operations that Tish says she is now entirely
+unfurnished.
+
+Mr. Ostermaier's face was terrible, and only two days ago Mrs.
+Ostermaier came over to ask about putting an extra width in the skirt to
+her last winter's suit. But it is my belief that she came to save Tish's
+soul, and nothing else.
+
+"I'm so glad wide skirts have come in," she said. "They're so modest,
+aren't they, Miss Tish?"
+
+"Not in a wind," Tish said, eying her coldly.
+
+"I do think, dear Miss Tish," she went on with her eyes down, "that
+to--to go about in riding-breeches before a young man is--well, it is
+hardly discreet, is it?"
+
+I saw Tish glancing about the room. She was pretty angry, and I knew
+perfectly well what she wanted. I put my knitting-bag over Charlie
+Sands's tobacco-pouch.
+
+Tish had learned to roll cigarettes out in Glacier Park. Not that she
+smoked them, of course, but she said she might as well know how. There
+was no knowing when it would come in handy. And when she wishes to calm
+herself she reaches instinctively for what Bill used to call, strangely,
+"the makings."
+
+"If," she said, her eye still roving,--"if it was any treat to a
+twenty-four-year-old cowpuncher to see three elderly women in
+riding-breeches, Mrs. Ostermaier,--and it's kind of you to think
+so,--why, I'm not selfish."
+
+Mrs. Ostermaier's face was terrible. She gathered up her skirt and rose.
+"I shall not tell Mr. Ostermaier what you have just said," she observed
+with her mouth set hard. "We owe you a great deal, especially the return
+of my earrings. But I must request, Miss Tish, that you do not voice
+such sentiments in the Sunday school."
+
+Tish watched her out. Then she sat down and rolled eleven cigarettes for
+Charlie Sands, one after the other. At last she spoke.
+
+"I'm not sure," she said tartly, "that if I had it to do over again I'd
+do it. That woman's not a Christian. I was thinking," she went on, "of
+giving them a part of the reward to go to Asbury Park with. But she'd
+have to wear blinders on the bathing-beach, so I'll not do it."
+
+However, I am ahead of my recital.
+
+For a few days Tish said nothing more, but one Sunday morning, walking
+home from church, she turned to me suddenly and said:--
+
+"Lizzie, you're fat."
+
+"I'm as the Lord made me," I replied with some spirit.
+
+"Fiddlesticks!" said Tish. "You're as your own sloth and overindulgence
+has made you. Don't blame the Good Man for it."
+
+Now, I am a peaceful woman, and Tish is as my own sister, and indeed
+even more so. But I was roused to anger by her speech.
+
+"I've been fleshy all my life," I said. "I'm no lazier than most, and
+I'm a dratted sight more agreeable than some I know, on account of
+having the ends of my nerves padded."
+
+But she switched to another subject in her characteristic manner.
+
+"Have you ever reflected, either of you," she observed, "that we know
+nothing of this great land of ours? That we sing of loving 'thy rocks
+and rills, thy woods and templed hills'--although the word 'templed'
+savors of paganism and does not belong in a national hymn? And that it
+is all balderdash?"
+
+Aggie took exception to this and said that she loved her native land,
+and had been south to Pinehurst and west to see her niece in
+Minneapolis, on account of the baby having been named for her.
+
+But Tish merely listened with a grim smile. "Travel from a car window,"
+she observed, "is no better than travel in a nickelodeon. I have done
+all of that I am going to. I intend to become acquainted with my native
+land, closely acquainted. State by State I shall wander over it,
+refreshing soul and body and using muscles too long unused."
+
+"Tish!" Aggie quavered. "You are not going on another walking-tour?"
+
+Only a year or two before Tish had read Stevenson's "Travels with a
+Donkey," and had been possessed to follow his example. I have elsewhere
+recorded the details of that terrible trip. Even I turned pale, I fear,
+and cast a nervous eye toward the table where Tish keeps her
+reading-matter.
+
+Tish is imaginative, and is always influenced by the latest book she has
+read. For instance, a volume on "Nursing at the Front" almost sent her
+across to France, although she cannot make a bed and never could, and
+turns pale at the sight of blood; and another time a book on flying
+machines sent her up into the air, mentally if not literally. I shall
+never forget the time she secured some literature on the Mormon Church,
+and the difficulty I had in smuggling it out under my coat.
+
+Tish did not refute the walking-tour at once, but fell into a deep
+reverie.
+
+It is not her custom to confide her plans to us until they are fully
+shaped and too far on to be interfered with, which accounts for our
+nervousness.
+
+On arriving at her apartment, however, we found a map laid out on the
+table and the Rocky Mountains marked with pins. We noticed that whenever
+she straightened from the table she grunted.
+
+"What we want," Tish said, "is isolation. No people. No crowds. No
+servants. If I don't get away from Hannah soon I'll murder her."
+
+"It wouldn't hurt to see somebody now and then, Tish," Aggie objected.
+
+"Nobody," Tish said firmly. "A good horse is companion enough." She
+forgot herself and straightened completely, and she groaned.
+
+"We might meet some desirable people, Tish," I put in firmly. "If we do,
+I don't intend to run like a rabbit."
+
+"Desirable people!" Tish scoffed. "In the Rocky Mountains! My dear
+Lizzie, every desperado in the country takes refuge in the Rockies. Of
+course, if you want to take up with that class--"
+
+Aggie sneezed and looked wretched. As for me, I made up my mind then and
+there that if Letitia Carberry was going to such a neighborhood, she was
+not going alone. I am not much with a revolver, but mighty handy with a
+pair of lungs.
+
+Well, Tish had it all worked out. "I've found the very place," she said.
+"In the first place, it's Government property. When our country puts
+aside a part of itself as a public domain we should show our
+appreciation. In the second place, it's wild. I'd as soon spend a
+vacation in Central Park near the Zoo as in the Yellowstone. In the
+third place, with an Indian reservation on one side and a national
+forest on the other, it's bound to be lonely. Any tourist," she said
+scornfully, "can go to the Yosemite and be photographed under a redwood
+tree."
+
+"Do the Indians stay on the reservation?" Aggie asked feebly.
+
+"Probably not," Tish observed coldly. "Once for all, Aggie--if you are
+going to run like a scared deer every time you see an Indian or a bear,
+I wish you would go to Asbury Park."
+
+She forgot herself then and sat down quickly, an action which was
+followed by an agonized expression.
+
+"Tish," I said sharply, "you have been riding a horse!
+
+"Only in a cinder ring," she replied with unwonted docility. "The
+teacher said I would be a trifle stiff."
+
+"How long did you ride?"
+
+"Not more than twenty minutes," she said. "The lesson was to be an hour,
+but somebody put a nickel in a mechanical piano, and the creature I was
+on started going sideways."
+
+Well, she had fallen off and had to be taken home in a taxicab. When
+Aggie heard it she simply took the pins out of the map and stuck them in
+Tish's cushion. Her mouth was set tight.
+
+"I didn't really fall," Tish said. "I sat down, and it was cinders, and
+not hard. It has made my neck stiff, that's all."
+
+"That's enough," said Aggie. "If I've got to seek pleasure by ramming my
+spinal column up into my skull and crowding my brains, I'll stay at
+home."
+
+"You can't fall out of a Western saddle," Tish protested rather
+bitterly. "And if I were you, Aggie, I wouldn't worry about crowding my
+brains."
+
+However, she probably regretted this speech, for she added more gently:
+"A high altitude will help your hay fever, Aggie."
+
+Aggie said with some bitterness that her hay fever did not need to be
+helped. That, as far as she could see, it was strong and flourishing. At
+that matters rested, except for a bit of conversation just before we
+left. Aggie had put on her sweater vest and her muffler and the jacket
+of her winter suit and was getting into her fur coat, when Tish said:
+"Soft as mush, both of you!"
+
+"If you think, Tish Carberry," I began, "that I--"
+
+"Apple dumplings!" said Tish. "Sofa pillows! Jellyfish! Not a muscle to
+divide between you!"
+
+I drew on my woolen tights angrily.
+
+"Elevators!" Tish went on scornfully. "Street cars and taxicabs! No
+wonder your bodies are mere masses of protoplasm, or cellulose, or
+whatever it is."
+
+"Since when," said Aggie, "have you been walking to develop yourself,
+Tish? I must say--"
+
+Here anger brought on one of her sneezing attacks, and she was unable to
+finish.
+
+Tish stood before us oracularly. "After next September," she said, "you
+will both scorn the sloth of civilization. You will move about for the
+joy of moving about. You will have cast off the shackles of the flesh
+and be born anew. That is, if a plan of mine goes through. Lizzie, you
+will lose fifty pounds!"
+
+Well, I didn't want to lose fifty pounds. After our summer in the Maine
+woods I had gone back to find that my new tailor-made coat, which had
+fitted me exactly, and being stiffened with haircloth kept its shape off
+and looked as if I myself were hanging to the hook, had caved in on me
+in several places. Just as I had gone to the expense of having it taken
+in I began to put on flesh again, and had to have it let out. Besides,
+no woman over forty should ever reduce, at least not violently. She
+wrinkles. My face that summer had fallen into accordion plaits, and I
+had the curious feeling of having enough skin for two.
+
+Aggie had suggested at that time that I have my cheeks filled out with
+paraffin, which I believe cakes and gives the appearance of youth. But
+Mrs. Ostermaier knew a woman who had done so, and being hit on one side
+by a snowball, the padding broke in half, one part moving up under her
+eye and the second lodging at the angle of her jaw. She tried lying on a
+hot-water bottle to melt the pieces and bring them together again, but
+they did not remain fixed, having developed a wandering habit and
+slipping unexpectedly now and then. Mrs. Ostermaier says it is painful
+to watch her holding them in place when she yawns.
+
+Strangely enough, however, a few weeks later Tish's enthusiasm for the
+West had apparently vanished. When several weeks went by and the atlas
+had disappeared from her table, and she had given up vegetarianism for
+Swedish movements, we felt that we were to have a quiet summer after
+all, and Aggie wrote to a hotel in Asbury Park about rooms for July and
+August.
+
+There was a real change in Tish. She stopped knitting abdominal bands
+for the soldiers in Europe, for one thing, although she had sent over
+almost a dozen very tasty ones. In the evenings, when we dropped in to
+chat with her, she said very little and invariably dozed in her chair.
+
+On one such occasion, Aggie having inadvertently stepped on the rocker
+of her chair while endeavoring by laying a hand on Tish's brow to
+discover if she was feverish, the chair tilted back and Tish wakened
+with a jerk.
+
+She immediately fell to groaning and clasped her hands to the small of
+her back, quite ignoring poor Aggie, whom the chair had caught in the
+epigastric region, and who was compelled for some time to struggle for
+breath.
+
+"Jumping Jehoshaphat!" said Tish in an angry tone. It is rare for Tish
+to use the name of a Biblical character in this way, but she was clearly
+suffering. "What in the world are you doing, Aggie?"
+
+"T-t-trying to breathe," poor Aggie replied.
+
+"Then I wish," Tish said coldly, "that you would make the effort some
+place else than on the rocker of my chair. You jarred me, and I am in no
+state to be jarred."
+
+But she refused to explain further, beyond saying, in reply to a
+question of mine, that she was not feverish and that she had not been
+asleep, having merely closed her eyes to rest them. Also she affirmed
+that she was not taking riding-lessons. We both noticed however, that
+she did not leave her chair during the time we were there, and that she
+was sitting on the sofa cushion I had made her for the previous
+Christmas, and on which I had embroidered the poet Moore's beautiful
+words: "Come, rest in this bosom."
+
+As Aggie was still feeling faint, I advised her to take a mouthful of
+blackberry cordial, which Tish keeps for emergencies in her bathroom
+closet. Immediately following her departure the calm of the evening was
+broken by a loud shriek.
+
+It appeared, on my rushing to the bathroom, while Tish sat heartlessly
+still, that Aggie, not seeing a glass, had placed the bottle to her lips
+and taken quite a large mouthful of liniment, which in color resembled
+the cordial. I found her sitting on the edge of the bathtub in a state
+of collapse.
+
+"I'm poisoned!" she groaned. "Oh, Lizzie, I am not fit to die!"
+
+I flew with the bottle to Tish, who was very calm and stealthily rubbing
+one of her ankles.
+
+"Do her good," Tish said. "Take some of the stiffness out of her liver,
+for one thing. But you might keep an eye on her. It's full of alcohol."
+
+"What's the antidote?" I asked, hearing Aggie's low groans.
+
+"The gold cure is the only thing I can think of at the moment," said
+Tish coldly, and started on the other ankle.
+
+I merely record this incident to show the change in Tish. Aggie was not
+seriously upset, although dizzy for an hour or so and very talkative,
+especially about Mr. Wiggins.
+
+Tish was changed. Her life, which mostly had been an open book to us,
+became filled with mystery. There were whole days when she was not to be
+located anywhere, and evenings, as I have stated, when she dozed in her
+chair.
+
+As usual when we are worried about Tish, we consulted her nephew,
+Charlie Sands. But like all members of the masculine sex he refused to
+be worried.
+
+"She'll be all right," he observed. "She takes these spells. But trust
+the old lady to come up smiling."
+
+"It's either Christian Science or osteopathy," Aggie said dolefully.
+"She's not herself. The fruit cake she sent me the other day tasted very
+queer, and Hannah thinks she put ointment in instead of butter."
+
+"Ointments!" observed Charlie thoughtfully. "And salves! By George, I
+wonder--I'll tell you," he said: "I'll keep an eye open for a few days.
+The symptoms sound like--But never mind. I'll let you know."
+
+We were compelled to be satisfied with this, but for several days we
+lingered in anxiety. During that painful interval nothing occurred to
+enlighten us, except one conversation with Tish.
+
+We had taken dinner with her, and she seemed to be all right again and
+more than usually active. She had given up the Bran-Nut after breaking
+a tooth on it, and was eating rare beef, which she had heard was
+digested in the spleen or some such place, thus resting the stomach for
+a time. She left us, however, immediately after the meal, and Hannah,
+her maid, tiptoed into the room.
+
+"I'm that nervous I could scream," she said. "Do you know what she's
+doing now?
+
+"No, Hannah," I said with bitter sarcasm. "Long ago I learned never to
+surmise what Miss Tish is doing."
+
+"She's in the bathroom, standing on one foot and waving the other in the
+air. She's been doing it," Hannah said, "for weeks. First one foot, then
+the other. And that ain't all."
+
+"You've been spying on Miss Tish," Aggie said. "Shame on you, Hannah!"
+
+"I have, Miss Aggie. Spy I have and spy I will, while there's breath in
+my body. Twenty years have I--Do you know what she does when she come
+home from these sneakin' trips of hers? She sits in a hot bath until the
+wonder is that her blood ain't turned to water. And after that she uses
+liniment. Her underclothes is that stained up with it that I'm ashamed
+to hang 'em out."
+
+Here Tish returned and, after a suspicious glance at Hannah, sat down.
+Aggie and I glanced at each other. She did not, as she had for some time
+past, line the chair with pillows, and there was an air about her almost
+of triumph.
+
+She did not, however, volunteer any explanation. Aggie and I were driven
+to speculation, in which we indulged on our way home, Aggie being my
+guest at the time, on account of her janitor's children having measles,
+and Aggie never having had them, although recalling a severe rash as a
+child, with other measly symptoms.
+
+"She has something in mind for next summer," said Aggie apprehensively,
+"and she is preparing her strength for it. Tish is forehanded if nothing
+else."
+
+"Well," I remarked with some bitterness, "if we are going along it might
+be well to prepare us too."
+
+"Something," Aggie continued, "that requires landing on one foot with
+the other in the air."
+
+"Don't drivel," said I. "She's not likely going into the Russian ballet.
+She's training her muscles, that's all."
+
+But the mystery was solved the following morning when Charlie Sands
+called me up.
+
+"I've got it, beloved aunt," he said.
+
+"Got what?" said I.
+
+"What the old lady is up to. She's a wonder, and no mistake. Only I
+think it was stingy of her not to let you and Aunt Aggie in."
+
+He asked me to get Aggie and meet him at the office as soon as possible,
+but he refused to explain further. And he continued to refuse until we
+had arrived at our destination, a large brick building in the center of
+the city.
+
+"Now," he said, "take a long breath and go in. And mind--no excitement."
+
+We went in. There was a band playing and people circling at a mile a
+minute. In the center there was a cleared place, and Tish was there on
+ice skates. An instructor had her by the arm, and as we looked she waved
+him off, gave herself a shove forward with one foot, and then, with her
+arms waving, she made a double curve, first on one foot and then on the
+other.
+
+"The outside edge, by George!" said Charlie Sands. "The old sport!"
+
+Unluckily at that moment Tish saw us, and sat down violently on the ice.
+And a quite nice-looking young man fell over her and lay stunned for
+several seconds. We rushed round the arena, expecting to see them both
+carried out, but Tish was uninjured, and came skating toward us with her
+hands in her pockets. It was the young man who had to be assisted out.
+
+"Well," she said, fetching up against the railing with a bang, "of
+course you had to come before I was ready for you! In a week I'll really
+be skating."
+
+We said nothing, but looked at her, and I am afraid our glances showed
+disapproval, for she straightened her hat with a jerk.
+
+"Well?" she said. "You're not tongue-tied all of a sudden, are you?
+Can't a woman take a little exercise without her family and friends
+coming snooping round and acting as if she'd broken the Ten
+Commandments?"
+
+"Breaking the Ten Commandments!" I said witheringly. "Breaking a leg
+more likely. If you could have seen yourself, Tish Carberry, sprawled on
+that ice at your age, and both your arteries and your bones brittle, as
+the specialist told you,--and I heard him myself,--you'd take those
+things off your feet and go home and hide your head."
+
+"I wish I had your breath, Lizzie," Tish said. "I'd be a submarine
+diver."
+
+Saying which she skated off, and did not come near us again. A young
+gentleman went up to her and asked her to skate, though I doubt if she
+had ever seen him before. And as we left the building in disapproval
+they were doing fancy turns in the middle of the place, and a crowd was
+gathering round them.
+
+Owing to considerable feeling being roused by the foregoing incident,
+we did not see much of Tish for a week. If a middle-aged woman wants to
+make a spectacle of herself, both Aggie and I felt that she needed to be
+taught a lesson. Besides, we knew Tish. With her, to conquer a thing is
+to lose interest.
+
+On the anniversary of the day Aggie became engaged to Mr. Wiggins, Tish
+asked us both to dinner, and we buried the hatchet, or rather the
+skates. It was when dessert came that we realized how everything that
+had occurred had been preparation for the summer, and that we were not
+going to Asbury Park, after all.
+
+"It's like this," said Tish. "Hannah, go out and close the door, and
+don't stand listening. I have figured it all out," she said, when Hannah
+had slammed out. "The muscles used in skating are the ones used in
+mountain-climbing. Besides, there may be times when a pair of skates
+would be handy going over the glaciers. It's not called Glacier Park for
+nothing, I dare say. When we went into the Maine woods we went
+unprepared. This time I intend to be ready for any emergency."
+
+But we gave her little encouragement. We would go along, and told her
+so. But further than that I refused to prepare. I would not skate, and
+said so.
+
+"Very well, Lizzie," she said. "Don't blame me if you find yourself
+unable to cope with mountain hardships. I merely felt this way: if each
+of us could do one thing well it might be helpful. There's always snow,
+and if Aggie would learn to use snowshoes it might be valuable."
+
+"Where could I practice?" Aggie demanded.
+
+But Tish went on, ignoring Aggie's sarcastic tone. "And if you, Lizzie,
+would learn to throw a lasso, or lariat,--I believe both terms are
+correct,--it would be a great advantage, especially in case of meeting
+ferocious animals. The park laws will not allow us to kill them, and it
+would be mighty convenient, Lizzie. Not to mention that it would be an
+accomplishment few women possess."
+
+I refused to make the attempt, although Tish sent for the clothesline,
+and with the aid of the encyclopdia made a loop in the end of it.
+Finally she became interested herself, and when we left rather
+downhearted at ten o'clock she had caught the rocking-chair three times
+and broken the clock.
+
+Aggie and I prepared with little enthusiasm, I must confess. We had as
+much love for the rocks and rills of our great country as Tish, but, as
+Aggie observed, there were rocks and rocks, and one could love them
+without climbing up them or falling off them.
+
+The only comfort we had was that Charlie Sands said that we should ride
+ponies, and not horses. My niece's children have a pony which is very
+gentle and not much larger than a dog, which comes up on the porch for
+lumps of sugar. We were lured to a false sense of security, I must say.
+
+As far as we could see, Tish was making few preparations for the trip.
+She said we could get everything we needed at the park entrance, and
+that the riding was merely sitting in a saddle and letting the pony do
+the rest. But on the 21st of June, the anniversary of the day Aggie was
+to have been married, we went out to decorate Mr. Wiggins's last
+resting-place, and coming out of the cemetery we met Tish.
+
+She was on a horse, astride!
+
+She was not alone. A gentleman was riding beside her, and he had her
+horse by a long leather strap.
+
+She pretended not to see us, and Aggie unfortunately waved her red
+parasol at her. The result was most amazing. The beast she was on jerked
+itself free in an instant, and with the same movement, apparently,
+leaped the hedge beside the road. One moment there was Tish, in a derby
+hat and breeches, and the next moment there was only the gentleman, with
+his mouth open.
+
+Aggie collapsed, moaning, in the road, and beyond the hedge we could
+hear the horse leaping tombstones in the cemetery.
+
+"Oh, Tish!" Aggie wailed.
+
+I broke my way through the hedge to find what was left of her, while the
+riding-master bolted for the gate. But to my intense surprise Tish was
+not on the ground. Then I saw her. She was still on the creature, and
+she was coming back along the road, with her riding-hat on the back of
+her head and a gleam in her eye that I knew well enough was a gleam of
+triumph.
+
+She halted the thing beside me and looked down with a patronizing air.
+
+"He's a trifle nervous this morning," she said calmly. "Hasn't been
+worked enough. Good horse, though,--very neat jump."
+
+Then she rode on and out through the gates, ignoring Aggie's pitiful
+wail and scorning the leading-string the instructor offered.
+
+We reached Glacier Park without difficulty, although Tish insisted on
+talking to the most ordinary people on the train, and once, losing her,
+we found her in the drawing-room learning to play bridge, although not a
+card-player, except for casino. Though nothing has ever been said, I
+believe she learned when too late that they were playing for money, as
+she borrowed ten dollars from me late in the afternoon and was looking
+rather pale.
+
+"What do you think?" she said, while I was getting the money from the
+safety pocket under my skirt. "The young man who knocked me down on the
+ice that day is on the train. I've just exchanged a few words with him.
+He was not much hurt, although unconscious for a short time. His name is
+Bell--James C. Bell."
+
+Soon after that Tish brought him to us, and we had a nice talk. He said
+he had not been badly hurt on the ice, although he got a cut on the
+forehead from Tish's skate, requiring two stitches.
+
+After a time he and Aggie went out on the platform, only returning when
+Aggie got a cinder in her eye.
+
+"Just think," she said as he went for water to use in my eye-cup, "he
+is going to meet the girl he is in love with out at the park. She has
+been there for four weeks. They are engaged. He is very much in love. He
+didn't talk of anything else."
+
+She told him she had confided his tender secret to us, and instead of
+looking conscious he seemed glad to have three people instead of one to
+talk to about her.
+
+"You see, it's like this," he said: "She is very good looking, and in
+her town a moving-picture company has its studio. That part's all right.
+I suppose we have to have movies. But the fool of a director met her at
+a party, and said she would photograph well and ought to be with them.
+He offered her a salary, and it went to her head. She's young," he
+added, "and he said she could be as great a hit as Mary Pickford."
+
+"How sad!" said Aggie. "But of course she refused?"
+
+"Well, no, she liked the idea. It got me worried. Worried her people
+too. Her father's able to give her a good home, and I'm expecting to
+take that job off his hands in about a year. But girls are queer. She
+wanted to try it awfully."
+
+It developed that he had gone to her folks about it, and they'd offered
+her a vacation with some of her school friends in Glacier Park.
+
+"It's pretty wild out there," he went on, "and we felt that the air, and
+horseback riding and everything, would make her forget the movies. I
+hope so. She's there now. But she's had the bug pretty hard. Got so she
+was always posing, without knowing it."
+
+But he was hopeful that she would be cured, and said she was to meet him
+at the station.
+
+"She's an awfully nice girl, you understand," he finished. "It's only
+that this thing got hold of her and needed driving out."
+
+Well, we were watching when the train drew in at Glacier Park Station,
+and she was there. She was a very pretty girl, and it was quite touching
+to see him look at her. But Aggie observed something and remarked on it.
+
+"She's not as glad to see him as he is to see her," she said. "He was
+going to kiss her, and she moved back."
+
+In the crowd we lost sight of them, but that evening, sitting in the
+lobby of the hotel, we saw Mr. Bell wandering round alone. He looked
+depressed, and Aggie beckoned to him.
+
+"How is everything?" she asked. "Is the cure working?"
+
+He dropped into a chair and looked straight ahead.
+
+"Not so you could notice it!" he said bitterly. "Would you believe that
+there's a moving-picture outfit here, taking scenes in the park?"
+
+"No!"
+
+"There is. They've taken two thousand feet of her already, dressed like
+an Indian," he said in a tone of suppressed fury. "It makes me sick. I
+dare say if we tied her in a well some fool would lower a camera on a
+rope."
+
+Just at that moment she sauntered past us with a reddish-haired young
+man. Mr. Bell ignored her, although I saw her try to catch his eye.
+
+"That's the moving-picture man with her," he said in a low, violent tone
+when they had passed. "Name's Oliver." He groaned. "He's told her she
+ought to go in for the business. She'd be a second Mary Pickford! I'd
+like to kill him!" He rose savagely and left us.
+
+We spent the night in the hotel at the park entrance, and I could not
+get to sleep. Tish was busy engaging a guide and going over our
+supplies, and at eleven o'clock Aggie came into my room and sat down on
+the bed.
+
+"I can't sleep, Lizzie," she said. "That poor Mr. Bell is on my mind.
+Besides, did you see those ferocious Indians hanging round?"
+
+Well, I had seen them, but said nothing.
+
+"They would scalp one as quick as not," Aggie went on. "And who's to
+know but that our guide will be in league with them? I've lost my
+teeth," she said with a flash of spirit, "but so far I've kept my hair,
+and mean to if possible. That old Indian has a scalp tied to the end of
+a stick. Lizzie, I'm nervous."
+
+"If it is only hair they want, I don't mind their taking my switch," I
+observed, trying to be facetious, although uneasy. As to the switch, it
+no longer matched my hair, and I would have parted from it without a
+pang.
+
+"And another thing," said Aggie: "Tish can talk about ponies until she
+is black in the face. The creatures are horses. I've seen them."
+
+Well, I knew that, too, by that time. As we walked to the hotel from the
+train I had seen one of than carrying on. It was arching its back like a
+cat that's just seen a strange dog, and with every arch it swelled its
+stomach. At the third heave it split the strap that held the saddle on,
+and then it kicked up in the rear and sent saddle and rider over its
+head. So far as I had seen, no casualty had resulted, but it had set me
+thinking. Given a beast with an India-rubber spine and no sense of
+honor, I felt I would be helpless.
+
+Tish came in just then and we confronted her.
+
+[Illustration: "It's well enough for you, Tish Carberry, to talk about
+gripping a horse with your knees"]
+
+"Ponies!" I said bitterly. "They are horses, if I know a horse. And,
+moreover, it's well enough for you, Tish Carberry, to talk about
+gripping a horse with your knees. I'm not built that way, and you know
+it. Besides, no knee grip will answer when a creature begins to act like
+a cat in a fit."
+
+Aggie here had a bright idea. She said that she had seen pictures of
+pneumatic jackets to keep people from drowning, and that Mr. McKee, a
+buyer at one of the stores at home, had taken one, fully inflated, when
+he crossed to Paris for autumn suits.
+
+"I would like to have one, Tish," she finished. "It would break the
+force of a fall anyhow, even if it did puncture."
+
+Tish, who was still dressed, went out to the curio shop in the lobby,
+and returned with the sad news that there was nothing of the sort on
+sale.
+
+We were late in getting started the next morning owing partly to Aggie's
+having put her riding-breeches on wrong, and being unable to sit down
+when once in the saddle. But the main reason was the guide we had
+engaged. Tish heard him using profane language to one of the horses and
+dismissed him on the spot.
+
+The man who was providing our horses and outfit, however, understood,
+and in a short time returned with another man.
+
+"I've got a good one for you now, Miss Carberry," he said. "Safe and
+perfectly gentle, and as mild as milk. Only has one fault, and maybe you
+won't mind that. He smokes considerably."
+
+"I don't object, as long as it's in the open air," Tish said.
+
+So that was arranged. But I must say that the new man did not look mild.
+He had red hair, although a nice smile with a gold tooth, and his
+trousers were of white fur, which looked hot for summer.
+
+"You are sure that you don't use strong language?" Tish asked.
+
+"No, ma'am," he said. "I was raised strict, and very particular as to
+swearing. Dear, dear now, would you look at that cinch! Blow up their
+little tummies, they do, when they're cinched, and when they breathe it
+out, the saddle's as loose as the tongues of some of these here
+tourists."
+
+Tish swung herself up without any trouble, but owing to a large canvas
+bag on the back of my saddle I was unable to get my leg across, and
+was compelled to have it worked over, a little at a time. At last,
+however, we were ready. A white pack-horse, carrying our tents and
+cooking-utensils, was led by Bill, which proved to be the name of our
+cowboy guide.
+
+Mr. Bell came to say good-bye and to wish us luck. But he looked
+unhappy, and there was no sign whatever of the young lady, whose name we
+had learned was Helen.
+
+"I may see you on the trail," he said sadly. "I'm about sick of this
+place, and I'm thinking of clearing out."
+
+Aggie reminded him that faint heart never won fair lady, but he only
+shook his head.
+
+"I'm not so sure that I want to win," he said. "Marriage is a serious
+business, and I don't know that I'd care to have a wife that followed a
+camera like a street kid follows a brass band. It wouldn't make for a
+quiet home."
+
+We left him staring wistfully into the distance.
+
+Tish sat in her saddle and surveyed the mountain peaks that rose behind
+the hotel.
+
+"Twenty centuries are looking down upon us!" she said. "The crest of our
+native land lies before us. We will conquer those beetling crags, or die
+trying. All right, Bill. Forward!"
+
+Bill led off, followed by the pack-horse, then Tish, Aggie and myself.
+We kept on in this order for some time, which gave me a chance to
+observe Aggie carefully. I am not much of a horsewoman myself, having
+never been on a horse before. But my father was fond of riding, and I
+soon adapted myself to the horse's gait, especially when walking. On
+level stretches, however, where Bill spurred his horse to a trot, I was
+not so comfortable, and Aggie appeared to strike the saddle in a
+different spot every time she descended.
+
+Once, on her turning her profile to me in a glance of despair, I was
+struck by the strange and collapsed appearance of her face. This was
+explained, however, when my horse caught up to hers on a wider stretch
+of road, and I saw that she had taken out her teeth and was holding them
+in her hand.
+
+"Al-almost swallowed them," she gasped. "Oh, Lizzie, to think of a
+summer of this!"
+
+At last we left the road and turned onto a footpath, which instantly
+commenced to rise. Tish called back something about the beauties of
+nature and riding over a carpet of flowers, but my horse was fording a
+small stream at the time and I was too occupied to reply. The path--or
+trail, which is what Bill called it--grew more steep, and I let go of
+the lines and held to the horn of my saddle. The horses were climbing
+like goats.
+
+"Tish," Aggie called desperately, "I can't stand this. I'm going back!
+I'm--Lordamighty!"
+
+Fortunately Tish did not hear this. We had suddenly emerged on the brink
+of a precipice. A two-foot path clung to the cliff, and along the very
+edge of this the horses walked, looking down in an interested manner now
+and then. My blood turned to water and I closed my eyes.
+
+"Tish!" Aggie shrieked.
+
+But the only effect of this was to start her horse into a trot. I had
+closed my eyes, but I opened them in time to see Aggie give a wild
+clutch and a low moan.
+
+In a few moments the trail left the edge, and Aggie turned in her saddle
+and looked back at me.
+
+"I lost my lower set back there," she said. "They went over the edge. I
+suppose they're falling yet."
+
+"It's a good thing it wasn't the upper set," I said, to comfort her. "As
+far as appearance goes--"
+
+"Appearance!" she said bitterly. "Do you suppose we'll meet anybody but
+desperadoes and Indians in a place like this? And not an egg with us, of
+course."
+
+The eggs referred to her diet, as at different times, when having her
+teeth repaired, she can eat little else.
+
+"Ham," she called back in a surly tone, "and hard tack, I suppose! I'll
+starve, Lizzie, that's all. If only we had brought some junket tablets!"
+
+With the exception of this incident the morning was quiet. Tish and Bill
+talked prohibition, which he believed in, and the tin pans on the
+pack-horse clattered, and we got higher all the time, and rode through
+waterfalls and along the edge of death. By noon I did not much care if
+the horses fell over or not. The skin was off me in a number of places,
+and my horse did not like me, and showed it by nipping back at my leg
+here and there.
+
+At eleven o'clock, riding through a valley on a trail six inches wide,
+Bill's horse stepped on a hornets' nest. The insects were probably dazed
+at first, but by the time Tish's horse arrived they were prepared, and
+the next thing we knew Tish's horse was flying up the mountain-side as
+if it had gone crazy, and Bill was shouting to us to stop.
+
+The last we saw of Tish for some time was her horse leaping a mountain
+stream, and jumping like a kangaroo, and Bill was following.
+
+"She'll be killed!" Aggie cried. "Oh, Tish, Tish!"
+
+"Don't yell," I said. "You'll start the horses. And for Heaven's sake,
+Aggie," I added grimly, "remember that this is a pleasure trip."
+
+It was a half-hour before Tish and Bill returned. Tish was a chastened
+woman. She said little or nothing, but borrowed some ointment from me
+for her face, where the branches of trees had scraped it, while Bill led
+the horses round the fatal spot. I recall, however, that she said she
+wished now that we had brought the other guide.
+
+"Because I feel," she observed, "that a little strong language would be
+a relief."
+
+We had luncheon at noon in a sylvan glade, and Aggie was pathetic. She
+dipped a cracker in a cup of tea, and sat off by herself under a tree.
+Tish, however, had recovered her spirits.
+
+"Throw out your chests, and breathe deep of this pure air unsullied by
+civilization," she cried. "Aggie, fill yourself with ozone."
+
+"Humph!" said Aggie. "It's about all I will fill myself with."
+
+"Think," Tish observed, "of the fools and dolts who are living under
+roofs, struggling, contending, plotting, while all Nature awaits them."
+
+"With stings," Aggie said nastily, "and teeth, and horns, and claws, and
+every old thing! Tish, I want to go back. I'm not happy, and I don't
+enjoy scenery when I'm not happy. Besides, I can't eat the landscape."
+
+As I look back, I believe it would have been better if we had returned.
+I think of that day, some time later, when we made the long descent from
+the Piegan Pass under such extraordinary circumstances, and I realize
+that, although worse for our bodies, which had grown strong and agile,
+so that I have, later on, seen Aggie mount her horse on a run, it would
+have been better for our nerves had we returned.
+
+We were all perfectly stiff after luncheon, and Aggie was sulking also.
+Bill was compelled to lift us into our saddles, and again we started up
+and up. The trail was now what he called a "switchback." Halfway up
+Aggie refused to go farther, but on looking back decided not to return
+either.
+
+"I shall not go another step," she called. "Here I am, and here I stay
+till I die."
+
+"Very well," Tish said from overhead. "I suppose you don't expect us all
+to stay and die with you. I'll tell your niece when I see her."
+
+Aggie thought better of it, however, and followed on, with her eyes
+closed and her lips moving in prayer. She happened to open them at a bad
+place, although safe enough, according to Bill, and nothing to what we
+were coming to a few days later. Opening them as she did on a ledge of
+rock which sloped steeply for what appeared to be several miles down
+on each side, she uttered a piercing shriek, followed by a sneeze. As
+before, her horse started to run, and Aggie is, I believe Bill said,
+the only person in the world who ever took that place at a canter.
+
+We were to take things easy the first day, Bill advised. "Till you get
+your muscles sort of eased up, ladies," he said. "If you haven't been
+riding astride, a horse's back seems as wide as the roof of a church.
+But we'll get a rest now. The rest of the way is walking."
+
+"I can't walk," Aggie said. "I can't get my knees together."
+
+"Sorry, ma'am," said Bill. "We're going down now, and the animals has to
+be led. That's one of the diversions of a trip like this. First you ride
+and than you walk. And then you ride again. This here's one of the show
+places, although easy of access from the entrance. Be a good place for a
+holdup, I've always said."
+
+"A holdup?" Tish asked. Her enthusiasm seemed to have flagged somewhat,
+but at this she brightened up.
+
+"Yes'm. You see, we're near the Canadian border, and it would be easy
+for a gang to slip over and back again. Don't know why we've never had
+one. Yellowstone can boast of a number."
+
+I observed tartly that I considered it nothing to boast of, but Bill did
+not agree with me.
+
+"It doesn't hurt a neighborhood none," he observed. "Adds romance, as
+you might say."
+
+He went on and, happening to slide on a piece of shale at that moment, I
+sat down unexpectedly and the horse put its foot on me.
+
+I felt embittered and helpless, but the others kept on.
+
+"Very well," I said, "go on. Don't mind me. If this creature wants to
+sit in my lap, well and good. I expect it's tired."
+
+But as they went on callously, I was obliged to shove the creature off
+and to hobble on. Bill was still babbling about holdups, and Aggie was
+saying that he was sunstruck, but of course it did not matter.
+
+We made very slow progress, owing to taking frequent rests, and late in
+the afternoon we were overtaken by Mr. Bell, on foot and carrying a
+pack. He would have passed on without stopping, but Aggie hailed him.
+
+"Not going to hike, are you?" she said pleasantly. Aggie is fond of
+picking up the vernacular of a region.
+
+"No," he said in a surly tone quite unlike his former urbane manner,
+"I'm merely taking this pack out for a walk."
+
+But he stopped and mopped his face.
+
+"To tell you the truth, ladies," he said, "I'm working off a little
+steam, that's all. I was afraid, if I stayed round the hotel, I'd do
+something I'd be sorry for. There are times when I am not a fit
+companion for any one, and this is one of them."
+
+We invited him to join us, but he refused.
+
+"No, I'm better alone," he said. "When things get too strong for me on
+the trail I can sling things about. I've been throwing boulders down the
+mountain every now and then. I'd just as soon they hit somebody as not.
+Also," he added, "I'm safer away from any red-headed men."
+
+We saw him glance at Bill, and understood. Mr. Oliver was red-headed.
+
+"Love's an awful thing," said Bill as the young man went on, kicking
+stones out of his way. "I'm glad I ain't got it."
+
+Tish turned and eyed him. "True love is a very beautiful thing," she
+rebuked him. "Although a single woman myself, I believe in it. 'Come
+live with me and be my love,'" she quoted, sitting down to shake a stone
+out of her riding-boot.
+
+Bill looked startled. "I might say," he said hastily, "that I may have
+misled you, ladies. I'm married."
+
+"You said you had never been in love," Tish said sharply.
+
+"Well, not to say real love," he replied. "She was the cook of an outfit
+I was with and it just came about natural. She was going to leave, which
+meant that I'd have to do the cooking, which I ain't much at, especially
+pastry. So I married her."
+
+Tish gave him a scornful glance but said nothing and we went on.
+
+We camped late that afternoon beside Two Medicine Lake, and while Bill
+put up the tents the three of us sat on a log and soaked our aching feet
+in the water which was melted glacier, and naturally cold.
+
+What was our surprise, on turning somewhat, to see the angry lover
+fishing on a point near by. While we stared he pulled out a large trout,
+and stalked away without a glance in our direction. As Tish, with her
+usual forethought, had brought a trout rod, she hastily procured it, but
+without result.
+
+"Of course," Aggie said, "no fish! I could eat a piece of broiled fish.
+I dare say I shall be skin and bone at the end of this trip--and not
+much skin."
+
+Bill had set up the sleeping-tent and built a fire, and it looked cozy
+and comfortable. But Tish had the young man on her mind, and after
+supper she put on a skirt which she had brought along and went to see
+him.
+
+"I'd take him some supper, Bill," she said, "but you are correct: you
+are no cook."
+
+She disappeared among the bushes, only to return in a short time,
+jerking off her skirt as she came.
+
+"He says all he wants is to be let alone," she said briefly. "I must say
+I'm disappointed in him. He was very agreeable before."
+
+I pass without comment over the night. Bill had put up the tent over the
+root of a large tree, and we disposed ourselves about it as well as we
+could. In the course of the night one of the horses broke loose and put
+its head inside the tent. Owing to Aggie's thinking it was a bear, Tish
+shot at it, fortunately missing it.
+
+But the frightened animal ran away, and Bill was until noon the next day
+finding it. We cooked our own breakfast, and Tish made some gems, having
+brought the pan along. But the morning dragged, although the scenery was
+lovely.
+
+At twelve Bill brought the horse back and came over to us.
+
+"If you don't mind my saying it, Miss Carberry," he observed, "you're a
+bit too ready with that gun. First thing you know you'll put a hole
+through me, and then where will you be?"
+
+"I've got along without men most of my life," Tish said sharply. "I
+reckon we'd manage."
+
+"Well," he said, "there's another angle to it. Where would I be?"
+
+"That's between you and your Creator," Tish retorted.
+
+We went on again that afternoon, and climbed another precipice. We saw
+no human being except a mountain goat, although Bill claimed to have
+seen a bear. Tish was quite calm at all times, and had got so that she
+could look down into eternity without a shudder. But Aggie and I were
+still nervous, and at the steepest places we got off and walked.
+
+The unfortunate part was that the exercise and the mountain air made
+Aggie hungry, and there was little that she could eat.
+
+"If any one had told me a month ago," she said, mopping her forehead,
+"that I would be scaling the peaks of my country on crackers and tea, I
+wouldn't have believed it. I'm done out, Lizzie. I can't climb another
+inch."
+
+Bill was ahead with the pack horse, and Tish, overhearing her, called
+back some advice.
+
+"Take your horse's tail and let him pull you up, Aggie," she said. "I've
+read it somewhere."
+
+Aggie, although frequently complaining, always does as Tish suggests. So
+she took the horse's tail, when a totally unexpected thing happened.
+Docile as the creature generally was, it objected at once, and kicked
+out with both rear feet. In a moment, it seemed to me, Aggie was gone,
+and her horse was moving on alone.
+
+"Aggie!" I called in a panic.
+
+Tish stopped, and we both looked about. Then we saw her, lying on a
+ledge about ten feet below the trail. She was flat on her back, and her
+riding-hat was gone. But she was uninjured, although shaken, for as we
+looked she sat up, and an agonized expression came over her face.
+
+"Aggie!" I cried. "Is anything broken?"
+
+"Damnation!" said Aggie in an awful voice. "The upper set is gone!"
+
+I have set down exactly what Aggie said. I admit that the provocation
+was great. But Tish was not one to make allowances, and she turned and
+went on, leaving us alone. She is not without feeling, however, for from
+the top of the pass she sent Bill down with a rope, and we dragged poor
+Aggie to the trail again. Her nerves were shaken and she was repentant
+also, for when she found that her hat was gone she said nothing,
+although her eyes took on a hunted look.
+
+At the top of the pass Tish was sitting on a stone. She had taken her
+mending-box from the saddle, where she always kept it handy, and was
+drawing up a hole in her stocking. I observed to her pleasantly that it
+was a sign of scandal to mend clothing while still on, but she ignored
+me, although, as I reflected bitterly, I had not been kicked over the
+cliff.
+
+It was a subdued and speechless Aggie who followed us that afternoon
+along the trail. As her hat was gone, I took the spare dish towel and
+made a turban for her, with an end hanging down to protect the back of
+her neck. But she expressed little gratitude, beyond observing that as
+she was going over the edge piecemeal, she'd better have done it all at
+once and be through with it.
+
+The afternoon wore away slowly. It seemed a long time until we reached
+our camping-place, partly because, although a small eater ordinarily,
+the air and exercise had made me feel famished. But the disagreement
+between Tish and Aggie, owing to the latter's unfortunate exclamation
+while kicked over the cliff, made the time seem longer. There was not
+the usual exchange of pleasant nothings between us.
+
+But by six o'clock Tish was more amiable, having seen bear scratches on
+trees near the camp, and anticipating the sight of a bear. She mixed up
+a small cup cake while Bill was putting up our tent, and then, taking
+her rod, proceeded to fish, while Aggie and I searched for grasshoppers.
+These were few, owing to the altitude, but we caught four, which we
+imprisoned in a match-box.
+
+With them Tish caught four trout and, broiling them nicely, she offered
+one to poor Aggie. It was a peace offering, and taken as such, so that
+we were soon on our former agreeable footing, and all forgotten.
+
+The next day it rained, and we were obliged to sit in the tent. Bill sat
+with us, and talked mainly of desperadoes.
+
+"As I observed before," he said, "there hasn't been any tourist holdup
+yet. But it's bound to come. Take the Yellowstone, now,--one holdup a
+year's the average, and it's full of soldiers at that."
+
+"It's a wonder people keep on going," I observed moving out of a puddle.
+
+"Oh, I don't know," he said. "In one way it's good business. I take it
+this way: When folks come West they want the West they've read about.
+What do they care for irrigation and apple orchards? What they like is
+danger and a little gunplay, the sort of thing they see in these here
+moving pictures."
+
+"I'm sure I don't," Aggie remarked. It was growing dusk, and she peered
+out into the forest round us. "There is something crackling out there
+now," she said.
+
+"Only a bear, likely," Bill assured her. "We have a sight of bears here.
+No, ma'am, they want danger. And every holdup's an advertisement. You
+see, the Government can't advertise these here parks; not the way it
+should, anyhow. But a holdup's news, so the papers print it, and it sets
+people to thinking about the park. Maybe they never thought of the place
+and are arranging to go elsewhere. Then along comes a gang and raises
+h--, raises trouble, and the park's in every one's mouth, so to speak.
+We'd get considerable business if there was one this summer."
+
+At that moment the crackling outside increased, and a shadowy form
+emerged from the bushes. Even Bill stood up, and Aggie screamed.
+
+It was, however, only poor Mr. Bell.
+
+"Mind if I borrow some matches?" he said gruffly.
+
+"We can't lend matches," Tish replied. "At least, I don't see the use of
+sending them back after they've been lighted. We can give you some."
+
+"My mistake," he said.
+
+That was all he said, except the word "Thanks" when I reached him a box.
+
+"He's a surly creature," Tish observed as he crackled through the brush
+again. "More than likely that girl's better off without him."
+
+"He looks rather downhearted," Aggie remarked. "Much that we think is
+temper is due to unhappiness."
+
+"Much of your charitable view is due to a good dinner too," Tish said.
+"Here we are, in the center of the wilderness, with great peaks on every
+hand, and we meet a fellow creature who speaks nine words, and begrudges
+those. If he's as stingy with money as with language she's hard a narrow
+escape."
+
+"He's had kind of a raw deal," Bill put in. "The girl was stuck on him
+all right, until this moving-picture chap came along. He offered to take
+some pictures with her in them, and it was all off. They're making up a
+play now, and she's to be in it."
+
+"What sort of a play?" Tish demanded.
+
+"Sorry not to oblige," Bill replied. "Can't say the nature of it."
+
+But all of us felt that Bill knew and would not say.
+
+Tish, to whom a mystery is a personal affront, determined to find out
+for herself; and when later in the evening we saw the light of Bell's
+camp-fire, it was Tish herself who suggested that we go over and visit
+with him.
+
+"We can converse about various things," she said, "and take his mind
+from his troubles. But it would be better not to mention affairs of the
+heart. He's probably sensitive."
+
+So we left Bill to look after things, and went to call on Mr. Bell. It
+was farther to his camp than it had appeared, and Tish unfortunately ran
+into a tree and bruised her nose badly. When it had stopped bleeding,
+however, we went on, and at last arrived.
+
+He was sitting on a log by the fire, smoking a pipe and looking very
+sad. Behind him was a bit of a tent not much larger than an umbrella.
+
+Aggie touched my arm. "My heart aches for him," she said. "There is
+despair in his very eyes."
+
+I do not believe that at first he was very glad to see us, but he
+softened somewhat when Tish held out the cake she had brought.
+
+"That's very nice of you," he said, rising. "I'm afraid I can't ask you
+to sit down. The ground's wet and there is only this log."
+
+"I've sat on logs before," Tish replied. "We thought we'd call, seeing
+we are neighbors. As the first comers it was our place to call first, of
+course."
+
+"I see," he said, and poked up the fire with a piece of stick.
+
+"We felt that you might be lonely," said Aggie.
+
+"I came here to be lonely," he replied gloomily. "I want to be lonely."
+
+Tish, however, was determined to be cheerful, and asked him, as a safe
+subject, how he felt about the war.
+
+"War?" he said. "That's so, there is a war. To tell the truth, I had
+forgotten about it. I've been thinking of other things."
+
+We saw that it was going to be difficult to cheer him. Tish tried the
+weather, which brought us nowhere, as he merely grunted. But Aggie
+broached the subject of desperadoes, and he roused somewhat.
+
+"There are plenty of shady characters in the park," he said shortly.
+"Wolves in sheep's clothing, that's what they are."
+
+"Bill, our guide, says there may be a holdup at any time."
+
+"Sure there is," he said calmly. "There's one going to be pulled off in
+the next day or two."
+
+We sat petrified, and Aggie's eyes were starting out of her head.
+
+"All the trimmings," he went on, staring at the fire. "Innocent and
+unsuspecting tourists, lunch, laughter, boiled coffee, and cold ham.
+Ambush. The whole business--followed by highwaymen in flannel shirts and
+revolvers. Dead tourist or two, desperate resistance--everything."
+
+Aggie rose, pale as an aspen. "You--you are joking!" she cried.
+
+"Do I look like it?" he demanded fiercely. "I tell you there is going to
+be the whole thing. At the end the lovely girl will escape on horseback
+and ride madly for aid. She will meet the sheriff and a posse, who are
+out for a picnic or some such damfool nonsense, and--"
+
+"Young man," Tish said coldly, "if you know all this, why are you
+sitting here and not alarming the authorities?"
+
+"Pooh!" he said disagreeably. "It's a put-up scheme, to advertise the
+park. Yellowstone's got ahead of them this year, and has had its
+excitement, with all the papers ringing with it. That was a gag, too,
+probably."
+
+"Do you mean--"
+
+"I mean considerable," he said. "That red-headed movie idiot will be on
+a rise, taking the tourists as they ride through. Of course he doesn't
+expect the holdup--not in the papers anyhow. He happens to have the
+camera trained on the party, and gets it all. Result--a whacking good
+picture, revolvers firing blank cartridges, everything which people will
+crowd to see. Oh, it's good business all right. I don't mind admitting
+that."
+
+Tish's face expressed the greatest rage. She rose, drawing herself to
+her full height.
+
+"And the tourists?" she demanded. "They lend themselves to this
+imposition? To this infamy? To this turpitude?"
+
+"Certainly not. They think it's the real thing. The whole business hangs
+on that. And as the sheriff, or whoever it is in the fool plot, captures
+the bandits, the party gets its money back, and has material for
+conversation for the next twenty years."
+
+"To think," said Tish, "of our great National Government lending itself
+to such a scheme!"
+
+"Wrong," said the young man. "It's a combination of Western railroads
+and a movie concern acting together."
+
+"I trust," Tish observed, setting her lips firmly, "that the tourists
+will protest."
+
+"The more noise, the better." The young man, though not more cheerful as
+to appearance, was certainly more talkative. "Trust a clergyman for
+yelling when his pocket's picked."
+
+With one voice the three of us exclaimed: "Mr. Ostermaier!"
+
+He was not sure of the name, but "Helen" had pointed the clergyman out
+to him, and it was Mr. Ostermaier without a doubt.
+
+We talked it over with Bill when we got back, and he was not as
+surprised as we'd expected.
+
+"Knew they were cooking up something. They've got some Indians in it
+too. Saw them rehearsing old Thunder Mountain the other day in nothing
+but a breech-clout."
+
+Tish reproved him for a lack of delicacy of speech, and shortly
+afterward we went to bed. Owing to the root under the tent, and puddles
+here and there, we could not go to sleep for a time, and we discussed
+the "nefarious deed," as Tish aptly termed it, that was about to take
+place.
+
+"Although," Tish observed, "Mr. Ostermaier has been receiving for so
+many years that it might be a good thing, for his soul's sake, to have
+him give up something, even if to bandits." I dozed off after a time,
+but awakened to find Tish sitting up, wide awake.
+
+"I've been thinking that thing over, Lizzie," she said in a low tone. "I
+believe it's our duty to interfere."
+
+"Of course," I replied sarcastically; "and be shown all over the country
+in the movies making fools of ourselves."
+
+"Did you notice that that young man said they would be firing blank
+cartridges?"
+
+Well, even a blank cartridge can be a dangerous thing. Then and there I
+reminded her of my niece's boy, who was struck on the Fourth of July by
+a wad from one, and had to be watched for lockjaw for several weeks.
+
+It was at that moment that we heard Bill, who had no tent, by choice,
+and lay under a tree, give a loud whoop, followed by what was
+unmistakably an oath.
+
+"Bear!" he yelled. "Watch out, he's headed for the tent! It's a
+grizzly."
+
+Tish felt round wildly for her revolver, but it was gone! And the bear
+was close by. We could hear it snuffing about, and to add to the
+confusion Aggie wakened and commenced to sneeze with terror.
+
+"Bill!" Tish called. "I've lost my revolver!"
+
+"I took it, Miss Carberry. But I've been lying in a puddle, and it won't
+go off."
+
+All hope seemed gone. The frail walls of our tent were no protection
+whatever, and as we all knew, even a tree was no refuge from a bear,
+which, as we had seen in the Zoological Garden at home, can climb like a
+cat, only swifter. Besides, none of us could climb a tree.
+
+It was at that moment that Tish had one of those inspirations that make
+her so dependable in emergencies. Feeling round in the tent for a
+possible weapon, she touched a large ham, from which we had broiled a
+few slices at supper. In her shadowy form there was both purpose and
+high courage. With a single sweeping gesture she flung the ham at the
+bear so accurately that we heard the thud with which it struck.
+
+"What the hell are you doing?" Bill called from a safe distance. Even
+then we realized that his restraint of speech was a pose, pure and
+simple. "If you make him angry he'll tear up the whole place."
+
+But Tish did not deign to answer. The rain had ceased, and suddenly the
+moon came out and illuminated the whole scene. We saw the bear sniffing
+at the ham, which lay on the ground. Then he picked it up in his jaws
+and stood looking about.
+
+Tish said later that the moment his teeth were buried in the ham she
+felt safe. I can still see the majestic movement with which she walked
+out of the tent and waved her arms.
+
+"Now, scat with you!" she said firmly. "Scat!"
+
+He "scatted." Snarling through his nose, for fear of dropping the ham,
+he turned and fled up the mountainside. In the open space Tish stood the
+conqueror. She yawned and glanced about.
+
+"Going to be a nice night, after all," she said. "Now, Bill, bring me
+that revolver, and if I catch you meddling with it again I'll put that
+pair of fur rugs you are so proud of in the fire."
+
+Bill, who was ignorant of the ham, emerged sheepishly into the open.
+"Where the--where the dickens did you hit him, Miss Tish?" he asked.
+
+"In the stomach," Tish replied tartly, and taking her revolver went back
+to the tent.
+
+All the next day Tish was quiet. She rode ahead, hardly noticing the
+scenery, with her head dropped on her chest. At luncheon she took a
+sardine sandwich and withdrew to a tree, underneath which she sat, a
+lonely and brooding figure.
+
+When luncheon was over and Aggie and I were washing the dishes and
+hanging out the dish towels to dry on a bush, Tish approached Bill, who
+was pouring water on the fire to extinguish it.
+
+"Bill," she stated, "you came to us under false pretenses. You swear,
+for one thing."
+
+"Only under excitement, Miss Tish," he said. "And as far as that goes,
+Miss Aggie herself said--"
+
+"Also," Tish went on hastily, "you said you could cook. You cannot
+cook."
+
+"Now, look here, Miss Tish," he said in a pleading tone, "I can cook. I
+didn't claim to know the whole cookbook. I can make coffee and fry
+bacon. How'd I know you ladies wanted pastry? As for them canned salmon
+croquettes with white sauce, I reckon to make them with a little
+showing, and--"
+
+"Also," said Tish, cutting in sternly, "you took away my revolver, and
+left us helpless last night, and in peril of wild beasts."
+
+"Tourists ain't allowed to carry guns."
+
+He attempted to look injured, but Tish ignored him.
+
+"Therefore," she said, "if I am not to send you back--which I have been
+considering all day, as I've put up a tent myself before this, and you
+are only an extra mouth to feed, which, as we are one ham short, is
+inconvenient--you will have to justify my keeping you."
+
+"If you will just show me once about them gems, Miss Tish--" he began.
+
+But Tish cut him off. "No," she said firmly, "you are too casual about
+cooking. And you are no dish-washer. Setting a plate in a river and
+letting the current wash it may satisfy cow-punchers. It doesn't go with
+me. The point is this: You know all about the holdup that is going to
+take place. Don't lie. I know you know. Now, you take us there and tell
+us all you know about it."
+
+He scratched his head reflectively. "I'll tell you," he said. "I'm a
+slow thinker. Give me about twenty minutes on it, will you? It's a sort
+of secret, and there's different ways of looking at it."
+
+Tish took out her watch. "Twenty minutes," she said. "Start thinking
+now."
+
+He wandered off and rolled a cigarette. Later on, as I have said, he
+showed Tish how to do it--not, of course, that she meant to smoke, but
+Tish is fond of learning how to do things. She got so she could roll
+them with one hand, and she does it now in the winter evenings, instead
+of rolling paper spills as formerly. When Charlie Sands comes, she
+always has a supply ready for him, although occasionally somewhat dry
+from waiting for a few weeks.
+
+At the end of twenty minutes Tish snapped her watch shut.
+
+"Time!" she called, and Bill came back.
+
+"Well, I'll do it," he said. "I don't know as they'll put you in the
+picture, but I'll see what I can do."
+
+"Picture nothing!" Tish snapped. "You take us there and hide us. That's
+the point. There must be caves round to put us in, although I don't
+insist on a cave. They're damp usually."
+
+Well, he looked puzzled, but he agreed. I caught Aggie's eye, and we
+exchanged glances. There was trouble coming, and we knew it. Our long
+experience with Tish had taught us not to ask questions. "Ours but to do
+and die," as Aggie later said. But I confess to a feeling of uneasiness
+during the remainder of that day.
+
+We changed our course that afternoon, turning off at Saint Mary's and
+spending the night near the Swiss Chalet at Going-to-the-Sun. Aggie and
+I pleaded to spend the night in the chalet, but Tish was adamant.
+
+"When I am out camping, I camp," she said. "I can have a bed at home,
+but I cannot sleep under the stars, on a bed of pine needles, and be
+lured to rest by the murmur of a mountain stream."
+
+Well, we gave it up and went with her. I must say that the trip had
+improved us already. Except when terrified or kicked by a horse, Aggie
+was not sneezing at all, and I could now climb into the saddle
+unassisted. My waistbands were much looser, too, and during a short rest
+that afternoon I put a dart in my riding-breeches, during the absence
+of Bill after the pack-horse, which had strayed.
+
+It was on that occasion that Tish told us as much of her plan as she
+thought it wise for us to know.
+
+"The holdup," she explained, "is to be the day after to-morrow on the
+Piegan Pass. Bill says there is a level spot at the top with rocks all
+about. That is the spot. The Ostermaiers and their party leave the
+automobiles at Many Glaciers and take horses to the pass. It will be
+worth coming clear to Montana to see Mrs. Ostermaier on a horse."
+
+"I still don't see," Aggie observed in a quavering voice, "what we have
+to do with it."
+
+"Naturally not," said Tish. "You'll know as soon as is good for you."
+
+"I don't believe it will ever be good for me," said poor Aggie. "It
+isn't good for anybody to be near a holdup. And I don't want to be in a
+moving picture with no teeth. I'm not a vain woman," she said, "but I
+draw the line at that."
+
+But Tish ignored her. "The only trouble," she said, "is having one
+revolver. If we each had one--Lizzie, did you bring any ink?"
+
+Well, I had, and said so, but that I needed it for postcards when we
+struck a settlement.
+
+Tish waved my objection aside. "I guess it can be managed," she
+observed. "Bill has a knife. Yes, I think it can be done."
+
+She and Bill engaged in an earnest conference that afternoon. At first
+Bill objected. I could see him shaking his head. Then Tish gave him
+something which Aggie said was money. I do not know. She had been short
+of cash on the train, but she may have had more in her trunk. Then I saw
+Bill start to laugh. He laughed until he had to lean against a tree,
+although Tish was quite stern and serious.
+
+We reached Piegan Pass about three that afternoon, and having inspected
+it and the Garden Wall, which is a mile or two high at that point, we
+returned to a "bench" where there were some trees, and dismounted.
+
+Here, to our surprise, we found Mr. Bell again. As Tish remarked, he was
+better at walking than at talking. He looked surprised at seeing us, and
+was much more agreeable than before.
+
+"I'm afraid I was pretty surly the other night," he said. "The truth is,
+I was so blooming unhappy that I didn't give a damn for anything."
+
+But when he saw that Bill was preparing to take the pack off the horse
+he looked startled.
+
+"I say," he said, "you don't mean to camp here, do you?"
+
+"Such is my intention," Tish observed grimly.
+
+"But look here. Just beyond, at the pass, is where the holdup is to take
+place to-morrow."
+
+"So I believe," said Tish. "What has that to do with us? What are you
+going to do?"
+
+"Oh, I'm going to hang round."
+
+"Well, we intend to hang round also."
+
+He stood by and watched our preparations for camp. Tish chose a small
+grove for the tent, and then left us, clambering up the mountain-side.
+She finally disappeared. Aggie mixed some muffins for tea, and we
+invited the young man to join us. But he was looking downhearted again
+and refused.
+
+However, when she took them out of the portable oven, nicely browned,
+and lifting the tops of each one dropped in a teaspoonful of grape
+jelly, he changed his mind.
+
+"I'll stay, if you don't mind," he said. "Maybe some decent food will
+make me see things clearer."
+
+When Tish descended at six o'clock, she looked depressed. "There is no
+cave," she said, "although I have gone where a mountain goat would get
+dizzy. But I have found a good place to hide the horses, where we can
+get them quickly when we need them."
+
+Aggie was scooping the inside out of her muffin, being unable to eat the
+crust, but she went quite pale.
+
+"Tish," she said, "you have some desperate plan in view, and I am not
+equal to it. I am worn with travel and soft food, and am not as young as
+I once was."
+
+"Desperate nothing!" said Tish, pouring condensed milk into her tea. "I
+am going to teach a lot of idiots a lesson, that's all. There should be
+one spot in America free from the advertising man and his schemes, and
+this is going to be it. Commercialism," she went on, growing oratorical,
+"does not belong here among these mighty mountains. Once let it start,
+and these towering cliffs will be defaced with toothpowder and
+intoxicating-liquor signs."
+
+The young man knew the plans for the holdup even letter than Bill. He
+was able to show us the exact spot which had been selected, and to tell
+us the hour at which the Ostermaier party was to cross the pass.
+
+"They'll lunch on the pass," he said, "and, of course, they suspect
+nothing. The young lady of whom I spoke to you will be one of their
+party. She, however, knows what is coming, and is, indeed, a party to
+it. The holdup will take place during luncheon."
+
+Here his voice broke, and he ate an entire muffin before he went on:
+"The holdup will take place on the pass, the bandits having been hidden
+on this 'bench' right here. Then the outlaws, having robbed the
+tourists, will steal the young lady and escape down the trail on the
+other side. The guide, who is in the plot, will ride ahead in this
+direction and raise the alarm. You understand," he added, "that as it's
+a put-up job, the tourists will get all their stuff back. I don't know
+how that's to be arranged."
+
+"But the girl?" Tish asked.
+
+"She's to make her escape later," Mr. Bell said grimly, "and will be
+photographed galloping down the trail, by another idiot with a camera,
+who, of course, just happens to be on the spot. She'll do it too," he
+added with a pathetic note of pride in his voice. "She's got nerve
+enough for anything."
+
+He drew a long breath, and Aggie poured him a third cup of tea.
+
+"I dare say this will finish everything," he said dejectedly. "I can't
+offer her any excitement like this. We live in a quiet suburb, where
+nobody ever fires a revolver except on the Fourth of July."
+
+"What she needs," Tish said, bending forward, "is a lesson, Mr.
+Bell--something to make her hate the very thought of a moving picture
+and shudder at the sound of a shot."
+
+"Exactly," said Mr. Bell. "I've thought of that. Something to make her
+gun-shy and camera-shy. It's curious about her. In some ways she's a
+timid girl. She's afraid of thunder, for one thing."
+
+Tish bent forward. "Do you know," she said, "the greatest weapon in the
+world?"
+
+"Weapon? Well, I don't know. These new German guns--"
+
+"The greatest weapon in the world," Tish explained, "is ridicule. Man is
+helpless against it. To be absurd is to be lost. When the bandits take
+the money, where do they go?"
+
+"Down the other side from the pass. A photographer will photograph them
+there, making their escape with the loot."
+
+"And the young lady?"
+
+"I've told you that," he said bitterly. "She is to be captured by the
+attacking party."
+
+"They will all be armed?"
+
+"Sure, with blanks. The Indians have guns and arrows, but the arrows
+have rubber tips."
+
+Tish rose majestically. "Mr. Bell," she said, "you may sleep to-night
+the sleep of peace. When I undertake a thing, I carry it through. My
+friends will agree with me. I never fail, when my heart is set on it. By
+the day after to-morrow the young lady in the case will hate the sight
+of a camera."
+
+Although not disclosing her plan, she invited the young man to join us.
+But his face fell and he shook his head.
+
+Tish said that she did not expect to need him, but that, if the time
+came, she would blow three times on a police whistle, which she had,
+with her usual foresight, brought along. He agreed to that, although
+looking rather surprised, and we parted from him.
+
+"I would advise," Tish said as he moved away, "that you conceal yourself
+in the valley below the pass on the other side."
+
+He agreed to this, and we separated for the night. But long after Aggie
+and I had composed ourselves to rest Tish sat on a stone by the
+camp-fire and rolled cigarettes.
+
+At last she came into the tent and wakened us by prodding us with her
+foot.
+
+"Get all the sleep you can," she said. "We'll leave here at dawn
+to-morrow, and there'll be little rest for any of us to-morrow night."
+
+At daylight next morning she roused us. She was dressed, except that she
+wore her combing-jacket, and her hair was loose round her face.
+
+"Aggie, you make an omelet in a hurry, and, Lizzie, you will have to get
+the horses."
+
+"I'll do nothing of the sort," I said, sitting up on the ground. "We've
+got a man here for that. Besides, I have to set the table."
+
+"Very well," Tish replied, "we can stay here, I dare say. Bill's busy at
+something I've set him to doing."
+
+"Whose fault is it," I demanded, "that we are here in 'Greenland's Icy
+Mountains'? Not mine. Id never heard of the dratted place. And those
+horses are five miles away by now, most likely."
+
+"Go and get a cup of tea. You'll have a little sense then," said Tish,
+not unkindly. "And as for what Bill's doing, he's making revolvers.
+Where's your writing ink?"
+
+_I had none!_ I realized it that moment. I had got it out at the first
+camp to record in my diary the place, weather, temperature, and my own
+pulse rate, which I had been advised to watch, on account of the effect
+of altitude on the heart, and had left the bottle sitting on a stone.
+
+When I confessed this to Tish, she was unjustly angry and a trifle
+bitter.
+
+"It's what I deserve, most likely, for bringing along two incompetents,"
+was her brief remark. "Without ink we are weaponless."
+
+But she is a creature of resource, and a moment later she emerged from
+the tent and called to Bill in a cheerful tone.
+
+"No ink, Bill," she said, "but we've got blackberry cordial, and by
+mixing it with a little soot we may be able to manage."
+
+Aggie demurred loudly, as there are occasions when only a mouthful of
+the cordial enables her to keep doing. But Tish was firm. When I went to
+the fire, I found Bill busily carving wooden revolvers, copying Tish's,
+which lay before him. He had them done well enough, and could have gone
+for the horses as easy as not, but he insisted on trimming them up.
+Mine, which I still have, has a buffalo head carved on the handle, and
+Aggie's has a wreath of leaves running round the barrel.
+
+In spite of Aggie's wails Tish poured a large part of the blackberry
+cordial into a biscuit pan, and put in a chip of wood.
+
+"It makes it red," she said doubtfully. "I never saw a red revolver,
+Bill."
+
+"Seems like an awful waste," Bill said. But having now completed the
+wreath he placed all three weapons--he had made one for himself--in the
+pan. The last thing I saw, as I started for the horses, was the three of
+them standing about, looking down, and Aggie's face was full of misery.
+
+I was gone for a half-hour. The horses had not wandered far, and having
+mounted mine, although without a saddle, I copied as well as I could the
+whoop Bill used to drive them in, and rounded them up. When I returned,
+driving them before me, the pack was ready, and on Tish's face was a
+look of intense satisfaction. I soon perceived the reason.
+
+Lying on a stone by the fire were three of the shiniest black revolvers
+any one could want. I eyed Tish and she explained.
+
+"Stove polish," she said. "Like a fool I'd forgot it. Gives a true
+metallic luster, as it says on the box."
+
+Tish is very particular about a stove, and even on our camping-trips we
+keep the portable stove shining and clean.
+
+"Does it come off?"
+
+"Well, more or less," she admitted. "We can keep the box out and renew
+when necessary. It is a great comfort," she added, "to feel that we are
+all armed. We shall need weapons."
+
+"In an emergency," I observed rather tartly, "I hope you will not depend
+on us too much. While I don't know what you intend to do, if it is
+anything desperate, just remember that the only way Aggie or I can do
+any damage with these things is to thrust them down somebody's throat
+and strangle him to death."
+
+She ignored my remark, however, and soon we were on our horses and
+moving along the trail toward the pass.
+
+
+
+
+II
+
+
+It will be unnecessary to remind those familiar with Glacier Park of the
+trail which hugs the mountain above timber-line, and extends toward the
+pass for a mile or so, in a long semicircle which curves inward.
+
+At the end it turns to the right and mounts to an acre or so of level
+ground, with snow and rocks but no vegetation. This is the Piegan Pass.
+Behind it is the Garden Wall, that stupendous mass of granite rising to
+incredible heights. On the other side the trail drops abruptly, by means
+of stepladders which I have explained.
+
+Tish now told us of her plan.
+
+"The unfortunate part is," she said, "that the Ostermaiers will not see
+us. I tried to arrange it so they could, but it was impossible. We must
+content ourselves with the knowledge of a good deed done."
+
+Her plan, in brief, was this: The sham attacking party was to turn and
+ride away down the far side of the pass, up which the Ostermaiers had
+come. They were, according to the young man, to take the girl with them,
+with the idea of holding her for ransom. She was to escape, however,
+while they were lunching in some secluded fastness, and, riding back to
+the pass, was to meet there a rescue party, which the Ostermaiers were
+to meet on the way down to Gunsight Chalet.
+
+Tish's idea was this: We would ride up while they were lunching, pretend
+to think them real bandits, paying no attention to them if they fired at
+us, as we knew they had only blank cartridges, and, having taken them
+prisoners, make them walk in ignominy to the nearest camp, some miles
+farther.
+
+"Then," said Tish, "either they will confess the ruse, and the country
+will ring with laughter, or they will have to submit to arrest and much
+unpleasantness. It will be a severe lesson."
+
+We reached the pass safely, and on the way down the other side we passed
+Mr. Oliver, the moving-picture man, with his outfit on a horse. He
+touched his hat politely and moved out on a ledge to let us by.
+
+"Mind if I take you as you go down the mountain?" he called. "It's a
+bully place for a picture." He stared at Aggie, who was muffled in a
+cape and had the dish towel round her head. "I'd particularly like to
+get your Arab," he said. "The Far East and the Far West, you know."
+
+Aggie gave him a furious glance. "Arab nothing!" she snapped. "If you
+can't tell a Christian lady from a heathen, on account of her having
+lost her hat, then you belong in the dirty work you're doing."
+
+"Aggie, be quiet!" Tish said in an awful voice.
+
+But wrath had made Aggie reckless. "'Dirty work' was what I said," she
+repeated, staring at the young man.
+
+"I beg your pardon. I'm sure I--"
+
+"Don't think," Aggie went on, to Tish's fury, "that we don't know a few
+things. We do."
+
+"I see," he said slowly. "All right. Although I'd like to know--"
+
+"Good-morning," said Aggie, and kicked her horse to go on.
+
+I shall never forget Tish's face. Round the next bend she got off her
+horse and confronted Aggie.
+
+[Illustration: "The older I get, Aggie Pilkington, the more I realize
+that to take you anywhere means ruin."]
+
+"The older I get, Aggie Pilkington," she said, "the more I realize that
+to take you anywhere means ruin. We are done now. All our labor is for
+nothing. There will be no holdup, no nothing. They are scared off."
+
+But Aggie was still angry. "Just let some one take you for a lousy
+Bedouin, Tish," she said, "and see what you would do. I'm not sorry
+anyhow. I never did like the idea."
+
+But Tish dislikes relinquishing an idea, once it has taken hold. And,
+although she did not speak to Aggie again for the next hour, she went
+ahead with her preparations.
+
+"There's still a chance, Lizzie," she said. "It's not likely they'll
+give up easy, on account of hiring the Indians and everything."
+
+About a mile and a half down the trail, she picked out a place to hide.
+This time there was a cave. We cleared our saddles for action, as Tish
+proposed to let them escape past us with the girl, and then to follow
+them rapidly, stealing upon them if possible while they were at
+luncheon, and covering them with the one real revolver and the three
+wooden ones.
+
+The only thing that bothered us was Bill's attitude. He kept laughing to
+himself and muttering, and when he was storing things in the cave, Tish
+took me aside.
+
+"I don't like his attitude, Lizzie," she said. "He's likely to giggle or
+do something silly, just at the crucial moment. I cannot understand why
+he thinks it is funny, but he does. We'd be much better without him."
+
+"You'd better talk to him, Tish," I said. "You can't get rid of him
+now."
+
+But to tell Tish she cannot do a thing is to determine her to do it.
+
+It was still early, only half-past eight, when she came to me with an
+eager face.
+
+"I've got it, Lizzie," she said. "I'll send off Mona Lisa, and he will
+have to search for her. The only thing is, she won't move unless she's
+driven. If we could only find a hornet's nest again, we could manage. It
+may be cruel, but I understand that a hornet's sting is not as painful
+to a horse as to a human being."
+
+Mona Lisa, I must explain, was the pack-horse. Tish had changed her name
+from Jane to Mona Lisa because in the mornings she was constantly
+missing, and having to be looked for.
+
+Tish disappeared for a time, and we settled down to our long wait. Bill
+put another coat of stove polish on the weapons, and broke now and then
+into silent laughter. On my giving him a haughty glance, however, he
+became sober and rubbed with redoubled vigor.
+
+In a half-hour, however, I saw Tish beckoning to me from a distance, and
+I went to her. I soon saw that she was holding her handkerchief to one
+cheek, but when I mentioned the fact she ignored me.
+
+"I have found a nest, Lizzie," she cried. "Slip over and unfasten Mona
+Lisa. She's not near the other horses, which is fortunate."
+
+I then perceived that Tish's yellow slicker was behind her on the ground
+and tied into a bundle, from which emerged a dull roaring. I was
+wondering how Tish expected to open it, when she settled the question by
+asking me to cut a piece from the mosquito netting which we put in the
+doorway of the tent at night, and to bring her riding-gloves.
+
+Aggie was darning a hole in the tablecloth when I went back and Bill was
+still engaged with the weapons. Having taken what she required to Tish,
+under pretense of giving Mona Lisa a lump of sugar, I untied her. What
+followed was exactly as Tish had planned. Mona Lisa, not realizing her
+freedom, stood still while Tish untied the slicker and freed its furious
+inmates. She then dropped the whole thing under the unfortunate animal,
+and retreated, not too rapidly, for fear of drawing Bill's attention.
+For possibly sixty seconds nothing happened, except that Mona Lisa
+raised her head and appeared to listen. Then, with a loud scream, she
+threw up her head and bolted. By the time Bill had put down the stove
+brush she was out of sight among the trees, but we could hear her
+leaping and scrambling through the wood.
+
+"Jumping cats!" said Bill, and ran for his horse. "Acts as though she'd
+started for the Coast!" he yelled to me, and flung after her.
+
+When he had disappeared, Tish came out of the woods, and, getting a
+kettle of boiling water, poured it over the nest. In spite of the
+netting, however, she was stung again, on the back of the neck, and
+spent the rest of the morning holding wet mud to the affected parts.
+
+Her brain, however, was as active as ever, and by half-past eleven,
+mounting a boulder, she announced that she could see the Ostermaier
+party far down the trail, and that in an hour they would probably be at
+the top. She had her field-glasses, and she said that Mrs. Ostermaier
+was pointing up to the pass and shaking her head, and that the others
+were arguing with her.
+
+[Illustration: "It would be just like the woman, to refuse to come any
+farther and spoil everything"]
+
+"It would be just like the woman," Tish said bitterly, "to refuse to
+come any farther and spoil everything."
+
+But a little later she announced that the guide was leading Mrs.
+Ostermaier's horse and that they were coming on.
+
+We immediately retreated to the cave and waited, it being Tish's
+intention to allow them to reach the pass without suspecting our
+presence, and only to cut off the pseudo-bandits in their retreat, as I
+have explained.
+
+It was well that we had concealed the horses also, for the party stopped
+near the cave, and Mrs. Ostermaier was weeping. "Not a step farther!"
+she said. "I have a family to consider, and Mr. Ostermaier is a man of
+wide usefulness and cannot be spared."
+
+We did not dare to look out, but we heard the young lady speaking, and
+as Aggie remarked later, no one would have thought, from the sweetness
+of her voice, that she was a creature of duplicity.
+
+"But it is perfectly safe, dear Mrs. Ostermaier," she said "And think,
+when you go home, of being able to say that you have climbed a mountain
+pass."
+
+"Pass!" sniffed Mrs. Ostermaier. "Pass nothing! I don't call a wall a
+mile high a pass."
+
+"Think," said the girl, "of being able to crow over those three old
+women who are always boasting of the things they do. Probably you are
+right, and they never do them at all, but you--there's a moving-picture
+man waiting, remember, and you can show the picture before the Dorcas
+Society. No one can ever doubt that you have done a courageous thing.
+You'll have the proof."
+
+"George," said Mrs. Ostermaier in a small voice, "if anything happens, I
+have told you how I want my things divided."
+
+"Little devil!" whispered Aggie, referring to the girl. "If that young
+man knows when he is well off, he'll let her go."
+
+But beyond rebuking her for the epithet, Tish made no comment, and the
+party moved on. We lost them for a time among the trees, but when they
+moved out above timber-line we were able to watch them, and we saw that
+Mrs. Ostermaier got off her horse, about halfway up, and climbed slowly
+on foot. Tish, who had the glasses, said that she looked purple and
+angry, and that she distinctly saw the guide give her something to drink
+out of a bottle. It might, however, have been vichy or some similar
+innocent beverage, and I believe in giving her the benefit of the doubt.
+
+When at last they vanished over the edge of the pass, we led out our
+horses and prepared for what was to come. Bill had not returned, and,
+indeed, we did not see him until the evening of the second day after
+that, when, worn but triumphant, we emerged from the trail at the Many
+Glaciers Hotel. That, however, comes later in this narrative.
+
+With everything prepared, Tish judged it best to have luncheon. I made a
+few mayonnaise-and-lettuce sandwiches, beating the mayonnaise in the
+cool recesses of the cave, and we drank some iced tea, to which Aggie
+had thoughtfully added sliced lemon and a quantity of ginger ale.
+Feeling much refreshed, we grasped our weapons and waited.
+
+At half-past twelve we heard a loud shriek on the pass, far overhead,
+followed almost immediately by a fusillade of shots. Then a silence,
+followed by more shots. Then a solitary horseman rode over the edge of
+the pass and, spurring his horse, rode recklessly down the precipitous
+trail. Aggie exclaimed that it was Mr. Ostermaier, basely deserting his
+wife in her apparent hour of need. But Tish, who had the glasses,
+reported finally that it was the moving-picture man.
+
+We were greatly surprised, as it had not occurred to us that this would
+be a part of the program.
+
+As he descended, Tish announced that there must be another photographer
+on top, as he was "registering" signs of terror--a moving-picture
+expression which she had acquired from Charlie Sands--and looking back
+frequently over his shoulder.
+
+We waited until he reached timber-line, and then withdrew to a group of
+trees. It was not our intention to allow him to see us and spoil
+everything. But when he came near, through the woods, and his horse
+continued at unabated speed, Tish decided that the animal, frightened by
+the shots, was running away.
+
+She therefore placed herself across the trail to check its headlong
+speed, but the animal merely rushed round her. Mr. Oliver yelled
+something at us, which we were, however, unable to hear, and kept madly
+on.
+
+Almost immediately four men, firing back over their shoulders, rode into
+sight at the pass and came swiftly down toward us.
+
+"Where's the girl?" Tish cried with her glasses to her eyes. "The idiots
+have got excited and have forgotten to steal her."
+
+That was plainly what had happened, but she was determined to be stolen
+anyhow, for the next moment she rode into view, furiously following the
+bandits.
+
+"She's kept her head anyhow," Tish observed with satisfaction. "Trust a
+lot of men to go crazy and do the wrong thing. But they'll have to
+change the story and make her follow them."
+
+At timber-line the men seemed to realize that she was behind them, and
+they turned and looked up. They seemed to be at a loss to know what to
+do, in view of the picture. But they were quick thinkers, too, we
+decided. Right then and there they took her prisoner, surrounding her.
+
+She made a desperate resistance, even crying out, as we could plainly
+see. But Tish was irritated. She said she could not see how the story
+would hold now. Either the girl should have captured them, they being
+out of ammunition, or the whole thing should have been done again,
+according to the original plan. However, as she said, it was not our
+affair. Our business was to teach them a lesson not to impose on
+unsuspecting tourists, for although not fond of Mrs. Ostermaier, we had
+been members of Mr. Ostermaier's church, and liked him, although his
+sermons were shorter than Tish entirely approved of.
+
+We withdrew again to seclusion until they had passed, and Tish gave them
+ten minutes to get well ahead. Then we rode out.
+
+Tish's face was stern as she led off. The shriek of Mrs. Ostermaier was
+still, as she said in a low tone, ringing in her ears. But before we had
+gone very far, Tish stopped and got off her horse. "We've got to pad the
+horses' feet," she said. "How can we creep up on them when on every
+stony place we sound like an artillery engagement?"
+
+Here was a difficulty we had not anticipated. But Tish overcame it with
+her customary resource, by taking the blanket from under her saddle and
+cutting it into pieces with her scissors, which always accompany her. We
+then cut the leather straps from our saddles at her direction, and each
+of us went to work. Aggie, however, protested.
+
+"I never expected," she said querulously, "to be sitting on the Rocky
+Mountains under a horse, tying a piece of bed quilt on his feet. I
+wouldn't mind," she added, "if the creature liked me. But the way he
+feels toward me he's likely to haul off and murder me at any moment."
+
+However, it was done at last, and it made a great change. We moved along
+silently, and all went well except that, having neglected to draw the
+cinch tight, and the horse's back being slippery without the padding, my
+saddle turned unexpectedly, throwing me off into the trail. I bruised my
+arm badly, but Tish only gave me a glance of scorn and went on.
+
+Being above carelessness herself, she very justly resents it in others.
+
+We had expected, with reason, that the so-called highwaymen, having
+retreated to a certain distance, would there pause and very possibly
+lunch before returning. It was, therefore, a matter of surprise to find
+that they had kept on.
+
+Moreover, they seemed to have advanced rapidly, and Tish, who had read a
+book on signs of the trail, examined the hoofprints of their horses in a
+soft place beside a stream, and reported that they had been going at a
+lope.
+
+"Now, remember," she said as she prepared to mount again, "to all
+intents and purposes these are real bandits and to be treated
+accordingly. Our motto is 'No quarter.' I shall be harsh, and I expect
+no protest from either of you. They deserve everything they get."
+
+But when, after another mile or two, we came to a side trail, leading,
+by Tish's map, not to Many Glaciers, but up a ravine to another pass,
+and Tish saw that they had taken that direction, we were puzzled.
+
+But not for long.
+
+"I understand now," she said. "It is all clear. The photographer was
+riding ahead to get them up this valley somewhere. They've probably got
+a rendezvous all ready, with another camera in place. I must say," she
+observed, "that they are doing it thoroughly."
+
+We rode for two hours, and no sign of them. The stove polish had come
+off the handles of our revolvers by that time, and Aggie, having rubbed
+her face ever and anon to remove perspiration, presented under her
+turban a villainous and ferocious expression quite at variance with her
+customary mildness.
+
+I urged her to stop and wash, but Tish, after a glance, said to keep on.
+
+"Your looking like that's a distinct advantage, Aggie," she said. "Like
+as not they'll throw up their hands the minute they see you. I know I
+should. You'd better ride first when we get near."
+
+"Like as not they'll put a hole in me," Aggie objected. "And as to
+riding first, I will not. This is your doing, Tish Carberry, and as for
+their having blank cartridges--how do we know someone hasn't made a
+mistake and got a real one?"
+
+Tish reflected on that. "It's a possibility," she agreed. "If we find
+that they're going to spend the night out, it might be better to wait
+until they've taken off all the hardware they're hung with."
+
+But we did not come up with them. We kept on finding traces of the party
+in marshy spots, and once Tish hopped off her horse and picked up a
+small handkerchief with a colored border and held it up to us.
+
+"It's hers," she said. "Anybody would know she is the sort to use
+colored borders. They're ahead somewhere."
+
+But it seemed strange that they would go so far, and I said so.
+
+"We're far enough off the main trail, Tish," I said. "And it's getting
+wilder every minute. There's nothing I can see to prevent a mountain
+lion dropping on us most any time."
+
+"Not if it gets a good look at Aggie!" was Tish's grim response.
+
+It began to grow dark in the valley, and things seemed to move on either
+side of the trail. Aggie called out once that we had just passed a
+grizzly bear, but Tish never faltered. The region grew more and more
+wild. The trail was broken with mudholes and crossed by fallen logs.
+With a superb disdain Tish rode across all obstacles, not even glancing
+at them. But Aggie and I got off at the worst places and led our horses.
+At one mudhole I was unfortunate enough to stumble. A horse with a
+particle of affection for a woman who had ridden it and cared for it for
+several days would have paused.
+
+Not so my animal. With a heartlessness at which I still shudder the
+creature used me as a bridge, and stepped across, dryfoot, on my back.
+Owing to his padded feet and to the depth of the mud--some eight feet, I
+believe--I was uninjured. But it required ten minutes of hard labor on
+the part of both Tish and Aggie to release me from the mud, from which I
+was finally raised with a low, hissing sound.
+
+"Park!" said Aggie as she scraped my obliterated features with a small
+branch. "Park, indeed! It's a howling wilderness. I'm fond of my native
+land," she went on, digging out my nostrils, so I could breathe, "but I
+don't calculate to eat it. As for that unfeeling beast of yours, Lizzie,
+I've never known a horse to show such selfishness. Never."
+
+Well, we went on at last, but I was not so enthusiastic about teaching
+people lessons as I had been. It seemed to me that we might have kept on
+along the trail and had a mighty good time, getting more and more nimble
+and stopping now and then to bake a pie and have a decent meal, and
+putting up our hair in crimps at night, without worrying about other
+folks' affairs.
+
+Late in the afternoon of that day, when so far as I could see Tish was
+lost, and not even her gathering a bunch of wild flowers while the
+horses rested could fool me, I voiced my complaint.
+
+"Let me look at the map, Tish," I suggested. "I'm pretty good at maps.
+You know how I am at charades and acrostics. At the church supper--"
+
+"Nonsense, Lizzie," she returned. "You couldn't make head or tail of
+this map. It's my belief that the man who made it had never been here.
+Either that or there has been an earthquake since. But," she went on,
+more cheerfully, "if we are lost, so are the others."
+
+"If we even had Bill along!"
+
+"Bill!" Tish said scornfully. "It's my belief Bill is in the whole
+business, and that if we hadn't got rid of him we'd have been the next
+advertising dodge. As far as that goes," she said thoughtfully, "it
+wouldn't surprise me a particle to find that we've been taken, without
+our knowing it, most any time. Your horse just now, walking across that
+bridge of size, for one thing."
+
+Tish seldom makes a pun, which she herself has said is the lowest form
+of humor. The dig at my figure was unkind, also, and unworthy of her. I
+turned and left her.
+
+At last, well on in the evening, I saw Tish draw up her horse and point
+ahead.
+
+"The miscreants!" she said.
+
+True enough, up a narrow side caon we could see a camp-fire. It was a
+small one, and only noticeable from one point. But Tish's keen eye had
+seen it. She sat on her horse and gazed toward it.
+
+"What a shameful thing it is," she said, "to prostitute the beauties of
+this magnificent region to such a purpose. To make of these beetling
+crags a joke! To invade these vast gorges with the spirit of
+commercialism and to bring a pack of movie actors to desecrate the
+virgin silence with ribald jests and laughter! Lizzie, I wish you
+wouldn't wheeze!"
+
+"You would wheeze, too, Tish Carberry," I retorted, justly indignant,
+"if a horse had just pressed your spinal column into your breast bone.
+Goodness knows," I said, "where my lungs are. I've missed them ever
+since my fall."
+
+However, she was engrossed with larger matters, and ignored my
+petulance. She is a large-natured woman and above pettiness.
+
+We made our way slowly up the caon. The movie outfit was securely
+camped under an overhanging rock, as we could now see. At one point
+their position commanded the trail, which was hardly more than a track
+through the wilderness, and before we reached this point we dismounted
+and Tish surveyed the camp through her glasses.
+
+"We'd better wait until dark," Tish said. "Owing to the padding they
+have not heard us, but it looks to me as if one of them is on a rock,
+watching."
+
+It seemed rather strange to me that they were keeping a lookout, but
+Tish only shrugged her shoulders.
+
+"If I know anything of that red-headed Oliver man," she said, "he hates
+to let a camera rest. Like as not he's got it set up among the trees
+somewhere, taking flashlights of wild animals. It's rather a pity," she
+said, turning and surveying Aggie and myself, "that he cannot get you
+two. If you happen to see anything edible lying on the ground, you'd
+better not pick it up. It's probably attached to the string that sets
+off the flash."
+
+We led our horses into the woods, which were very thick at that point,
+and tied them. My beast, however, lay down and rolled, saddle and all,
+thus breaking my mirror--a most unlucky omen--and the bottle of olive
+oil which we had brought along for mayonnaise dressing. Tish is fond of
+mayonnaise, and, besides, considers olive oil most strengthening.
+However, it was gone, and although Aggie comforted me by suggesting that
+her boiled salad dressing is quite tasty, I was disconsolate.
+
+It was by that time seven o'clock and almost dark. We held a conference.
+Tish was of the opinion that we should first lead off their horses, if
+possible.
+
+"I intend," she said severely, "to make escape impossible. If they fire,
+when taken by surprise, remember that they have only blank cartridges. I
+must say," she added with a confession of unusual weakness, "that I am
+glad the Indians escaped the other way. I would hardly know what to do
+with Indians, even quite tame ones. While I know a few letters of the
+deaf-and-dumb language, which I believe all tribes use in common, I fear
+that in a moment of excitement I would forget what I know."
+
+The next step, she asserted, was to secure their weapons.
+
+"After all," she said, "the darkness is in our favor. I intend to fire
+once, to show them that we are armed and dangerous. And if you two will
+point the guns Bill made, they cannot possibly tell that they are not
+real."
+
+"But we will know it," Aggie quavered. Now that the quarry was in sight
+she was more and more nervous, sneezing at short intervals in spite of
+her menthol inhaler. "I am sorry, Tish, but I cannot feel the same about
+that wooden revolver as I would about a real one. And even when I try to
+forget that it is only wood the carving reminds me."
+
+But Tish silenced her with a glance. She had strangely altered in the
+last few minutes. All traces of fatigue had gone, and when she struck a
+match and consulted her watch I saw in her face that high resolve, that
+stern and matchless courage, which I so often have tried to emulate and
+failed.
+
+"Seven o'clock," she announced. "We will dine first. There is nothing
+like food to restore failing spirits."
+
+But we had nothing except our sandwiches, and Tish suggested snaring
+some of the stupid squirrels with which the region abounded.
+
+"Aggie needs broth," she said decidedly. "We have sandwiches, but Aggie
+is frail and must be looked to."
+
+Aggie was pathetically grateful, although sorry for the squirrels, which
+were pretty and quite tame. But Tish was firm in her kindly intent, and
+proceeded at once to set a rabbit snare, a trick she had learned in the
+Maine woods. Having done this, and built a small fire, well hidden, we
+sat down to wait.
+
+In a short time we heard terrible human cries proceeding from the snare,
+and, hurrying thither, found in it a young mountain lion. It looked
+dangerous, and was biting in every direction. I admit that I was
+prepared to leave in haste, but not so Tish. She fetched her umbrella,
+without which she never travels, and while the animal set its jaws in
+it--a painful necessity, as it was her best umbrella--Tish hit it on the
+head--not the umbrella, but the lion--with a large stone.
+
+Tish's satisfaction was unbounded. She stated that the flesh of the
+mountain lion was much like veal, and so indeed it proved. We made a
+nourishing soup of it, with potatoes and a can of macdoine vegetables,
+and within an hour and a half we had dined luxuriously, adding to our
+repast what remained of the sandwiches, and a tinned plum pudding of
+English make, very nutritious and delicious.
+
+For twenty minutes after the meal we all stood. Tish insists on this, as
+aiding digestion. Then we prepared for the night's work.
+
+I believe that our conduct requires no defense. But it may be well again
+to explain our position. These people, whose camp-fire glowed so
+brazenly against the opposite cliff, had for purely mercenary motives
+committed a cruel hoax. They had posed as bandits, and as bandits they
+deserved to be treated. They had held up our own clergyman, of a nervous
+temperament, on a mountain pass, and had taken from him a part of his
+stipend. It was heartless. It was barbarous. It was cruel.
+
+My own courage came back with the hot food, which I followed by a
+charcoal tablet. And the difference in Aggie was marked. Possibly some
+of the courage of the mountain lion, that bravest of wild creatures, had
+communicated itself to her through the homely medicine of digestion.
+
+"I can hardly wait to get after them," she said.
+
+However, it was still too early for them to have settled for the night.
+We sat down, having extinguished our fire, and I was just dozing off
+when Tish remembered the young man who was to have listened for the
+police whistle.
+
+"I absolutely forgot him," she said regretfully. "I suppose he is
+hanging round the foot of Piegan's Pass yet. I'm sorry to have him miss
+this. I shall tell him, when I see him, that no girl worth having would
+be sitting over there at supper with four moving-picture actors without
+a chaperon. The whole proceeding is scandalous. I have noticed," she
+added, "that it is the girls from quiet suburban towns who are really
+most prone to defy the conventions when the chance comes."
+
+We dozed for a short time.
+
+Then Tish sat up suddenly. "What's that?" she said.
+
+We listened and distinctly heard the tramp of horses' feet. We started
+up, but Tish was quite calm.
+
+"They've turned their horses out," she said. "Fortune is with us. They
+are coming this way."
+
+But at first it did not seem so fortunate, for we heard one of the men
+following them, stumbling along, and, I regret to say, using profane
+language. They came directly toward us, and Aggie beside me trembled.
+But Tish was equal to the emergency.
+
+She drew us behind a large rock, where, spreading out a raincoat to
+protect us from the dampness, we sat down and waited.
+
+When one of the animals loomed up close to the rock Aggie gave a low
+cry, but Tish covered her mouth fiercely with an ungentle hand.
+
+"Be still!" she hissed.
+
+It was now perfectly dark, and the man with the horses was not far off.
+We could not see him, but at last he came near enough so that we could
+see the flare of a match when he lighted a cigarette. I put my hand on
+Aggie, and she was shaking with nervousness.
+
+"I am sure I am going to sneeze, Lizzie," she gasped.
+
+And sneeze she did. She muffled it considerably, however, and we were
+not discovered. But, Tish, I knew, was silently raging.
+
+The horses came nearer.
+
+One of them, indeed, came quite close, and took a nip at the toe of my
+riding-boot. I kicked at it sharply, however, and it moved away.
+
+The man had gone on. We watched the light of his cigarette, and thus, as
+he now and then turned his head, knew where he was. It was now that I
+felt, rather than heard, that Tish was crawling out from the shelter of
+the rock. At the same time we heard, by the crunching of branches, that
+the man had sat down near at hand.
+
+Tish's progress was slow but sure. For a half-hour we sat there. Then
+she returned, still crawling, and on putting out my hand I discovered
+that she had secured the lasso from her saddle and had brought it back.
+How true had been her instinct when she practiced its use! How my own
+words, that it was all foolishness, came back and whispered lessons of
+humility in my ear!
+
+At this moment a deep, resonant sound came from the tree where the movie
+actor sat. At the same moment a small creature dropped into my lap from
+somewhere above, and ran up my sleeve. I made frantic although
+necessarily silent efforts to dislodge it, and it bit me severely.
+
+The necessity for silence taxed all my strength, but managing finally to
+secure it by the tail, I forcibly withdrew it and flung it away.
+Unluckily it struck Aggie in the left eye and inflicted a painful
+bruise.
+
+Tish had risen to her feet and was standing, a silent and menacing
+figure, while this event transpired. The movements of the horses as they
+grazed, the soft breeze blowing through the pines, were the only sounds.
+Now she took a step forward.
+
+"He's asleep!" she whispered. "Aggie, sit still and watch the horses.
+Lizzie, come with me."
+
+As I advanced to her she thrust her revolver into my hand.
+
+"When I give the word," she said in a whisper, "hold it against his
+neck. But keep your finger off the trigger. It's loaded."
+
+We advanced slowly, halting now and then to listen. Although brush
+crackled under our feet, the grazing horses were making a similar
+disturbance, and the man slept on. Soon we could see him clearly,
+sitting back against a tree, his head dropped forward on his breast.
+Tish surveyed the scene with her keen and appraising eye, and raised
+the lasso.
+
+The first result was not good. The loaded end struck a branch, and,
+being deflected, the thing wrapped itself perhaps a dozen times round my
+neck. Tish, being unconscious of what had happened, drew it up with a
+jerk, and I stood helpless and slowly strangling. At last, however, she
+realized the difficulty and released me. I was unable to breathe
+comfortably for some time, and my tongue felt swollen for several hours.
+
+Through all of this the movie actor had slept soundly. At the second
+effort Tish succeeded in lassoing him without difficulty. We had feared
+a loud outcry before we could get to him, but owing to Tish's swiftness
+in tightening the rope he was able to make, at first, only a low,
+gurgling sound. I had advanced to him, and was under the impression that
+I was holding the revolver to his neck. On discovering, however, that I
+was pressing it to the trunk of the tree, to which he was now secured by
+the lariat, I corrected the error and held it against his ear.
+
+He was now wide awake and struggling violently. Then, I regret to say,
+he broke out into such language as I have never heard before. At Tish's
+request I suppress his oaths, and substitute for them harmless
+expressions in common use.
+
+"Good gracious!" he said. "What in the world are you doing anyhow?
+Jimminy crickets, take that thing away from my neck! Great Scott and
+land alive, I haven't done anything! My word, that gun will go off if
+you aren't careful!"
+
+I am aware that much of the strength of what he said is lost in this
+free translation. But it is impossible to repeat his real language.
+
+"Don't move," Tish said, "and don't call out. A sound, and a bullet goes
+crashing through your brain."
+
+"A woman!" he said in most unflattering amazement. "Great Jehoshaphat, a
+woman!"
+
+This again is only a translation of what he said.
+
+"Exactly," Tish observed calmly. She had cut the end off the lasso with
+her scissors, and was now tying his feet together with it. "My friend,
+we know the whole story, and I am ashamed, ashamed," she said
+oratorically, "of your sex! To frighten a harmless and well-meaning
+preacher and his wife for the purpose of publicity is not a joke. Such
+hoaxes are criminal. If you must have publicity, why not seek it in some
+other way?"
+
+"Crazy!" he groaned to himself. "In the hands of lunatics! Oh, my
+goodness!" Again these were not exactly his words.
+
+Having bound him tightly, hand and foot, and taken a revolver from his
+pocket, Tish straightened herself.
+
+"Now we'll gag him, Lizzie," she said. "We have other things to do
+to-night than to stand here and converse." Then she turned to the man
+and told him a deliberate lie. I am sorry to record this. But a tendency
+to avoid the straight and narrow issues of truth when facing a crisis is
+one of Tish's weaknesses, the only flaw in an otherwise strong and
+perfect character.
+
+"We are going to leave you here," she said. "But one of our number,
+fully armed, will be near by. A sound from you, or any endeavor to call
+for succor, will end sadly for you. A word to the wise. Now, Lizzie,
+take that bandanna off his neck and tie it over his mouth."
+
+Tish stood, looking down at him, and her very silhouette was scornful.
+
+"Think, my friend," she said, "of the ignominy of your position! Is any
+moving picture worth it? Is the pleasure of seeing yourself on the
+screen any reward for such a shameful position as yours now is? No. A
+thousand times no."
+
+He made a choking sound in his throat and writhed helplessly. And so we
+left him, a hopeless and miserable figure, to ponder on his sins.
+
+"That's one," said Tish briskly. "There are only three left. Come,
+Aggie," she said cheerfully--"to work! We have made a good beginning."
+
+It is with modesty that I approach that night's events, remembering
+always that Tish's was the brain which conceived and carried out the
+affair. We were but her loyal and eager assistants. It is for this
+reason that I thought, and still think, that the money should have been
+divided so as to give Tish the lion's share. But she, dear, magnanimous
+soul, refused even to hear of such a course, and insisted that we share
+it equally.
+
+Of that, however, more anon.
+
+We next proceeded to capture their horses and to tie them up. We
+regretted the necessity for this, since the unfortunate animals had
+traveled far and were doubtless hungry. It went to my heart to drag them
+from their fragrant pasture and to tie them to trees. But, as Tish said,
+"Necessity knows no law," not even kindness. So we tied them up. Not,
+however, until we had moved them far from the trail.
+
+Tish stopped then, and stared across the caon to the enemy's camp-fire.
+
+"No quarter, remember," she said. "And bring your weapons."
+
+We grasped our wooden revolvers and, with Tish leading, started for the
+camp. Unluckily there was a stream between us, and it was necessary to
+ford it. It shows Tish's true generalship that, instead of removing her
+shoes and stockings, as Aggie and I were about to do, she suggested
+getting our horses and riding across. This we did, and alighted on the
+other side dryshod.
+
+It was, on consulting my watch, nine o'clock and very dark. A few drops
+of rain began to fall also, and the distant camp-fire was burning low.
+Tish gave us each a little blackberry cordial, for fear of dampness, and
+took some herself. The mild glow which followed was very comforting.
+
+It was Tish, naturally, who went forward to reconnoiter. She returned in
+an hour, to report that the three men were lying round the fire, two
+asleep and one leaning on his elbow with a revolver handy. She did not
+see Mr. Oliver, and it was possible that it was he we had tied to the
+tree. The girl, she said, was sitting on a log, with her chin propped in
+her hands.
+
+"She looked rather low-spirited," Tish said. "I expect she liked the
+first young man better than she thought she did. I intend to give her a
+piece of my mind as soon as I get a chance. This playing hot and cold
+isn't maidenly, to say the least."
+
+We now moved slowly forward, after tying our horses. Toward the last,
+following Tish's example, we went on our hands and knees, and I was
+thankful then for no skirts. It is wonderful the freedom a man has. I
+was never one to approve of Doctor Mary Walker, but I'm not so sure she
+isn't a wise woman and the rest of us fools. I haven't put on a skirt
+braid since that time without begrudging it.
+
+Well, as I have stated, we advanced, and at last we were in full sight
+of the camp. I must say I'd have thought they'd have a tent. We expected
+something better, I suppose, because of the articles in the papers about
+movie people having their own limousines, and all that. But there they
+were, open to the wrath of the heavens, and deserving it, if I do say
+so.
+
+The girl was still sitting, as Tish had described her. Only now she was
+crying. My heart was downright sore for her. It is no comfort, having
+made a wrong choice, to know that it is one's own fault.
+
+Having now reached the zone of firelight Tish gave the signal, and we
+rose and pointed our revolvers at them. Then Tish stepped forward and
+said:--
+
+"Hands up!"
+
+I shall never forget the expression on the man's face.
+
+He shouted something, but he threw up his hands also, with his eyes
+popping out of his head. The others scrambled to their feet, but he
+warned them.
+
+"Careful, boys!" he yelled. "They're got the drop on us."
+
+Just then his eyes fell on Aggie, and he screeched:--
+
+"Two women and a Turk, by ----." The blank is mine.
+
+"Lizzie," said Tish sternly, as all of them, including the girl, held
+their hands up, "just give me your weapon and go over them."
+
+"Go over them?" I said, not understanding.
+
+"Search them," said Tish. "Take everything out of their pockets. And
+don't move," she ordered them sternly. "One motion, and I fire. Go on,
+Lizzie."
+
+Now I have never searched a man's pockets, and the idea was repugnant to
+me. I am a woman of delicate instincts. But Tish's face was stern. I did
+as commanded, therefore, the total result being:--
+
+Four revolvers.
+
+Two large knives.
+
+One small knife.
+
+One bunch of keys.
+
+One plug of chewing-tobacco.
+
+Four cartridge belts.
+
+Two old pipes.
+
+Mr. Ostermaier's cigar-case, which I recognized at once, being the one
+we had presented to him.
+
+Mrs. Ostermaier's wedding-ring and gold bracelet, which her sister gave
+her on her last birthday.
+
+A diamond solitaire, unknown, as Mrs. Ostermaier never owned one,
+preferring instead earrings as more showy.
+
+And a considerable sum of money, which I kept but did not count.
+
+There were other small articles, of no value.
+
+"Is that all the loot you secured during the infamous scene on Piegan
+Pass?" Tish demanded, "You need not hide anything from us. We know the
+facts, and the whole story will soon be public."
+
+"That's all, lady," whined one of the men. "Except a few boxes of lunch,
+and that's gone. Lady, lemme take my hands down. I've got a stiff
+shoulder, and I--"
+
+"Keep them up," Tish snapped. "Aggie, see that they keep them up."
+
+Until that time we had been too occupied to observe the girl, who merely
+stood and watched in a disdainful sort of way. But now Tish turned and
+eyed her sternly.
+
+"Search her, Lizzie," she commanded.
+
+"Search me!" the girl exclaimed indignantly. "Certainly not!"
+
+"Lizzie," said Tish in her sternest manner, "go over that girl. Look in
+her riding-boots. I haven't come across Mrs. Ostermaier's earrings yet."
+
+At that the girl changed color and backed off.
+
+"It's an outrage," she said. "Surely I have suffered enough."
+
+"Not as much," Tish observed, "as you are going to suffer. Go over her,
+Lizzie."
+
+While I searched her, Tish was lecturing her.
+
+"You come from a good home, I understand," she said, "and you ought
+to know better. Not content with breaking an honest heart, you join a
+moving-picture outfit and frighten a prominent divine--for Mr. Ostermaier
+is well known--into what may be an illness. You cannot deny," she
+accused her, "that it was you who coaxed them to the pass. At least you
+needn't. We heard you."
+
+"How was I to know--" the girl began sullenly.
+
+But at that moment I found Mrs. Ostermaier' chamois bag thrust into her
+riding-boot, and she suddenly went pale.
+
+Tish held it up before her accusingly. "I dare say you will not deny
+this," she exclaimed, and took Mrs. Ostermaier's earrings out of it.
+
+The men muttered, but Aggie was equal to the occasion. "Silence!" she
+said, and pointed the revolver at each in turn.
+
+The girl started to speak. Then she shrugged her shoulders. "I could
+explain," she said, "but I won't. If you think I stole those hideous
+earrings you're welcome to."
+
+"Of course not," said Tish sarcastically. "No doubt she gave them to
+you--although I never knew her to give anything away before."
+
+The girl stood still, thinking. Suddenly she said "There's another one,
+you know. Another man."
+
+"We have him. He will give no further trouble," Tish observed grimly. "I
+think we have you all, except your Mr. Oliver."
+
+"He is not my Mr. Oliver," said the girl. "I never want to see him
+again. I--I hate him."
+
+"You haven't got much mind or you couldn't change it so quickly."
+
+She looked sulky again, and said she'd thank us for the ring, which was
+hers and she could prove it.
+
+But Tish sternly refused. "It's my private opinion," she observed, "that
+it is Mrs. Ostermaier's, and she has not worn it openly because of the
+congregation talking quite considerably about her earrings, and not
+caring for jewelry on the minister's wife. That's what I think."
+
+Shortly after that we heard a horse loping along the road. It came
+nearer, and then left the trail and came toward the fire. Tish picked up
+one of the extra revolvers and pointed it. It was Mr. Oliver!
+
+"Throw up your hands!" Tish called. And he did it. He turned a sort of
+blue color, too, when he saw us, and all the men with their hands up.
+But he looked relieved when he saw the girl.
+
+"Thank Heaven!" he said. "The way I've been riding this country--"
+
+"You rode hard enough away from the pass," she replied coldly.
+
+We took a revolver away from him and lined him up with the others. All
+the time he was paying little attention to us and none at all to the
+other men. But he was pleading with the girl.
+
+"Honestly," he said, "I thought I could do better for everybody by doing
+what I did. How did I know," he pleaded, "that you were going to do such
+a crazy thing as this?"
+
+But she only stared at him as if she hated the very ground he stood on.
+
+"It's a pity," Tish observed, "that you haven't got your camera along.
+This would make a very nice picture. But I dare say you could hardly
+turn the crank with your hands in the air."
+
+We searched him carefully, but he had only a gold watch and some money.
+On the chance, however, that the watch was Mr. Ostermaier's, although
+unlikely, we took it.
+
+I must say he was very disagreeable, referring to us as highwaymen and
+using uncomplimentary language. But, as Tish observed, we might as well
+be thorough while we were about it.
+
+For the nonce we had forgotten the other man. But now I noticed that the
+pseudo-bandits wore a watchful and not unhopeful air. And suddenly one
+of them whistled--a thin, shrill note that had, as Tish later remarked,
+great penetrative power without being noisy.
+
+"That's enough of that," she said. "Aggie, take another of these guns
+and point them both at these gentlemen. If they whistle again, shoot.
+As to the other man, he will not reply, nor will he come to your
+assistance. He is gagged and tied, and into the bargain may become at
+any time the victim of wild beasts."
+
+The moment she had said it, Tish realized that it was but too true, and
+she grew thoughtful. Aggie, too, was far from comfortable. She said
+later that she was uncertain what to do. Tish had said to fire if they
+whistled again. The question in her mind was, had it been said purely
+for effect or did Tish mean it? After all, the men were not real
+bandits, she reflected, although guilty of theft, even if only for
+advertising purposes. She was greatly disturbed, and as agitation always
+causes a return of her hay fever, she began to sneeze violently.
+
+Until then the men had been quiet, if furious. But now they fell into
+abject terror, imploring Tish, whom they easily recognized as the
+leader, to take the revolvers from her.
+
+But Tish only said: "No fatalities, Aggie, please. Point at an arm or a
+leg until the spasm subsides."
+
+Her tone was quite gentle.
+
+Heretofore this has been a plain narrative, dull, I fear, in many
+places. But I come now to a not unexciting incident--which for a time
+placed Tish and myself in an unpleasant position.
+
+I refer to the escape of the man we had tied.
+
+We held a brief discussion as to what to do with our prisoners until
+morning, a discussion which Tish solved with her usual celerity by
+cutting from the saddles which lay round the fire a number of those
+leather thongs with which such saddles are adorned and which are used in
+case of necessity to strap various articles to the aforesaid saddles.
+
+With these thongs we tied them, not uncomfortably, but firmly, their
+hands behind them and their feet fastened together. Then, as the night
+grew cold, Tish suggested that we shove them near the fire, which we
+did.
+
+The young lady, however, offered a more difficult problem. We
+compromised by giving her her freedom, but arranging for one of our
+number to keep her covered with a revolver.
+
+"You needn't be so thoughtful," she said angrily, and with a total lack
+of appreciation of Tish's considerate attitude. "I'd rather be tied,
+especially if the Moslem with the hay fever is going to hold the gun."
+
+It was at that moment that we heard a whistle from across the stream,
+and each of the prostrate men raised his head eagerly. Before Tish could
+interfere one of them had whistled three times sharply, probably a
+danger signal.
+
+Without a word Tish turned and ran toward the stream, calling to me to
+follow her.
+
+"Tish!" I heard Aggie's agonized tone. "Lizzie! Come back. Don't leave
+me here alone. I--"
+
+Here she evidently clutched the revolver involuntarily, for there was a
+sharp report, and a bullet struck a tree near us.
+
+Tish paused and turned. "Point that thing up into the air, Aggie," she
+called back. "And stay there. I hold you responsible."
+
+I heard Aggie give a low moan, but she said nothing, and we kept on.
+
+The moon had now come up, flooding the valley with silver radiance. We
+found our horses at once, and Tish leaped into the saddle. Being heavier
+and also out of breath from having stumbled over a log, I was somewhat
+slower.
+
+Tish was therefore in advance of me when we started, and it was she who
+caught sight of him first.
+
+"He's got a horse, Lizzie," she called back to me. "We can get him, I
+think. Remember, he is unarmed."
+
+Fortunately he had made for the trail, which was here wider than
+ordinary and gleamed white in the moonlight. We had, however, lost some
+time in fording the stream, and we had but the one glimpse of him as the
+trail curved.
+
+Tish lashed her horse to a lope, and mine followed without urging.
+I had, unfortunately, lost a stirrup early in the chase, and was
+compelled, being unable to recover it, to drop the lines and clutch
+the saddle.
+
+Twice Tish fired into the air. She explained afterward that she did this
+for the moral effect on the fugitive, but as each time it caused my
+horse to jump and almost unseat me, at last I begged her to desist.
+
+We struck at last into a straight piece of trail, ending in a wall of
+granite, and up this the trail climbed in a switchback. Tish turned to
+me.
+
+"We have him now," she said. "When he starts up there he is as much gone
+as a fly on the wall. As a matter of fact," she said as calmly as though
+we had been taking an afternoon stroll, "his taking this trail shows
+that he is a novice and no real highwayman. Otherwise he would have
+turned off into the woods."
+
+At that moment the fugitive's horse emerged into the moonlight and Tish
+smiled grimly.
+
+"I see why now," she exclaimed. "The idiot has happened on Mona Lisa,
+who must have returned and followed us. And no pack-horse can be made to
+leave the trail unless by means of a hornet. Look, he's trying to pull
+her off and she won't go."
+
+It was true, as we now perceived. He saw his danger, but too late. Mona
+Lisa, probably still disagreeable after her experience with the hornets,
+held straight for the cliff.
+
+The moon shone full on it, and when he was only thirty feet up its face
+Tish fired again, and the fugitive stopped.
+
+"Come down," said Tish quietly.
+
+He said a great many things which, like his earlier language, I do not
+care to repeat. But after a second shot he began to descend slowly.
+
+Tish, however, approached him warily, having given her revolver to me.
+
+"He might try to get it from me, Lizzie," she observed. "Keep it pointed
+in our direction, but not at us. I'm going to tie him again."
+
+This she proceeded to do, tying his hands behind him and fastening his
+belt also to the horn of the saddle, but leaving his feet free. All this
+was done to the accompaniment of bitter vituperation. She pretended to
+ignore this, but it made an impression evidently, for at last she
+replied.
+
+"You have no one to blame but yourself," she said. "You deserve your
+present humiliating position, and you know it. I've made up my mind to
+take you all in and expose your cruel scheme, and I intend to do it. I'm
+nothing if I am not thorough," she finished.
+
+He made no reply to this, and, in fact, he made only one speech on the
+way back, and that, I am happy to say, was without profanity.
+
+"It isn't being taken in that I mind so much," he said pathetically.
+"It's all in the game, and I can stand up as well under trouble as any
+one. It's being led in by a crowd of women that makes it painful."
+
+I have neglected to say that Tish was leading Mona Lisa, while I
+followed with the revolver.
+
+It was not far from dawn when we reached the camp again. Aggie was as we
+had left her, but in the light of the dying fire she looked older and
+much worn. As a matter of fact, it was some weeks before she looked like
+her old self.
+
+The girl was sitting where we had left her, and sulkier than ever. She
+had turned her back to Mr. Oliver, and Aggie said afterward that the way
+they had quarreled had been something terrible.
+
+Aggie said she had tried to make conversation with the girl, and had,
+indeed, told her of Mr. Wiggins and her own blasted life. But she had
+remained singularly unresponsive.
+
+The return of our new prisoner was greeted by the other men with brutal
+rage, except Mr. Oliver, who merely glanced at him and then went back to
+his staring at the fire. It appeared that they had been counting on him
+to get assistance, and his capture destroyed their last hope. Indeed,
+their language grew so unpleasant that at last Tish hammered sharply on
+a rock with the handle of her revolver.
+
+"Please remember," she said, "that you are in the presence of ladies!"
+
+They jeered at her, but she handled the situation with her usual
+generalship.
+
+"Lizzie," she said calmly, "get the tin basin that is hanging to my
+saddle, and fill it with the water from that snowbank. On the occasion
+of any more unseemly language, pour it over the offender without mercy."
+
+It became necessary to do it, I regret to state. They had not yet
+learned that Tish always carries out her threats. It was the one who we
+felt was the leader who offended, and I did as I had been requested to.
+But Aggie, ever tender-hearted, feared that it would give the man a
+severe cold, and got Tish's permission to pour a little blackberry
+cordial down his throat.
+
+Far from this kindness having a salubrious effect, it had the contrary.
+They all fell to bad language again, and, realizing that they wished the
+cordial, and our supply being limited, we were compelled to abandon the
+treatment.
+
+It had been an uncomfortable night, and I confess to a feeling of relief
+when "the rift of dawn" broke the early skies.
+
+We were, Tish calculated, some forty miles from breakfast, and Aggie's
+diet for some days had been light at the best, even the mountain-lion
+broth having been more stimulating than staying. We therefore
+investigated the camp, and found behind a large stone some flour,
+baking-powder, and bacon. With this equipment and a frying-pan or two we
+were able to make some very fair pancakes--or flapjacks, as they are
+called in the West.
+
+Tish civilly invited the girl to eat with us, but she refused curtly,
+although, on turning once, I saw her eyeing us with famished eyes. I
+think, however, that on seeing us going about the homely task of getting
+breakfast, she realized that we were not the desperate creatures she had
+fancied during the night, but three gentlewomen on a holiday--simple
+tourists, indeed.
+
+"I wish," she said at last almost wistfully--"I wish that I could
+understand it all. I seem to be all mixed up. You don't suppose I want
+to be here, do you?"
+
+But Tish was not in a mood to make concessions. "As for what you want,"
+she said, "how are we to know that? You are here, aren't you?--here as
+a result of your own cold-heartedness. Had you remained true to the very
+estimable young man you jilted you would not now be in this position."
+
+"Of course he would talk about it!" said the girl darkly.
+
+"I am convinced," Tish went on, dexterously turning a pancake by a swift
+movement of the pan, "that sensational movies are responsible for much
+that is wrong with the country to-day. They set false standards.
+Perfectly pure-minded people see them and are filled with thoughts of
+crime."
+
+Although she had ignored him steadily, the girl turned now to Mr.
+Oliver.
+
+"They don't believe anything I tell them. Why don't you explain?" she
+demanded.
+
+"Explain!" he said in a furious voice. "Explain to three lunatics?
+What's the use?"
+
+"You got me into this, you know."
+
+"I did! I like that! What in the name of Heaven induced you to ride off
+the way you did?"
+
+Tish paused, with the frying-pan in the air. "Silence!" she commanded.
+"You are both only reaping what you have sowed. As far as quarreling
+goes, you can keep that until you are married, if you intend to be. I
+don't know but I'd advise it. It's a pity to spoil two houses."
+
+But the girl said that she wouldn't marry him if he was the last man on
+earth, and he fell back to sulking again.
+
+As Aggie observed later, he acted as if he had never cared for her,
+while Mr. Bell, on the contrary, could not help his face changing when
+he so much as mentioned her name.
+
+We made some tea and ate a hearty breakfast, while the men watched us.
+And as we ate, Tish held the moving-picture business up to contumely and
+scorn.
+
+"Lady," said one of the prostrate men, "aren't you going to give us
+anything to eat?"
+
+"People," Tish said, ignoring him, "who would ordinarily cringe at the
+sight of a wounded beetle sit through bloody murders and go home with
+the obsession of crime."
+
+"I hope you won't take it amiss," said the man again, "if I say that,
+seeing it's our flour and bacon, you either ought to feed us or take it
+away and eat it where we can't see you."
+
+"I take it," said Tish to the girl, pouring in more batter, "that you
+yourself would never have thought of highway robbery had you not been
+led to it by an overstimulated imagination."
+
+"I wish," said the girl rudely, "that you wouldn't talk so much. I've
+got a headache."
+
+When we had finished Tish indicated the frying-pan and the batter.
+"Perhaps," she said, "you would like to bake some cakes for these
+friends of yours. We have a long trip ahead of us."
+
+But the girl replied heartlessly that she hoped they would starve to
+death, ignoring their pitiful glances. In the end it was our own
+tender-hearted Aggie who baked pancakes for them and, loosening their
+hands while I stood guard, saw that they had not only food but the
+gentle refreshment of fresh tea. Tish it was, however, who, not to be
+outdone in magnanimity, permitted them to go, one by one, to the stream
+to wash. Escape, without horses or weapons, was impossible, and they
+realized it.
+
+By nine o'clock we were ready to return. And here a difficulty presented
+itself. There were six prisoners and only three of us. The men, fed now,
+were looking less subdued, although they pretended to obey Tish's
+commands with alacrity.
+
+Aggie overheard a scrap of conversation, too, which seemed to indicate
+that they had not given up hope. Had Tish not set her heart on leading
+them into the great hotel at Many Glaciers, and there exposing them to
+the taunts of angry tourists, it would have been simpler for one of us
+to ride for assistance, leaving the others there.
+
+In this emergency Tish, putting her hand into her pocket for her
+scissors to trim a hangnail, happened to come across the policeman's
+whistle.
+
+"My gracious!" she said. "I forgot my promise to that young man!"
+
+She immediately put it to her lips and blew three shrill blasts. To our
+surprise they were answered by a halloo, and a moment later the young
+gentleman himself appeared on the trail. He was no longer afoot, but was
+mounted on a pinto pony, which we knew at once for Bill's.
+
+He sat on his horse, staring as if he could not believe his eyes. Then
+he made his way across the stream toward us.
+
+"Good Heavens!" he said. "What in the name of--" Here his eyes fell on
+the girl, and he stiffened.
+
+"Jim!" cried the girl, and looked at him with what Aggie afterward
+characterized as a most touching expression.
+
+But he ignored her. "Looks as though you folks have been pretty busy,"
+he observed, glancing at our scowling captives. "I'm a trifle surprised.
+You don't mind my being rather breathless, do you?"
+
+"My only regret," Tish said loftily, "is that we have not secured the
+Indians. They too should be taught a lesson. I am sure that the red man
+is noble until led away by civilized people who might know better."
+
+It was at this point that Mr. Bell's eyes fell on Mr. Oliver, who with
+his hands tied behind him was crouching over the fire.
+
+"Well!" he said. "So you're here too! But of course you would be." This
+he said bitterly.
+
+"For the love of Heaven, Bell," Mr. Oliver said, "tell those mad women
+that I'm not a bandit."
+
+"We know that already," Tish observed.
+
+"And untie my hands. My shoulders are about broken."
+
+But Mr. Bell only looked at him coldly. "I can't interfere with these
+ladies," he said. "They're friends of mine. If they think you are better
+tied, it's their business. They did it."
+
+"At least," Mr. Oliver said savagely, "you can tell them who I am, can't
+you?"
+
+"As to that," Mr. Bell returned, "I can only tell them what you say you
+are. You must remember that I know nothing about you. Helen knows much
+more than I do."
+
+"Jim," cried the girl, "surely you are going to tell these women that we
+are not highway robbers. Tell them the truth. Tell them I am not a
+highway robber. Tell them that these men are not my accomplices, that I
+never saw them before."
+
+"You must remember," he replied in an icy tone, "that I no longer know
+your friends. It is some days since you and I parted company. And you
+must admit that one of them is a friend of yours--as well as I can
+judge, a very close friend."
+
+She was almost in tears, but she persisted. "At least," she said, "you
+can tell them that I did not rob that woman on the pass. They are going
+to lead us in to Many Glaciers, and--Jim, you won't let them, will you?
+I'll die of shame."
+
+But he was totally unmoved. As Aggie said afterward, no one would have
+thought that, but a day or two before, he had been heartbroken because
+she was in love with someone else.
+
+"As to that," he said, "it is questionable, according to Mrs.
+Ostermaier, that nothing was taken from you, and that as soon as the
+attack was over you basely deserted her and followed the bandits. A full
+description of you, which I was able to correct in one or two trifling
+details, is now in the hands of the park police."
+
+She stared at him with fury in her eyes. "I hope you will never speak to
+me again," she cried.
+
+"You said that the last time I saw you, Helen. If you will think, you
+will remember that you addressed me first just now."
+
+She stamped her foot.
+
+"Of course," he said politely, "you can see my position. You maintain
+and possibly believe that these--er--acquaintances of yours"--he
+indicated the men--"are not members of the moving-picture outfit. Also
+that your being with them is of an accidental nature. But, on the other
+hand--"
+
+She put her fingers in her ears and turned her back on him.
+
+"On the other hand," he went on calmly, "I have the word of these three
+respectable ladies that they are the outfit, or part of it, that they
+have just concluded a cruel hoax on unsuspecting tourists, and that they
+justly deserve to be led in as captives and exposed to the full ignominy
+of their position."
+
+Here she faced him again, and this time she was quite pale. "Ask
+those--those women where they found my engagement ring," she said. "One
+of those wretches took it from me. That ought to be proof enough that
+they are not from the moving-picture outfit."
+
+Tish at once produced the ring and held it out to him. But he merely
+glanced at it and shook his head.
+
+"All engagement rings look alike," he observed. "I cannot possibly say,
+Helen, but I think it is unlikely that it is the one I gave you, as you
+told me, you may recall, that you had thrown it into a crack in a
+glacier. It may, of course, be one you have recently acquired."
+
+He glanced at Mr. Oliver, but the latter only shrugged his shoulders.
+
+Well, she shed a few tears, but he was adamant, and helped us saddle the
+horses, ignoring her utterly. It was our opinion that he no longer cared
+for her, and that, having lost him, she now regretted it. I know that
+she watched him steadily when he was not looking her way. But he went
+round quite happily, whistling a bit of tune, and not at all like the
+surly individual we had at first thought him.
+
+The ride back was without much incident. Our prisoners rode with their
+hands tied behind them, except the young lady.
+
+"We might as well leave her unfastened," the young man said casually.
+"While I dare say she would make her escape if possible, and
+particularly if there was any chance of getting filmed while doing it,
+I will make myself personally responsible."
+
+As a matter of fact she was exceedingly rude to all of us, and during
+our stop for luncheon, which was again bacon and pancakes, she made a
+dash for her horse. The young man saw her, however, in time, and brought
+her back. From that time on she was more civil, but I saw her looking at
+him now and then, and her eyes were positively terrified.
+
+It was Aggie, at last, who put in a plea for her with him, drawing him
+aside to do so. "I am sure," she said, "that she is really a nice girl,
+and has merely been led astray by the search for adventure. Naturally my
+friends, especially Miss Tish, have small sympathy with such a state of
+mind. But you are younger--and remember, you loved her once."
+
+"Loved her once!" he replied. "Dear lady, I'm so crazy about her at this
+minute that I can hardly hold myself in."
+
+"You are not acting much like it."
+
+"The fact is," he replied, "I'm afraid to let myself go. And if she's
+learned a lesson, I have too. I've been her doormat long enough. I tried
+it and it didn't work. She's caring more for me now, at this minute,
+than she has in eleven months. She needs a strong hand, and, by George!
+I've got it--two of them, in fact."
+
+We reached Many Glaciers late that afternoon, and Tish rode right up to
+the hotel. Our arrival created the most intense excitement, and Tish,
+although pleased, was rather surprised. It was not, however, until a
+large man elbowed his way through the crowd and took possession of the
+prisoners that we understood.
+
+"I'll take them now," he said. "Well, George, how are you?"
+
+This was to the leader, who merely muttered in reply.
+
+"I'd like to leave them here for a short time," Tish stated. "They
+should be taught a severe lesson and nothing stings like ridicule. After
+that you can turn them free, but I think they ought to be discharged."
+
+"Turn them free!" he said in a tone of amazement. "Discharged! My dear
+madam, they will get fifteen years' hard labor, I hope. And that's too
+good for them."
+
+Then suddenly the crowd began to cheer. It was some time before Tish
+realized that they were cheering us. And even then, I shall have to
+confess, we did not understand until the young man explained to me.
+
+"You see," he said, "I didn't like to say anything sooner, for fear of
+making you nervous. You'd done it all so well that I wanted you to
+finish it. You're been in the right church all along, but the wrong
+pew. Those fellows aren't movie actors, except Oliver, who will be
+freed now, and come after me with a gun, as like as not! They're real
+dyed-in-the-wool desperadoes and there's a reward of five thousand
+dollars for capturing them."
+
+Tish went rather white, but said nothing. Aggie, however, went into a
+paroxysm of sneezing, and did not revive until given aromatic ammonia
+to inhale.
+
+"I was fooled at first too," the young man said. "We'd been expecting a
+holdup and when it came we thought it was the faked one. But the
+person"--he paused and looked round--"the person who had the real jolt
+was Helen. She followed them, since they didn't take her for ransom, as
+had been agreed in the plot.
+
+"Then, when she found her mistake, they took her along, for fear she'd
+ride off and raise the alarm. All in all," he said reflectively, "it has
+been worth about a million dollars to me."
+
+We went into the hotel, with the crowd following us, and the first thing
+we saw was Mrs. Ostermaier, sitting dejectedly by the fire. When she saw
+us, she sprang to her feet and came to meet us.
+
+"Oh, Miss Tish, Miss Tish!" she said. "What I have been through!
+Attacked on a lonely mountain-top and robbed of everything. My reason is
+almost gone. And my earrings, my beautiful earrings!"
+
+Tish said nothing, but, reaching into her reticule, which she had taken
+from the horn of her saddle, she drew out a number of things.
+
+"Here," she said. "Are your earrings. Here also is Mr. Ostermaier's
+cigar-case, but empty. Here is some money too. I'll keep that, however,
+until I know how much you lost."
+
+"Tish!" screeched Mrs. Ostermaier. "You found them!"
+
+"Yes," Tish said somewhat wearily, "we found them. We found a number of
+things, Mrs. Ostermaier,--four bandits, and two lovers, or rather three,
+but so no longer, and your things, and a reward of five thousand
+dollars, and an engagement ring. I think," she said, "that I'd like a
+hot bath and something to eat."
+
+Mrs. Ostermaier was gloating over her earrings, but she looked up at
+Tish's tired and grimy face, at the mud encrusted on me from my accident
+the day before, at Aggie in her turban.
+
+"Go and wash, all of you," she said kindly, "and I'll order some hot
+tea."
+
+But Tish shook her head. "Tea nothing!" she said firmly. "I want a
+broiled sirloin steak and potatoes. And"--she looked Mrs. Ostermaier
+full in the eye--"I am going to have a cocktail. I need it."
+
+Late that evening Aggie came to Tish's room, where I was sitting with
+her. Tish was feeling entirely well, and more talkative than I can
+remember her in years. But the cocktail, which she felt, she said, in no
+other way, had gone to her legs.
+
+"It is not," she observed, "that I cannot walk. I can, perfectly well.
+But I am obliged to keep my eyes on my feet, and it might be noticed."
+
+"I just came in," Aggie said, "to say that Helen and her lover have made
+it up. They are down by the lake now, and if you will look out you can
+see them."
+
+I gave Tish an arm to the window, and the three of us stood and looked
+out. The moon was rising over the snow-capped peaks across the lake, and
+against its silver pathway the young people stood outlined. As we looked
+he stooped and kissed her. But it was a brief caress, as if he had just
+remembered the strong hand and being a doormat long enough.
+
+Tish drew a long breath.
+
+"What," she said, "is more beautiful than young love? It will be a
+comfort to remember that we brought them together. Let go of me now,
+Lizzie. If I keep my eye on the bedpost I think I can get back."
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Tish, The Chronicle of Her Escapades
+and Excursions, by Mary Roberts Rinehart
+
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Tish, The Chronicle of Her Escapades and
+Excursions, by Mary Roberts Rinehart
+
+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: Tish, The Chronicle of Her Escapades and Excursions
+
+Author: Mary Roberts Rinehart
+
+Release Date: February 16, 2005 [EBook #3464]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK TISH ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Lynn Hill
+
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: "The outside edge, by George!" said Charlie Sands. "The
+old sport!"]
+
+
+
+
+
+TISH
+
+The Chronicle of Her Escapades and Excursions
+
+By MARY ROBERTS RINEHART
+
+
+_With Illustrations_
+_by May Wilson Preston_
+
+
+
+1916
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+MIND OVER MOTOR
+
+LIKE A WOLF ON THE FOLD
+
+THE SIMPLE LIFERS
+
+TISH'S SPY
+
+MY COUNTRY TISH OF THEE--
+
+
+
+
+ILLUSTRATIONS
+
+
+"The outside edge, by George!" said Charlie Sands. "The old sport!"
+
+Without cutting down her speed, bumped home the winner
+
+The real meaning of what was occurring did not penetrate to any of us
+
+It ended with Tish stalking off into the woods with the rabbit in one
+hand and the knife in the other
+
+As fast as she wet a bit of lawn, we followed with the pails
+
+"Get the canoe and follow. I'm heading for Island Eleven"
+
+"It's well enough for you, Tish Carberry, to talk about gripping a horse
+with your knees"
+
+"The older I get, Aggie Pilkington, the more I realize that to take you
+anywhere means ruin"
+
+"It would be just like the woman to refuse to come any farther and spoil
+everything"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+MIND OVER MOTOR
+
+HOW TISH BROKE THE LAW AND SOME RECORDS
+
+I
+
+
+So many unkind things have been said of the affair at Morris Valley
+that I think it best to publish a straightforward account of everything.
+The ill nature of the cartoon, for instance, which showed Tish in a pair
+of khaki trousers on her back under a racing-car was quite uncalled
+for. Tish did not wear the khaki trousers; she merely took them along
+in case of emergency. Nor was it true that Tish took Aggie along as
+a mechanician and brutally pushed her off the car because she was not
+pumping enough oil. The fact was that Aggie sneezed on a curve and fell
+out of the car, and would no doubt have been killed had she not been
+thrown into a pile of sand.
+
+It was in early September that Eliza Bailey, my cousin, decided to go
+to London, ostensibly for a rest, but really to get some cretonne at
+Liberty's. Eliza wrote me at Lake Penzance asking me to go to Morris
+Valley and look after Bettina.
+
+I must confess that I was eager to do it. We three were very comfortable
+at Mat Cottage, "Mat" being the name Charlie Sands, Tish's nephew, had
+given it, being the initials of "Middle-Aged Trio." Not that I regard
+the late forties as middle-aged. But Tish, of course, is fifty. Charlie
+Sands, who is on a newspaper, calls us either the "M.A.T." or the
+"B.A.'s," for "Beloved Aunts," although Aggie and I are not related
+to him.
+
+Bettina's mother's note:--
+
+ Not that she will allow you to do it, or because she isn't entirely
+ able to take care of herself; but because the people here are a talky
+ lot. Bettina will probably look after you. She has come from college
+ with a feeling that I am old and decrepit and must be cared for. She
+ maddens me with pillows and cups of tea and woolen shawls. She thinks
+ Morris Valley selfish and idle, and is disappointed in the church,
+ preferring her Presbyterianism pure. She is desirous now of learning
+ how to cook. If you decide to come I'll be grateful if you can keep
+ her out of the kitchen.
+
+ Devotedly, ELIZA.
+
+ P.S. If you can keep Bettina from getting married while I'm away
+ I'll be very glad. She believes a woman should marry and rear a
+ large family!
+
+ E.
+
+
+We were sitting on the porch of the cottage at Lake Penzance when I
+received the letter, and I read it aloud. "Humph!" said Tish, putting
+down the stocking she was knitting and looking over her spectacles at
+me--"Likes her Presbyterianism pure and believes in a large family! How
+old is she? Forty?"
+
+"Eighteen or twenty," I replied, looking at the letter. "I'm not anxious
+to go. She'll probably find me frivolous."
+
+Tish put on her spectacles and took the letter. "I think it's your duty,
+Lizzie," she said when she'd read it through. "But that young woman
+needs handling. We'd better all go. We can motor over in half a day."
+
+That was how it happened that Bettina Bailey, sitting on Eliza Bailey's
+front piazza, decked out in chintz cushions,--the piazza, of course,--saw
+a dusty machine come up the drive and stop with a flourish at the steps.
+And from it alight, not one chaperon, but three.
+
+After her first gasp Bettina was game. She was a pretty girl in a white
+dress and bore no traces in her face of any stern religious proclivities.
+
+"I didn't know--" she said, staring from one to the other of us. "Mother
+said--that is--won't you go right upstairs and have some tea and lie
+down?" She had hardly taken her eyes from Tish, who had lifted the
+engine hood and was poking at the carbureter with a hairpin.
+
+"No, thanks," said Tish briskly. "I'll just go around to the garage and
+oil up while I'm dirty. I've got a short circuit somewhere. Aggie, you
+and Lizzie get the trunk off."
+
+Bettina stood by while we unbuckled and lifted down our traveling trunk.
+She did not speak a word, beyond asking if we wouldn't wait until the
+gardener came. On Tish's saying she had no time to wait, because she
+wanted to put kerosene in the cylinders before the engine cooled,
+Bettina lapsed into silence and stood by watching us.
+
+Bettina took us upstairs. She had put Drummond's "Natural Law in the
+Spiritual World" on my table and a couch was ready with pillows and a
+knitted slumber robe. Very gently she helped us out of our veils and
+dusters and closed the windows for fear of drafts.
+
+"Dear mother is so reckless of drafts," she remarked. "Are you sure you
+won't have tea?"
+
+"We had some blackberry cordial with us," Aggie said, "and we all had a
+little on the way. We had to change a tire and it made us thirsty."
+
+"Change a tire!"
+
+Aggie had taken off her bonnet and was pinning on the small lace cap she
+wears, away from home, to hide where her hair is growing thin. In her
+cap Aggie is a sweet-faced woman of almost fifty, rather ethereal. She
+pinned on her cap and pulled her crimps down over her forehead.
+
+"Yes," she observed. "A bridge went down with us and one of the nails
+spoiled a new tire. I told Miss Carberry the bridge was unsafe, but she
+thought, by taking it very fast--"
+
+Bettina went over to Aggie and clutched her arm. "Do you mean to say,"
+she quavered, "that you three women went through a bridge--"
+
+"It was a small bridge," I put in, to relieve her mind; "and only a foot
+or two of water below. If only the man had not been so disagreeable--"
+
+"Oh," she said, relieved, "you had a man with you!"
+
+"We never take a man with us," Aggie said with dignity. "This one was
+fishing under the bridge and he was most ungentlemanly. Quite refused
+to help, and tried to get the license number so he could sue us."
+
+"Sue you!"
+
+"He claimed his arm was broken, but I distinctly saw him move it."
+Aggie, having adjusted her cap, was looking at it in the mirror. "But
+dear Tish thinks of everything. She had taken off the license plates."
+
+Bettina had gone really pale. She seemed at a loss, and impatient at
+herself for being so. "You--you won't have tea?" she asked.
+
+"No, thank you."
+
+"Would you--perhaps you would prefer whiskey and soda."
+
+Aggie turned on her a reproachful eye. "My dear girl," she said, "with
+the exception of a little home-made wine used medicinally we drink
+nothing. I am the secretary of the Woman's Prohibition Party."
+
+Bettina left us shortly after that to arrange for putting up Letitia
+and Aggie. She gave them her mother's room, and whatever impulse she
+may have had to put the Presbyterian Psalter by the bed, she restrained
+it. By midnight Drummond's "Natural Law" had disappeared from my table
+and a novel had taken its place. But Bettina had not lost her air of
+bewilderment.
+
+That first evening was very quiet. A young man in white flannels called,
+and he and Letitia spent a delightful evening on the porch talking
+spark-plugs and carbureters. Bettina sat in a corner and looked at the
+moon. Spoken to, she replied in monosyllables in a carefully sweet tone.
+The young man's name was Jasper McCutcheon.
+
+It developed that Jasper owned an old racing-car which he kept in the
+Bailey garage, and he and Tish went out to look it over. They very
+politely asked us all to go along, but Bettina refusing, Aggie and I sat
+with her and looked at the moon.
+
+Aggie in her capacity as chaperon, or as one of an association of
+chaperons, used the opportunity to examine Bettina on the subject of
+Jasper.
+
+"He seems a nice boy," she remarked. Aggie's idea of a nice boy is one
+who in summer wears fresh flannels outside, in winter less conspicuously.
+"Does he live near?"
+
+"Next door," sweetly but coolly.
+
+"He is very good-looking."
+
+"Ears spoil him--too large."
+
+"Does he come around--er--often?"
+
+"Only two or three times a day. On Sunday, of course, we see more of
+him."
+
+Aggie looked at me in the moonlight. Clearly the young man from the next
+door needed watching. It was well we had come.
+
+"I suppose you like the same things?" she suggested. "Similar tastes
+and--er--all that?"
+
+Bettina stretched her arms over her head and yawned.
+
+"Not so you could notice it," she said coolly. "I can't thick of
+anything we agree on. He is an Episcopalian; I'm a Presbyterian. He
+approves of suffrage for women; I do not. He is a Republican; I'm a
+Progressive. He disapproves of large families; I approve of them, if
+people can afford them."
+
+Aggie sat straight up. "I hope you don't discuss that!" she exclaimed.
+
+Bettina smiled. "How nice to find that you are really just nice elderly
+ladies after all!" she said. "Of course we discuss it. Is it anything to
+be ashamed of?"
+
+"When I was a girl," I said tartly, "we married first and discussed
+those things afterward."
+
+"Of course you did, Aunt Lizzie," she said, smiling alluringly. She was
+the prettiest girl I think I have ever seen, and that night she was
+beautiful. "And you raised enormous families who religiously walked to
+church in their bare feet to save their shoes!"
+
+"I did nothing of the sort," I snapped.
+
+"It seems to me," Aggie put in gently, "that you make very little of
+love." Aggie was once engaged to be married to a young man named
+Wiggins, a roofer by trade, who was killed in the act of inspecting a
+tin gutter, on a rainy day. He slipped and fell over, breaking his neck
+as a result.
+
+Bettina smiled at Aggie. "Not at all," she said. "The day of blind love
+is gone, that's all--gone like the day of the chaperon."
+
+Neither of us cared to pursue this, and Tish at that moment appearing
+with Jasper, Aggie and I made a move toward bed. But Jasper not going,
+and none of us caring to leave him alone with Bettina, we sat down
+again.
+
+We sat until one o'clock.
+
+At the end of that time Jasper rose, and saying something about its
+being almost bedtime strolled off next door. Aggie was sound asleep in
+her chair and Tish was dozing. As for Bettina, she had said hardly a
+word after eleven o'clock.
+
+Aggie and Tish, as I have said, were occupying the same room. I went to
+sleep the moment I got into bed, and must have slept three or four hours
+when I was awakened by a shot. A moment later a dozen or more shots were
+fired in rapid succession and I sat bolt upright in bed. Across the
+street some one was raising a window, and a man called "What's the
+matter?" twice.
+
+There was no response and no further sound. Shaking in every limb, I
+found the light switch and looked at the time. It was four o'clock in
+the morning and quite dark.
+
+Some one was moving in the hall outside and whimpering. I opened the
+door hurriedly and Aggie half fell into the room.
+
+"Tish is murdered, Lizzie!" she said, and collapsed on the floor in a
+heap.
+
+"Nonsense!"
+
+"She's not in her room or in the house, and I heard shots!"
+
+Well, Aggie was right. Tish was not in her room. There was a sort of
+horrible stillness everywhere as we stood there clutching at each other
+and listening.
+
+"She's heard burglars downstairs and has gone down after them, and this
+is what has happened! Oh, Tish! brave Tish!" Aggie cried hysterically.
+
+And at that Bettina came in with her hair over her shoulders and asked
+us if we had heard anything. When we told her about Tish, she insisted
+on going downstairs, and with Aggie carrying her first-aid box and I
+carrying the blackberry cordial, we went down.
+
+The lower floor was quiet and empty. The man across the street had put
+down his window and gone back to bed, and everything was still. Bettina
+in her dressing-gown went out on the porch and turned on the light. Tish
+was not there, nor was there a body lying on the lawn.
+
+"It was back of the house by the garage," Bettina said. "If only
+Jasper--"
+
+And at that moment Jasper came into the circle of light. He had a
+Norfolk coat on over his pajamas and a pair of slippers, and he was
+running, calling over his shoulder to some one behind as he ran.
+
+"Watch the drive!" he yelled. "I saw him duck round the corner."
+
+We could hear other footsteps now and somebody panting near us. Aggie
+was sitting huddled in a porch chair, crying, and Bettina, in the hall,
+was trying to get down from the wall a Moorish knife that Eliza Bailey
+had picked up somewhere.
+
+"John!" we heard Jasper calling. "John! Quick! I've got him!"
+
+He was just at the corner of the porch. My heart stopped and then rushed
+on a thousand a minute. Then:--
+
+"Take your hands off me!" said Tish's voice.
+
+The next moment Tish came majestically into the circle of light and
+mounted the steps. Jasper, with his mouth open, stood below looking up,
+and a hired man in what looked like a bed quilt was behind in the
+shadow.
+
+Tish was completely dressed in her motoring clothes, even to her
+goggles. She looked neither to the right nor left, but stalked across
+the porch into the house and up the stairway. None of us moved until we
+heard the door of her room slam above.
+
+"Poor old dear!" said Bettina. "She's been walking in her sleep!"
+
+"But the shots!" gasped Aggie. "Some one was shooting at her!"
+
+Conscious now of his costume, Jasper had edged close to the veranda and
+stood in its shadow.
+
+"Walking in her sleep, of course!" he said heartily. "The trip to-day was
+too much for her. But think of her getting into that burglar-proof
+garage with her eyes shut--or do sleep-walkers have their eyes
+shut?--and actually cranking up my racer!"
+
+Aggie looked at me and I looked at Aggie.
+
+"Of course," Jasper went on, "there being no muffler on it, the racket
+wakened her as well as the neighborhood. And then the way we chased
+her!"
+
+"Poor old dear!" said Bettina again. "I'm going in to make her some
+tea."
+
+"I think," said Jasper, "that I need a bit of tea too. If you will put
+out the porch lights I'll come up and have some."
+
+But Aggie and I said nothing. We knew Tish never walked in her sleep.
+She had meant to try out Jasper's racing-car at dawn, forgetting that
+racers have no mufflers, and she had been, as one may say, hoist with
+her own petard--although I do not know what a petard is and have never
+been able to find out.
+
+We drank our tea, but Tish refused to have any or to reply to our
+knocks, preserving a sulky silence. Also she had locked Aggie out and
+I was compelled to let her sleep in my room.
+
+I was almost asleep when Aggie spoke:--
+
+"Did you think there was anything queer about the way that Jasper boy
+said good-night to Bettina?" she asked drowsily.
+
+"I didn't hear him say good-night."
+
+"That was it. He didn't. I think"--she yawned--"I think he kissed her."
+
+
+
+
+II
+
+
+Tish was down early to breakfast that morning and her manner forbade any
+mention of the night before. Aggie, however, noticed that she ate her
+cereal with her left hand and used her right arm only when absolutely
+necessary. Once before Tish had almost broken an arm cranking a car and
+had been driven to arnica compresses for a week; but this time we dared
+not suggest anything.
+
+Shortly after breakfast she came down to the porch where Aggie and I
+were knitting.
+
+"I've hurt my arm, Lizzie," she said. "I wish you'd come out and crank
+the car."
+
+"You'd better stay at home with an arm like that," I replied stiffly.
+
+"Very well, I'll crank it myself."
+
+"Where are you going?"
+
+"To the drug store for arnica."
+
+Bettina was not there, so I turned on Tish sharply. "I'll go, of
+course," I said; "but I'll not go without speaking my mind, Letitia
+Carberry. By and large, I've stood by you for twenty-five years, and
+now in the weakness of your age I'm not going to leave you. But I warn
+you, Tish, if you touch that racing-car again, I'll send for Charlie
+Sands."
+
+"I haven't any intention of touching it again," said Tish, meekly
+enough. "But I wish I could buy a second-hand racer cheap."
+
+"What for?" Aggie demanded.
+
+Tish looked at her with scorn. "To hold flowers on the dining-table,"
+she snapped.
+
+It being necessary, of course, to leave a chaperon with Bettina, because
+of the Jasper person's habit of coming over at any hour of the day, we
+left Aggie with instructions to watch them both.
+
+Tish and I drove to the drug store together, and from there to a garage
+for gasoline. I have never learned to say "gas" for gasoline. It seems
+to me as absurd as if I were to say "but" for butter. Considering that
+Aggie was quite sulky at being left, it is absurd for her to assume an
+air of virtue over what followed that day. Aggie was only like a lot of
+people--good because she was not tempted; for it was at the garage that
+we met Mr. Ellis.
+
+We had stopped the engine and Tish was quarreling with the man about
+the price of gasoline when I saw him--a nice-looking young man in a
+black-and-white checked suit and a Panama hat. He came over and stood
+looking at Tish's machine.
+
+"Nice lines to that car," he said. "Built for speed, isn't she? What do
+you get out of her?"
+
+Tish heard him and turned. "Get out of her?" she said. "Bills mostly."
+
+"Well, that's the way with most of them," he remarked, looking steadily
+at Tish. "A machine's a rich man's toy. The only way to own one is to
+have it endowed like a university. But I meant speed. What can you
+make?"
+
+"Never had a chance to find out," Tish said grimly. "Between nervous
+women in the machine and constables outside I have the twelve-miles-an-
+hour habit. I'm going to exchange the speedometer for a vacuum bottle."
+
+He smiled. "I don't think you're fair to yourself. Mostly--if you'll
+forgive me--I can tell a woman's driving as far off as I can see the
+machine; but you are a very fine driver. The way you brought that car
+in here impressed me considerably."
+
+"She need not pretend she crawls along the road," I said with some
+sarcasm. "The bills she complains of are mostly fines for speeding."
+
+"No!" said the young man, delighted. "Good! I'm glad to hear it. So are
+mine!"
+
+After that we got along famously. He had his car there--a low gray thing
+that looked like an armored cruiser.
+
+"I'd like you ladies to try her," he said. "She can move, but she is as
+gentle as a lamb. A lady friend of mine once threaded a needle as an
+experiment while going sixty-five miles an hour."
+
+"In this car?"
+
+"In this car."
+
+Looking back, I do not recall just how the thing started. I believe Tish
+expressed a desire to see the car go, and Mr. Ellis said he couldn't let
+her out on the roads, but that the race-track at the fair-ground was
+open and if we cared to drive down there in Tish's car he would show us
+her paces, as he called it.
+
+From that to going to the race-track, and from that to Tish's getting in
+beside him on the mechanician's seat and going round once or twice, was
+natural. I refused; I didn't like the look of the thing.
+
+Tish came back with a cinder in her eye and full of enthusiasm. "It was
+magnificent, Lizzie," she said. "The only word for it is sublime. You
+see nothing. There is just the rush of the wind and the roar of the
+engine and a wonderful feeling of flying. Here! See if you can find this
+cinder."
+
+"Won't you try it, Miss--er--Lizzie?"
+
+"No, thanks," I replied. "I can get all the roar and rush of wind I want
+in front of an electric fan, and no danger."
+
+He stood by, looking out over the oval track while I took three cinders
+from Tish's eye.
+
+"Great track!" he said. "It's a horse-track, of course, but it's in
+bully shape--the county fair is held there and these fellows make a big
+feature of their horse-races. I came up here to persuade them to hold an
+automobile meet, but they've got cold feet an the proposition."
+
+"What was the proposition?" asked Tish.
+
+"Well," he said, "it was something like this. I've been turning the
+trick all over the country and it works like a charm. The town's ahead
+in money and business, for an automobile race always brings a big crowd;
+the track owners make the gate money and the racing-cars get the prizes.
+Everybody's ahead. It's a clean sport too."
+
+"I don't approve of racing for money," Tish said decidedly.
+
+But Mr. Ellis shrugged his shoulders. "It's really hardly racing for
+money," he explained. "The prizes cover the expenses of the racing-cars,
+which are heavy naturally. The cars alone cost a young fortune."
+
+"I see," said Tish. "I hadn't thought of it in that light. Well, why
+didn't Morris Valley jump at the chance?"
+
+He hesitated a moment before he answered. "It was my fault really," he
+said. "They were willing enough to have the races, but it was a matter
+of money. I made them a proposition to duplicate whatever prize money
+they offered, and in return I was to have half the gate receipts and the
+betting privileges."
+
+Tish quite stiffened. "Clean sport!" she said sarcastically. "With
+betting privileges!"
+
+"You don't quite understand, dear lady," he explained. "Even in the
+cleanest sport we cannot prevent a man's having an opinion and backing
+it with his own money. What I intended to do was to regulate it.
+Regulate it."
+
+Tish was quite mollified. "Well, of course," she said, "I suppose since
+it must be, it is better--er,--regulated. But why haven't you
+succeeded?"
+
+"An unfortunate thing happened just as I had the deal about to close,"
+he replied, and drew a long breath. "The town had raised twenty-five
+hundred. I was to duplicate the amount. But just at that time a--a young
+brother of mine in the West got into difficulties, and I--but why go
+into family matters? It would have been easy enough for me to pay my
+part of the purse out of my share of the gate money; but the committee
+demands cash on the table. I haven't got it."
+
+Tish stood up in her car and looked out over the track.
+
+"Twenty-five hundred dollars is a lot of money, young man."
+
+"Not so much when you realize that the gate money will probably amount
+to twelve thousand."
+
+Tish turned and surveyed the grandstand.
+
+"That thing doesn't seat twelve hundred."
+
+"Two thousand people in the grandstand--that's four thousand dollars.
+Four thousand standing inside the ropes at a dollar each, four thousand
+more. And say eight hundred machines parked in the oval there at five
+dollars a car, four thousand more. That's twelve thousand for the gate
+money alone. Then there are the concessions to sell peanuts, toy
+balloons, lemonade and palm-leaf fans, the lunch-stands, merry-go-round
+and moving-picture permits. It's a bonanza! Fourteen thousand anyhow."
+
+"Half of fourteen thousand is seven," said Tish dreamily. "Seven
+thousand less twenty-five hundred is thirty-five hundred dollars
+profit."
+
+"Forty-five hundred, dear lady," corrected Mr. Ellis, watching her.
+"Forty-five hundred dollars profit to be made in two weeks, and nothing
+to do to get it but sit still and watch it coming!"
+
+I can read Tish like a book and I saw what was in her mind. "Letitia
+Carberry!" I said sternly. "You take my warning and keep clear of this
+foolishness. If money comes as easy as that it ain't honest."
+
+"Why not?" demanded Mr. Ellis. "We give them their money's worth,
+don't we? They'd pay two dollars for a theater seat without half
+the thrills--no chances of seeing a car turn turtle or break its
+steering-knuckle and dash into the side-lines. Two dollars' worth?
+It's twenty!"
+
+But Tish had had a moment to consider, and the turning-turtle business
+settled it. She shook her head. "I'm not interested, Mr. Ellis," she
+said coldly. "I couldn't sleep at night if I thought I'd been the cause
+of anything turning turtle or dashing into the side-lines."
+
+"Dear lady!" he said, shocked; "I had no idea of asking you to help
+me out of my difficulties. Anyhow, while matters are at a standstill
+probably some shrewd money-maker here will come forward before long and
+make a nice profit on a small investment."
+
+As we drove away from the fair grounds Tish was very silent; but just as
+we reached the Bailey place, with Bettina and young Jasper McCutcheon
+batting a ball about on the tennis court, Tish turned to me.
+
+"You needn't look like that, Lizzie," she said. "I'm not even thinking
+of backing an automobile race--although I don't see why I shouldn't, so
+far as that goes. But it's curious, isn't it, that I've got twenty-five
+hundred dollars from Cousin Angeline's estate not even earning four per
+cent?"
+
+I got out grimly and jerked at my bonnet-strings.
+
+"You put it in a mortgage, Tish," I advised her with severity in every
+tone. "It may not be so fast as an automobile race or so likely to turn
+turtle or break its steering-knuckle, but it's safe."
+
+"Huh!" said Tish, reaching for the gear lever. "And about as exciting as
+a cold pork chop."
+
+"And furthermore," I interjected, "if you go into this thing now that
+your eyes are open, I'll send for Charlie Sands!"
+
+"You and Charlie Sands," said Tish viciously, jamming at her gears,
+"ought to go and live in an old ladies' home away from this cruel
+world."
+
+Aggie was sitting under a sunshade in the broiling sun at the tennis
+court. She said she had not left Bettina and Jasper for a moment, and
+that they had evidently quarreled, although she did not know when,
+having listened to every word they said. For the last half-hour, she
+said, they had not spoken at all.
+
+"Young people in love are very foolish," she said, rising stiffly. "They
+should be happy in the present. Who knows what the future may hold?"
+
+I knew she was thinking of Mr. Wiggins and the icy roof, so I patted her
+shoulder and sent her up to put cold cloths on her head for fear of
+sunstroke. Then I sat down in the broiling sun and chaperoned Bettina
+until luncheon.
+
+
+
+
+III
+
+
+Jasper took dinner with us that night. He came across the lawn, freshly
+shaved and in clean white flannels, just as dinner was announced, and
+said he had seen a chocolate cake cooling on the kitchen porch and that
+it was a sort of unwritten social law that when the Baileys happened to
+have a chocolate cake at dinner they had him also.
+
+There seemed to be nothing to object to in this. Evidently he was right,
+for we found his place laid at the table. The meal was quite cheerful,
+although Jasper ate the way some people play the piano, by touch, with
+his eyes on Bettina. And he gave no evidence at dessert of a fondness
+for chocolate cake sufficient to justify a standing invitation.
+
+After dinner we went out on the veranda, and under cover of showing me a
+sunset Jasper took me round the corner of the house. Once there, he
+entirely forgot the sunset.
+
+"Miss Lizzie," he began at once, "what have I done to you to have you
+treat me like this?"
+
+"I?" I asked, amazed.
+
+"All three of you. Did--did Bettina's mother warn you against me?"
+
+"The girl has to be chaperoned."
+
+"But not jailed, Miss Lizzie, not jailed! Do you know that I haven't had
+a word with Bettina alone since you came?"
+
+"Why should you want to say anything we cannot hear?"
+
+"Miss Lizzie," he said desperately, "do you want to hear me propose to
+her? For I've reached the point where if I don't propose to Bettina
+soon, I'll--I'll propose to somebody. You'd better be warned in time. It
+might be you or Miss Aggie."
+
+I weakened at that. The Lord never saw fit to send me a man I could care
+enough about to marry, or one who cared enough about me, but I couldn't
+look at the boy's face and not be sorry for him.
+
+"What do you want me to do?" I asked.
+
+"Come for a walk with us," he begged. "Then sprain your ankle or get
+tired, I don't care which. Tell us to go on and come back for you later.
+Do you see? You can sit down by the road somewhere."
+
+"I won't lie," I said firmly. "If I really get tired I'll say so. If I
+don't--"
+
+"You will." He was gleeful. "We'll walk until you do! You see it's like
+this, Miss Lizzie. Bettina was all for me, in spite of our differing on
+religion and politics and--"
+
+"I know all about your differences," I put in hastily.
+
+"Until a new chap came to town--a fellow named Ellis. Runs a sporty car
+and has every girl in the town lashed to the mast. He's a novelty and
+I'm not. So far I have kept him away from Bettina, but at any time they
+may meet, and it will be one-two-three with me."
+
+I am not defending my conduct; I am only explaining. Eliza Bailey
+herself would have done what I did under the circumstances. I went for a
+walk with Bettina and Jasper shortly after my talk with Jasper, leaving
+Tish with the evening paper and Aggie inhaling a cubeb cigarette, her
+hay fever having threatened a return. And what is more, I tired within
+three blocks of the house, where I saw a grassy bank beside the road.
+
+Bettina wished to stay with me, but I said, in obedience to Jasper's
+eyes, that I liked to sit alone and listen to the crickets, and for them
+to go on. The last I saw of them Jasper had drawn Bettina's arm through
+his and was walking beside her with his head bent, talking. I sat for
+perhaps fifteen minutes and was growing uneasy about dew and my
+rheumatism when I heard footsteps and, looking up, I saw Aggie coming
+toward me. She was not surprised to see me and addressed me coldly.
+
+"I thought as much!" she said. "I expected better of you, Lizzie. That
+boy asked me and I refused. I dare say he asked Tish also. For you, who
+pride yourself on your strength of mind--"
+
+"I was tired," I said. "I was to sprain my ankle," she observed
+sarcastically. "I just thought as I was sitting there alone--"
+
+"Where's Tish?"
+
+"A young man named Ellis came and took her out for a ride," said Aggie.
+"He couldn't take us both, as the car holds only two."
+
+I got up and stared at Aggie in the twilight. "You come straight home
+with me, Aggie Pilkington," I said sternly.
+
+"But what about Bettina and Jasper?"
+
+"Let 'em alone," I said; "they're safe enough. What we need to keep an
+eye on is Letitia Carberry and her Cousin Angeline's legacy."
+
+But I was too late. Tish and Mr. Ellis whirled up to the door at
+half-past eight and Tish did not even notice that Bettina was absent.
+She took off her veil and said something about Mr. Ellis's having heard
+a grinding in the differential of her car that afternoon and that he
+suspected a chip of steel in the gears. They went out together to the
+garage, leaving Aggie and me staring at each other. Mr. Ellis was
+carrying a box of tools.
+
+Jasper and Bettina returned shortly after, and even in the dusk I knew
+things had gone badly for him. He sat on the steps, looking out across
+the dark lawn, and spoke in monosyllables. Bettina, however, was very
+gay.
+
+It was evident that Bettina had decided not to take her Presbyterianism
+into the Episcopal fold. And although I am a Presbyterian myself I felt
+sorry.
+
+Tish and Mr. Ellis came round to the porch about ten o'clock and he was
+presented to Bettina. From that moment there was no question in my mind
+as to how affairs were going, or in Jasper's either. He refused to move
+and sat doggedly on the steps, but he took little part in the
+conversation.
+
+Mr. Ellis was a good talker, especially about himself.
+
+"You'll be glad to know," he said to me, "that I've got this race matter
+fixed up finally. In two weeks from now we'll have a little excitement
+here."
+
+I looked toward Tish, but she said nothing.
+
+"Excitement is where I live," said Mr. Ellis. "If I don't find any
+waiting I make it."
+
+"If you are looking for excitement, we'll have to find you some," Jasper
+said pointedly.
+
+Mr. Ellis only laughed. "Don't put yourself out, dear boy," he said.
+"I have enough for present necessities. If you think an automobile race
+is an easy thing to manage, try it. Every man who drives a racing-car
+has a _coloratura_ soprano beaten to death for temperament. Then every
+racing-car has quirky spells; there's the local committee to propitiate;
+the track to look after; and if that isn't enough, there's the promotion
+itself, the advertising. That's my stunt--the advertising."
+
+"It's a wonderful business, isn't it?" asked Bettina. "To take a mile
+or so of dirt track and turn it into a sort of stage, with drama every
+minute and sometimes tragedy!"
+
+"Wait a moment," said Mr. Ellis; "I want to put that down. I'll use it
+somewhere in the advertising." He wrote by the light of a match, while
+we all sat rather stunned by both his personality and his alertness.
+"Everything's grist that comes to my mill. I suppose you all remember
+when I completed the speedway at Indianapolis and had the Governor of
+Indiana lay a gold brick at the entrance? Great stunt that! But the best
+part of that story never reached the public."
+
+Bettina was leaning forward, all ears and thrills. "What was that?" she
+asked.
+
+"I had the gold brick stolen that night--did it myself and carried the
+brick away in my pocket--only gold-plated, you know. Cost eight or nine
+dollars, all told, and brought a million dollars in advertising. But the
+papers were sore about some passes and wouldn't use the story. Too bad
+we can't use the brick here. Still have it kicking about somewhere."
+
+It was then, I think, that Jasper yawned loudly, apologized, said
+good-night and lounged away across the lawn. Bettina hardly knew he was
+going. She was bending forward, her chin in her palms, listening to Mr.
+Ellis tell about a driver in a motor race breaking his wrist cranking a
+car, and how he--Ellis--had jumped into the car and driven it to
+victory. Even Aggie was enthralled. It seemed as if, in the last hour,
+the great world of stress and keen wits and endeavor and mad speed had
+sat down on our door-step.
+
+As Tish said when we were going up to bed, why shouldn't Mr. Ellis brag?
+He had something to brag about.
+
+
+
+
+IV
+
+
+Although I felt quite sure that Tish had put up the prize money for Mr.
+Ellis, I could not be certain. And Tish's attitude at that time did not
+invite inquiry. She took long rides daily with the Ellis man in his gray
+car, and I have reason to believe that their objective point was always
+the same--the race-track.
+
+Mr. Ellis was the busiest man in Morris Valley. In the daytime he was
+superintending putting the track in condition, writing what he called
+"promotion stuff," securing entries and forming the center of excited
+groups at the drug store and one or other of the two public garages.
+In the evenings he was generally to be found at Bettina's feet.
+
+Jasper did not come over any more. He sauntered past, evening after
+evening, very much white-flanneled and carrying a tennis racket. And
+once or twice he took out his old racing-car, and later shot by the
+house with a flutter of veils and a motor coat beside him.
+
+Aggie was exceedingly sorry for him, and even went the length of having
+the cook bake a chocolate cake and put it on the window sill to cool. It
+had, however, no perceptible effect, except to draw from Mr. Ellis, who
+had been round at the garage looking at Jasper's old racer, a remark
+that he was exceedingly fond of cake, and if he were urged--
+
+That was, I believe, a week before the race. The big city papers had
+taken it up, according to Mr. Ellis, and entries were pouring in.
+
+"That's the trouble on a small track," he said--"we can't crowd 'em.
+A dozen cars will be about the limit. Even with using the cattle pens
+for repair pits we can't look after more than a dozen. Did I tell you
+Heckert had entered his Bonor?"
+
+"No!" we exclaimed. As far as Aggie and I were concerned, the Bonor
+might have been a new sort of dog.
+
+"Yes, and Johnson his Sampler. It's going to be some race--eh, what!"
+
+Jasper sauntered over that evening, possibly a late result of the cake,
+after all. He greeted us affably, as if his defection of the past week
+had been merely incidental, and sat down on the steps.
+
+"I've been thinking, Ellis," he said, "that I'd like to enter my car."
+
+"What!" said Ellis. "Not that--"
+
+"My racer. I'm not much for speed, but there's a sort of feeling in the
+town that the locality ought to be represented. As I'm the only owner of
+a speed car--"
+
+"Speed car!" said Ellis, and chuckled. "My dear boy, we've got Heckert
+with his ninety-horse-power Bonor!"
+
+"Never heard of him." Jasper lighted a cigarette. "Anyhow, what's that
+to me? I don't like to race. I've got less speed mania than any owner of
+a race car you ever met. But the honor of the town seems to demand a
+sacrifice, and I'm it."
+
+"You can try out for it anyhow," said Ellis. "I don't think you'll make
+it; but, if you qualify, all right. But don't let any other town people,
+from a sense of mistaken local pride, enter a street roller or a
+traction engine."
+
+Jasper colored, but kept his temper.
+
+Aggie, however, spoke up indignantly. "Mr. McCutcheon's car was a very
+fine racer when it was built."
+
+"_De mortuis nil nisi bonum_," remarked Mr. Ellis, and getting up said
+good-night.
+
+Jasper sat on the steps and watched him disappear. Then he turned to
+Tish.
+
+"Miss Letitia," he said, "do you think you are wise to drive that racer
+of his the way you have been doing?"
+
+Aggie gave a little gasp and promptly sneezed, as she does when she is
+excited.
+
+"I?" said Tish.
+
+"You!" he smiled. "Not that I don't admire your courage. I do. But the
+other day, now, when you lost a tire and went into the ditch--"
+
+"Tish!" from Aggie.
+
+"--you were fortunate. But when a racer turns over the results are not
+pleasant."
+
+"As a matter of fact," said Tish coldly, "it was a wheat-field, not a
+ditch."
+
+Jasper got up and threw away his cigarette. "Well, our departing friend
+is not the only one who can quote Latin," he said. "_Verbum sap._, Miss
+Tish. Good-night, everybody. Good-night, Bettina."
+
+Bettina's good-night was very cool. As I went up to bed that night, I
+thought Jasper's chances poor indeed. As for Tish, I endeavored to speak
+a few word of remonstrance to her, but she opened her Bible and began to
+read the lesson for the day and I was obliged to beat a retreat.
+
+
+It was that night that Aggie and I, having decided the situation was
+beyond us, wrote a letter to Charlie Sands asking him to come up. Just
+as I was sealing it Bettina knocked and came in. She closed the door
+behind her and stood looking at us both.
+
+"Where is Miss Tish?" she asked.
+
+"Reading her Bible," I said tartly. "When Tish is up to some mischief,
+she generally reads an extra chapter or two as atonement."
+
+"Is she--is she always like this?"
+
+"The trouble is," explained Aggie gently, "Miss Letitia is an
+enthusiast. Whatever she does, she does with all her heart."
+
+"I feel so responsible," said Bettina. "I try to look after her, but
+what can I do?"
+
+"There is only one thing to do," I assured her--"let her alone. If she
+wants to fly, let her fly; if she wants to race, let her race--and trust
+in Providence."
+
+"I'm afraid Providence has its hands full!" said Bettina, and went to
+bed.
+
+For the remainder of that week nothing was talked of in Morris Valley
+but the approaching race. Some of Eliza Bailey's friends gave fancy-work
+parties for us, which Aggie and I attended. Tish refused, being now
+openly at the race-track most of the day. Morris Valley was much
+excited. Should it wear motor clothes, or should it follow the example
+of the English Derby and the French races and wear its afternoon
+reception dress with white kid gloves? Or--it being warm--wouldn't
+lingerie clothes and sunshades be most suitable?
+
+Some of the gossip I retailed to Jasper, oil-streaked and greasy, in the
+Baileys' garage where he was working over his car.
+
+"Tell 'em to wear mourning," he said pessimistically. "There's always a
+fatality or two. If there wasn't a fair chance of it nothing would make
+'em sit for hours watching dusty streaks going by."
+
+The race was scheduled for Wednesday. On Sunday night the cars began to
+come in. On Monday Tish took us all, including Bettina, to the track.
+There were half a dozen tents in the oval, one of them marked with a
+huge red cross.
+
+"Hospital tent," said Tish calmly. We even, on permission from Mr.
+Ellis, went round the track. At one spot Tish stopped the car and got
+out.
+
+"Nail," she said briefly. "It's been a horse-racing track for years, and
+we've gathered a bushel of horse-shoe nails."
+
+Aggie and I said nothing, but we looked at each other. Tish had said
+"we." Evidently Cousin Angeline's legacy was not going into a mortgage.
+
+The fair-grounds were almost ready. Peanut and lunch stands had sprung
+up everywhere. The oval, save by the tents and the repair pits, was
+marked off into parking-spaces numbered on tall banners. Groups of dirty
+men in overalls, carrying machine wrenches, small boys with buckets of
+water, onlookers round the tents and track-rollers made the place look
+busy and interesting. Some of the excitement, I confess, got into my
+blood. Tish, on the contrary, was calm and businesslike. We were sorry
+we had sent for Charlie Sands. She no longer went out in Mr. Ellis's
+car, and that evening she went back to the kitchen and made a boiled
+salad dressing.
+
+We were all deceived.
+
+Charlie Sands came the next morning. He was on the veranda reading a
+paper when we got down to breakfast. Tish's face was a study.
+
+"Who sent for you?" she demanded.
+
+"Sent for me! Why, who would send for me? I'm here to write up the race.
+I thought, if you haven't been out to the track, we'd go out this
+morning."
+
+"We've been out," said Tish shortly, and we went in to breakfast. Once
+or twice during the meal I caught her eye on me and on Aggie and she was
+short with us both. While she was upstairs I had a word with Charlie
+Sands.
+
+"Well," he said, "what is it this time? Is she racing?"
+
+"Worse than that," I replied. "I think she's backing the thing!"
+
+"No!"
+
+"With her cousin Angeline's legacy." With that I told him about our
+meeting Mr. Ellis and the whole story. He listened without a word.
+
+"So that's the situation," I finished. "He has her hypnotized, Charlie.
+What's more, I shouldn't be surprised to see her enter the race under an
+assumed name."
+
+Charlie Sands looked at the racing list in the Morris Valley Sun.
+
+"Good cars all of them," he said. "She's not here among the drivers,
+unless she's--Who are these drivers anyhow? I never heard of any of
+them."
+
+"It's a small race," I suggested. "I dare say the big men--"
+
+"Perhaps." He put away his paper and got up. "I'll just wander round the
+town for an hour or two, Aunt Lizzie," he said. "I believe there's a
+nigger in this woodpile and I'm a right nifty little nigger-chaser."
+
+When he came back about noon, however, he looked puzzled. I drew him
+aside.
+
+"It seems on the level," he said. "It's so darned open it makes me
+suspicious. But she's back of it all right. I got her bank on the
+long-distance 'phone."
+
+We spent that afternoon at the track, with the different cars doing what
+I think they called "trying out heats." It appeared that a car, to
+qualify, must do a certain distance in a certain time. It grew
+monotonous after a while. All but one entry qualified and Jasper just
+made it. The best showing was made by the Bonor car, according to
+Charlie Sands.
+
+Jasper came to our machine when it was over, smiling without any
+particular good cheer.
+
+"I've made it and that's all," he said. "I've got about as much chance
+as a watermelon at a colored picnic. I'm being slaughtered to make a
+Roman holiday."
+
+"If you feel that way why do you do it?" demanded Bettina coldly. "If
+you go in expecting to slaughtered--"
+
+He was leaning on the side of the car and looked up at her with eyes
+that made my heart ache, they were so wretched.
+
+"What does it matter?" he said. "I'll probably trail in at the last,
+sound in wind and limb. If I don't, what does it matter?"
+
+He turned and left us at that, and I looked at Bettina. She had her lips
+shut tight and was blinking hard. I wished that Jasper had looked back.
+
+
+
+
+V
+
+
+Charlie Sands announced at dinner that he intended to spend the night at
+the track.
+
+Tish put down her fork and looked at him. "Why?" she demanded.
+
+"I'm going to help the boy next door watch his car," he said calmly.
+"Nothing against your friend Mr. Ellis, Aunt Tish, but some enemy of
+true sport might take a notion in the night to slip a dope pill into
+the mouth of friend Jasper's car and have her go to sleep on the track
+to-morrow."
+
+We spent a quiet evening. Mr. Ellis was busy, of course, and so was
+Jasper. The boy came to the house to get Charlie Sands and, I suppose,
+for a word with Bettina, for when he saw us all on the porch he looked,
+as you may say, thwarted.
+
+When Charlie Sands had gone up for his pajamas and dressing-gown, Jasper
+stood looking up at us.
+
+"Oh, Association of Chaperons!" he said, "is it permitted that my lady
+walk to the gate with me--alone?"
+
+"I am not your lady," flashed Bettina.
+
+"You've nothing to say about that," he said recklessly. "I've selected
+you; you can't help it. I haven't claimed that you have selected me."
+
+"Anyhow, I don't wish to go to the gate," said Bettina.
+
+He went rather white at that, and Charlie Sands coming down at that
+moment with a pair of red-and-white pajamas under his arm and a
+toothbrush sticking out of his breast pocket, romance, as Jasper said
+later in referring to it, "was buried in Sands."
+
+Jasper went up to Bettina and held out his hand. "You'll wish me luck,
+won't you?"
+
+"Of course." She took his hand. "But I think you're a bit of a coward,
+Jasper!"
+
+He eyed her. "Coward!" he said. "I'm the bravest man you know. I'm doing
+a thing I'm scared to death to do!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The race was to begin at two o'clock in the afternoon. There were small
+races to be run first, but the real event was due at three.
+
+From early in the morning a procession of cars from out of town poured
+in past Eliza Bailey's front porch, and by noon her cretonne cushions
+were thick with dust. And not only automobiles came, but hay-wagons,
+side-bar buggies, delivery carts--anything and everything that could
+transport the crowd.
+
+At noon Mr. Ellis telephoned Tish that the grand-stand was sold out and
+that almost all the parking-places that had been reserved were taken.
+Charlie Sands came home to luncheon with a curious smile on his face.
+
+"How are you betting, Aunt Tish?" he asked.
+
+"Betting!"
+
+"Yes. Has Ellis let you in on the betting?"
+
+"I don't know what you are talking about," Tish said sourly. "Mr. Ellis
+controls the betting so that it may be done in an orderly manner. I am
+sure I have nothing to do with it."
+
+"I'd like to bet a little, Charlie," Aggie put in with an eye on Tish.
+"I'd put all I win on the collection plate on Sunday."
+
+"Very well." Charlie Sands took out his notebook. "On what car and how
+much?"
+
+"Ten dollars on the Fein. It made the best time at the trial heats."
+
+"I wouldn't if I were you," said Charlie Sands. "Suppose we put it on
+our young friend next door."
+
+Bettina rather sniffed. "On Jasper!" she exclaimed.
+
+"On Jasper," said Charlie Sands gravely.
+
+Tish, who had hardly heard us, looked up from her plate.
+
+"Bettina is betting," she snapped. "Putting it on the collection plate
+doesn't help any." But with that she caught Charlie Sands' eye and he
+winked at her. Tish colored. "Gambling is one thing, clean sport is
+another," she said hotly.
+
+I believe, however, that whatever Charlie Sands may have suspected, he
+really knew nothing until the race had started. By that time it was too
+late to prevent it, and the only way he could think of to avoid getting
+Tish involved in a scandal was to let it go on.
+
+We went to the track in Tish's car and parked in the oval. Not near the
+grandstand, however. Tish had picked out for herself a curve at one end
+of the track which Mr. Ellis had said was the worst bit on the course.
+"He says," said Tish, as we put the top down and got out the vacuum
+bottle--oh, yes, Mr. Ellis had sent Tish one as a present--"that if
+there are any smashups they'll occur here."
+
+Aggie is not a bloodthirsty woman ordinarily, but her face quite lit up.
+
+"Not really!" she said.
+
+"They'll probably turn turtle," said Tish. "There is never a race
+without a fatality or two. No racer can get any life insurance. Mr.
+Ellis says four men were killed at the last race he promoted."
+
+"Then I think Mr. Ellis is a murderer," Bettina cried. We all looked at
+her. She was limp and white and was leaning back among the cushions with
+her eyes shut. "Why didn't you tell Jasper about this curve?" she
+demanded of Tish.
+
+But at that moment a pistol shot rang out and the races were on.
+
+The Fein won two of the three small races. Jasper was entered only for
+the big race. In the interval before the race was on, Jasper went round
+the track slowly, looking for Bettina. When he saw us he waved, but did
+not stop. He was number thirteen.
+
+I shall not describe the race. After the first round or two, what with
+dust in my eyes and my neck aching from turning my head so rapidly, I
+just sat back and let them spin in front of me.
+
+It was after a dozen laps or so, with number thirteen doing as well as
+any of them, that Tish was arrested.
+
+Charlie Sands came up beside the car with a gentleman named Atkins, who
+turned out to be a county detective. Charlie Sands was looking stern and
+severe, but the detective was rather apologetic.
+
+"This is Miss Carberry," said Charlie Sands. "Aunt Tish, this gentleman
+wishes to speak to you."
+
+"Come around after the race," Tish observed calmly.
+
+"Miss Carberry," said the detective gently, "I believe you are back of
+this race, aren't you?"
+
+"What if I am?" demanded Tish.
+
+Charlie Sands put a hand on the detective's arm. "It's like this, Aunt
+Tish," he said; "you are accused of practicing a short-change game,
+that's all. This race is sewed up. You employ those racing-cars with
+drivers at an average of fifty dollars a week. They are hardly worth it,
+Aunt Tish. I could have got you a better string for twenty-five."
+
+Tish opened her mouth and shut it again without speaking.
+
+"You also control the betting privileges. As you own all the racers you
+have probably known for a couple of weeks who will win the race. Having
+made the Fein favorite, you can bet on a Brand or a Bonor, or whatever
+one you chance to like, and win out. Only I take it rather hard of you,
+Aunt Tish, not to have let the family in. I'm hard up as the dickens."
+
+"Charlie Sands!" said Tish impressively. "If you are joking--"
+
+"Joking! Did you ever know a county detective to arrest a prominent
+woman at a race-track as a little jest between friends? There's no joke,
+Aunt Tish. You've financed a phony race. The permit is taken in your
+name--L.L. Carberry. Whatever car wins, you and Ellis take the prize
+money, half the gate receipts, and what you have made out of the
+betting--"
+
+Tish rose in the machine and held out both her hands to Mr. Atkins.
+
+"Officer, perform your duty," she said solemnly. "Ignorance is no
+defense and I know it. Where are the handcuffs?"
+
+"We'll not bother about them, Miss Carberry", he said. "If you like I'll
+get into the car and you can tell me all about it while we watch the
+race. Which car is to win?"
+
+"I may have been a fool, Mr. County Detective," she said coldly; "but
+I'm not a knave. I have not bet a dollar on the race."
+
+We were very silent for a time. The detective seemed to enjoy the race
+very much and ate peanuts out of his pocket. He even bought a
+red-and-black pennant, with "Morris Valley Races" on it, and fastened it
+to the car. Charlie Sands, however, sat with his arms folded, stiff and
+severe.
+
+Once Tish bent forward and touched his arm.
+
+"You--you don't think it will get in the papers, do you?" she quavered.
+
+Charlie Sands looked at her with gloom. "I shall have to send it myself,
+Aunt Tish," he said; "it is my duty to my paper. Even my family pride,
+hurt to the quick and quivering as it is, must not interfere with my
+duty."
+
+It was Bettina who suggested a way out--Bettina, who had sat back as
+pale as Tish and heard that her Mr. Ellis was, as Charlie Sands said
+later, as crooked as a pretzel.
+
+"But Jasper was not--not subsidized," she said. "If he wins, it's all
+right, isn't it?"
+
+The county detective turned to her.
+
+"Jasper?" he said.
+
+"A young man who lives here." Bettina colored.
+
+"He is--not to be suspected?"
+
+"Certainly not," said Bettina haughtily; "he is above suspicion.
+Besides, he--he and Mr. Ellis are not friends."
+
+Well, the county detective was no fool. He saw the situation that
+minute, and smiled when he offered Bettina a peanut. "Of course," he
+said cheerfully, "if the race is won by a Morris Valley man, and not by
+one of the Ellis cars, I don't suppose the district attorney would care
+to do anything about it. In fact," he said, smiling at Bettina, "I don't
+know that I'd put it up to the district attorney at all. A warning to
+Ellis would get him out of the State."
+
+It was just at that moment that car number thirteen, coming round the
+curve, skidded into the field, threw out both Jasper McCutcheon and his
+mechanician, and after standing on two wheels for an appreciable moment
+of time, righted herself, panting, with her nose against a post.
+
+Jasper sat up almost immediately and caught at his shoulder. The
+mechanician was stunned. He got up, took a step or two and fell down,
+weak with fright.
+
+I do not recall very distinctly what happened next. We got out of the
+machine, I remember, and Bettina was cutting off Jasper's sweater with
+Charlie Sands' penknife, and crying as she did it. And Charlie Sands was
+trying to prevent Jasper from getting back into his car, while Jasper
+was protesting that he could win in two or more laps and that he could
+drive with one hand--he'd only broken his arm.
+
+The crowd had gathered round us, thick. Suddenly they drew back, and
+in a sort of haze I saw Tish in Jasper's car, with Aggie, as white as
+death, holding to Tish's sleeve and begging her not to get in. The next
+moment Tish let in the clutch of the racer and Aggie took a sort of
+flying leap and landed beside her in the mechanician's seat.
+
+Charlie Sands saw it when I did, but we were both too late. Tish was
+crossing the ditch into the track again, and the moment she struck level
+ground she put up the gasoline.
+
+It was just then that Aggie fell out, landing, as I have said before, in
+a pile of sand. Tish said afterward that she never missed her. She had
+just discovered that this was not Jasper's old car, which she knew
+something about, but a new racer with the old hood and seat put on in
+order to fool Mr. Ellis. She didn't know a thing about it.
+
+Well, you know the rest--how Tish, trying to find how the gears worked,
+side-swiped the Bonor car and threw it off the field and out of the
+race; how, with the grandstand going crazy, she skidded off the track
+into the field, turned completely round twice, and found herself on the
+track again facing the way she wanted to go; how, at the last lap, she
+threw a tire and, without cutting down her speed, bumped home the
+winner, with the end of her tongue nearly bitten off and her spine
+fairly driven up into her skull.
+
+[Illustration: Without cutting down her speed, bumped home the winner]
+
+All this is well known now, as is also the fact that Mr. Ellis
+disappeared from the judges' stand after a word or two with Mr. Atkins,
+and was never seen at Morris Valley again.
+
+Tish came out of the race ahead by half the gate money--six thousand
+dollars--by a thousand dollars from concessions, and a lame back that
+she kept all winter. Even deducting the twenty-five hundred she had put
+up, she was forty-five hundred dollars ahead, not counting the prize
+money. Charlie Sand brought the money from the track that night, after
+having paid off Mr. Ellis's racing-string and given Mr. Atkins a small
+present. He took over the prize money to Jasper and came back with it,
+Jasper maintaining that it belonged to Tish, and that he had only raced
+for the honor of Morris Valley. For some time the money went begging,
+but it settled itself naturally enough, Tish giving it to Jasper in the
+event of--but that came later.
+
+On the following evening--Bettina, in the pursuit of learning to cook,
+having baked a chocolate cake--we saw Jasper, with his arm in a sling,
+crossing the side lawn.
+
+Jasper stopped at the foot of the steps. "I see a chocolate cake cooling
+on the kitchen porch," he said. "Did you order it, Miss Lizzie?"
+
+I shook my head.
+
+"Miss Tish? Miss Aggie?"
+
+"I ordered it," said Bettina defiantly--"or rather I baked it."
+
+"And you did that, knowing what it entailed? He was coming up the steps
+slowly and with care.
+
+"What does it entail?" demanded Bettina.
+
+"Me."
+
+"Oh, that!" said Bettina. "I knew that."
+
+Jasper threw his head back and laughed. Then:--
+
+"Will the Associated Chaperons," he said, "turn their backs?"
+
+"Not at all," I began stiffly. "If I--"
+
+"She baked it herself!" said Jasper exultantly. "One--two. When I say
+three I shall kiss Bettina."
+
+And I have every reason to believe he carried out his threat.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Eliza Bailey forwarded me this letter from London where Bettina had sent
+it to her:--
+
+ _Dearest Mother_: I hope you are coming home soon. I really think you
+ should. Aunt Lizzie is here and she brought two friends, and, mother,
+ I feel so responsible for them! Aunt Lizzie is sane enough, if somewhat
+ cranky; but Miss Tish is almost more than I can manage--I never know
+ what she is going to do next--and I am worn out with chaperoning her.
+ And Miss Aggie, although she is very sweet, is always smoking cubeb
+ cigarettes for hay fever, and it looks terrible! The neighbors do not
+ know they are cubeb, and, anyhow, that's a habit, mother. And yesterday
+ Miss Tish was arrested, and ran a motor race and won it, and to-day she
+ is knitting a stocking and reciting the Twenty-third Psalm. Please,
+ mother, I think you should come home.
+
+ Lovingly, BETTINA.
+
+ P.S. I think I shall marry Jasper after all. He says he likes the
+ Presbyterian service.
+
+
+I looked up from reading Eliza's letter. Tish was knitting quietly and
+planning to give the money back to the town in the shape of a library,
+and Aggie was holding a cubeb cigarette to her nose. Down on the tennis
+court Jasper and Bettina were idly batting a ball round.
+
+"I'm glad the Ellis man did not get her," said Aggie. And then, after a
+sneeze, "How Jasper reminds me of Mr. Wiggins."
+
+The library did not get the money after all. Tish sent it, as a wedding
+present, to Bettina.
+
+
+
+
+LIKE A WOLF ON THE FOLD
+
+I
+
+
+Aggie has always been in the habit of observing the anniversary of Mr.
+Wiggins's death. Aggie has the anniversary habit, anyhow, and her life
+is a succession: of small feast-days, on which she wears mental crape or
+wedding garments--depending on the occasion. Tish and I always remember
+these occasions appropriately, sending flowers on the anniversaries of
+the passing away of Aggie's parents; grandparents; a niece who died in
+birth; her cousin, Sarah Webb, who married a missionary and was
+swallowed whole by a large snake,--except her shoes, which the reptile
+refused and of which Aggie possesses the right, given her by the
+stricken husband; and, of course, Mr. Wiggins.
+
+For Mr. Wiggins Tish and I generally send the same things each
+year--Tish a wreath of autumn foliage and I a sheaf of wheat tied with a
+lavender ribbon. The program seldom varies. We drive to the cemetery in
+the afternoon and Aggie places the sheaf and the wreath on Mr. Wiggins's
+last resting-place, after first removing the lavender ribbon, of which
+she makes cap bows through the year and an occasional pin-cushion or
+fancy-work bag; then home to chicken and waffles, which had been Mr.
+Wiggins's favorite meal. In the evening Charlie Sands generally comes in
+and we play a rubber or two of bridge.
+
+On the thirtieth anniversary of Mr. Wiggins's falling off a roof and
+breaking his neck, Tish was late in arriving, and I found Aggie sitting
+alone, dressed in black, with a tissue-paper bundle in her lap. I put my
+sheaf on the table and untied my bonnet-strings.
+
+"Where's Tish?" I asked.
+
+"Not here yet."
+
+Something in Aggie's tone made me look at her. She was eyeing the bundle
+in her lap.
+
+"I got a paler shade of ribbon this time," I said, seeing she made no
+comment on the sheaf. "It's a better color for me if you're going to
+make my Christmas present out of it this year again. Where's Tish's
+wreath?"
+
+"Here." Aggie pointed dispiritedly to the bundle in her lap and went on
+rocking.
+
+"That! That's no wreath."
+
+In reply Aggie lifted the tissue paper and shook out, with hands that
+trembled with indignation, a lace-and-linen centerpiece. She held it up
+before me and we eyed each other over it. Both of us understood.
+
+"Tish is changed, Lizzie," Aggie said hollowly. "Ask her for bread these
+days and she gives you a Cluny-lace fandangle. On mother's anniversary
+she sent me a set of doilies; and when Charlie Sands was in the hospital
+with appendicitis she took him a pair of pillow shams. It's that Syrian!"
+
+Both of us knew. We had seen Tish's apartment change from a sedate and
+spinsterly retreat to a riot of lace covers on the mantel, on the backs
+of chairs, on the stands, on the pillows--everywhere. We had watched
+her Marseilles bedspreads give way to hem-stitched covers, with bolsters
+to match. We had seen Tish go through a cold winter clad in a succession
+of sleazy silk kimonos instead of her flannel dressing-gown; terrible
+kimonos--green and yellow and red and pink, that looked like fruit
+salads and were just as heating.
+
+"It's that dratted Syrian!" cried Aggie--and at that Tish came in. She
+stood inside the door and eyed us.
+
+"What about him?" she demanded. "If I choose to take a poor starving
+Christian youth and assist him by buying from him what I need--what I
+need!--that's my affair, isn't it? Tufik was starving and I took him
+in."
+
+"He took you in, all right!" Aggie sniffed. "A great, mustached, dirty,
+palavering foreigner, who's probably got a harem at home and no respect
+for women!"
+
+Tish glanced at my sheaf and at the centerpiece. She was dressed as she
+always dressed on Mr. Wiggins's day--in black; but she had a new lace
+collar with a jabot, and we knew where she had got it. She saw our eyes
+on it and she had the grace to flush.
+
+"Once for all," she snapped, "I intend to look after this unfortunate
+Syrian! If my friends object, I shall be deeply sorry; but, so far as
+I care, they may object until they are purple in the face and their
+tongues hang out. I've been sending my money to foreign missions long
+enough; I'm doing my missionary work at home now."
+
+"He'll marry you!" This from Aggie.
+
+Tish ignored her. "His father is an honored citizen of Beirut, of the
+nobility. The family is impoverished, being Christian, and grossly
+imposed on by the Turks. Tufik speaks French and English as well as
+Mohammedan. They offered him a high government position if he would
+desert the Christian faith; but he refused firmly. He came to this
+country for religious freedom; at any moment they may come after him and
+take him back."
+
+A glint of hope came to me. I made a mental note to write to the mayor,
+or whatever they call him over there, and tell him where he could locate
+his wandering boy.
+
+"He loves the God of America," said Tish.
+
+"Money!" Aggie jeered.
+
+"And he is so pathetic, so grateful! I told Hannah at noon to-day--that's
+what delayed me--to give him his lunch. He was starving; I thought we'd
+never fill him. And when it was over, he stooped in the sweetest way,
+while she was gathering up the empty dishes, and kissed her hand. It was
+touching!"
+
+"Very!" I said dryly. "What did Hannah do?"
+
+"She's a fool! She broke a cup on his head."
+
+Mr. Wiggins's anniversary was not a success. Part of this was due to
+Tish, who talked of Tufik steadily--of his youth; of the wonderful
+bargains she secured from him; of his belief that this was the land of
+opportunity--Aggie sniffed; of his familiarity with the Bible and
+Biblical places; of the search the Turks were making for him. The
+atmosphere was not cleared by Aggie's taking the Cluny-lace centerpiece
+to the cemetery and placing it, with my sheaf, on Mr. Wiggins's grave.
+
+As we got into Tish's machine to go back, Aggie was undeniably peevish.
+She caught cold, too, and was sneezing--as she always does when she is
+irritated or excited.
+
+"Where to?" asked Tish from the driving-seat, looking straight ahead and
+pulling on her gloves. From where we sat we could still see the dot of
+white on the grass that was the centerpiece.
+
+"Back to the house," Aggie snapped, "to have some chicken and waffles
+and Tufik for dinner!"
+
+Tish drove home in cold silence. As well as we could tell from her back,
+she was not so much indignant as she was determined. Thus we do not
+believe that she willfully drove over every rut and thank-you-ma'am on
+the road, scattering us generously over the tonneau, and finally, when
+Aggie, who was the lighter, was tossed against the top and sprained her
+neck, eliciting a protest from us. She replied in an abstracted tone,
+which showed where her mind was.
+
+"It would be rougher on a camel," she said absently. "Tufik was telling
+me the other day--"
+
+Aggie had got her head straight by that time and was holding it with
+both hands to avoid jarring. She looked goaded and desperate; and, as
+she said afterward, the thing slipped out before she knew she was more
+than thinking it.
+
+"Oh, damn Tufik!" she said.
+
+Fortunately at that moment we blew out a tire and apparently Tish did
+not hear her. While I was jacking up the car and Tish was getting the
+key of the toolbox out of her stocking, Aggie sat sullenly in her place
+and watched us.
+
+"I suppose," she gibed, "a camel never blows out a tire!"
+
+"It might," Tish said grimly, "if it heard an oath from the lips of a
+middle-aged Sunday-school teacher!"
+
+We ate Mr. Wiggins's anniversary dinner without any great hilarity.
+Aggie's neck was very stiff and she had turned in the collar of her
+dress and wrapped flannels wrung out of lamp oil round it. When she
+wished to address either Tish or myself she held her head rigid and
+turned her whole body in her chair; and when she felt a sneeze coming on
+she clutched wildly at her head with both hands as if she expected it to
+fly off.
+
+Tufik was not mentioned, though twice Tish got as far as Tu-- and then
+thought better of it; but her mind was on him and we knew it. She worked
+the conversation round to Bible history and triumphantly demanded
+whether we knew that Sodom and Gomorrah are towns to-day, and that a
+street-car line is contemplated to them from some place or other--it
+developed later that she meant Tyre and Sidon. Once she suggested that
+Aggie's sideboard needed new linens, but after a look at Aggie's rigid
+head she let it go at that.
+
+No one was sorry when, with dinner almost over, and Aggie lifting her
+ice-cream spoon straight up in front of her and opening her mouth with
+a sort of lockjaw movement, the bell rang. We thought it was Charlie
+Sands. It was not. Aggie faced the doorway and I saw her eyes widen.
+Tish and I turned.
+
+A boy stood in the doorway--a shrinking, timid, brown-eyed young
+Oriental, very dark of skin, very white of teeth, very black of hair--a
+slim youth of eighteen, possibly twenty, in a shabby blue suit, broken
+shoes, and a celluloid collar. Twisting between nervous brown fingers,
+not as clean as they might have been, was a tissue-paper package.
+
+"My friends!" he said, and smiled.
+
+Tish is an extraordinary woman. She did not say a word. She sat still
+and let the smile get in its work. Its first effect was on Aggie's neck,
+which she forgot. Tufik's timid eyes rested for a moment on Tish and
+brightened. Then like a benediction they turned to mine, and came to a
+stop on Aggie. He took a step farther into the room.
+
+"My friend's friend are my friend," he said. "America is my friend--this
+so great God's country!"
+
+Aggie put down her ice-cream spoon and closed her mouth, which had been
+open.
+
+"Come in, Tufik," said Tish; "and I am sure Miss Pilkington would like
+you to sit down."
+
+Tufik still stood with his eyes fixed on Aggie, twisting his package.
+
+"My friend has said," he observed--he was quite calm and divinely
+trustful--"My friend has said that this is for Miss Pilk a sad day. My
+friend is my mother; I have but her and God. Unless--but perhaps I have
+two new friend also--no?"
+
+"Of course we are your friends," said Aggie, feeling for the table-bell
+with her foot. "We are--aren't we, Lizzie?"
+
+Tufik turned and looked at me wistfully. It came over me then what an
+awful thing it must be to be so far from home and knowing nobody, and
+having to wear trousers and celluloid collars instead of robes and
+turbans, and eat potatoes and fried things instead of olives and figs
+and dates, and to be in danger of being taken back and made into a
+Mohammedan and having to keep a harem.
+
+"Certainly," I assented. "If you are good we will be your friends."
+
+He flashed a boyish smile at me.
+
+"I am good," he said calmly--"as the angels I am good. I have here a
+letter from a priest. I give it to you. Read!"
+
+He got a very dirty envelope from his pocket and brought it round the
+table to me. "See!" he said. "The priest says: 'Of all my children Tufik
+lies next my heart.'"
+
+He held the letter out to me; but it looked as if it had been copied
+from an Egyptian monument and was about as legible as an outbreak of
+measles.
+
+"This," he said gently, pointing, "is the priest's blessing. I carry
+it ever. It brings me friends." He put the paper away and drew a long
+breath; then surveyed us all with shining eyes. "It has brought me you."
+
+We were rather overwhelmed. Aggie's maid having responded to the bell,
+Aggie ordered ice cream for Tufik and a chair drawn to the table; but
+the chair Tufik refused with a little, smiling bow.
+
+"It is not right that I sit," he said. "I stand in the presence of my
+three mothers. But first--I forget--my gift! For the sadness, Miss
+Pilk!"
+
+He held out the tissue-paper package and Aggie opened it. Tufik's gift
+proved to be a small linen doily, with a Cluny-lace border!
+
+We were gone from that moment--I know it now, looking back. Gone! We
+were lost the moment Tufik stood in the doorway, smiling and bowing.
+Tish saw us going; and with the calmness of the lost sat there nibbling
+cake and watching us through her spectacles--and raised not a hand.
+
+Aggie looked at the doily and Tufik looked at her.
+
+"That's--that's really very nice of you," said Aggie. "I thank you."
+
+Tufik came over and stood beside her.
+
+"I give with my heart," he said shyly. "I have had nobody--in all so
+large this country--nobody! And now--I have you!" Aggie saw--but too
+late. He bent over and touched his lips to her hands. "The Bible says:
+'To him that overcometh I will give the morning star!' I have
+overcometh--ah, so much!--the sea; the cold, wet England; the Ellis
+Island; the hunger; the aching of one who has no love, no money! And
+now--I have the morning star!"
+
+He looked at us all three at once--Charlie Sands said this was
+impossible, until he met Tufik. Aggie was fairly palpitant and Tish was
+smug, positively smug. As for me, I roused with a start to find myself
+sugaring my ice cream.
+
+Charlie Sands was delayed that night. He came in about nine o'clock and
+found Tufik telling us about his home and his people and the shepherds
+on the hills about Damascus and the olive trees in sunlight. We
+half-expected Tufik to adopt Charlie Sands as a father; but he contented
+himself with a low Oriental salute, and shortly after he bowed himself
+away.
+
+Charlie Sands stood looking after him and smiling to himself. "Pretty
+smooth boy, that!" he said.
+
+"Smooth nothing!" Tish snapped, getting the bridge score. "He's a
+sad-hearted and lonely boy; and we are going to do the kindest thing--we
+are going to help him to help himself."
+
+"Oh, he'll help himself all right!" observed Charlie Sands. "But, since
+his people are Christians, I wish you'd tell me how he knows so much
+about the inside of a harem!"
+
+Seeing that comment annoyed us, he ceased, and we fell to our bridge
+game; but more than once his eye fell on Aggie's doily, and he muttered
+something about the Assyrian coming down like a wolf on the fold.
+
+
+
+
+II
+
+
+The problem of Tufik's future was a pressing one. Tish called a meeting
+of the three of us next morning, and we met at her house. We found her
+reading about Syria in the encyclopaedia, while spread round her on
+chairs and tables were numbers of silk kimonos, rolls of crocheted lace,
+shirt-waist patterns, and embroidered linens.
+
+Hannah let us in. She looked surly and had a bandage round her head, a
+sure sign of trouble--Hannah always referring a pain in her temper to
+her ear or her head or her teeth. She clutched my arm in the hall and
+held me back.
+
+"I'm going to poison him!" she said. "Miss Lizzie, that little snake
+goes or I go!"
+
+"I'm ashamed of you, Hannah!" I replied sternly. "If out of the breadth
+of her charity Miss Tish wishes to assist a fellow man--"
+
+Hannah reeled back and freed my arm.
+
+"My God!" she whispered. "You too!"
+
+I am very fond of Hannah, who has lived with Tish for many years; but I
+had small patience with her that morning.
+
+"I cannot see how it concerns you, anyhow, Hannah," I observed severely.
+
+Hannah put her apron to her eyes and sniffled into it.
+
+"Oh, you can't, can't you!" she wailed. "Don't I give him half his
+meals, with him soft-soapin' Miss Tish till she can't see for suds?
+Ain't I fallin' over him mornin', noon, and night, and the postman
+telling all over the block he's my steady company--that snip that's not
+eighteen yet? And don't I do the washin'? And will you look round the
+place and count the things I've got to do up every week? And don't he
+talk to me in that lingo of his, so I don't know whether he's askin' for
+a cup of coffee or insultin' me?"
+
+I patted Hannah on the arm. After all, none of the exaltation of a good
+deed upheld Hannah as it sustained us.
+
+"We are going to help him help himself, Hannah," I said kindly. "He
+hasn't found himself. Be gentle with him. Remember he comes from the
+land of the Bible."
+
+"Humph!" said Hannah, who reads the newspapers. "So does the plague!"
+
+The problem we had set ourselves we worked out that morning. As Tish
+said, the boy ought to have light work, for the Syrians are not a
+laboring people.
+
+"Their occupation is--er--mainly pastoral," she said, with the authority
+of the encyclopaedia. "Grazing their herds and gathering figs and olives.
+If we knew some one who needed a shepherd--"
+
+Aggie opposed the shepherd idea, however. As she said, and with reason,
+the climate is too rigorous. "It's all well enough in Syria," she said,
+"where they have no cold weather; but he'd take his death of pneumonia
+here."
+
+We put the shepherd idea reluctantly aside. My own notion of finding a
+camel for him to look after was negatived by Tish at once, and properly
+enough I realized.
+
+"The only camels are in circuses," she said, "and our duty to the boy is
+moral as well as physical. Circuses are dens of immorality. Of course
+the Syrians are merchants, and we might get him work in a store. But
+then again--what chance has he of rising? Once a clerk, always a clerk."
+She looked round at the chairs and tables, littered with the contents of
+Tufik's pasteboard suitcase, which lay empty at her feet. "And there is
+nothing to canvassing from door to door. Look at these exquisite
+things!--and he cannot sell them. Nobody buys. He says he never gets
+inside a house door. If you had seen his face when I bought a kimono
+from him!"
+
+At eleven o'clock, having found nothing in the "Help Wanted" column to
+fit Tufik's case, Tish called up Charlie Sands and offered Tufik as a
+reporter, provided he was given no nightwork. But Charlie Sands said it
+was impossible--that the editors and owners of the paper were always
+putting on their sons and relatives, and that when there was a vacancy
+the big advertisers got it. Tish insisted--she suggested that Tufik
+could run an Arabian column, like the German one, and bring in a lot of
+new subscribers. But Charlie Sands stood firm.
+
+At noon Tufik came. We heard a skirmish at the door and Hannah talking
+between her teeth.
+
+"She's out," she said.
+
+"Well, I think she is not out," in Tufik's soft tones.
+
+"You'll not get in."
+
+"Ah, but my toes are in. See, my foot wishes to enter!" Then something
+soft, coaxing, infinitely wistful, in Arabian followed by a slap. The
+next moment Hannah, in tears, rushed back to the kitchen. There was no
+sound from the hallway. No smiling Tufik presented himself in the
+doorway.
+
+Tish rose in the majesty of wrath. "I could strangle that woman!" she
+said, and we followed her into the hall.
+
+Tufik was standing inside the door with his arms folded, staring ahead.
+He took no notice of us.
+
+"Tufik!" Aggie cried, running to him. "Did she--did she dare--Tish, look
+at his cheek!"
+
+"She is a bad woman!" Tufik said somberly. "I make my little prayer to
+see Miss Tish, my mother, and she--I kill her!"
+
+We had a hard time apologizing to him for Hanna. Tish got a basin of
+cold water so he might bathe his face; and Aggie brought a tablespoonful
+of blackberry cordial, which is soothing. When the poor boy was calmer
+we met in Tish's bedroom and Tish was quite firm on one point--Hannah
+must leave!
+
+Now, this I must say in my own defense--I was sorry for Tufik; and it is
+quite true I bought him a suit and winter flannels and a pair of yellow
+shoes--he asked for yellow. He said he was homesick for a bit of
+sunshine, and our so somber garb made him heart-sad. But I would never
+have dismissed a cook like Hannah for him.
+
+"I shall have to let her go," Tish said. "He is Oriental and passionate.
+He has said he will kill her--and he'll do it. They hold life very
+lightly."
+
+"Humph!" I said. "Very well, Tish, that holding life lightly isn't a
+Christian trait. It's Mohammedan--every Mohammedan wants to die and go
+to his heaven, which is a sort of sublimated harem. The boy's probably a
+Christian by training, but he's a Mohammedan by blood."
+
+Aggie thought my remark immoral and said so. And just then Hannah solved
+her own problem by stalking into the room with her things on and a
+suitcase in her hand.
+
+"I'm leaving, Miss Tish!" she said with her eye-rims red. "God knows I
+never expected to be put out of this place by a dirty dago! You'll find
+your woolen stockings on the stretchers, and you've got an appointment
+with the dentist tomorrow morning at ten. And when that little
+blackguard has sucked you dry, and you want him killed to get rid of
+him, you'll find me at my sister's."
+
+She picked up her suitcase and Tish flung open the door. "You're a
+hard-hearted woman, Hannah Mackintyre!" Tish snapped. "Your sister can't
+keep you. You'll have to work."
+
+Hannah turned in the doorway and sneered at the three of us.
+
+"Oh, no!" she said. "I'm going to hunt up three soft-headed old maids
+and learn to kiss their hands and tell 'em I have nobody but them and
+God!"
+
+She slammed out at that, leaving us in a state of natural irritation.
+But our rage soon faded. Tufik was not in the parlor; and Tish,
+tiptoeing back, reported that he was in the kitchen and was mixing up
+something in a bowl.
+
+"He's a dear boy!" she said. "He feels responsible for Hannah's leaving
+and he's getting luncheon! Hannah is a wicked and uncharitable woman!"
+
+ "Man's inhumanity to man,
+ Makes countless thousands mourn!"
+
+quoted Aggie softly. From the kitchen came the rhythmic beating of a
+wooden spoon against the side of a bowl; a melancholy chant--quite
+archaic, as Tish said--kept time with the spoon, and later a smell of
+baking flour and the clatter of dishes told us that our meal was
+progressing.
+
+"'The Syrians,'" read Tish out of her book, "'are a peaceful and
+pastoral people. They have not changed materially in nineteen centuries,
+and the traveler in their country finds still the life of Biblical
+times.' Something's burning!"
+
+Shortly after, Tufik, beaming with happiness and Hannah clearly
+forgotten, summoned us to the dining-room. Tufik was not a cook. We
+realized that at once. He had made coffee in the Oriental way--strong
+enough to float an egg, very sweet and full of grounds; and after a bite
+of the cakes he had made, Tish remembered the dentist the next day and
+refused solid food on account of a bad tooth. The cakes were made of
+lard and flour, without any baking-powder or flavoring, and the tops
+were sprinkled thick with granulated sugar. Little circles of grease
+melted out of them on to the plate, and Tufik, wide-eyed with triumph,
+sweetly wistful over Tish's tooth, humble and joyous in one minute,
+stood by the cake plate and fed them to us!
+
+I caught Aggie's agonized eye, but there was nothing else to do. Were we
+not his friends? And had he not made this delicacy for us? On her third
+cake, however, Aggie luckily turned blue round the mouth and had to go
+and lie down. This broke up the meal and probably saved my life, though
+my stomach has never been the same since. Tish says the cakes are
+probably all right in the Orient, where it is hot and the grease does
+not get a chance to solidify. She thinks that Tufik is probably a good
+cook in his own country. But Aggie says that a good many things in the
+Bible that she never understood are made plain to her if that is what
+they ate in Biblical times--some of the things they saw in visions, and
+all that. She dropped asleep on Tish's lounge and distinctly saw Tufik
+murdering Hannah by forcing one of his cakes down her throat.
+
+The next month was one of real effort. We had planned to go to Panama,
+and had our passage engaged; but when we broke the news to Tufik he
+turned quite pale.
+
+"You go--away?" he said wistfully.
+
+"Only for a month," Tish hastened to apologize. "You see, we--we are all
+very tired, and the Panama Canal--"
+
+"Canal? I know not a canal."
+
+"It is for ships--"
+
+"You go there in a ship?"
+
+"Yes. A canal is a--"
+
+"You go far--in a ship--and I--I stay here?"
+
+"Only for a month," Aggie broke in. "We will leave you enough money to
+live on; and perhaps when we come back you will have found something to
+do--"
+
+"For a month," he said brokenly. "I have no friends, no Miss Tish, no
+Miss Liz, no Miss Pilk. I die!"
+
+He got up and walked to the window. It was Aggie who realized the awful
+truth. The poor lonely boy was weeping--and Charlie Sands may say what
+he likes! He was really crying--when he turned, there were large tears
+on his cheeks. What made it worse was that he was trying to smile.
+
+"I wish you much happiness on the canal," he said. "I am wicked; but my
+sad heart--it ache that my friends leave me. I am sad! If only my
+seester--"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+That was the first we had known of Tufik's sister, back in Beirut,
+wearing a veil over her face and making lace for the bazaars. We were to
+know more.
+
+Well, between getting ready to go to Panama and trying to find something
+Tufik could do, we were very busy for the next month. Tufik grew
+reconciled to our going, but he was never cheerful about it; and finding
+that it pained him we never spoke about it in his presence.
+
+He was with us a great deal. In the morning he would go to Tish, who
+would give him a list of her friends to see. Then Tish would telephone
+and make appointments for him, and he would start off hopefully,
+with his pasteboard suitcase. But he never sold anything--except a
+shirt-waist pattern to Mrs. Ostermaier, the minister's wife. We took day
+about giving him his carfare, but this was pauperizing and we knew it.
+Besides, he was very sensitive and insisted on putting down everything
+we gave him in a book, to be repaid later when he had made a success.
+
+The allowance idea was mine and it worked well. We figured that,
+allowing for his washing,--which was not much, as he seemed to prefer
+the celluloid collar,--he could live in a sort of way on nine dollars a
+week. We subscribed equally to this; and to save his pride we mailed it
+to him weekly by check.
+
+His failure to sell his things hurt him to the soul. More than once we
+caught tears in his eyes. And he was not well--he could not walk any
+distance at all and he coughed. At last Tish got Charlie Sands to take
+him to a lung specialist, a stupid person, who said it was a cigarette
+cough. This was absurd, as Tufik did not smoke.
+
+At last the time came for the Panama trip. Tish called me up the day she
+packed and asked me to come over.
+
+"I can't. I'm busy, Tish," I said.
+
+She was quite disagreeable. "This is your burden as well as mine," she
+snapped. "Come over and talk to that wretched boy while I pack my trunk.
+He stands and watches everything I put in, and I haven't been able to
+pack a lot of things I need."
+
+I went over that afternoon and found Tufik huddled on the top step of
+the stairs outside Tish's apartment, with his head in his hands.
+
+"She has put me out!" he said, looking up at me with tragic eyes. "My
+mother has put me out! She does not love Tufik! No one loves Tufik! I am
+no good. I am a dirty dago!"
+
+I was really shocked. I rang the bell and Tish let me in. She had had no
+maid since Hannah's departure and was taking her meals out. She saw
+Tufik and stiffened.
+
+"I thought I sent you away!" she said, glaring at him.
+
+He looked at her pitifully.
+
+"Where must I--go?" he asked, and coughed.
+
+Tish sighed and flung the door wide open. "Bring him in," she said with
+resignation, "but for Heaven's sake lock him in a closet until I get my
+underwear packed. And if he weeps--slap him."
+
+The poor boy was very repentant, and seeing that his cough worried us he
+fought it back bravely. I mixed the white of an egg with lemon juice and
+sugar, and gave it to him. He was pathetically grateful and kissed my
+hand. At five o'clock we sent him away firmly, having given him
+thirty-six dollars. He presented each of us with a roll of crocheted
+lace to take with us and turned in the doorway to wave a wistful final
+good-bye.
+
+We met at Tish's that night so that we might all go together to the
+train. Charlie Sands had agreed to see us off and to keep an eye on
+Tufik during our absence. Aggie was in a palpitating travel ecstasy,
+clutching a patent seasick remedy and a map of the Canal Zone; Tish was
+seeing that the janitor shut off the gas and water in the apartment; and
+Charlie Sands was jumping on top of a steamer trunk to close it. The
+taxicab was at the door and we had just time to make the night train.
+The steamer sailed early the next morning.
+
+"All ready!" cried Charlie Sands, getting the lid down finally. "All off
+for the Big Ditch!"
+
+We all heard a noise in the hall--a sort of scuffling, with an
+occasional groan. Tish rushed over and threw open the door. On the top
+step, huddled and shivering, with streams of water running off his hair
+down over his celluloid collar, pouring out of his sleeves and cascading
+down the stairs from his trousers legs, was Tufik. The policeman on the
+beat was prodding at him with his foot, trying to make him get up. When
+he saw us the officer touched his hat.
+
+"Evening, Miss Tish," he said, grinning. "This here boy of yours has
+been committing suicide. Just fished him out of the lake in the park!"
+
+"Get up!" snapped Charlie Sands. "You infernal young idiot! Get up and
+stop sniveling!"
+
+He stooped and took the poor boy by the collar. His brutality roused us
+all out of our stupor. Tish and I rushed forward and commanded him to
+stand back; and Aggie, with more presence of mind than we had given her
+credit for, brought a glass containing a tablespoonful of blackberry
+cordial into which she had poured ten drops of seasickness remedy. Tufik
+was white and groaning, but he revived enough to sit up and stare at us
+with his sad brown eyes.
+
+"I wish to die!" he said brokenly. "Why you do not let me die? My
+friends go on the canal! I am alone! My heart is empty!"
+
+Tish wished to roll him on a barrel, but we had no barrel; so, with
+Charlie Sands standing by with his watch in his hand, refusing to assist
+and making unkind remarks, we got him to Tish's room and laid out on her
+mackintosh on the bed. He did not want to live. We could hardly force
+him to drink the hot coffee Tish made for him. He kept muttering things
+about his loneliness and being only a dirty dago; and then he turned
+bitter and said hard things about this great America, where he could
+find no work and must be a burden on his three mothers, and could not
+bring his dear sister to be company for him. Aggie quite broke down and
+had to lie down on the sofa in the parlor and have a cracker and a cup
+of tea.
+
+When Tish and I had succeeded in making Tufik promise to live, and had
+given him one of his own silk kimonos to put on until his clothing could
+be dried--Charlie Sands having disagreeably refused to lend his
+overcoat--and when we had given the officer five dollars not to arrest
+the boy for attempting suicide, we met in the parlor to talk things
+over.
+
+Charlie Sands was sitting by the lamp in his overcoat. He had put our
+railway and steamer tickets on the table, and was holding his cigarette
+so that Aggie could inhale the fumes, she having hay fever and her
+cubebs being on their way to Panama.
+
+"I suppose you know," he said nastily, "that your train has gone and
+that you cannot get the boat tomorrow?"
+
+Tish was in an exalted mood--and she took off her things and flung them
+on a chair.
+
+"What is Panama," she demanded, "to saving a life? Charlie, we must plan
+something for this boy. If you will take off your overcoat--"
+
+"And see you put it on that little parasite? Not if I melt! Do you know
+how deep the lake is? Three feet!"
+
+"One can drown in three feet of water," said Aggie sadly, "if one is
+very tired of life. People drown themselves in bathtubs."
+
+Tish's furious retort to this was lost, Tufik choosing that moment to
+appear in the doorway. He wore a purple-and-gold kimono that had given
+Tish bronchitis early in the winter, and he had twisted a bath towel
+round the waist. He looked very young, very sad, very Oriental. He
+ignored Charlie Sands, but made at once for Tish and dropped on one knee
+beside her.
+
+"Miss Tish!" he begged. "Forgive, Miss Tish! Tufik is wicked. He has the
+bad heart. He has spoil the going on the canal. No?"
+
+"Get up!" said Tish. "Don't be a silly child. Go and take your shoes out
+of the oven. We are not going to Panama. When you are better, I am going
+to give you a good scolding."
+
+Charlie Sands put the cigarette on a book under Aggie's nose and stood
+up.
+
+"I guess I'll go," he said. "My nerves are not what they used to be and
+my disposition feels the change."
+
+Tufik had risen and the two looked at each other. I could not quite make
+out Tufik's expression; had I not known his gentleness I would have
+thought his expression a mixture of triumph and disdain.
+
+"'The Assyrian came down like a wolf on the fold, and his cohorts were
+gleaming in purple and gold!'" said Charlie Sands, and went out,
+slamming the door.
+
+
+
+
+III
+
+
+The next day was rainy and cold. Aggie sneezed all day and Tish had
+neuralgia. Being unable to go out for anything to eat and the exaltation
+of the night before having passed, she was in a bad humor. When I got
+there she was sitting in her room holding a hot-water bottle to her
+face, and staring bitterly at the plate containing a piece of burned
+toast and Tufik's specialty--a Syrian cake crusted with sugar.
+
+"I wish he had drowned!" she said. "My stomach's gone, Lizzie! I ate one
+of those cakes for breakfast. You've got to eat this one."
+
+"I'll do nothing of the sort! This is your doing, Tish Carberry. If it
+hadn't been for you and your habit of picking up stray cats and dogs and
+Orientals and imposing them on your friends we'd be on the ocean to-day,
+on our way to a decent climate. The next time your duty to your brother
+man overwhelms you, you'd better lock yourself in your room and throw
+the key out the window."
+
+Tish was not listening, however. Her eye and her mind both were on the
+cake.
+
+"If you would eat it and then take some essence of pepsin--" she
+hazarded. But I looked her full it the eye and she had the grace to
+color. "He loves to make them," she said--"he positively beamed when he
+brought it. He has another kind he is making now--of pounded beans, or
+something like that. Listen!" I listened.
+
+From back in the kitchen came a sound of hammering and Tufik's voice
+lifted in a low, plaintive chant. "He says that song is about the
+valleys of Lebanon," said Tish miserably. "Lizzie, if you'll eat half of
+it, I'll eat the rest."
+
+My answer was to pick up the plate and carry it into the bathroom.
+Heroic measures were necessary: Tish was not her resolute self; and,
+indeed, through all the episode of Tufik, and the shocking denouement
+that followed, Tish was a spineless individual who swayed to and fro
+with every breeze.
+
+She divined my purpose and followed me to the bathroom door.
+
+"Leave some crumbs on the plate!" she whispered. "It will look more
+natural. Get rid of the toast too."
+
+I turned and faced her, the empty plate in my hands.
+
+"Tish," I said sternly, "this is hypocrisy, which is just next door to
+lying. It's the first step downward. I have a feeling that this boy is
+demoralizing us! We shall have to get rid of him."
+
+"As for instance?" she sarcastically asked.
+
+"Send him back home," I said with firmness. "He doesn't belong here; he
+isn't accustomed to anything faster than a camel. He doesn't know how to
+work--none of them do. He comes from a country where they can eat food
+like this because digestion is one of their occupations."
+
+I was right and Tish knew it. Even Tufik was satisfied when we put it up
+to him. He spread his hands in his Oriental way and shrugged his
+shoulders.
+
+"If my mothers think best," he said softly. "In my own land Tufik is
+known--I sell in the bazaar the so fine lace my sister make. I drink
+wine, not water. My stomach--I cannot eat in this America. But--I have
+no money."
+
+"We will furnish the money," Tish said gently. "But you must promise one
+thing, Tufik. You must not become a Mohammedan."
+
+"Before that I die!" he said proudly.
+
+"And--there is something else, Tufik,--something rather personal. But I
+want you to promise. You are only a boy; but when you are a man--" Tish
+stopped and looked to me for help.
+
+"Miss Tish means this," I put in, "you are to have only one wife, Tufik.
+We are not sending you back to start a harem. We--we disapprove strongly
+of--er--anything like that."
+
+"Tufik takes but one wife," he said. "Our people--we have but one wife.
+My first child--it is called Tish; my next, Lizzie; and my next, Aggie
+Pilk. All for my so kind friends. And one I call Charlie Sands; and one
+shall be Hannah. So that Tufik never forget America."
+
+Aggie was rather put out when we told her what we had done; but after
+eating one of the cakes made of pounded beans and sugar, under Tufik's
+triumphant eyes, she admitted that it was probably for the best. That
+evening, while Tufik took his shrunken and wrinkled clothing to be
+pressed by a little tailor in the neighborhood who did Tish's repairing,
+the three of us went back to the kitchen and tried to put it in order.
+It was frightful--flour and burned grease over everything, every pan
+dirty, dishes all over the place and a half-burned cigarette in the
+sugar bin. But--it touched us all deeply--he had found an old photograph
+of the three of us and had made a sort of shrine of the clock-shelf--the
+picture in front of the clock and in front of the picture a bunch of red
+geraniums.
+
+While we were looking at the picture and Aggie was at the sink putting
+water in the glass that held the geraniums, Tufik having forgotten to do
+so, Tish's neighbor from the apartment below, an elderly bachelor, came
+up the service staircase and knocked at the door. Tish opened it.
+
+"Humph!" said the gentleman from below. "Gone is he?"
+
+"Is who gone?"
+
+"Your thieving Syrian, madam!"
+
+Tish stiffened.
+
+"Perhaps," she said, "if you will explain--"
+
+"Perhaps," snarled the visitor, "you will explain what you have done
+with my geraniums! Why don't you raise your own flowers?"
+
+Tish was quite stunned and so was I. After all, it was Aggie who came to
+the rescue. She slammed the lid on to the teakettle and set it on the
+stove with a bang.
+
+"If you mean," she said indignantly, "that you think we have any
+geraniums of yours--"
+
+"Think! Didn't my cook see your thieving servant steal 'em off the box
+on the fire-escape?"
+
+"Then, perhaps," Aggie suggested, "you will look through the apartment
+and see if they are here. You will please look everywhere!"
+
+Tish and I gasped. It was not until the visitor had made the rounds of
+the apartment, and had taken an apologetic departure, that Tish and I
+understood. The teakettle was boiling and from its spout coming a spicy
+and familiar odor. Aggie took it off the stove and removed the lid. The
+geraniums, boiled to a pulp, were inside.
+
+"Back to Syria that boy goes!" said Tish, viewing the floral remains.
+"He did it out of love and we must not chide him. But we have our own
+immortal souls to think of."
+
+The next morning two things happened. We gave Tufik one hundred and
+twenty dollars to buy a ticket back to Syria and to keep him in funds on
+the way. And Tish got a note from Hannah:--
+
+ _Dear Miss Tish_: I here you still have the dago--or, as my sister's
+ husband says, he still has you. I am redy to live up to my bargen if
+ you are.
+
+ HANNAH.
+
+ P.S. I have lerned a new salud--very rich, but delissious.
+
+ H.
+
+
+In spite of herself, Tish looked haunted. It was the salad, no doubt.
+She said nothing, but she looked round the untidy rooms, where
+everything that would hold it had a linen cover with a Cluny-lace
+edge--all of them soiled and wrinkled. She watched Tufik, chanting about
+the plains of Lebanon and shoving the carpet-sweeper with a bang against
+her best furniture; and, with Hannah's salad in mind, she sniffed a
+warning odor from the kitchen that told of more Syrian experiments with
+her digestion. Tish surrendered: that morning she wrote to Hannah that
+Tufik was going back to Syria, and to come and bring the salad recipe
+with her.
+
+That was, I think, on a Monday. Tufik's steamer sailed on Thursday. On
+Tuesday Aggie and I went shopping; and in a spirit of repentance--for we
+felt we were not solving Tufik's question but getting rid of him--we
+bought him a complete new outfit. He almost disgraced us by kissing
+our hands in the store, and while we were buying him some ties he
+disappeared--to come back later with the rims of his eyes red from
+weeping. His gentle soul was touched with gratitude. Aggie had to tell
+him firmly that if he kissed any more hands he would get his ears boxed.
+
+The clerks in the store were all interested, and two or three cash-boys
+followed us round and stood, open-mouthed, staring at us. Neither Aggie
+nor I knew anything about masculine attire, and Tufik's idea was a suit,
+with nothing underneath, a shirt-front and collar of celluloid, and a
+green necktie already tied and hooking on to his collar-button. He was
+dazed when we bought him a steamer trunk and a rug, and disappeared
+again, returning in a few moments with a small paper bag full of
+gumdrops. We were quite touched.
+
+That, as I say, was on Tuesday. Tufik had been sleeping in Tish's
+guest-room since his desperate attempt at suicide, and we sent his
+things to Tish's apartment. That evening Tufik asked permission to spend
+the night with a friend in the restaurant business--a Damascan. Tish let
+him go against my advice.
+
+"He'll eat a lot of that Syrian food," I objected, "and get sick and
+miss his boat, and we'll have the whole thing over again!"
+
+But Tish was adamant. "It's his last night," she said, "and he has
+promised not to smoke any cigarettes and I've given him two pepsin
+tablets. This is the land of the free, Lizzie."
+
+We were to meet Tufik at the station next morning and we arranged a
+lunch for him to eat on the train, Aggie bringing fried chicken and I
+sandwiches and cake. Tish's domestic arrangements being upset, she
+supplied fruit, figs and dates mostly, to make him think of home.
+
+The train left early, and none of us felt very cheerful at having to be
+about. Aggie sat in the station and sneezed; Tish had a pain above her
+eye and sat by a heater. We had the luncheon in a large shoebox, wrapped
+in oiled paper to keep it moist.
+
+He never appeared! The train was called, filled up, and left. People
+took to staring at us as we sat there. Aggie sneezed and Tish held her
+eye. And no Tufik! In a sort of helpless, breakfastless rage we called a
+taxicab and went to Tish's. No one said much. We were all thinking.
+
+We were hungry; so we spread out the shoebox lunch on one of the
+Cluny-lace covers and ate it, mostly in silence. The steamer trunk and
+the rug had gone. We let them go. They might go to Jerusalem, as far as
+we were concerned! After we had eaten,--about eleven o'clock, I
+think,--Tish got up and surveyed the apartment. Then, with a savage
+gleam in her eye, she whisked off all the fancy linens, the Cluny laces,
+the hemstitched bedspreads, and piled them in a heap on the floor. Aggie
+and I watched her in silence. She said nothing, but kicked the whole lot
+into the bottom of a cupboard. When she had slammed the door, she turned
+and faced us grimly.
+
+"That roll of fiddle-de-dees has cost me about five hundred dollars,"
+she said. "It's been worth it if it teaches me that I'm an old fool and
+that you are two others! If that boy shows his face here again, I'll
+hand him over to the police."
+
+However, as it happened, she did nothing of the sort. At four o'clock
+that afternoon there was a timid ring at the doorbell and I answered it.
+Outside was Tufik, forlorn and drooping, and held up by main force by a
+tall, dark-skinned man with a heavy mustache.
+
+"I bring your boy!" said the mustached person, smiling. "He has great
+trouble--sorrow; he faint with grief."
+
+I took a good look at Tufik then. He was pale and shaky, and his new
+suit looked as if he had slept in it. His collar was bent and wilted,
+and the green necktie had been taken off and exchanged for a ragged
+black one.
+
+"Miss Liz!" he said huskily. "I die; the heart is gone! My parent--"
+
+He broke down again; and leaning against the door jamb he buried his
+face in a handkerchief that I could not believe was one of the lot we
+had bought only yesterday. I hardly knew what to do. Tish had said she
+was through with the boy. I decided to close them out in the hallway
+until we had held a council; but Tufik's foot was on the sill, and the
+more I asked him to move it, the harder he wept.
+
+The mustached person said it was quite true. Tufik's father had died of
+the plague; the letter had come early that morning. Beirut was full of
+the plague. He waved the letter at me; but I ordered him to burn it
+immediately--on account of germs. I brought him a shovel to burn it on;
+and when that was over Tufik had worked out his own salvation. He was at
+the door of Tish's room, pouring out to Aggie and Tish his grief, and
+offering the black necktie as proof.
+
+We were just where we had started, but minus one hundred and twenty
+dollars; for, the black-mustached gentleman having gone after trying to
+sell Tish another silk kimono, I demanded Tufik's ticket--to be
+redeemed--and was met with two empty hands, outstretched.
+
+"Oh, my friends,--my Miss Tish, my Miss Liz, my Miss Ag,--what must I
+say? I have not the ticket! I have been wikkid--but for my sister--only
+for my sister! She must not die--she so young, so little girl!"
+
+"Tufik," said Tish sternly, "I want you to tell us everything this
+minute, and get it over."
+
+"She ees so little!" he said wistfully. "And the body of my
+parent--could I let it lie and rot in the so hot sun? Ah, no; Miss Tish,
+Miss Liz, Miss Ag,--not so. To-day I take back my ticket, get the
+money, and send it to my sister. She will bury my parent, and then--she
+comes to this so great America, the land of my good friends!"
+
+There was a moment's silence. Then Aggie sneezed!
+
+
+
+
+IV
+
+
+I shall pass over the next month, with its unpleasantnesses; over
+Charlie Sands's coming one evening with a black tie and, on the strength
+of having killed a dog with his machine, asking for money to bury it,
+and bring another one from Syria! I shall not more than mention Hannah,
+who kept Tish physically comfortable and well fed and mentally wretched,
+having a teakettle of boiling water always ready if Tufik came to the
+apartment; I shall say nothing of our success in getting him employment
+in the foreign department of a bank, and his ending up by washing its
+windows; or of the position Tish got him as elevator boy in her
+hospital, where he jammed the car in some way and held up four surgeons
+and three nurses and a patient on his way to the operating-room--until
+the patient changed his mind and refused to be operated on.
+
+Aggie had a brilliant idea about the census--that he could make the
+census reports in the Syrian district. To this end she worked for some
+time, coaching Tufik for the examination, only to have him fail--fail
+absolutely and without hope. He was staying in the Syrian quarter at
+that time, on account of Hannah; and he brought us various tempting
+offers now and then--a fruit stand that could be bought for a hundred
+dollars; a restaurant for fifty; a tailor's shop for twenty-five. But,
+as he knew nothing of fruits or restaurants or tailoring, we refused to
+invest. Tish said that we had been a good while getting to it, but that
+we were being businesslike at last. We gave the boy nine dollars a week
+and not a penny more; and we refused to buy any more of his silly linens
+and crocheted laces. We were quite firm with him.
+
+And now I come to the arriving of Tufik's little sister--not that she
+was really little. But that comes later.
+
+Tufik had decided at last on what he would be in our so great America.
+Once or twice, when he was tired or discouraged, Tish had taken him out
+in her machine, and he had been thrilled--really thrilled. He did not
+seem able to learn how to crank it--Tish's car is hard to crank--but he
+learned how to light the lamps and to spot a policeman two blocks away.
+Several times, when we were going into the country, Tish took him
+because it gave her a sense of security to have a man along.
+
+Having come from a country where the general travel is by camel,
+however, he had not the first idea of machinery. He thought Tish made
+the engine go by pressing on the clutch with her foot, like a sewing
+machine, and he regarded her strength with awe. And once, when we were
+filling a tire from an air bottle and the tube burst and struck him, he
+declared there was a demon in the air bottle and said a prayer in the
+middle of the road. About that time Tish learned of a school for
+chauffeurs, and the three of us decided to divide the expense and send
+him.
+
+"In three months," Tish explained, "we can get him a state license and
+he can drive a taxicab. It will suit him, because he can sit to do it."
+
+So Tufik went to an automobile school and stood by while some one drew
+pictures of parts of the engine on a blackboard, and took home lists of
+words that he translated into Arabic at the library, and learned
+everything but why and how the engine of an automobile goes. He still
+thought--at the end of two months--that the driver did it with his
+foot! But we were ignorant of all that. He would drop round in the
+evenings, when Hannah was out or in bed, and tell us what "magneto" was
+in Arabic, and how he would soon be able to care for Tish's car and
+would not take a cent for it, doing it at night when the taxicab was
+resting.
+
+At the end of six weeks we bought him a chauffeur's outfit. The next
+day the sister arrived and Tufik brought her to Aggie's, where we were
+waiting. We had not told Hannah about the sister; she would not have
+understood.
+
+Charlie Sands telephoned while we were waiting and asked if he might
+come over and help receive the girl. We were to greet her and welcome
+her to America; then she was to go to the home of the Syrian with the
+large mustache. Charlie Sands came in and shook hands all round,
+surveying each of us carefully.
+
+"Strange!" he muttered. "Curious is no name for it! What do we know of
+the vagaries of the human mind? Three minds and one obsession!" he said
+with the utmost gentleness. "Three maiden ladies who have lived
+impeccable lives for far be it from me to say how many years; and
+now--this! Oh, Aunt Tish! Dear Aunt Tish!"
+
+He got out his handkerchief and wiped his eyes. Tish was speechless with
+rage, but I rose to our defense.
+
+"We don't want to do it and you know it!" I said tartly. "But when the
+Lord sends want and suffering to one's very door--"
+
+"Want, with large brown eyes and a gentle voice!" he retorted. "My dear
+ladies, it's your money; and I dare say it costs you less than bridge at
+five cents a point, or the Gay White Way. But, for Heaven's sake, my
+respected but foolish virgins, why not an American that wants a real
+job? Why let a sticky Oriental pull your legs--"
+
+"Charlie Sands!" cried Tish, rising in her wrath. "I will not endure
+such vulgarity. And when Tufik takes you out in a taxicab--"
+
+"God forbid!" said Charlie Sands, and sat down to wait for Tufik's
+sister.
+
+She did not look like Tufik and she was tired and dirty from the
+journey; but she had big brown eyes and masses of dark hair and she
+spoke not a single word of English. Tufik's joy was boundless; his soft
+eyes were snapping with excitement; and Aggie, who is sentimental, was
+obliged to go out and swallow half a glass of water without breathing to
+keep from crying. Charlie Sands said nothing, but sat back in a corner
+and watched us all; and once he took out his notebook and made a
+memorandum of something. He showed it to us later.
+
+Tufik's sister was the calmest of us all, I believe. She sat on a stiff
+chair near the door and turned her brown eyes from one to the other.
+Tish said that proper clothing would make her beautiful; and Aggie,
+disappearing for a few minutes, came back with her last summer's foulard
+and a jet bonnet. When the poor thing understood they were for her, she
+looked almost frightened, the thing being unexpected; and Tufik, in a
+paroxysm of delight, kissed all our hands and the girl on each cheek.
+
+Tish says our vulgar lip-osculation is unknown in the Orient and that
+they rub noses by way of greeting. I think, however, that she is
+mistaken in this and that the Australians are the nose-rubbers. I recall
+a returned missionary's telling this, but I cannot remember just where
+he had been stationed.
+
+Things were very quiet for a couple of weeks. Tufik came round only
+once--to tell us that, having to pay car fare to get to the automobile
+school, his nine dollars were not enough. We added a dollar a week under
+protest; and Tish suggested with some asperity that as he was only busy
+four hours a day he might find some light employment for the balance of
+the day. He spread out his hands and drew up his shoulders.
+
+"My friends are angry," he said sadly. "It is not enough that I study? I
+must also work? Ver' well, I labor. I sell the newspaper. But, to buy
+newspapers, one must have money--a dollar; two dollars. Ver' leetle;
+only--I have it not."
+
+We gave him another dollar and he went out smiling and hopeful. It
+seemed that at last we had solved his problem. Tish recalled one of her
+Sunday-school scholars who sold papers and saved enough to buy a
+second-hand automobile and rear a family. But our fond hopes were dashed
+to the ground when, the next morning, Hannah, opening the door at Tish's
+to bring in the milk bottles, found a huge stack of the night-before's
+newspapers and a note on top addressed to Tish, which said:-
+
+ _Deer Mother Tish_: You see now that I am no good. I wish to die!
+ I hav one papier sold, and newsboys kell me on sight. I hav but you
+ and God--and God has forget!
+
+ TUFIK.
+
+
+We were discouraged and so, clearly, was Tufik. For ten days we did not
+hear from him, except that a flirty little Syrian boy called for the ten
+dollars on Saturday and brought a pair of Tufik's shoes for us to have
+resoled. But one day Tish telephoned in some excitement and said that
+Tufik was there and wanted us to go to a wedding.
+
+"His little sister's wedding!" she explained. "The dear child is all
+excited. He says it has been going on for two days and this is the day
+of the ceremony."
+
+Aggie was spending the afternoon with me, and spoke up hastily.
+
+"Ask her if I have time to go home and put on my broadcloth," she said.
+"I'm not fixed for a wedding."
+
+Tish said there was no time. She would come round with the machine and
+we were to be ready in fifteen minutes. Aggie hesitated on account of
+intending to wash her hair that night and so not having put up her
+crimps; but she finally agreed to go and Tish came for us. Tufik was in
+the machine. He looked very tidy and wore the shoes we had had repaired,
+a pink carnation in his buttonhole, and an air of suppressed excitement.
+
+"At last," he said joyously while Tish cranked the car--"at last my
+friends see my three mothers! They think Tufik only talks--now they
+see! And the priest will bless my mothers on this so happy day."
+
+Tish having crawled panting from her exertion into the driver's seat and
+taken the wheel, in sheer excess of boyish excitement he leaned over and
+kissed the hand nearest him.
+
+The janitor's small boy was on the curb watching, and at that he set up
+a yell of joy. We left him calling awful things after us and Tish's face
+was a study; but soon the care of the machine made her forget everything
+else.
+
+The Syrian quarter was not impressive. It was on a hillside above the
+Russian Jewish colony, and consisted of a network of cobble-paved
+alleys, indescribably dirty and incredibly steep. In one or two of these
+alleys Tish was obliged to turn the car and go up backward, her machine
+climbing much better on the reverse gear. Crowds of children followed
+us; dogs got under the wheels and apparently died, judging by the
+yelps--only to follow us with undiminished energy after they had picked
+themselves up. We fought and won a battle with a barrel of ashes and
+came out victorious but dusty; and at last, as Tufik made a lordly
+gesture, we stopped at an angle of forty-five degrees and Tufik bowed us
+out of the car. He stood by visibly glowing with happiness, while Tish
+got a cobblestone and placed it under a wheel, and Aggie and I took in
+our surroundings.
+
+We were in an alley ten feet wide and paved indiscriminately with stones
+and tin cans, babies and broken bottles. Before us was a two-story brick
+house with broken windows and a high, railed wooden stoop, minus two
+steps. Under the stoop was a door leading into a cellar, and from this
+cellar was coming a curious stamping noise and a sound as of an animal
+in its death throes.
+
+Aggie caught my arm. "What's that?" she quavered.
+
+I had no time to reply. Tufik had thrown open the door and stood aside
+to let us pass.
+
+"They dance," he said gravely. "There is always much dancing before a
+wedding. The music one hears is of Damascus and he who dances now is a
+sheik among his people."
+
+Reassured as to the sounds, we stepped down into the basement. That was
+at four o'clock in the afternoon.
+
+I have never been fairly clear as to what followed and Aggie's memory
+is a complete blank. I remember a long, boarded-in and floored cellar,
+smelling very damp and lighted by flaring gas jets. The center was empty
+save for a swarthy gentleman in a fez and his shirt-sleeves, wearing a
+pair of green suspenders and dancing alone--a curious stamping dance
+that kept time to a drum. I remember the musicians too--three of them
+in a corner: one playing on a sort of pipes-of-Pan affair of reeds,
+one on a long-necked instrument that looked like a guitar with zither
+ambitions, and a drummer who chanted with his eyes shut and kept time
+to his chants by beating on a sheepskin tied over the mouth of a brass
+bowl. Round three sides of the room were long, oil cloth-covered tables;
+and in preparation for the ceremony a little Syrian girl was sweeping up
+peanut shells, ashes, and beer bottles, with absolute disregard of the
+guests.
+
+All round the wall, behind rows of beer bottles, dishes of bananas,
+and plates of raw liver, were men,--soft-eyed Syrians with white
+teeth gleaming and black hair plastered close and celluloid
+collars,--gentle-voiced, urbane-mannered Orientals, who came up gravely
+one by one and shook hands with us; who pressed on us beer and peanuts
+and raw liver.
+
+Aggie, speaking between sneezes and over the chanting and the drum, bent
+toward me. "It's a breath of the Orient!" she said ecstatically. "Oh,
+Lizzie, do you think I could buy that drum for my tabouret?"
+
+"Orient!" observed Tish, coughing. "I'm going out and take the
+switch-key out of that car. And I wish I'd brought Charlie Sands!"
+
+It was in vain we reminded her that the Syrians are a pastoral people
+and that they come from the land of the Bible. She looked round her
+grimly.
+
+"They look like a lot of bandits to me," she sniffed. "And there's
+always a murder at a wedding of this sort. There isn't a woman here but
+ourselves!"
+
+She was exceedingly disagreeable and Aggie and I began to get
+uncomfortable. But when Tufik brought us little thimble-sized glasses
+filled with a milky stuff and assured us that the women had only gone to
+prepare the bride, we felt reassured. He said that etiquette demanded
+that we drink the milky white stuff.
+
+Tish was inclined to demur. "Has it any alcohol in it?" she demanded.
+Tufik did not understand, but he said it was harmless and given to all
+the Syrian babies; and while we were still undecided Aggie sniffed it.
+
+"It smells like paregoric, Tish," she said. "I'm sure it's harmless."
+
+We took it then. It tasted sweet and rather spicy, and Aggie said it
+stopped her sneezing at once. It was very mild and pleasant, and rather
+medicinal in its flavor. We each had two little glasses--and Tish said
+she would not bother about the switch-key. The car was insured against
+theft.
+
+A little later Aggie said she used to do a little jig step when she was
+a girl, and if they would play slower she would like to see if she had
+forgotten it. Tish did not hear this--she was talking to Tufik, and a
+moment later she got up and went out.
+
+Aggie had decided to ask the musicians to play a little slower and I had
+my hands full with her; so it was with horror that, shortly after, I
+heard the whirring of the engine and through the cellar window caught a
+glimpse of Tish's machine starting off up the hill. I rose excitedly,
+but Tufik was before me, smiling and bowing.
+
+"Miss Tish has gone for the bride," he said softly. "The taxicab hav'
+not come. Soon the priest arrive, and so great shame--the bride is not
+here! Miss Tish is my mother, my heart's delight!"
+
+When Aggie realized that Tish had gone, she was rather upset--she
+depends a great deal on Tish--and she took another of the little glasses
+of milky stuff to revive her.
+
+I was a little bit nervous with Tish gone and the sun setting and
+another tub of beer bottles brought in--though the people were orderly
+enough and Tufik stood near. But Aggie began to feel very strange,
+and declared that the man with the sheepskin drum was winking at her and
+that her head was twitching round on her shoulders. And when a dozen or
+so young Syrians formed a circle, their hands on each other's shoulders,
+and sang a melancholy chant, stamping to beat time, she wept with sheer
+sentiment.
+
+"Ha! Hoo! Ta, Ta, Ta!" they chanted in unison; and Tufik bent over us,
+his soft eyes beaming.
+
+"They are shepherds and the sons of shepherds from Palestine," he
+whispered. "That is the shepherd's call to his sheep. In my country many
+are shepherds. Perhaps some day you go with me back to my country, and
+we hear the shepherd call his sheep--'Ha! Hoo! Ta, Ta, Ta!'--and we hear
+the sleepy sheep reply: 'Maaaa!'"
+
+"It is too beautiful!" murmured Aggie. "It is the Holy Land all over
+again! And we should never have known this but for you, Tufik!"
+
+Just then some one near the door clapped his hands and all the noise
+ceased. Those who were standing sat down. The little girl with the broom
+swept the accumulations of the room under a chair and put the broom in a
+corner. The music became loud and stirring.
+
+Aggie swayed toward me. "I'm sick, Lizzie!" she gasped. "That paregoric
+stuff has poisoned me. Air!"
+
+I took one arm and Tufik the other, and we got her out and seated on one
+of the wooden steps. She was a blue-green color and the whites of her
+eyes were yellow. But I had little time for Aggie. Tufik caught my hand
+and pointed.
+
+Tish's machine was coming down the alley. Beside her sat Tufik's sister,
+sobbing at the top of her voice and wearing Aggie's foulard, a pair of
+cotton gloves, and a lace curtain over her head. Behind in the tonneau
+were her maid of honor, a young Syrian woman with a baby in her arms and
+four other black-eyed children about her. But that was not all. In front
+of the machine, marching slowly and with dignity, were three bearded
+gentlemen, two in coats and one in a striped vest, blowing on curious
+double flutes and making a shrill wailing noise. And all round were
+crowds of women and children, carrying tin pans and paper bags full of
+parched peas, which they were flinging with all their might.
+
+I caught Tish's eye as the procession stopped, and she looked
+subdued--almost stunned. The pipers still piped. But the bride refused
+to move. Instead, her wails rose higher; and Aggie, who had paid no
+attention so far, but was sitting back with her eyes shut, looked up.
+
+"Lizzhie," she said thickly, "Tish looks about the way I feel." And with
+that she fell to laughing awful laughter that mingled with the bride's
+cries and the wail of the pipes.
+
+The bride, after a struggle, was taken by force from the machine and
+placed on a chair against the wall. Her veil was torn and her wreath
+crooked, and she observed a sulky silence. To our amazement, Tufik was
+still smiling, urbane and cheerful.
+
+"It is the custom of my country, my mothers," he said. "The bride leave
+with tears the home of her good parents or of her friends; and she speak
+no word--only weep--until she is marriaged. Ah--the priest!"
+
+The rest of the story is short and somewhat blurred. Tish having broken
+her glasses, Aggie being, as one may say, _hors de combat_, and I having
+developed a frightful headache in the dust and bad air, the real meaning
+of what was occurring did not penetrate to any of us. The priest
+officiated from a table in the center of the room, on which he placed
+two candles, an Arabic Bible, and a sacred picture, all of which he took
+out of a brown valise. He himself wore a long black robe and a beard,
+and looked, as Tish observed, for all the world as if he had stepped
+from an Egyptian painting. Before him stood Tufik's sister, the maid of
+honor with her baby, the black-mustached friend who had brought Tufik to
+us after his tragic attempt at suicide, and Tufik himself.
+
+[Illustration: The real meaning of what was occurring did not penetrate
+to any of us]
+
+Everybody held lighted candles, and the heat was frightful. The music
+ceased, there was much exhorting in Arabic, much reading from the book,
+many soft replies indiscriminately from the four principals--and then
+suddenly Tish turned and gripped my arm.
+
+"Lizzie," she said hoarsely, "that little thief and liar has done us
+again! That isn't his sister at all. He's marrying her--for us to keep!"
+
+Luckily Aggie grew faint again at that moment, and we led her out into
+the open air. Behind us the ceremony seemed to be over; the drum was
+beating, the pipes screaming, the lute thrumming.
+
+Tish let in the clutch with a vicious jerk, and the whir of the engine
+drowned out the beating of the drum and the clapping of the hands.
+Twilight hid the tin cans and ash-barrels, and the dogs slept on the
+cool pavements. In the doorways soft-eyed Syrian women rocked their
+babies to drowsy chants. The air revived Aggie. She leaned forward and
+touched Tish on the shoulder.
+
+"After all," she said softly, "if he loves her very much, and there was
+no other way--Do you remember that night she arrived--how he looked at
+her?"
+
+"Yes," Tish snapped. "And I remember the way he looked at us every time
+he wanted money. We've been a lot of sheep and we've been sheared good
+and proper! But we needn't bleat with joy about it!"
+
+As we drew up at my door, Tish pulled out her watch.
+
+"It's seven o'clock," she said brusquely. "I am going to New York on the
+nine-forty train and I shall take the first steamer outward bound--I
+need a rest! I'll go anywhere but to the Holy Land!"
+
+We went to Panama.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Two months afterward, in the dusk of a late spring evening, Charlie
+Sands met us at the station and took us to Tish's in a taxicab. We were
+homesick, tired, and dirty; and Aggie, who had been frightfully seasick,
+was clamoring for tea.
+
+As the taxicab drew up at the curb, Tish clutched my arm and Aggie
+uttered a muffled cry and promptly sneezed. Seated on the doorstep,
+celluloid collar shining, the brown pasteboard suitcase at his feet, was
+Tufik. He sat calmly smoking a cigarette, his eyes upturned in placid
+and Oriental contemplation of the heavens.
+
+"Drive on!" said Tish desperately. "If he sees us we are lost!"
+
+"Drive where?" demanded Charlie.
+
+Tufik's gaze had dropped gradually--another moment and his brown eyes
+would rest on us. But just then a diversion occurred. A window overhead
+opened with a slam and a stream of hot water descended. It had been
+carefully aimed--as if with long practice. Tufik was apparently not
+surprised. He side-stepped it with a boredom as of many repetitions,
+and, picking up his suitcase, stood at a safe distance looking up.
+First, in his gentle voice he addressed the window in Arabic; then from
+a safer distance in English.
+
+"You ugly old she-wolf!" he said softly. "When my three old women come
+back I eat you, skin and bones,--and they shall say nothing! They love
+me--Tufik! I am their child. Aye! And my child--which comes--will be
+their grandchild!"
+
+He kissed his fingers to the upper window which closed with a slam.
+Tufik stooped, picked up his suitcase, and saw the taxi for the first
+time. Even in the twilight we saw his face change, his brown eyes
+brighten, his teeth show in his boyish smile. The taxicab driver had
+stalled his engine and was cranking it.
+
+"Sh!" I said desperately, and we all cowered back into the shadows.
+
+Tufik approached, uncertainty changing to certainty. The engine was
+started now. Oh, for a second of time! He was at the window now, peering
+into the darkness.
+
+"Miss Tish!" he said breathlessly. No one answered. We hardly breathed.
+And then suddenly Aggie sneezed! "Miss Pilk!" he shouted in delight. "My
+mothers! My so dear friends--"
+
+The machine jerked, started, moved slowly off. He ran beside it, a hand
+on the door. Tish bent forward to speak, but Charlie Sands put his hand
+over her mouth.
+
+And so we left him, standing in the street undecided, staring after us
+wistfully, uncertainly--the suitcase, full of Cluny-lace centerpieces,
+crocheted lace, silk kimonos, and embroidered bedspreads, in his hand.
+
+That night we hid in a hotel and the next day we started for Europe. We
+heard nothing from Tufik; but on the anniversary of Mr. Wiggins's death,
+while we were in Berlin, Aggie received a small package forwarded from
+home. It was a small lace doily, and pinned to it was a card. It read:--
+
+ For the sadness, Miss Pilk!
+
+ TUFIK.
+
+
+Aggie cried over it.
+
+
+
+
+THE SIMPLE LIFERS
+
+I
+
+
+I suppose there is something in all of us that harks back to the soil.
+When you come to think of it, what are picnics but outcroppings of
+instinct? No one really enjoys them or expects to enjoy them, but with
+the first warm days some prehistoric instinct takes us out into the
+woods, to fry potatoes over a strangling wood fire and spend the next
+week getting grass stains out of our clothes. It must be instinct; every
+atom of intelligence warns us to stay at home near the refrigerator.
+
+Tish is really a child of instinct. She is intelligent enough, but in a
+contest between instinct and brains, she always follows her instinct.
+Aggie under the same circumstances follows her heart. As for me, I
+generally follow Tish and Aggie, and they've led me into some curious
+places.
+
+This is really a sort of apology, because, whereas usually Tish leads
+off and we follow her, in the adventure of the Simple Life we were all
+equally guilty. Tish made the suggestion, but we needed no urging. As
+you know, this summer two years ago was a fairly good one, as summers
+go,--plenty of fair weather, only two or three really hot spells, and
+not a great deal of rain. Charlie Sands, Tish's nephew, went over to
+England in June to report the visit of the French President to London
+for his newspaper, and Tish's automobile had been sent to the factory to
+be gone over. She had been teaching Aggie to drive it, and owing to
+Aggie's thinking she had her foot on the brake when it was really on the
+gas, they had leaped a four-foot ditch and gone down into a deep ravine,
+from which both Tish and Aggie had had to be pulled up with ropes.
+
+Well, with no machine and Charlie Sands away, we hardly knew how to plan
+the summer. Tish thought at first she would stay at home and learn to
+ride. She thought her liver needed stirring up. She used to ride, she
+said, and it was like sitting in a rocking-chair, only perhaps more so.
+Aggie and I went out to her first lesson; but when I found she had
+bought a divided skirt and was going to try a man's saddle, I could not
+restrain my indignation.
+
+"I'm going, Tish," I said firmly, when she had come out of the
+dressing-room and I realized the situation. "I shan't attempt to
+restrain you, but I shall not remain to witness your shame."
+
+Tish eyed me coldly. "When you wish to lecture me," she snapped, "about
+revealing to the public that I have two legs, if I do wear a skirt,
+don't stand in a sunny doorway in that linen dress of yours. I am going
+to ride; every woman should ride. It's good for the liver."
+
+I think she rather wavered when they brought the horse, which looked
+larger than usual and had a Roman nose. The instructor handed Tish four
+lines and she grabbed them nervously in a bunch.
+
+"Just a moment!" said the instructor, and slipped a line between each
+two of her fingers.
+
+Tish looked rather startled. "When I used to ride--" she began with
+dignity.
+
+But the instructor only smiled. "These two are for the curb," he
+said--"if he bolts or anything like that, you know. Whoa, Viper! Still,
+old man!"
+
+"Viper!" Tish repeated, clutching at the lines. "Is--is he--er--nasty?"
+
+"Not a bit of it," said the instructor, while he prepared to hoist her
+up. "He's as gentle as a woman to the people he likes. His only fault is
+that he's apt to take a little nip out of the stablemen now and then.
+He's very fond of ladies."
+
+"Humph!" said Tish. "He's looking at me rather strangely, don't you
+think? Has he been fed lately?"
+
+"Perhaps he sees that divided skirt," I suggested.
+
+Tish gave me one look and got on the horse. They walked round the ring
+at first and Tish seemed to like it. Then a stableman put a nickel into
+a player-piano and that seemed to be a signal for the thing to trot.
+Tish said afterward that she never hit the horse's back twice in the
+same place. Once, she says, she came down on his neck, and several times
+she was back somewhere about his tail. Every time she landed, wherever
+it might be, he gave a heave and sent her up again. She tried to say
+"Whoa," but it came out in pieces, so to speak, and the creature seemed
+to be encouraged by it and took to going faster. By that time, she said,
+she wasn't coming down at all, but was in the air all the time, with the
+horse coming up at the rate of fifty revolutions a second. She had
+presence of mind enough to keep her mouth shut so she wouldn't bite her
+tongue off.
+
+After four times round the music stopped and the horse did also. They
+were just in front of us, and Tish looked rather dazed.
+
+"You did splendidly!" said Aggie. "Honestly, Tish, I was frightened at
+first, but you and that dear horse seemed one piece. Didn't they,
+Lizzie?"
+
+Tish straightened out the fingers of her left hand with her right and
+extricated the lines. Then she turned her head slowly from right to left
+to see if she could.
+
+"Help me down, somebody," she said in a thin voice, "and call an
+osteopath. There is something wrong with my spine!"
+
+She was in bed three days, having massage and a vibrator and being
+rubbed with chloroform liniment. At the end of that time she offered me
+her divided skirt, but I refused.
+
+"Riding would be good for your liver, Lizzie," she said, sitting up in
+bed with pillows all about her.
+
+"I don't intend to detach it to do it good," I retorted. "What your
+liver and mine and most of the other livers need these days isn't to be
+sent out in a divided skirt and beaten to a jelly: they need rest--less
+food and simpler food. If instead of taking your liver on a horse you'd
+put it in a tent and feed it nuts and berries, you wouldn't be the color
+you are to-day, Tish Carberry."
+
+That really started the whole thing, although at the time Tish said
+nothing. She has a way of getting an idea and letting it simmer on the
+back of her brain, as you may say, when nobody knows it's been cooking
+at all, and then suddenly bringing it out cooked and seasoned and ready
+to serve.
+
+On the day Tish sat up for the first time, Aggie and I went over to see
+her. Hannah, the maid, had got her out of bed to a window, and Tish was
+sitting there with books all about her. It is in times of enforced
+physical idleness that most of Tish's ideas come to her, and Aggie had
+reminded me of that fact on the way over.
+
+"You remember, Lizzie," she said, "how last winter when she was getting
+over the grippe she took up that correspondence-school course in
+swimming. She's reading, watch her books. It'll probably be suffrage or
+airships."
+
+Tish always believes anything she reads. She had been quite sure she
+could swim after six correspondence lessons. She had all the movements
+exactly, and had worried her trained nurse almost into hysteria for a
+week by turning on her face in bed every now and then and trying the
+overhand stroke. She got very expert, and had decided she'd swim
+regularly, and even had Charlie Sands show her the Australian crawl
+business so she could go over some time and swim the Channel. It was a
+matter of breathing and of changing positions, she said, and was up to
+intelligence rather than muscle.
+
+Then when she was quite strong, she had gone to the natatorium. Aggie
+and I went along, not that we were any good in emergency, but because
+Tish had convinced us there would be no emergency. And Tish went in at
+the deep end of the pool, head first, according to diagram, and _did not
+come up_.
+
+Well, there seemed to be nothing threatening in what Tish was reading
+this time. She had ordered some books for Maria Lee's children and was
+looking them over before she sent them. The "Young Woods-man" was one
+and "Camper Craft" was another. How I shudder when I recall those names!
+
+Aggie had baked an angel cake and I had brought over a jar of cookies.
+But Tish only thanked us and asked Hannah to take them out. Even then we
+were not suspicious. Tish sat back among her pillows and said very
+little. The conversation was something like this:--
+
+ _Aggie_: Well, you're up again: I hope to goodness it will be a lesson
+ to you. If you don't mind, I'd like Hannah to cut that cake. It fell
+ in the middle.
+
+ _Tish_: Do you know that the Indians never sweetened their food and that
+ they developed absolutely perfect teeth?
+
+ _Aggie_: Well, they never had any automobiles either, but they didn't
+ develop wings.
+
+ _Lizzie_: Don't you want that window closed? I'm in a draft.
+
+ _Tish_: Air in motion never gave any one a cold. We do not catch cold;
+ we catch heat. It's ridiculous the way we shut ourselves up in houses
+ and expect to remain well.
+
+ _Aggie_: Well, I'b catchig sobethig.
+
+ _Lizzie_ (_changing the subject_): Would you like me to help you dress?
+ It might rest your back to have your corset on.
+
+ _Tish_ (_firmly_): I shall never wear a corset again.
+
+ _Aggie_ (_sneezing_): Why? Didn't the Iddiads wear theb?
+
+
+Tish is very sensitive to lack of sympathy and she shut up like a clam.
+She was coldly polite to us for the remainder of our visit, but she did
+not again refer to the Indians, which in itself was suspicious.
+
+Fortunately for us, or unfortunately, Tish's new scheme was one she
+could not very well carry out alone. I believe she tried to induce
+Hannah to go with her, and only when Hannah failed her did she turn to
+us. Hannah was frightened and came to warn us.
+
+I remember the occasion very well. It was Mr. Wiggins's birthday
+anniversary, and we usually dine at Aggie's and have a cake with thirty
+candles on it. Tish was not yet able to be about, so Aggie and I ate
+together. She always likes to sit until the last candle is burned out,
+which is rather dispiriting and always leaves me low in my mind.
+
+Just as it flickered and went out, Hannah came in.
+
+"Miss Tish sent over Mr. Charlie's letter from London," said Hannah, and
+put it in front of Aggie. Then she sat down on a chair and commenced to
+cry.
+
+"Why, Hannah!" said Aggie. "What in the world has happened?"
+
+"She's off again!" sniveled Hannah; "and she's worse this time than she's
+ever been. No sugar, no tea, only nuts and fruit, and her windows open
+all night, with the curtains getting black. I wisht I had Mr. Charlie by
+the neck."
+
+I suppose it came over both of us at the same time--the "Young
+Woodsman," and the "Camper Craft," and no stays, and all that. I reached
+for Charlie Sands's letter, which was always sent to Tish and meant for
+all of us. He wrote:--
+
+ _Dear Three of a Kind_: Well, the French President has came and went,
+ and London has taken down all the brilliant flags which greeted him,
+ such tactful bits as bore Cressy and Agincourt, and the pretty little
+ smallpox and "plague here" banners, and has gone back to such innocent
+ diversions as baiting cabinet ministers, blowing up public buildings, or
+ going out into the woods seeking the Simple Life.
+
+ The Simple Lifers travel in bands--and little else. They go barefooted,
+ barearmed, bareheaded and barenecked. They wear one garment, I believe,
+ let their hair hang and their beards grow, eat only what Nature
+ provides, such as nuts and fruits, sleep under the stars, and drink
+ from Nature's pools. Rather bully, isn't it? They're a handsome lot
+ generally, brown as nuts. And I saw a girl yesterday--well, if you do
+ not hear from me for a time it will be because I have discarded the
+ pockets in which I carry my fountain pen and my stamps and am wandering
+ barefoot through the Elysian fields.
+
+ Yours for the Simple Life,
+
+ CHARLIE SANDS.
+
+
+As I finished reading the letter aloud, I looked at Aggie in dismay.
+"That settles it," I said hopelessly. "She had some such idea before,
+and now this young idiot--" I stopped and stared across the table at
+Aggie. She was sitting rapt, her eyes fixed on the smouldering wicks of
+Mr. Wiggins's candles.
+
+"Barefoot through the Elysian fields!" she said.
+
+
+
+
+II
+
+
+I am not trying to defend myself. I never had the enthusiasm of the
+other two, but I rather liked the idea. And I did restrain them. It was
+my suggestion, for instance, that we wear sandals without stockings,
+instead of going in our bare feet, which was a good thing, for the first
+day out Aggie stepped into a hornet's nest. And I made out the lists.
+
+The idea, of course, is not how much one can carry, but how little. The
+"Young Woodsman" told exactly how to manage in the woods if one were
+lost there and had nothing in the world but a bootlace and a wire
+hairpin.
+
+With the hairpin one could easily make a fair fish-hook--and with a
+bootlace or a good hemp cord one could make a rabbit snare.
+
+"So you see," Tish explained, "there's fish and meat with no trouble at
+all. And there will be berries and nuts. That's a diet for a king."
+
+I was making a list of the necessaries at the time and under bootlaces
+and hairpins I put down "spade."
+
+"What in Heaven's name is the spade for?" Tish demanded.
+
+"You've got to dig bait, haven't you?"
+
+Tish eyed me with disgust.
+
+"Grasshoppers!" she said tersely.
+
+There was really nothing Tish was not prepared for. I should never have
+thought of grasshoppers.
+
+"The idea is simply this," observed Tish: "We have surrounded ourselves
+with a thousand and one things we do not need and would be better
+without--houses, foolish clothing, electric light, idiotic
+servants--Hannah, get away from that door!--rich foods, furniture and
+crowds of people. We've developed and cared for our bodies instead of
+our souls. What we want is to get out into the woods and think; to
+forget those pampered bodies of ours and to let our souls grow and
+assert themselves."
+
+We decided finally to take a blanket apiece, rolled on our shoulders,
+and Tish and I each took a strong knife. Aggie, instead of the knife,
+took a pair of scissors. We took a small bottle of blackberry cordial
+for emergencies, a cake of soap, a salt-cellar for seasoning the fish
+and rabbits, two towels, a package of court-plaster, Aggie's hay-fever
+remedy, a bottle of oil of pennyroyal to use against mosquitoes, and
+a large piece of canvas, light but strong, cut like the diagram.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+Tish said it was the regulation Indian tepee, and that a squaw could set
+one up in an hour and have dinner cooked inside it in thirty minutes
+after. She said she guessed we could do it if an Indian squaw could, and
+that after we'd cut the poles once, we could carry them with us if we
+wished to move. She said the tent ought to be ornamented, but she had
+had no time, and we could paint designs on it with colored clay in the
+woods when we had nothing more important to do!
+
+It made a largish bundle, but we did not intend to travel much. We
+thought we could find a good place by a lake somewhere and put up the
+tent, and set a few snares, and locate the nearest berry-bushes and
+mushroom-patches, and then, while the rabbits were catching themselves,
+we should have time to get acquainted with our souls again.
+
+Tish put it in her terse manner most intelligently. "We intend to
+prove," she stated to Mrs. Ostermaier, the minister's wife, who came to
+call and found us all sitting on the floor trying to get used to it, for
+of course there would be no chairs, "we shall prove that the trappings
+of civilization are a delusion and a snare. We shall bring back 'Mens
+sana in corpore sano'."
+
+The minister's wife thought this was a disease, for she said, "I hope
+not, I'm sure," very hastily.
+
+"We shall make our own fire and our own shelter," said Tish from the
+floor. "We shall wear one garment, loose enough to allow entire freedom
+of movement. We shall bathe in Nature's pools and come out cleansed. On
+the Sabbath we shall attend divine service under the Gothic arches of
+the trees, read sermons in stones, and instead of that whining tenor in
+the choir we shall listen to the birds singing praise, overhead."
+
+Mrs. Ostermaier looked rather bewildered. "I'm sure I hope so," she said
+vaguely. "I don't like camping myself. There are so many bugs."
+
+As Tish said, some ideas are so large that the average person cannot see
+them at all.
+
+We had fixed on Maine. It seemed to combine all the necessary qualities:
+woods and lakes, rabbits, game and fish, and--solitude. Besides,
+Aggie's hay fever is better the farther north she gets. On the day we
+were leaving, Mr. Ostermaier came to see us.
+
+"I--I really must protest, ladies," he said. "That sort of thing may be
+all right for savages, but--"
+
+"Are we not as intelligent as savages?" Tish demanded.
+
+"Primitive people are inured to hardships, and besides, they have
+methods of their own. They can make fire--" "So can I," retorted Tish.
+"Any fool can make a fire with a rubbing-stick. It's been done in
+thirty-one seconds."
+
+"If you would only take some matches," he wailed, "and a good revolver,
+Miss Letitia. And--you must pardon this, but I have your well-being at
+heart--if I could persuade you to take along some--er--flannels and warm
+clothing!"
+
+"Clothing," said Tish loftily, "is a matter of habit, Mr. Ostermaier."
+
+I think he got the idea from this that we intended to discard clothing
+altogether, for he went away almost immediately, looking rather upset,
+and he preached on the following Sunday from "Consider the lilies of the
+field.... Even Solomon in all his glory was not arrayed like one of
+these."
+
+We left on Monday evening, and by Tuesday at noon we were at our
+destination, as far as the railroad was concerned. Tish had a map with
+the lake we'd picked out, and we had figured that we'd drive out to
+within ten miles or so of it and then send the driver back. The lake was
+in an uninhabited neighborhood, with the nearest town twenty-five miles
+away. We had one suitcase containing our blankets, sandals, short
+dresses, soap, hairpins, salt-box, knives, scissors, and a compass, and
+the leather thongs for rabbit snares that we had had cut at a harness
+shop. In the other suitcase was the tepee.
+
+We ate a substantial breakfast at Tish's suggestion, because we expected
+to be fairly busy the first day, and there would be no time for hunting.
+We had to walk ten miles, set up the tent, make a fire and gather nuts
+and berries. It was about that time, I think, that I happened to recall
+that it was early for nuts. Still there would be berries, and Tish had
+added mushrooms to our menu.
+
+We found a man with a spring wagon to drive us out and Tish showed him
+the map.
+
+"I guess I can get you out that way," he said, "but I ain't heard of no
+camp up that direction."
+
+"Who said anything about a camp?" snapped Tish. "How much to drive us
+fifteen miles in that direction?"
+
+"Fifteen miles! Well, about five dollars, but I think--"
+
+"How much to drive us fifteen miles without thinking?"
+
+"Ten dollars," said the man; and as he had the only wagon in the town we
+had to pay it.
+
+It was a lovely day, although very warm. The morning sun turned the
+woods to fairylike glades. Tish sat on the front seat, erect and staring
+ahead.
+
+Aggie bent over and touched my arm lightly. "Isn't she wonderful!" she
+whispered; "like some adventurer of old--Balboa discovering the Pacific
+Ocean, or Joan of Arc leading the what-you-call-'ems."
+
+But somehow my enthusiasm was dying. The sun was hot and there were no
+berry-bushes to be seen. Aggie's fairy glades in the woods were filled,
+not with dancing sprites, but with gnats. I wanted a glass of iced tea,
+and some chicken salad, and talcum powder down my neck. The road was
+bad, and the driver seemed to have a joke to himself, for every now and
+then he chuckled, and kept his eyes on the woods on each side, as if he
+expected to see something. His manner puzzled us all.
+
+"You can trust me not to say anything, ladies," he said at last, "but
+don't you think you're playing it a bit low down? This ain't quite up to
+contract, is it?"
+
+"You've been drinking!" said Tish shortly.
+
+After that he let her alone, but soon after he turned round to me and
+made another venture.
+
+"In case you need grub, lady," he said,"--and them two suitcases don't
+hold a lot,--I'll bring out anything you say: eggs and butter and garden
+truck at market prices. I'm no phylanthropist," he said, glaring at
+Tish, "but I'd be glad to help the girl, and that's the truth. I been
+married to this here wife o' mine quite a spell, and to my first one for
+twenty years, and I'm a believer in married life."
+
+"What girl?" I asked.
+
+He turned right round in the seat and winked at me.
+
+"All right," he said. "I'll not butt in unless you need me. But I'd like
+to know one thing: He hasn't got a mother, he says, so I take it you're
+his aunts. Am I on, ladies?"
+
+We didn't know what he was talking about, and we said so. But he only
+smiled. A mile or so from our destination the horse scared up a rabbit,
+and Tish could hardly be restrained from running after it with a leather
+thong. Aggie, however, turned a little pale.
+
+"I'll never be able to eat one, never!" she confided to me. "Did you see
+its eyes? Lizzie, do you remember Mr. Wiggins's eyes? and the way he
+used to move his nose, just like that?"
+
+At the end of fifteen miles the driver drew up his horses and took a
+fresh chew of tobacco.
+
+"I guess this is about right," he said. "That trail there'll take you to
+the lake. How long do you reckon it'll be before you'll need some fresh
+eggs?"
+
+"We are quite able to look after ourselves," said Tish with hauteur, and
+got out of the wagon. She paid him off at once and sat down on her
+suitcase until he had driven out of sight. He drove slowly, looking back
+every now and then, and his last view of us must have been
+impressive--three middle-aged and determined women ready to conquer the
+wilderness, as Tish put it, and two suitcases.
+
+It was as solitary a place as we could have wished. We had not seen a
+house in ten miles, and when the last creak of the wagon had died away
+there was a silence that made our city-broke ears fairly ache. Tish
+waited until the wagon was out of sight; then she stood up and threw out
+her arms.
+
+"At last!" she said. "Free to have a lodge in some vast wilderness--to
+think, to breathe, to expand! Lizzie, do you suppose if we go back we
+can get that rabbit?"
+
+I looked at my watch. It was one o'clock and there was not a berry-bush
+in sight. The drive had made me hungry, and I'd have eaten a rabbit that
+looked like Mr. Wiggins and called me by name if I'd had it. But there
+was absolutely no use going back for the one we'd seen on our drive.
+
+Aggie was opening her suitcase and getting out her costume, which was a
+blue calico with short sleeves and a shoe-top skirt.
+
+"Where'll I put it on?" she asked, looking about her.
+
+"Right here!" Tish replied. "For goodness sake, Aggie, try to discard
+false modesty and false shame. We're here to get close to the great
+beating heart of Nature. Take off your switch before you do another
+thing."
+
+None of us looked particularly well, I admit; but it was wonderful how
+much more comfortable we were. Aggie, who is very thin, discarded a part
+of her figure, and each of us parted with some pet hypocrisy. But I
+don't know that I have ever felt better. Only, of course we were hungry.
+
+We packed our things in the suitcases and hid them in a hollow tree, and
+Tish suggested looking for a spring. She said water was always the first
+requisite and fire the second.
+
+"Fire!" said Aggie. "What for? We've nothing to cook."
+
+Well, that was true enough, so we sent Aggie to look for water and Tish
+and I made a rabbit snare. We made a good many snares and got to be
+rather quick at it. They were all made like this illustration.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+First Tish, with her book open in front of her, made a running noose out
+of one of the buckskin thongs. Next we bent down a sapling and tied the
+noose to it, and last of all we bound the free part of the thong round a
+snag and thus held the sapling down. The idea is that a rabbit, bounding
+along, presumably with his eyes shut, will stick his head through the
+noose, kick the line clear of the snag and be drawn violently into the
+air. Tish figured that by putting up half a dozen snares we'd have
+three or four rabbits at least each day.
+
+It was about three when we finished, and we drew off to a safe distance
+to watch the rabbit bound to his doom. But no rabbits came along.
+
+I was very empty and rather faint, but Tish said she had never been able
+to think so clearly, and that we were all overfed and stodgy and would
+be better for fasting.
+
+Aggie came in at three-thirty with a hornet sting and no water. She said
+there were no springs, but that she had found a place where a spring had
+existed before the dry spell, and there was a naked footprint in the
+mud, quite fresh! We all went to look at it, and Tish was quite positive
+it was not a man's footprint at all, but only a bear's.
+
+"A bear!" said Aggie.
+
+"What of it?" Tish demanded. "The 'Young Woodsman' says that no bear
+attacks a human unless he is hungry, and at this time of the year with
+the woods full of food--"
+
+"Humph!"--I could not restrain myself--"I wish you would show me a
+little of it. If no rabbit with acute melancholia comes along to commit
+suicide by hanging on that gallows of yours, I think we'll starve to
+death."
+
+"There will be a rabbit," Tish said tersely; and we started back to the
+snare.
+
+I was never so astonished in my life. There was a rabbit! It seems we
+had struck a runway without knowing it, although Tish said afterward
+that she had recognized it at once from the rabbit tracks. Anyhow,
+whether it died of design or curiosity, our supper was kicking at the
+top of the sapling, and Tish pretended to be calm and to have known all
+along that we'd get one. But it was not dead.
+
+We got it down somehow or other and I held it by the ears while it
+kicked and scratched. I was hungry enough to have eaten it alive, but
+Aggie began to cry.
+
+"You'll be murderers, nothing else," she wailed. "Look at his little
+white tail and pitiful baby eyes!"
+
+"Good gracious, Aggie," Tish snapped, "get a knife and cut its throat
+while I make a fire. If it's any help to you, we're not going to eat
+either its little white tail or its pitiful baby eyes."
+
+As a matter of fact Aggie wouldn't touch the rabbit and I did not care
+much about it myself. I do not like to kill things. My Aunt Sarah
+Mackintosh once killed a white hen that lived twenty minutes without its
+head; two weeks later she dreamed that that same hen, without a head,
+was sitting on the footboard of the bed, and the next day she got word
+that her cousin's husband in Sacramento had died of the hiccoughs.
+
+It ended with Tish giving me the fire-making materials and stalking off
+into the woods with the rabbit in one hand and the knife in the other.
+
+[Illustration: It ended with Tish stalking off into the woods with the
+rabbit in one hand and the knife in the other]
+
+Tish is nothing if not thorough, but she seemed to me inconsistent. She
+brought blankets and a canvas tepee and sandals and an aluminum kettle,
+but she disdained matches. I rubbed with that silly drill and a sort of
+bow arrangement until my wrists ached, but I did not get even a spark of
+fire. When Tish came back with the rabbit there was no fire, and Aggie
+had taken out her watch crystal and was holding it in the sun over a
+pile of leaves.
+
+Tish got out the "Young Woodsman" from the suitcase. It seems I had
+followed cuts I and II, but had neglected cut III, which is: Hold the
+left wrist against the left shin, and the left foot on the fireblock. I
+had got my feet mixed and was trying to hold my left wrist against my
+right shin, which is exceedingly difficult. Tish got a fire in fourteen
+minutes and thirty-one seconds by Aggie's watch, and had to wear a
+bandage on her hand for a week.
+
+But we had a fire. We cooked the rabbit, which proved to be much older
+than Aggie had thought, and ate what we could. Personally I am not fond
+of rabbit, and our enjoyment was rather chastened by the fear that some
+mushrooms Tish had collected and added to the stew were toadstools
+_incognito_. To make things worse, Aggie saw some goldenrod nearby and
+began to sneeze.
+
+It was after five o'clock, but it seemed wisest to move on toward the
+lake.
+
+"Even if we don't make it," said Tish, "we'll be on our way, and while
+that bear is likely harmless we needn't thrust temptation in his way."
+
+We carried the fire with us in the kettle and we took turns with the
+tepee, which was heavy. Our suitcases with our city clothes in them we
+hid in a hollow tree, and one after the other, with Aggie last, we
+started on.
+
+The trail, which was a sort of wide wagon road at first, became a
+footpath; as we went on even that disappeared at times under fallen
+leaves. Once we lost it entirely, and Aggie, falling over a hidden root,
+stilled the fire. She became exceedingly disagreeable at about that
+time, said she was sure Tish's mushrooms were toadstools because she
+felt very queer, and suddenly gave a yell and said she had seen
+something moving in the bushes.
+
+We all looked, and the bushes were moving.
+
+
+
+
+III
+
+
+It was dusk by that time and the path was only a thread between masses
+of undergrowth. Tish said if it was the bear he would be afraid of the
+fire, so we put dry leaves in the kettle and made quite a blaze. By its
+light Tish read that bears in the summer are full fed and really
+frolicsome and that they are awful cowards. We felt quite cheered and
+brave, and Tish said if he came near to throw the fire kettle at him and
+he'd probably die of fright.
+
+It was too late to put up the tepee, so we found a clearing near the
+path and decided to spend the night there. Aggie still watched the
+bushes and wanted to spend the night in a tree; but Tish's calmness was
+a reproach to us both, and after we had emptied the kettle and made
+quite a fire to keep off animals, we unrolled our blankets and prepared
+for sleep. I could have slept anywhere, although I was still rather
+hungry. My last view was of Tish in the firelight grimly bending down a
+sapling and fastening a rabbit snare to it.
+
+During the night I was wakened by somebody clutching my arm. It was
+Aggie who lay next to me. When I raised my head she pointed off into the
+woods to our left. At a height of perhaps four feet from the ground a
+ghastly red glow was moving rapidly away from us. It was not a torch; it
+was more a radiance, and it moved not evenly, but jerkily. I could feel
+the very hair rising on my head and it was all I could do to call Tish.
+When we had roused her, however, the glow had faded entirely and she
+said we had had a nightmare.
+
+The snare the next morning contained a skunk, and we moved on as quickly
+as possible, without attempting to secure the thong, of which we had
+several. We gathered some puffballs to soak for breakfast and in a
+clearing I found some blackberry bushes. We were very cheerful that
+morning, for if we could capture rabbits and skunks, we were sure of
+other things, also, and soon we would be able to add fish to our menu.
+True, we had not had much time to commune with our souls, and Aggie's
+arms were so sunburned that she could not bend them at the elbows. But,
+as Tish said, we had already proved our contention that we could get
+along without men or houses or things. Things, she said, were the curse
+of modern life; we filled our lives with things instead of thoughts.
+
+It was when we were ready to cook the puffballs that we missed the
+kettle! Tish was very angry; she said it was evident that the bear was
+mischievous and that all bears were thieves. (See the "Young Woodsman.")
+But I recalled the glow of the night before, and more than once I caught
+Aggie's eyes on me, filled with consternation. For we had seen that
+kettle leaving the camp with some of our fire in it, and bears are
+afraid of fire!
+
+We reached the lake at noon and it seemed as if we might soon have time
+to sit down and rest. But there was a great deal to do. Aggie was of no
+assistance on account of her arms, so Tish and I put up the tent. The
+"Young Woodsman" said it was easy. First you tied three long poles
+together near the top and stood them up so they made a sort of triangle.
+Then you cut about a dozen and filled in between the three. That looked
+easy, but it took an afternoon, and our first three looked like this
+first cut.
+
+[Illustration:
+ AS THE FIRST THREE LOOKED
+ AS THEY SHOULD HAVE LOOKED]
+
+We had caught a rabbit by noon, and Aggie being unfit for other work,
+and the kettle being gone, Tish set her to roasting it. It was not
+very good, but we ate some, being ravenous. The method was simplicity
+itself--two forked sticks in the ground, one across to hang the rabbit
+to and a fire beneath. It tasted rather smoky.
+
+In the afternoon we finished putting up the tepee, and Tish made a
+fishhook out of a hairpin and tied it to a strong creeper I had found.
+But we caught no fish. We had more rabbit for supper, with some
+puffballs smoked and a few huckleberries. But by that time the very
+sight of a rabbit sickened me, and Aggie began to talk about broiled
+beefsteak and fried spring chicken.
+
+We had seen no sign of the bear, or whatever it was, all day, and it
+seemed likely we were not to be again disturbed. But a most mysterious
+thing occurred that very night.
+
+As I have said, we had caught no fish. The lake was full of them. We sat
+on a bank that evening and watched them playing leapfrog, and talked
+about frying them on red-hot stones, but nothing came near the hairpin.
+At last Tish made a suggestion.
+
+"We need worms," she said. "A grasshopper loses all his spirit after
+he's been immersed for an hour, but a worm will keep on wriggling and
+attracting attention for half a day."
+
+"I wanted to bring a spade," said I.
+
+But Tish had read of a scheme for getting worms that she said the game
+warden of some place or other had guaranteed officially.
+
+"You stick a piece of wood about two feet into the ground in a likely
+spot," she said, "and rub a rough piece of bark or plank across the top.
+This man claims, and it sounds reasonable, that the worms think it is
+raining and come up for water. All you have to do is to gather them up."
+
+Tish found a pole for the purpose on the beach and set to work, while
+Aggie and I prepared several hooks and lines. The fish were jumping
+busily, and it seemed likely we should have more than we could do to
+haul them in.
+
+The experiment, however, failed entirely, for not a single worm
+appeared. Tish laid it to the fact that it was very late and that the
+worms were probably settled down for the night. It may have been that,
+or it may have been the wrong kind of wood.
+
+The mysterious happening was this: We rose quite early because the tepee
+did not seem to be well anchored and fell down on us at daybreak. Tish
+went down to the beach to examine the lines that had been out all night,
+and found nothing. She was returning rather dispirited to tell us that
+it would be rabbit again for breakfast, when she saw lying on a flat
+stone half a dozen beautiful fish, one or two still gasping, in our lost
+kettle!
+
+Tish said she stood there, opening and shutting her mouth like the fish.
+Then she gave a whoop and we came running. At first we thought they
+might have been jumping and leaped out on to the beach by accident, but,
+as Tish said, they would hardly have landed all together and into a
+kettle that had been lost for two nights and a day. The queer thing was
+that they had not been caught with a hook at all. They hadn't a mark on
+them.
+
+We were so hungry that we ate every one of them for breakfast. It was
+only when we had eaten, and were sitting gorged and not caring whether
+the tent was set up again or not, that we fell to wondering about the
+fish. Tish fancied it might have been the driver of the spring wagon,
+but decided he'd have sold us the fish at thirty cents a pound live
+weight.
+
+All day long we watched for a sign of our benefactor, but we saw
+nothing. Tish set up more rabbit snares; not that she wanted rabbits,
+but it had become a mania with her, and there were so many of them that
+as they grew accustomed to us they sat round our camp in a ring and
+criticized our housekeeping. She thought if she got a good many skins
+she could have a fur robe made for her automobile. As a matter of fact
+she found another use for them.
+
+It was that night, then, that we were sitting round the camp-fire on
+stones that we had brought up from the beach. We had seen nothing more
+of the bear, and if we had been asked we should have said that the
+nearest human being was twenty-five miles away.
+
+Suddenly a voice came out of the woods just behind us, a man's voice.
+
+"Please don't be alarmed," said the voice. "But may I have a little of
+your fire? Mine has gone out again."
+
+"G-g-g-good gracious!" said Aggie. "T-Tish, get your revolver!"
+
+This was for effect. Tish had no revolver.
+
+All of us had turned and were staring into the woods behind, but we
+could see no one. After Aggie's speech about the revolver it was some
+time before the voice spoke again.
+
+"Never mind, Aggie," Tish observed, very loud. "The revolver is here and
+loaded--as nice a little thirty-six as any one needs here in the woods."
+
+She said afterward that she knew all the time there was no thirty-six
+caliber revolver, but in the excitement she got it mixed with her bust
+measure. Having replied to Aggie, Tish then turned in the direction of
+the voice.
+
+"Don't skulk back there," she called. "Come out, where we can see you.
+If you look reliable, we'll give you some fire, of course."
+
+There was another pause, as if the stranger were hesitating. Then:--
+
+"I think I'd better not," he said with reluctance in his voice. "Can't
+you toss a brand this way?"
+
+By that time we had grown accustomed to the darkness, and I thought I
+could see in the shadow of a tree a lightish figure. Aggie saw it at the
+same instant and clutched my arm.
+
+"Lizzie!" she gasped.
+
+It was at that moment that Tish tossed the brand. It fell far short, but
+her movement caught the stranger unawares. He ducked behind the tree,
+but the flare of light had caught him. With the exception of what looked
+like a pair of bathing-trunks he was as bare as my hand!
+
+There was a sort of astonished silence. Then the voice called out:--"Why
+in the world didn't you warn me?" it said, aggrieved. "I didn't know you
+were going to throw the blamed thing."
+
+We had all turned our backs at once and Tish's face was awful.
+
+"Take it and go," she said, without turning. "Take it and go."
+
+From the crackling of leaves and twigs we judged that he had come out
+and got the brand, and when he spoke again it was from farther back in
+the woods.
+
+"You know," he said, "I don't like this any more than you do. I've got
+forty-two mosquito bites on my left arm."
+
+He waited, as if for a reply; but getting none he evidently retreated.
+The sound of rustling leaves and crackling twigs grew fainter, fainter
+still, died away altogether. We turned then with one accord and gazed
+through the dark arches of the forest. A glowing star was retreating
+there--a smouldering fire, that seemed to move slowly and with an
+appearance of dejection.
+
+It was the second time Aggie and I had seen fire thus carried through
+the wood; but whereas about the kettle there had been a glow and
+radiance that was almost triumphant, the brand we now watched seemed
+smouldering, dejected, ashamed. Even Tish felt it.
+
+"The wretch!" she exclaimed. "Daring to come here like that! No wonder
+he's ashamed."
+
+But Aggie, who is very romantic, sat staring after the distant torch.
+
+"Mr. Wiggins suffered so from mosquitoes," she said softly.
+
+
+
+
+IV
+
+
+The next morning we found more fish awaiting us, and on the smooth sand
+of the beach was a message written with a stick:--
+
+ If you will leave a wire hairpin or two on this stone I can get
+ bigger fish. What do you mean to do with all those rabbit skins?
+
+ (Signed) P.
+
+
+Tish was touched by the fish, I think. She smoothed off the sand
+carefully and wrote a reply:--
+
+ Here are the hairpins. Thank you. Do you want the rabbit skins?
+
+ L.C.
+
+
+All day we were in a state of expectancy. The mosquitoes were very bad,
+and had it not been for the excitement of the P---- person I should have
+given up and gone home. I wanted mashed potatoes and lima beans with
+butter dressing, and a cup of hot tea, and muffins, and ice--in fact,
+I cannot think of anything I did not want, except rabbits and fish and
+puffballs and such blackberries as the birds did not fancy. Although we
+were well enough--almost too well--the better I felt the hungrier I got.
+
+Tish thought the time had now come to rest and invite our souls. She
+set the example that day by going out on a flat rock in the lake and
+preparing to think all the things she'd been waiting most of her life
+to consider.
+
+"I am ready to form my own opinions about some things," she said.
+"I realize now that all my life the newspapers and stupid people and
+books have formed my opinions. Now I'm going to think along my own
+lines. Is there another life after this? Do I really desire the
+suffrage? Why am I a Baptist?"
+
+Aggie said she would like to invite her soul that day also, not to form
+any opinions,--Tish always does that for her,--but she had to get some
+clothes in September and she might as well think them out.
+
+So it happened that I was alone when I met the P---- person's young
+woman.
+
+I had intended to wander only a short way along the trail, but after I
+had gone a mile or two it occurred to me as likely that the spring-wagon
+driver would come back that way before long out of curiosity, and I
+thought I might leave a message for him to bring out some fresh eggs and
+leave them there. I could tell Tish I had found a nest, or perhaps,
+since that would be lying, I could put them in a nest and let her find
+them. I'd have ordered tea, too, if I could have thought of any way to
+account for it.
+
+"I'm going to do some meditating myself to-day," I remarked, "but I
+think better when I'm moving. If I don't come back in an hour or so
+don't imagine I've been kidnaped."
+
+Tish turned on her stone and looked at me.
+
+"You will not be kidnaped," she said shortly. "I cannot imagine any one
+safer than you are in that costume."
+
+Well, I made my way along the trail as rapidly as I could. It was twenty
+miles there and back and I've seen the day when two city blocks would
+send me home to soak my feet in hot water. But the sandals were easy to
+walk in and my calico skirt was short and light.
+
+I had no paper to write my message on, of course, but on the way I
+gathered a large white fungus and I scraped a note on it with a pin.
+With the fungus under my arm I walked briskly along, planning an omelet
+with the eggs, if we got any, and gathering mushrooms here and there. It
+was the mushrooms that led me to the discovery of a camping-place that
+was prehistoric in its primitiveness--a clearing, surrounded by low
+bushes, and in the center a fireplace of stones with a fire smouldering.
+At one side a heap of leaves and small twigs for a bed, a stump for a
+seat, and lying on top of it a sort of stone axe, made by inserting a
+sharp stone into the cleft of a sapling and tying it into place with a
+wild-grape tendril. Pegged out on the ground to cure was a rabbit skin,
+indifferently scraped. It made our aluminum kettle and canvas tepee look
+like a marble-vestibuled apartment on Riverside Drive.
+
+The whole thing looked pitiful, hungry. I thought of Tish sitting on a
+stone inviting her soul, while rabbits came from miles round to stick
+their heads through our nooses and hang themselves for our dinner; and
+it seemed to me that we should share our plenty. I thought it probable
+that the gentleman of the woods lived here, and from the appearance of
+the place he carried all his possessions with him when he wore his
+bathing-trunks. If I had been in any doubt, the sight of Aggie's wire
+hairpin, sharpened and bent into a serviceable fishhook, decided me. I
+scratched a message for him on another fungus and left it:--
+
+ If you need anything come to the Indian tepee at the lake. We have
+ no clothing to spare, but are always glad to help in time of trouble.
+
+ (Signed) ONE OF THE SIMPLE LIFERS.
+
+
+I went on after that and about noon reached our point of exodus from the
+wagon. I was tired and hot and I kept thinking of my little dining-room
+at home, with the electric fan going, and iced cantaloupe, and nobody
+worrying about her soul or thinking her own thoughts, and no rabbits.
+
+Our suitcases were safe enough in the hollow tree, and I thought the
+spring wagon had been back already, for there were fresh tracks. This
+discouraged me and I sat down on a log to rest. It was then that I heard
+the girl crying.
+
+She was crying softly, but in the woods sounds travel. I found her on
+her face on the pine needles about twenty yards away, wailing her heart
+out into a pink automobile veil, and she was so absorbed in her misery
+that I had to stoop and touch her before she looked up.
+
+"Don't cry," I said. "If you are lost, I can direct you to a
+settlement."
+
+She looked up at me, and from being very red and suffused she went quite
+pale. It seems that with my bare legs and sandals and my hair down,
+which was Tish's idea for making it come in thick and not gray, and what
+with my being sunburned and stained with berries, she thought I was a
+wild woman. I realized what was wrong.
+
+"Don't be alarmed," I said somewhat grimly. "I'm rational enough; if I
+hop about instead of walking, it's because I'm the tomb of more rabbits
+than I care to remember, but aside from that I'm all right. Are you
+lost?"
+
+She sat up, still staring, and wiped her eyes.
+
+"No. I have a machine over there among the trees. Are there--are there
+plenty of rabbits in the woods?"
+
+"Thousands." She was a pretty little thing, very young, and dressed in a
+white motor coat with white shoes and hat.
+
+"And--and berries?"
+
+"There aren't many berries," I admitted. "The birds eat 'em. We get the
+ones they don't fancy."
+
+Now I didn't think for a moment that she was worried about my diet, but
+she was worried about the food supply in the woods, that was sure. So I
+sat down on a stump and told her about puffballs, and what Tish had read
+about ants being edible but acid, and that wood mice, roasted and not
+cooked too dry, were good food, but that Aggie had made us liberate the
+only ones we had caught, because a man she was once engaged to used to
+carry a pet mouse in his pocket.
+
+Nothing had really appealed to her until I mentioned Mr. Wiggins. Then
+unexpectedly she began to cry again. And after that I got the whole
+story.
+
+It seems she was in love with a young man who was everything a young man
+ought to be and had money as well. But the money was the barrier really,
+for the girl's father wouldn't believe that a youth who played polo, and
+did not have to work for a living, and led cotillons, and paid calls in
+the afternoon could have really good red blood in him. He had a man in
+view for her, she said, one who had made his money himself, and had to
+have his valet lay out his clothes for fear he'd make a mistake. Once
+the valet had to go to have a tooth pulled and the man had to decline
+a dinner.
+
+"Father said," finished the little girl tearfully, "that if
+Percy--that's his name, and it counted against him too--that if Percy
+was a real man he'd do something. And then he hap-happened on a book of
+my small brother's, telling how people used to live in the woods, and
+kill their own food and make their own fire--"
+
+"The 'Young Woodsman,' of course," I put in.
+
+"And how the strong survived, but the weak succumbed, and he said if
+Percy was a man, and not a t-tailor's dummy, he'd go out in the woods,
+j-just primitive man, without anything but a pair of bathing trunks,
+and keep himself alive for a month. If he s-stood the test father was
+willing to forget the 'Percy.' He said that he knew Mr. Willoughby could
+do it--that's the other man--and that he'd come in at the end of the
+time with a deed for the forest and mortgages on all the surrounding
+camps."
+
+"And Percy agreed?"
+
+"He didn't want to. He said it took mentality and physical endurance as
+well as some courage to play polo. Father said it did--on the part of
+the pony. Then s-some of the men heard of it, and there were bets on
+it--ten to one he wouldn't do it and twenty to one he couldn't do it. So
+Percy decided to try. Father was so afraid that some of the campers and
+guides would help him that he had notices sent out at Mr. Willoughby's
+suggestion offering a reward if Percy could be shown to have asked any
+assistance. Oh, I know he's sick in there somewhere, or starving
+or--dead!"
+
+I had had a great light break over me, and now I stooped and patted the
+girl on the shoulder.
+
+"Dead! Certainly not," I said. "I saw him last night."
+
+"Saw him!"
+
+"Well, not exactly saw him--there wasn't much light. But he's alive and
+well, and--do you really want him to win?"
+
+"Do I?" She sat up with shining eyes. "I don't care whether he owns
+anything in the world but the trunks. If I didn't think I'd add to his
+troubles I'd go into the woods this minute and find him and suffer with
+him."
+
+"You'd have to be married to him first," I objected, rather startled.
+
+But she looked at me with her cheeks as red strawberries. "Why?" she
+demanded. "Father's crazy about primitive man--did primitive man take
+his woman to church to be married, with eight brides maids and a
+reception after the ceremony? Of course not. He grabbed her and carried
+her off."
+
+"Good Heavens! You're not in earnest?" "I think I am," she said slowly.
+"I'd rather live in the woods with Percy and no ceremony than live
+without him anywhere in the world. And I'll bet primitive man would have
+been wiped off the earth if he hadn't had primitive woman to add her
+wits to his strength. If Percy only had a woman to help him!"
+
+"My dear," I said solemnly, "he has! He has, not one, but three!"
+
+It took me some time to explain that Percy was not supporting a harem in
+the Maine woods; but when at last she got my idea and that the other two
+classed with me in beauty and attractiveness, she was overjoyed.
+
+"But Percy promised not to ask for help," she said suddenly.
+
+"He needn't. My dear, go away and stop worrying about Percy--he's all
+right. When is the time up?"
+
+"In three weeks."
+
+"I suppose father and the Willoughby person will come to meet him?"
+
+"Yes, and all the fellows from the club who have put money up on him.
+We're going to motor over and father's bringing the physical director of
+the athletic club. He's not only got to survive, but he's got to be in
+good condition."
+
+"He'll be in good condition," I said grimly. "Does he drink and smoke?"
+
+"A little, not too much. Oh, yes, I had forgotten!" She opened up a
+little gold cigarette case, which she took from her pocket, and
+extracted a handful of cigarettes.
+
+"If you are going to see him," she said, "you might put them where he'll
+find them?"
+
+"Certainly not."
+
+"But that's not giving them to him."
+
+"My dear child," I said sternly, "Percy is going to come out of these
+woods so well and strong that he may not have to work, but he'll want
+to. And he'll not smoke anything stronger than corn-silk, if we're to
+take charge of this thing."
+
+She understood quickly enough and I must say she was grateful. She was
+almost radiant with joy when I told her how capable Tish was, and that
+she was sure to be interested, and about Aggie's hay fever and Mr.
+Wiggins and the rabbit snares. She leaned over and kissed me
+impulsively.
+
+"You dear old thing!" she cried. "I know you'll look after him and make
+him comfortable and--how old is Miss Letitia?"
+
+"Something over fifty and Aggie Pilkington's about the same, although
+she won't admit it."
+
+She kissed me again at that, and after looking at her wrist watch she
+jumped to her feet.
+
+"Heavens!" she said. "It's four o'clock and my engine has been running
+all this time!"
+
+She got a smart little car from somewhere up the road, and the last I
+saw of her she was smiling back over her shoulder and the car running on
+the edge of a ditch.
+
+"You are three darlings!" she called back. "And tell Percy I love
+him--love him--love him!"
+
+I thought I'd never get back to the lake. I was tired to begin with, and
+after I'd gone about four miles and was limping with a splinter in my
+heel and no needle to get it out with, I found I still had the fungus
+message to the spring-wagon person under my arm.
+
+It was dark when I got back and my nerves were rather unstrung, what
+with wandering from the path here and there, with nothing to eat since
+morning, and running into a tree and taking the skin off my nose. When I
+limped into camp at last, I didn't care whether Percy lived or died, and
+the thought, of rabbit stew made my mouth water.
+
+It was not rabbit, however. Aggie was sitting alone by the fire, waving
+a brand round her head to keep off mosquitoes, and in front of her,
+dangling from the spit, were a dozen pairs of frogs' legs in a row.
+
+I ate six pairs without a question and then I asked for Tish.
+
+"Catching frogs," said Aggie laconically, and flourished the brand.
+
+"Where?"
+
+"Pulling them off the trees. Where do you think she gets them?" she
+demanded.
+
+A large mosquito broke through her guard at that moment and she flung
+the torch angrily at the fire.
+
+"I'm eaten alive!" she snapped. "I wish to Heaven I had smallpox or
+something they could all take and go away and die."
+
+The frogs' legs were heavenly, although in a restaurant I loathe the
+things. I left Aggie wondering if her hay fever wasn't contagious
+through the blood and hoping the mosquitoes would get it and sneeze
+themselves to death, and went to find Tish.
+
+She was standing in the margin of the lake up to her knees in water,
+with a blazing torch in one hand and one of our tent poles in the other.
+Tied to the end the pole was a grapevine line, and a fishing-hook made
+of a hairpin was attached to it.
+
+Her method, which it seems she'd heard from Charlie Sands and which was
+not in the "Young Woodsman," was simple and effectual.
+
+"Don't move," she said tensely when she heard me on the bank. "There's
+one here as big as a chicken!"
+
+She struck the flare forward, and I could see the frog looking at it and
+not blinking. He sat in a sort of heavenly ecstasy, like a dog about to
+bay at the moon, while the hook dangled just at his throat.
+
+"I'm half-ashamed to do it, Lizzie, it's so easy," she said calmly,
+still tickling the thing's throat with the hook. "Grab him as I throw
+him at you. They slip off sometimes."
+
+The next instant she jerked the hook up and caught the creature by the
+lower jaw. It was the neatest thing I have ever seen. Tish came wading
+over to where I stood and examined the frog.
+
+"If we only had some Tartare sauce!" she said regretfully. "I wish you'd
+look at my ankle, Lizzie. There's something stuck to it."
+
+The something was a leech. It refused to come off, and so she carried
+both frog and leech back to the camp. Aggie said on no account to pull a
+leech off, it left its teeth in and the teeth went on burrowing, or laid
+eggs or something. One must leave it on until it was full and round and
+couldn't hold any more, and then it dropped off.
+
+So all night Tish kept getting up and going to the fire to see if it was
+swelling. But toward morning she fell asleep and it dropped off, and we
+had a terrible feeling that it was somewhere in our blankets.
+
+But the leech caused less excitement that evening than my story of Percy
+and the little girl in the white coat. Aggie was entranced, and Tish had
+made Percy a suit of rabbit skin with a cap to match and outlined a set
+of exercises to increase his chest measure before I was half through
+with my story.
+
+But Percy did not appear, although we had an idea that he was not far
+off in the woods. We could hear a crackling in the undergrowth, but when
+we called there was no reply. Tish was eating a frog's leg when the idea
+came to her.
+
+"He'll never come out under ordinary circumstances in that--er--costume,"
+she said. "Suppose we call for help. He'll probably come bounding.
+Help!" she yelled, between bites, as one may say.
+
+"Help! Fire! Police!"
+
+"Help!" cried Aggie. "Percy, help!" It sounded like "Mercy, help!"
+
+It worked like a charm. The faint cracking became louder, nearer, turned
+from a suspicion to a certainty and from a certainty to a fact. The
+bushes parted and Percy stood before us. All he saw was three elderly
+women eating frogs' legs round a fire under a cloud of mosquitoes. He
+stopped, dumbfounded, and in that instant we saw that he didn't need the
+physical exercises, but that, of course, he did need the rabbit-skin
+suit.
+
+"Great Scott!" he panted. "I thought I heard you calling for help."
+
+"So we did," said Tish, "but we didn't need it. Won't you sit down?"
+
+He looked dazed and backed toward the bushes.
+
+"I--I think," he said, "if there's nothing wrong I'd better not--"
+
+"Fiddlesticks!" Tish snapped. "Are you ashamed of the body the Lord
+gave you? Don't you suppose we've all got skins? And didn't I thrash my
+nephew, Charlie Sands, when he was almost as big as you and had less on,
+for bathing in the river? Sit down, man, and don't be a fool."
+
+He edged toward the fire, looking rather silly, and Aggie passed him a
+frog's leg on a piece of bark.
+
+"Try this, Percy," she said, smiling.
+
+At the name he looked ready to run. "I guess you've seen the notices,"
+he said, "so you'll understand I cannot accept any food or assistance.
+I'm very grateful to you, anyhow."
+
+"You may take what food you find, surely," said Aggie. "If you find a
+roasted frog's leg on the ground--so--there's nothing to prevent you
+eating it, is there?"
+
+"Nothing at all," said Percy, and picked it up. "Unless, of course--"
+
+"It's not a trap, young man," said Tish. "Eat it and enjoy it. There are
+lots more where it came from."
+
+He relaxed at that, and on Tish's bringing out a blanket from the tent
+to throw over his shoulders he became almost easy. He was much surprised
+to learn that we knew his story, and when I repeated the "love him"
+message, he seemed to grow a foot taller and his eyes glowed.
+
+"I'm holding out all right," he said. "I'm fit physically. But the thing
+that gets my goat is that I'm to come out clothed. Dorothea's father
+says that primitive man, with nothing but his hands and perhaps a stone
+club, fed himself, made himself a shelter, and clothed himself in skins.
+Skins! I'm so big that two or three bears would hardly be enough. I did
+find a hole that I thought a bear or two might fall into, and got almost
+stung to death robbing a bee tree to bait the thing with honey. But
+there aren't any bears, and if there were how'd I kill 'em? Wait until
+they starve to death?"
+
+"Rabbits!" said Tish.
+
+He looked down at himself and he seemed very large in the firelight.
+"Dear lady," he said, "there aren't enough rabbits in the county to
+cover me, and how'd I put 'em together? I was a fool to undertake the
+thing, that's all."
+
+"But aren't you in love with her?" asked Aggie.
+
+"Well, I guess I am. It isn't that, you know. I'm a good bit worse than
+crazy about her. A man might be crazy about a mint julep or a power
+boat, but--he'd hardly go into the woods in his skin and live on fish
+until he's scaly for either of them. If I don't get her, I don't want to
+live. That's all."
+
+He looked so gloomy and savage that we saw he meant it, and Aggie was
+perceptibly thrilled. Trish, however, was thinking hard, her eyes on the
+leech. "Was there anything in the agreement to prevent your accepting
+any suggestions?"
+
+He pondered. "No, I was to be given no food, drink, shelter, or any
+weapon. The old man forgot fire--that's how I came to beg some."
+
+"Fire and brains," reflected Tish. "We've given you the first and we've
+plenty of the second to offer. Now, young man, this is my plan. We'll
+give you nothing but suggestions. If now and then you find a cooked meal
+under that tree, that's accident, not design, and you'd better eat it.
+Can you sew?"
+
+"I'm like the Irishman and the fiddle--I never tried, but I guess I
+can." He was much more cheerful.
+
+"Do you have to be alone?"
+
+"I believe he took that for granted, in this costume."
+
+"Will it take you long to move over here?"
+
+"I think I can move without a van," he said, grinning. "My sole worldly
+possessions are a stone hatchet and a hairpin fishhook."
+
+"Get them and come over," commanded Tish. "When you leave this forest at
+the end of the time you are going to be fed and clothed and carry a
+tent; you will have with you smoked meat and fish; you will carry under
+your arm an Indian clock or sundial; you will have a lamp--if we can
+find a clamshell or a broken bottle--and you will have a fire-making
+outfit with your monogram on it."
+
+"But, my dear friend," he said, "I am not supposed to have any
+assistance and--"
+
+"Assistance!" Tish snapped. "Who said assistance? I'm providing the
+brains, but you'll do it all yourself."
+
+He moved over an hour or so later and Tish and I went into the tent to
+bed. Somewhat later, when she limped to the fire to see how the leech
+was filling up, he and Aggie were sitting together talking, he of
+Dorothea and Aggie of Mr. Wiggins. Tish said they were both talking at
+the same time, neither one listening to the other, and that it sounded
+like this:--"She's so sweet and trusting and honest--well, I'd believe
+what she said if she--"
+
+"--fell off a roof on a rainy day and was picked up by a man with a
+horse and buggy quite unconscious."
+
+
+
+
+V
+
+
+The next three weeks were busy times for Percy. He wore Tish's blanket
+for two days, and then, finding it in the way, he discarded it
+altogether. Seen in daylight it was easy to understand why little
+Dorothea was in love with him. He was a handsome young giant, although
+much bitten by mosquitoes and scratched with briers.
+
+The arrangement was a good one all round. He knew of things in the wood
+we'd never heard of--wild onions and artichokes, and he had found a
+clump of wild cherry trees. He made snares of the fibers of tree bark,
+and he brought in turtles and made plates out of the shells. And all the
+time he was working on his outfit, curing rabbit skins and sewing them
+together with fibers under my direction.
+
+When he'd made one sleeve of his coat we had a sort of celebration.
+He'd found an empty bottle somewhere in the woods, and he had made a
+wild-cherry decoction that he declared was cherry brandy, keeping it in
+the sun to ferment. Well, he insisted on opening the brandy that day and
+passing it round. We had cups made of leaves and we drank to his sleeve,
+although the stuff was villainous. He had put the sleeve on, and it
+looked rather inadequate. "Here's fun," he said joyously. "If my English
+tailor could see this sleeve he'd die of envy. A sleeve's not all of a
+coat, but what's a coat without a sleeve? Look at it--grace, ease of
+line, and beauty of material."
+
+Aggie lifted her leaf.
+
+"To Dorothea!" she said. "And may the sleeve soon be about her."
+
+Tish thought this toast was not delicate, but Percy was enchanted with
+it.
+
+It was on the evening of the fourth day of Percy's joining our camp that
+the Willoughby person appeared. It happened at a most inauspicious time.
+We had eaten supper and were gathered round the camp-fire and Tish had
+put wet leaves on the blaze to make a smudge that would drive the
+mosquitoes away. We were sitting there, Tish and I coughing and Aggie
+sneezing in the smoke, when Percy came running through the woods and
+stopped at the foot of a tree near by.
+
+"Bring a club, somebody," he yelled. "I've treed the back of my coat."
+
+Tish ran with one of the tent poles. A tepee is inconvenient for that
+reason. Every time any one wants a fishing-pole or a weapon, the tent
+loses part of its bony structure and sags like the face of a stout woman
+who has reduced. And it turned out that Percy had treed a coon. He
+climbed up after it, taking Tish's pole with him to dislodge it, and it
+was at that moment that a man rode into the clearing and practically
+fell off his horse. He was dirty and scratched with brambles, and his
+once immaculate riding-clothes were torn. He was about to take off his
+hat when he got a good look at us and changed his mind.
+
+"Have you got anything to eat?" he asked. "I've been lost since noon
+yesterday and I'm about all in."
+
+The leaves caught fire suddenly and sent a glow into Percy's tree. I
+shall never forget Aggie's agonized look or the way Tish flung on more
+wet leaves in a hurry.
+
+"I'm sorry," she said, "but supper's over."
+
+"But surely a starving man--"
+
+"You won't starve inside of a week," Tish snapped. "You've got enough
+flesh on you for a month."
+
+He stared at her incredulously.
+
+"But, my good woman," he said, "I can pay for my food. Even you
+itinerant folk need money now and then, don't you? Come, now, cook me a
+fish; I'll pay for it. My name is Willoughby--J.K. Willoughby. Perhaps
+you've heard of me."
+
+Tish cast a swift glance into the tree. It was in shadow again and she
+drew a long breath. She said afterward that the whole plan came to her
+in the instant of that breath.
+
+"We can give you something," she said indifferently. "We have a stewed
+rabbit, if you care for it."
+
+There was a wild scramble in the tree at that moment, and we thought all
+was over. We learned later that Percy had made a move to climb higher,
+out of the firelight, and the coon had been so startled that he almost
+fell out. But instead of looking up to investigate, the stranger backed
+toward the fire.
+
+"Only a wildcat," said Tish. "They'll not come near the fire."
+
+"Near!" exclaimed Mr. Willoughby. "If they came any nearer, they'd have
+to get into it!"
+
+"I think," said Tish, "that if you are afraid of them--although you are
+safe enough if you don't get under the trees; they jump down, you
+know--that you would better stay by the fire to-night. In the morning
+we'll start you toward a road."
+
+All night with Percy in the tree! I gave her a savage glance, but she
+ignored me.
+
+The Willoughby looked up nervously, and of course there were trees all
+about.
+
+"I guess I'll stay," he agreed. "What about that rabbit?"
+
+I did not know Tish's plan at that time, and while Aggie was feeding the
+Willoughby person and he was grumbling over his food, I took Tish aside.
+
+"Are you crazy?" I demanded. "Just through your idiocy Percy will have
+to stay in that tree all night--and he'll go to sleep, likely, and fall
+out."
+
+Tish eyed me coldly.
+
+"You are a good soul, Lizzie," she observed, "but don't overwork your
+mind. Go back and do something easy--let the Willoughby cross your palm
+with silver, and tell his fortune. If he asks any questions I'm queen of
+the gypsies, and give him to understand that we're in temporary hiding
+from the law. The worse he thinks of us the better. Remember, we haven't
+seen Percy."
+
+"I'm not going to lie," I said sternly.
+
+"Pooh!" Tish sneered. "That wretch came into the woods to gloat over his
+rival's misery. The truth's too good for him."
+
+I did my best, and I still have the silver dollar he gave me. I told him
+I saw a small girl, who loved him but didn't realize it yet, and there
+was another man.
+
+"Good gracious," I said, "there must be something wrong with your palm.
+I see the other man, but he seems to be in trouble. His clothing has
+been stolen, for he has none, and he is hungry, very hungry."
+
+"Ha!" said Mr. Willoughby, looking startled. "You old gypsies beat the
+devil! Hungry, eh? Is that all?"
+
+The light flared up again and I could see clearly the pale spot in the
+tree, which was Percy. But Mr. Willoughby's eyes were on his palm.
+
+"He has about decided to give up something--I cannot see just what," I
+said loudly. "He seems to be in the air, in a tree, perhaps. If he
+wishes to be safe he should go higher."
+
+Percy took the hint and moved up, and I said that was all there was in
+the palm. Soon after that Mr. Willoughby stretched out on the ground by
+the fire, and before long he was asleep.
+
+During the night I heard Tish moving stealthily about in the tepee and
+she stepped on my ankle as she went out. I fell asleep again as soon as
+it stopped aching. Just at dawn Tish came back and touched me on the
+shoulder.
+
+"Where's the blackberry cordial?" she whispered I sat up instantly.
+
+"Has Percy fallen out of the tree?"
+
+"No. Don't ask any questions, Lizzie. I want it for myself. That dratted
+horse fell on me."
+
+She refused to say any more and lay down groaning. But I was too worried
+to sleep again. In the morning Percy was gone from the tree. Mr.
+Willoughby had more rabbit and prepared to leave the forest. He offered
+Tish a dollar for the two meals and a bed, and Tish, who was moving
+about stiffly, said that she and her people took no money for their
+hospitality. Telling fortunes was one thing, bread and salt was another.
+She looked quite haughty, and the Willoughby person apologized and went
+into the woods to get his horse.
+
+The horse was gone!
+
+It was rather disagreeable for a time. He plainly thought we'd taken it,
+although Tish showed him that the end of the strap had been chewed
+partly through and then jerked free.
+
+"If the creature smelled a wildcat," she said, "nothing would hold it.
+None of my people ever bring a horse into this part of the country."
+
+"Humph!" said Mr. Willoughby. "Well, I'll bet they take a few out!"
+
+He departed on foot shortly after, very disgusted and suspicious. We
+showed him the trail, and the last we saw of him he was striding along,
+looking up now and then for wildcats.
+
+When he was well on his way, Percy emerged from the bushes. I had
+thought that he had helped Tish to take the Willoughby horse, but it
+seems he had not, and he was much amazed when Tish came through the wood
+leading the creature by the broken strap.
+
+"I'll turn it loose," she said to Percy, "and you can capture it. It
+will make a good effect for you to emerge from the forest on horseback,
+and anyhow, what with the rabbit skin, the tent, and the sundial and the
+other things, you have a lot to carry. You can say you found it straying
+in the woods and captured it."
+
+Percy looked at her with admiration not unmixed with reverence. "Miss
+Letitia," he said solemnly, "if it were not for Dorothea, I should ask
+you to marry me. I'd like to have you in my family."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I am very nearly to the end of my narrative.
+
+Toward the last Percy was obliged to work far into the night, for of
+course we could not assist him. He made a full suit of rabbit skins
+sewed with fibers, and a cap and shoes of coonskin to match. The shoes
+were cut from a bedroom-slipper pattern that Tish traced in the sand on
+the beach, and the cap had an eagle feather in it. He made a birch-bark
+knapsack to hold the fish he smoked and a bow and arrow that looked well
+but would not shoot. When he had the outfit completed, he put it on,
+with the stone hatchet stuck into a grapevine belt and the bow and arrow
+over his shoulder, and he looked superb.
+
+"The question is," he reflected, trying to view himself in the edge of
+the lake: "Will Dorothea like it? She's very keen about clothes. And
+gee, how she hates a beard!"
+
+"You could shave as the Indians do," Tish said.
+
+"How?"
+
+"With a clamshell."
+
+He looked dubious, but Tish assured him it was feasible. So he hunted a
+clamshell, a double one, Tish requested, and brought it into camp.
+
+"I'd better do it for you," said Tish. "It's likely to be slow, but it
+is sure."
+
+He was eyeing the clamshell and looking more and more uneasy.
+
+"You're not going to scrape it off?" he asked anxiously. "You know,
+pumice would be better for that, but somehow I don't like the idea."
+
+"Nothing of the sort," said Tish. "The double clamshell merely forms a
+pair of Indian nippers. I'm going to pull it out."
+
+But he made quite a fuss about it, and said he didn't care whether the
+Indians did it or not, he wouldn't. I think he saw how disappointed Tish
+was and was afraid she would attempt it while he slept, for he threw the
+Indian nippers into the lake and then went over and kissed her hand.
+
+"Dear Miss Tish," he said; "no one realizes more than I your inherent
+nobility of soul and steadfastness of purpose. I admire them both. But
+if you attempt the Indian nipper business, or to singe me like a chicken
+while I sleep, I shall be--forgive me, but I know my impulsiveness of
+disposition--I shall be really vexed with you."
+
+Toward the last we all became uneasy for fear hard work was telling on
+him physically. He used to sit cross-legged on the ground, sewing for
+dear life and singing Hood's "Song of the Shirt" in a doleful tenor.
+
+"You know," he said, "I've thought once or twice I'd like to do
+something--have a business like other fellows. But somehow dressmaking
+never occurred to me. Don't you think the expression of this right pant
+is good? And shall I make this gore bias or on the selvage?"
+
+He wanted to slash one trouser leg.
+
+"Why not?" he demanded when Tish frowned him down. "It's awfully
+fetching, and beauty half-revealed, you know. Do you suppose my
+breastbone will ever straighten out again? It's concave from stooping."
+
+It was after this that Tish made him exercise morning and evening and
+then take a swim in the lake. By the time he was to start back, he was
+in wonderful condition, and even the horse looked saucy and shiny, owing
+to our rubbing him down each day with dried grasses.
+
+The actual leave-taking was rather sad. We'd grown to think a lot of the
+boy and I believe he liked us. He kissed each one of us twice, once for
+himself and once for Dorothea, and flushed a little over doing it, and
+Aggie's eyes were full of tears.
+
+He rode away down the trail like a mixture of Robinson Crusoe and Indian
+brave, his rubbing-fire stick, his sundial with burned figures, and his
+bow and arrow jingling, his eagle feather blowing back in the wind, and
+his moccasined feet thrust into Mr. Willoughby's stirrups, and left us
+desolate. Tish watched him out of sight with set lips and Aggie was
+whimpering on a bank.
+
+"Tish," she said brokenly, "does he recall anything to you?"
+
+"Only my age," said Tish rather wearily, "and that I'm an elderly
+spinster teaching children to defy their parents and committing larceny
+to help them."
+
+"To me," said Aggie softly, "he is young love going out to seek his
+mate. Oh, Tish, do you remember how Mr. Wiggins used to ride by taking
+his work horses to be shod!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+We went home the following day, which was the time the spring-wagon man
+was to meet us. We started very early and were properly clothed and
+hatted when we saw him down the road.
+
+The spring-wagon person came on without hurry and surveyed us as he
+came.
+
+"Well, ladies," he said, stopping before us, "I see you pulled it off
+all right."
+
+"We've had a very nice time, thank you," said Tish, drawing on her
+gloves. "It's been rather lonely, of course."
+
+The spring-wagon person did not speak again until he had reached the
+open road. Then he turned round.
+
+"The horse business was pretty good," he said. "You ought to hev seen
+them folks when he rode out of the wood. Flabbergasted ain't the word.
+They was ding-busted."
+
+Tish whispered to us to show moderate interest and to say as little as
+possible, except to protest our ignorance. And we got the story at last
+like this:--
+
+It seems the newspapers had been full of the attempt Percy was to make,
+and so on the day before quite a crowd had gathered to see him come out
+of the wood.
+
+"Ten of these here automobiles," said the spring-wagon person, "and a
+hay-wagon full of newspaper fellows from the city with cameras, and
+about half the village back home walked out or druv and brought their
+lunches--sort of a picnic. I kep' my eye on the girl and on a Mr.
+Willoughby.
+
+"The story is that Willoughby who was the father's choice--Willoughby
+was pale and twitching and kep' moving about all the time. But the girl,
+she just kep' her eyes on the trail and waited. Noon was the time set,
+or as near it as possible.
+
+"The father talked to the newspaper men mostly. 'I don't think he'll
+do it, boys!' he said. 'He's as soft as milk and he's surprised me by
+sticking it out as long as he has. But mark my words, boys,' he said,
+'he's been living on berries and things he could pick up off the ground,
+and if his physical condition's bad he loses all bets!"
+
+It seems that, just as he said it, somebody pulled out a watch and
+announced "noon." And on the instant Percy was seen riding down the
+trail and whistling. At first they did not know it was he, as they had
+expected him to arrive on foot, staggering with fatigue probably. He
+rode out into the sunlight, still whistling, and threw an unconcerned
+glance over the crowd.
+
+He looked at the trees, and located north by the moss on the trunks, the
+S.-W.P. said, and unslinging his Indian clock he held it in front of
+him, pointing north and south. It showed exactly noon. It was then, and
+not until then, that Percy addressed the astonished crowd.
+
+"Twelve o'clock, gentlemen," he said. "My watch is quite accurate."
+
+Nobody said anything, being, as the S.-W.P. remarked, struck dumb. But
+a moment afterward the hay-wagon started a cheer and the machines took
+it up. Even the father "let loose," as we learned, and the little girl
+sat back in her motor car and smiled through her tears.
+
+But Willoughby was furious. It seems he had recognized the horse.
+"That's my horse," he snarled. "You stole it from me."
+
+"As a matter of fact," Percy retorted, "I found the beast wandering
+loose among the trees and I'm perfectly willing to return him to you. I
+brought him out for a purpose."
+
+"To make a Garrison finish!"
+
+"Not entirely. To prove that you violated the contract by going into the
+forest to see if you could find me and gloat over my misery. Instead you
+found--By the way, Willoughby, did you see any wild-cats?"
+
+"Those three hags are in this!" said Willoughby furiously. "Are you
+willing to swear you made that silly outfit?"
+
+"I am, but not to you."
+
+"And at that minute, if you'll believe me," said the S.-W.P., "the girl
+got out of her machine and walked right up to the Percy fellow. I was
+standing right by and I heard what she said. It was, curious, seeing
+he'd had no help and had gone in naked, as you may say, and came out
+clothed head to foot, with a horse and weapons and a watch, and able to
+make fire in thirty-one seconds, and a tent made of about a thousand
+rabbit skins."
+
+Tish eyed him coldly.
+
+"What did she say?" she demanded severely. "She said: 'Those three dear
+old things!'" replied the S.-W.P. "And she said: 'I hope you kissed
+them for me.'"
+
+"He did indeed," said Aggie dreamily, and only roused when Tish nudged
+her in a rage.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Charlie Sands came to have tea with us yesterday at Tish's. He is just
+back from England and full of the subject.
+
+"But after all," he said, "the Simple Lifers take the palm. Think of it,
+my three revered and dearly beloved spinster friends; think of the
+peace, the holy calm of it! Now, if you three would only drink less tea
+and once in a while would get back to Nature a bit, it would be good for
+you. You're all too civilized."
+
+"Probably," said Tish, pulling down her sleeves to hide her sunburned
+hands. "But do you think people have so much time in the--er--woods?"
+
+"Time!" he repeated. "Why, what is there to do?"
+
+Just then the doorbell rang and a huge box was carried in. Tish had a
+warning and did not wish to open it, but Charlie Sands insisted and cut
+the string. Inside were three sets of sable furs, handsomer than any in
+the church, Tish says, and I know I've never seen any like them.
+
+Tish and I hid the cards, but Aggie dropped hers and Charlie Sands
+pounced on it.
+
+"'The sleeve is now about Dorothea,'" he read aloud, and then, turning,
+eyed us all sternly.
+
+"Now, then," said Charlie Sands, "out with it! What have you been up to
+this time?"
+
+Tish returned his gaze calmly. "We have been in the Maine woods in the
+holy calm," she said. "As for those furs, I suppose a body may buy a set
+of furs if she likes." This, of course, was not a lie. "As for that
+card, it's a mistake." Which it was indeed.
+
+"But--Dorothea!" persisted Charlie Sands.
+
+"Never in my life knew anybody named Dorothea. Did you, Aggie?"
+
+"Never," said Aggie firmly.
+
+Charlie Sands apologized and looked thoughtful. On Tish's remaining
+rather injured, he asked us all out to dinner that night, and almost the
+first thing he ordered was frogs' legs. Aggie got rather white about the
+lips.
+
+"I--I think I'll not take any," she said feebly. "I--I keep thinking of
+Tish tickling their throats with the hairpin, and how Percy--"
+
+We glared at her, but it was too late. Charlie Sands drew up his chair
+and rested his elbows on the table.
+
+"So there was a Percy as well as a Dorothea!" he said cheerfully. "I
+might have known it. Now we'll have the story!"
+
+
+
+
+TISH'S SPY
+
+THE ADVENTURE OF THE RED-HEADED DETECTIVE, THE LADY CHAUFFEUR, AND THE
+MAN WHO COULD NOT TELL THE TRUTH
+
+I
+
+
+It is easy enough, of course, to look back on our Canadian experience
+and see where we went wrong. What I particularly resent is the attitude
+of Charlie Sands.
+
+I am writing this for his benefit. It seems to me that a clean statement
+of the case is due to Tish, and, in less degree, to Aggie and myself.
+
+It goes back long before the mysterious cipher. Even the incident of our
+abducting the girl in the pink tam-o'-shanter was, after all, the
+inevitable result of the series of occurrences that preceded it.
+
+It is my intention to give this series of occurrences in their proper
+order and without bias. Herbert Spencer says that every act of one's
+life is the unavoidable result of every act that has preceded it.
+
+Naturally, therefore, I begin with the engagement by Tish of a girl as
+chauffeur; but even before that there were contributing causes. There
+was the faulty rearing of the McDonald youth, for instance, and Tish's
+aesthetic dancing. And afterward there was Aggie's hay fever, which made
+her sneeze and let go of a rope at a critical moment. Indeed, Aggie's
+hay fever may be said to be one of the fundamental causes, being the
+reason we went to Canada.
+
+It was like this: Along in June of the year before last, Aggie suddenly
+announced that she was going to spend the summer in Canada.
+
+"It's the best thing in the world for hay fever," she said, avoiding
+Tish's eye. "Mrs. Ostermaier says she never sneezed once last year. The
+Northern Lights fill the air with ozone, or something like that."
+
+"Fill the air with ozone!" Tish scoffed. "Fill Mrs. Ostermaier's skull
+with ozone, instead of brains, more likely!"
+
+Tish is a good woman--a sweet woman, indeed; but she has a vein of
+gentle irony, which she inherited from her maternal grandfather, who was
+on the Supreme Bench of his country. However, that spring she was
+inclined to be irritable. She could not drive her car, and that was
+where the trouble really started.
+
+Tish had taken up aesthetic dancing in Mareb, wearing no stays and a
+middy blouse and short skirt; and during a fairy dance, where she was to
+twirl on her right toes, keeping the three other limbs horizontal, she
+twisted her right lower limb severely. Though not incapacitated, she
+could not use it properly; and, failing one day to put on the brake
+quickly, she drove into an open-front butter-and-egg shop.
+
+[This was the time one of the newspapers headed the article: "Even the
+Eggs Scrambled."]
+
+When Tish decided to have a chauffeur for a time she advertised. There
+were plenty of replies, but all of the applicants smoked cigarettes--a
+habit Tish very properly deplores. The idea of securing a young woman
+was, I must confess, mine.
+
+"Plenty of young women drive cars," I said, "and drive well. And, at
+least, they don't light a cigarette every time one stops to let a train
+go by."
+
+"Huh!" Tish commented. "And have a raft of men about all the time!"
+
+Nevertheless, she acted on the suggestion, advertising for a young woman
+who could drive a car and had no followers. Hutchins answered.
+
+She was very pretty and not over twenty; but, asked about men, her face
+underwent a change, almost a hardening. "You'll not be bothered with
+men," she said briefly. "I detest them!"
+
+And this seemed to be the truth. Charlie Sands, for instance, for whose
+benefit this is being written, absolutely failed to make any impression
+on her. She met his overtures with cold disdain. She was also adamant
+to the men at the garage, succeeding in having the gasoline filtered
+through a chamois skin to take out the water, where Tish had for years
+begged for the same thing without success.
+
+Though a dashing driver, Hutchins was careful. She sat on the small of
+her back and hurled us past the traffic policemen with a smile.
+
+[Her name was really Hutchinson; but it took so long to say it at the
+rate she ran the car that Tish changed it to Hutchins.]
+
+Really the whole experiment seemed to be an undoubted success, when
+Aggie got the notion of Canada into her head. Now, as it happened,
+owing to Tish's disapproval, Aggie gave up the Canada idea in favor
+of Nantucket, some time in June; but she had not reckoned with Tish's
+subconscious self. Tish was interested that spring in the subconscious
+self.
+
+You may remember that, only a year or so before, it had been the fourth
+dimension.
+
+[She became convinced that if one were sufficiently earnest one could go
+through closed doors and see into solids. In the former ambition she was
+unsuccessful, obtaining only bruises and disappointment; but she did
+develop the latter to a certain extent, for she met the laundress going
+out one day and, without a conscious effort, she knew that she had the
+best table napkins pinned to her petticoat. She accused the woman
+sternly--and she had six!]
+
+"Nantucket!" said Tish. "Why Nantucket?"
+
+"I have a niece there, and you said you hated Canada."
+
+"On the contrary," Tish replied, with her eyes partly shut, "I find
+that my subconscious self has adopted and been working on the Canadian
+suggestion. What a wonderful thing is this buried and greater ego!
+Worms, rifles, fishing-rods, 'The Complete Angler,' mosquito netting,
+canned goods, and sleeping-bags, all in my mind and in orderly array!"
+
+"Worms!" I said, with, I confess, a touch of scorn in my voice. "If you
+will tell me, Tish Carberry--"
+
+"Life preservers," chanted Tish's subconscious self, "rubber blankets,
+small tent, folding camp-beds, a camp-stove, a meat-saw, a wood-saw,
+and some beads and gewgaws for placating the Indians." Then she opened
+her eyes and took up her knitting. "There are no worms in Canada,
+Lizzie, just as there are no snakes in Ireland. They were all destroyed
+during the glacial period."
+
+"There are plenty of worms in the United States," I said with spirit.
+"I dare say they could crawl over the border--unless, of course, they
+object to being British subjects."
+
+She ignored me, however, and, getting up, went to one of her bureau
+drawers. We saw then that her subconscious self had written down
+lists of various things for the Canadian excursion. There was one
+headed Foodstuffs. Others were: Necessary Clothing: Camp Outfit;
+Fishing-Tackle; Weapons of Defense: and Diversions. Under this last
+heading it had placed binoculars, yarn and needles, life preservers,
+a prayer-book, and a cribbage-board.
+
+"Boats," she said, "we can secure from the Indians, who make them, I
+believe, of hollow logs. And I shall rent a motor boat. Hutchins says
+she can manage one. When she's not doing that she can wash dishes."
+
+[We had been rather chary of motor boats, you may remember, since the
+time on Lake Penzance, when something jammed on our engine, and we had
+gone madly round the lake a number of times, with people on various
+docks trying to lasso us with ropes.]
+
+Considering that it was she who had started the whole thing, and got
+Tish's subconscious mind to working, Aggie was rather pettish.
+
+"Huh!" she said. "I can't swim, and you know it, Tish. Those canoe
+things turn over if you so much as sneeze in them."
+
+"You'll not sneeze," said Tish. "The Northern Lights fill the air with
+ozone."
+
+Aggie looked at me helplessly; but I could do nothing. Only the year
+before, Tish, as you may recall, had taken us out into the Maine woods
+without any outfit at all, and we had lived on snared rabbits, and
+things that no Christian woman ought to put into her stomach. This time
+we were at least to go provisioned and equipped.
+
+"Where are we going?" Aggie asked.
+
+"Far from a white man," said Tish. "Away from milk wagons and children
+on velocipedes and the grocer calling up every morning for an order.
+We'll go to the Far North, Aggie, where the red man still treads his
+native forests; we'll make our camp by some lake, where the deer come at
+early morning to drink and fish leap to see the sunset."
+
+Well, it sounded rather refreshing, though I confess that, until Tish
+mentioned it, I had always thought that fish leaped in the evening to
+catch mosquitoes.
+
+We sent for Hutchins at once. She was always respectful, but never
+subservient. She stood in the doorway while Tish explained.
+
+"How far north?" she said crisply. Tish told her. "We'll have no
+cut-and-dried destination," she said. "There's a little steamer goes up
+the river I have in mind. We'll get off when we see a likely place."
+
+"Are you going for trout or bass?"
+
+Tish was rather uncertain, but she said bass on a chance, and Hutchins
+nodded her approval.
+
+"If it's bass, I'll go," she said. "I'm not fond of trout-fishing."
+
+"We shall have a motor boat. Of course I shall not take the car."
+
+Hutchins agreed indifferently. "Don't you worry about the motor boat,"
+she said. "Sometimes they go, and sometimes they don't. And I'll help
+round the camp; but I'll not wash dishes."
+
+"Why not?" Tish demanded.
+
+"The reason doesn't really matter, does it? What really concerns you is
+the fact."
+
+Tish stared at her; but instead of quailing before Tish's majestic eye
+she laughed a little.
+
+"I've camped before," she said. "I'm very useful about a camp. I like to
+cook; but I won't wash dishes. I'd like, if you don't mind, to see the
+grocery order before it goes."
+
+Well, Aggie likes to wash dishes if there is plenty of hot water; and
+Hannah, Tish's maid, refusing to go with us on account of Indians, it
+seemed wisest to accept Hutchins's services.
+
+Hannah's defection was most unexpected. As soon as we reached our
+decision, Tish ordered beads for the Indians; and in the evenings we
+strung necklaces, and so on, while one of us read aloud from the works
+of Cooper. On the second evening thus occupied, Hannah, who is allowed
+to come into Tish's sitting-room in the evening and knit, suddenly
+burst into tears and refused to go.
+
+"My scalp's as good to me as it is to anybody, Miss Tish," she said
+hysterically; and nothing would move her.
+
+She said she would run no risk of being cooked over her own camp-fire;
+and from that time on she would gaze at Tish for long periods
+mournfully, as though she wanted to remember how she looked when she was
+gone forever.
+
+Except for Hannah, everything moved smoothly. Tish told Charlie Sands
+about the plan, and he was quite enthusiastic.
+
+"Great scheme!" he said. "Eat a broiled black bass for me. And take the
+advice of one who knows: don't skimp on your fishing-tackle. Get the
+best. Go light on the canned goods, if necessary; but get the best reels
+and lines on the market. Nothing in life hurts so much," he said
+impressively, "as to get a three-pound bass to the top of the water and
+have your line break. I've had a big fellow get away like that and chase
+me a mile with its thumb on its nose." This last, of course, was purely
+figurative.
+
+He went away whistling. I wish he had been less optimistic. When we came
+back and told him the whole story, and he sat with his mouth open and
+his hair, as he said, crackling at the roots, I reminded him with some
+bitterness that he had encouraged us. His only retort was to say that
+the excursion itself had been harmless enough; but that if three elderly
+ladies, church members in good standing, chose to become freebooters and
+pirates the moment they got away from a corner policeman, they need not
+blame him.
+
+The last thing he said that day in June was about fishing-worms.
+
+"Take 'em with you," he said. "They charge a cent apiece for them up
+there, assorted colors, and there's something stolid and British about a
+Canadian worm. The fish aren't crazy about 'em. On the other hand, our
+worms here are--er--vivacious, animated. I've seen a really brisk and
+on-to-its-job United States worm reach out and clutch a bass by the
+gills."
+
+I believe it was the next day that Tish went to the library and read
+about worms. Aggie and I had spent the day buying tackle, according to
+Charlie Sands's advice. We got some very good rods with nickel-plated
+reels for two dollars and a quarter, a dozen assorted hooks for each
+person, and a dozen sinkers. The man wanted to sell us what he called a
+"landing net," but I took a good look at it and pinched Aggie.
+
+"I can make one out of a barrel hoop and mosquito netting," I whispered;
+so we did not buy it.
+
+Perhaps he thought we were novices, for he insisted on showing us all
+sorts of absurd things--trolling-hooks, he called them; gaff hooks for
+landing big fish and a spoon that was certainly no spoon and did not
+fool us for a minute, being only a few hooks and a red feather. He asked
+a dollar and a quarter for it!
+
+[I made one that night at home, using a bit of red feather from a
+duster. It cost me just three cents. Of that, as of Hutchins, more
+later.]
+
+Aggie, whose idea of Canada had been the Hotel Frontenac, had grown
+rather depressed as our preparations proceeded. She insisted that night
+on recalling the fact that Mr. Wiggins had been almost drowned in
+Canada.
+
+"He went with the Roof and Gutter Club, Lizzie," she said, "and he was a
+beautiful swimmer; but the water comes from the North Pole, freezing
+cold, and the first thing he knew--"
+
+The telephone bell rang just then. It was Tish.
+
+"I've just come from the library, Lizzie," she said. "We'd better raise
+the worms. We've got a month to do it in. Hutchins and I will be round
+with the car at eight o'clock to-night. Night is the time to get them."
+
+She refused to go into details, but asked us to have an electric flash
+or two ready and a couple of wooden pails. Also she said to wear
+mackintoshes and rubbers. Just before she rang off, she asked me to see
+that there was a package of oatmeal on hand, but did not explain. When I
+told Aggie she eyed me miserably.
+
+"I wish she'd be either more explicit or less," she said. "We'll be
+arrested again. I know it!"
+
+[Now and then Tish's enthusiasms have brought us into collision with the
+law--not that Tish has not every respect for law and order, but that she
+is apt to be hasty and at times almost unconventional.]
+
+"You remember," said Aggie, "that time she tried to shoot the sheriff,
+thinking he was a train robber? She started just like this--reading up
+about walking-tours, and all that. I--I'm nervous, Lizzie."
+
+I was staying with Aggie for a few days while my apartment was being
+papered. To soothe Aggie's nerves I read aloud from Gibbon's "Rome"
+until dinner-time, and she grew gradually calmer.
+
+"After all, Lizzie," she said, "she can't get us into mischief with two
+wooden pails and a package of oatmeal."
+
+Tish and Hutchins came promptly at eight and we got into the car. Tish
+wore the intent and dreamy look that always preceded her enterprises.
+There was a tin sprinkling-can, quite new, in the tonneau, and we placed
+our wooden pails beside it and the oatmeal in it. I confess I was
+curious, but to my inquiries Tish made only one reply:--
+
+"Worms!"
+
+Now I do not like worms. I do not like to touch them. I do not even like
+to look at them. As the machine went along I began to have a creepy
+loathing of them. Aggie must have been feeling the same way, for when my
+hand touched hers she squealed.
+
+Over her shoulder Tish told her plan. She said it was easy to get
+fishing-worms at night and that Hutchins knew of a place a few miles out
+of town where the family was away and where there would be plenty.
+
+"We'll put them in boxes of earth," she said, "and feed them coffee or
+tea grounds one day and oatmeal water the next. They propagate rapidly.
+We'll have a million to take with us. If we only have a hundred thousand
+at a cent apiece, that's a clear saving of a thousand dollars."
+
+"We could sell some," I suggested sarcastically; for Tish's enthusiasms
+have a way of going wrong.
+
+But she took me seriously. "If there are any fishing clubs about," she
+said, "I dare say they'll buy them; and we can turn the money over to
+Mr. Ostermaier for the new organ."
+
+Tish had bought the organ and had an evening concert with it before we
+turned off the main road into a private drive.
+
+"This is the place," Hutchins said laconically.
+
+Tish got out and took a survey. There was shrubbery all round and a very
+large house, quite dark, in the foreground.
+
+"Drive onto the lawn, Hutchins," she said. "When the worms come up, the
+lamps will dazzle them and they'll be easy to capture."
+
+We bumped over a gutter and came to a stop in the middle of the lawn.
+
+"It would be better if it was raining," Tish said. "You know, yourself,
+Lizzie, how they come up during a gentle rain. Give me the
+sprinkling-can."
+
+I do not wish to lay undue blame on Hutchins, who was young; but it was
+she who suggested that there would probably be a garden hose somewhere
+and that it would save time. I know she went with Tish round the corner
+of the house, and that they returned in ten minutes or so, dragging a
+hose.
+
+"I broke a tool-house window," Tish observed, "but I left fifty cents
+on the sill to replace it. It's attached at the other end. Run back,
+Hutchins, and turn on the water; but not too much. We needn't drown the
+little creatures."
+
+Well, I have never seen anything work better. Aggie, who had refused to
+put a foot out of the car, stood up in it and held the hose. As fast as
+she wet a bit of lawn, we followed with the pails. I spread my
+mackintosh out and knelt on it.
+
+[Illustration: As fast as she wet a bit of lawn, we followed with the
+pails]
+
+The thing took skill. The worms had a way of snapping back into their
+holes like lightning.
+
+Tish got about three to my one, and talked about packing them in moss
+and ice, and feeding them every other day. Hutchins, however, stood on
+the lawn, with her hands in her pockets, and watched the house.
+
+Suddenly, without warning, Aggie turned the hose directly on my left ear
+and held it there.
+
+"There's somebody coming!" she cried. "Merciful Heavens, what'll I do
+with the hose?"
+
+"You can turn it away from me!" I snapped.
+
+So she did, and at that instant a young man emerged from the shrubbery.
+
+He did not speak at once. Probably he could not. I happened to look at
+Hutchins, and, for all her usual _savoir-faire_, as Charlie Sands called
+it, she was clearly uncomfortable.
+
+Tish, engaged in a struggle at that moment and sitting back like a
+robin, did not see him at once.
+
+"Well!" said the young man; and again: "Well, upon my word!"
+
+He seemed out of breath with surprise; and he took off his hat and
+mopped his head with a handkerchief. And, of course, as though things
+were not already bad enough, Aggie sneezed at that instant, as she
+always does when she is excited; and for just a second the hose was
+on him.
+
+It was unexpected and he almost staggered. He looked at all of us,
+including Hutchins, and ran his handkerchief round inside his collar.
+Then he found his voice.
+
+"Really," he said, "this is awfully good of you. We do need rain--don't
+we?"
+
+Tish was on her feet by that time, but she could not think of anything
+to say.
+
+"I'm sorry if I startled you," said the young man. "I--I'm a bit
+startled myself."
+
+"There is nothing to make a fuss about!" said Hutchins crisply. "We are
+getting worms to go fishing."
+
+"I see," said the young man. "Quite natural, I'm sure. And where are you
+going fishing?"
+
+Hutchins surprised us all by rudely turning her back on him. Considering
+we were on his property and had turned his own hose on him, a little
+tact would have been better.
+
+Tish had found her voice by that time. "We broke a window in the
+tool-house," she said; "but I put fifty cents on the sill."
+
+"Thank you," said the young man.
+
+Hutchins wheeled at that and stared at him in the most disagreeable
+fashion; but he ignored her.
+
+"We are trespassing," said Tish; "but I hope you understand. We thought
+the family was away."
+
+"I just happened to be passing through," he explained. "I'm awfully
+attached to the place--for various reasons. Whenever I'm in town I spend
+my evenings wandering through the shrubbery and remembering--er--happier
+days."
+
+"I think the lamps are going out," said Hutchins sharply. "If we're to
+get back to town--"
+
+"Ah!" he broke in. "So you have come out from the city?"
+
+"Surely," said Hutchins to Tish, "it is unnecessary to give this
+gentleman any information about ourselves! We have done no damage--"
+
+"Except the window," he said.
+
+"We've paid for that," she said in a nasty tone; and to Tish: "How do we
+know this place is his? He's probably some newspaper man, and if you
+tell him who you are this whole thing will be in the morning paper, like
+the eggs."
+
+"I give you my word of honor," he said, "that I am nothing of the sort;
+in fact, if you will give me a little time I'd--I'd like to tell all
+about myself. I've got a lot to say that's highly interesting, if you'll
+only listen."
+
+Hutchins, however, only gave him a cold glance of suspicion and put the
+pails in the car. Then she got in and sat down.
+
+"I take it," he said to her, "that you decline either to give or to
+receive any information."
+
+"Absolutely!"
+
+He sighed then, Aggie declares.
+
+"Of course," he said, "though I haven't really the slightest curiosity,
+I could easily find out, you know. Your license plates--"
+
+"Are under the cushion I'm sitting on," said Hutchins, and started the
+engine.
+
+"Really, Hutchins," said Tish, "I don't see any reason for being so
+suspicious. I have always believed in human nature and seldom have I
+been disappointed. The young man has done nothing to justify rudeness.
+And since we are trespassing on his place--"
+
+"Huh!" was all Hutchins said.
+
+The young man sauntered over to the car, with his hands thrust into this
+coat pockets. He was nice-looking, especially then, when he was smiling.
+
+"Hutchins!" he said. "Well, that's a clue anyhow. It--it's an uncommon
+name. You didn't happen to notice a large 'No-Trespassing!' sign by the
+gate, did you?"
+
+Hutchins only looked ahead and ignored him. As Tish said afterward, we
+had a good many worms, anyhow; and, as the young man and Hutchins had
+clearly taken an awful dislike to each other at first sight, the best
+way to avoid trouble was to go home. So she got into the car. The young
+man helped her and took off his hat.
+
+"Come out any time you like," he said affably. "I'm not here at all in
+the daytime, and the grounds are really rather nice. Come out and get
+some roses. We've some pretty good ones--English importations. If you
+care to bring some children from the tenements out for a picnic, please
+feel free to do it. We're not selfish."
+
+Hutchins rudely started the car before he had finished; but he ignored
+her and waved a cordial farewell to the rest of us.
+
+"Bring as many as you like," he called. "Sunday is a good day. Ask
+Miss--Miss Hutchins to come out and bring some friends along."
+
+We drove back at the most furious rate. Tish was at last compelled to
+remonstrate with Hutchins.
+
+"Not only are we going too fast," she said, "but you were really rude to
+that nice young man."
+
+"I wish I had turned the hose on him and drowned him!" said Hutchins
+between her teeth.
+
+
+
+
+II
+
+
+Hutchins brought a newspaper to Tish the next morning at breakfast, and
+Tish afterwards said her expression was positively malevolent in such a
+young and pretty woman.
+
+The newspaper said that an attempt had been made to rob the Newcomb
+place the night before, but that the thieves had apparently secured
+nothing but a package of oatmeal and a tin sprinkling-can, which they
+had abandoned on the lawn. Some color, however, was lent to the fear
+that they had secured an amount of money, from the fact that a silver
+half-dollar had been found on the window sill of a tool-house. The
+Newcomb family was at its summer home on the Maine coast.
+
+"You see," Hutchins said to Tish, "that man didn't belong there at all.
+He was just impertinent and--laughing in his sleeve."
+
+Tish was really awfully put out, having planned to take the Sunday
+school there for a picnic. She was much pleased, however, at Hutchins's
+astuteness.
+
+"I shall take her along to Canada," she said to me. "The girl has
+instinct, which is better than reason. Her subconsciousness is unusually
+active."
+
+Looking back, as I must, and knowing now all that was in her small head
+while she whistled about the car, or all that was behind her smile,
+one wonders if women really should have the vote. So many of them are
+creatures of sex and guile. A word from her would have cleared up so
+much, and she never spoke it!
+
+Well, we spent most of July in getting ready to go. Charlie Sands said
+the mosquitoes and black flies would be gone by August, and we were in
+no hurry.
+
+We bought a good tent, with a diagram of how to put it up, some folding
+camp-beds, and a stove. The day we bought the tent we had rather a
+shock, for as we left the shop the suburban youth passed us. We ignored
+him completely, but he lifted his hat. Hutchins, who was waiting in
+Tish's car, saw him, too, and went quite white with fury.
+
+Shortly after that, Hannah came in one night and said that a man was
+watching Tish's windows. We thought it was imagination, and Tish gave
+her a dose of sulphur and molasses--her liver being sluggish.
+
+"Probably an Indian, I dare say," was Tish's caustic comment.
+
+In view of later developments, however, it is a pity we did not
+investigate Hannah's story; for Aggie, going home from Tish's late one
+night in Tish's car, had a similar experience, declaring that a small
+machine had followed them, driven by a heavy-set man with a mustache.
+She said, too, that Hutchins, swerving sharply, had struck the smaller
+machine a glancing blow and almost upset it.
+
+It was about the middle of July, I believe, that Tish received the
+following letter:--
+
+ _Madam_: Learning that you have decided to take a fishing-trip in
+ Canada, I venture to offer my services as guide, philosopher, and
+ friend. I know Canada thoroughly; can locate bass, as nearly as it
+ lies in a mortal so to do; can manage a motor launch; am thoroughly
+ at home in a canoe; can shoot, swim, and cook--the last indifferently
+ well; know the Indian mind and my own--and will carry water and chop
+ wood.
+
+ I do not drink, and such smoking as I do will, if I am engaged, be
+ done in the solitude of the woods.
+
+ I am young and of a cheerful disposition. My object is not money, but
+ only expenses paid and a chance to forget a recent and still poignant
+ grief. I hope you will see the necessity for such an addition to your
+ party, and allow me to subscribe myself, madam,
+
+ Your most obedient servant,
+
+ J. UPDIKE.
+
+
+Tish was much impressed; but Hutchins, in whose judgment she began to
+have the greatest confidence, opposed the idea.
+
+"I wouldn't think of it," she said briefly.
+
+"Why? It's a frank, straightforward letter."
+
+"He likes himself too much. And you should always be suspicious of
+anything that's offered too cheap."
+
+So the Updike application was refused. I have often wondered since what
+would have been the result had we accepted it!
+
+The worms were doing well, though Tish found that Hannah neglected them,
+and was compelled to feed them herself. On the day before we started, we
+packed them carefully in ice and moss, and fed them. That was the day
+the European war was declared.
+
+"Canada is at war," Tish telephoned. "The papers say the whole country
+is full of spies, blowing up bridges and railroads."
+
+"We can still go to the seashore," I said. "The bead things will do for
+the missionary box to Africa."
+
+"Seashore nothing!" Tish retorted. "We're going, of course,--just as we
+planned. We'll keep our eyes open; that's all. I'm not for one side or
+the other, but a spy's a spy."
+
+Later that evening she called again to say there were rumors that the
+Canadian forests were bristling with German wireless outfits.
+
+"I've a notion to write J. Updike, Lizzie, and find out whether he knows
+anything about wireless telegraphy," she said, "only there's so little
+time. Perhaps I can find a book that gives the code."
+
+[This is only pertinent as showing Tish's state of mind. As a matter of
+fact, she did not write to Updike at all.]
+
+Well, we started at last, and I must say they let us over the border
+with a glance; but they asked us whether we had any firearms. Tish's
+trunk contained a shotgun and a revolver; but she had packed over the
+top her most intimate personal belongings, and they were not disturbed.
+
+"Have you any weapons?" asked the inspector.
+
+"Do we look like persons carrying weapons?" Tish demanded haughtily. And
+of course we did not. Still, there was an untruth of the spirit and none
+of us felt any too comfortable. Indeed, what followed may have been a
+punishment on us for deceit and conspiracy.
+
+Aggie had taken her cat along--because it was so fond of fish, she said.
+And, between Tish buying ice for the worms and Aggie getting milk for
+the cat, the journey was not monotonous; but on returning from one of
+her excursions to the baggage-car, Tish put a heavy hand on my shoulder.
+
+"That boy's on the train, Lizzie!" she said. "He had the impudence to
+ask me whether I still drive with the license plates under a cushion.
+English roses--importations!" said Tish, and sniffed. "You don't suppose
+he went into that tent shop and asked about us?"
+
+"He might," I retorted; "but, on the other hand, there's no reason why
+our going to Canada should keep the rest of the United States at home!"
+
+However, the thing did seem queer, somehow. Why had he told us things
+that were not so? Why had he been so anxious to know who we were? Why,
+had he asked us to take the Sunday-school picnic to a place that did not
+belong to him?
+
+"He may be going away to forget some trouble. You remember what he said
+about happier days," said Tish.
+
+"That was Updike's reason too," I relied. "Poignant grief!"
+
+For just a moment our eyes met. The same suspicion had occurred to us
+both. Well, we agreed to say nothing to Aggie or Hutchins, for fear of
+upsetting them, and the next hour or so was peaceful.
+
+Hutchins read and Aggie slept. Tish and I strung beads for the Indians,
+and watched the door into the next car. And, sure enough, about the
+middle of the afternoon he appeared and stared in at us. He watched us
+for quite a time, smoking a cigarette as he did so. Then he came in and
+bent down over Tish.
+
+"You didn't take the children out for the picnic, did you?" he said.
+
+"I did not!" Tish snapped.
+
+"I'm sorry. Never saw the place look so well!"
+
+"Look here," Tish said, putting down her beads; "what were you doing
+there that night anyhow? You don't belong to the family."
+
+He looked surprised and then grieved.
+
+"You've discovered that, have you?" he said. "I did, you know--word of
+honor! They've turned me off; but I love the old place still, and on
+summer nights I wander about it, recalling happier days."
+
+Hutchins closed her book with a snap, and he sighed.
+
+"I perceive that we are overheard," he said. "Some time I hope to tell
+you the whole story. It's extremely sad. I'll not spoil the beginning of
+your holiday with it."
+
+All the time he had been talking he held a piece of paper in his hand.
+When he left us Tish went back thoughtfully to her beads.
+
+"It just shows, Lizzie," she said, "how wrong we are to trust to
+appearances. That poor boy--"
+
+I had stooped into the aisle and was picking up the piece of paper which
+he had accidentally dropped as he passed Hutchins. I opened it and read
+aloud to Tish and Aggie, who had wakened:--
+
+"'Afraid you'll not get away with it! The red-haired man in the car
+behind is a plain-clothes man.'"
+
+Tish has a large fund of general knowledge, gained through Charlie
+Sands; so what Aggie and I failed to understand she interpreted at once.
+
+"A plain-clothes man," she explained, "is a detective dressed as a
+gentleman. It's as plain as pikestaff! The boy's received this warning
+and dropped it. He has done something he shouldn't and is escaping to
+Canada!"
+
+I do not believe, however, that we should have thought of his being a
+political spy but for the conductor of the train. He proved to be a very
+nice person, with eight children and a toupee; and he said that Canada
+was honeycombed with spies in the pay of the German Government.
+
+"They're sending wireless messages all the time, probably from remote
+places," he said. "And, of course, their play now is to blow up the
+transcontinental railroads. Of course the railroads have an army of
+detectives on the watch."
+
+"Good Heavens!" Aggie said, and turned pale.
+
+Well, our pleasure in the journey was ruined. Every time the whistle
+blew on the engine we quailed, and Tish wrote her will then and there on
+the back of an envelope. It was while she was writing that the truth
+came to her.
+
+"That boy!" she said. "Don't you see it all? That note was a warning to
+him. He's a spy and the red-haired man is after him."
+
+None of us slept that night though Tish did a very courageous thing
+about eleven o'clock, when she was ready for bed. I went with her. We
+had put our dressing-gowns over our nightrobes, and we went back to the
+car containing the spy.
+
+He had not retired, but was sitting alone, staring ahead moodily. The
+red-haired man was getting ready for bed, just opposite. Tish spoke
+loudly, so the detective should hear.
+
+"I have come back," Tish said, "to say that we know everything. A word
+to the wise, Mister Happier Days! Don't try any of your tricks!"
+
+He sat, with his mouth quite open, and stared at us: but the red-haired
+man pretended to hear nothing and took off his other shoe.
+
+None of us slept at all except Hutchins. Though we had told her nothing,
+she seemed inherently to distrust the spy. When, on arriving at the town
+where we were to take the boat, he offered to help her off with Aggie's
+cat basket, which she was carrying, she snubbed him.
+
+"I can do it myself," she said coldly; "and if you know when you're well
+off you'll go back to where you came from. Something might happen to you
+here in the wilderness."
+
+"I wish it would," he replied in quite a tragic manner.
+
+[As Tish said then, a man is probably often forced by circumstances into
+hateful situations. No spy can really want to be a spy with every brick
+wall suggesting, as it must, a firing-squad.]
+
+Well, to make a long story short, we took the little steamer that goes
+up the river three times a week to take groceries and mail to the
+logging-camps, and the spy and the red-haired detective went along. The
+spy seemed to have quite a lot of luggage, but the detective had only a
+suitcase.
+
+Tish, watching the detective, said his expression grew more and more
+anxious as we proceeded up the river. Cottages gave place to
+logging-camps and these to rocky islands, with no sign of life; still,
+the spy stayed on the steamer, and so, of course, did the detective.
+
+Tish went down and examined the luggage. She reported that the spy was
+traveling under the name of McDonald and that the detective's suitcase
+was unmarked. Mr. McDonald had some boxes and a green canoe. The
+detective had nothing at all. There were no other passengers.
+
+We let Aggie's cat out on the boat and he caught a mouse almost
+immediately, and laid it in the most touching manner at the detective's
+feet; but he was in a very bad humor and flung it over the rail. Shortly
+after that he asked Tish whether she intended to go to the Arctic
+Circle.
+
+"I don't know that that's any concern of yours," Tish said. "You're not
+after me, you know."
+
+He looked startled and muttered something into his mustache.
+
+"It's perfectly clear what's wrong with him," Tish said. "He's got to
+stick to Mr. McDonald, and he hasn't got a tent in that suitcase, or
+even a blanket. I don't suppose he knows where his next meal's coming
+from."
+
+She was probably right, for I saw the crew of the boat packing a box or
+two of crackers and an old comfort into a box; and Aggie overheard the
+detective say to the captain that if he would sell him some fishhooks he
+would not starve anyhow.
+
+Tish found an island that suited her about three o'clock that afternoon,
+and we disembarked. Mr. McDonald insisted on helping the crew with our
+stuff, which they piled on a large flat rock; but the detective stood on
+the upper deck and scowled down at us. Tish suggested that he was a
+woman-hater.
+
+"They know so many lawbreaking women," she said, "it's quite natural."
+
+Having landed us, the boat went across to another island and deposited
+Mr. McDonald and the green canoe. Tish, who had talked about a lodge in
+some vast wilderness, complained at that; but when the detective got off
+on a little tongue of the mainland, in sight of both islands, she said
+the place was getting crowded and she had a notion to go farther.
+
+The first thing she did was to sit on a box and open a map. The Canadian
+Pacific was only a few miles away through the woods!
+
+Hutchins proved herself a treasure. She could work all round the three
+of us; she opened boxes and a can of beans for supper with the same
+hatchet, and had tea made and the beans heated while Tish was selecting
+a site for the tent.
+
+But--and I remembered this later--she watched the river at intervals,
+with her cheeks like roses from the exertion. She was really a pretty
+girl--only, when no one was looking, her mouth that day had a way of
+setting itself firmly, and she frowned at the water.
+
+We, Hutchins and I, set up the stove against a large rock, and when the
+teakettle started to boil it gave the river front a homey look. Sitting
+on my folding-chair beside the stove, with a cup of tea in my hand and
+a plate of beans on a doily on a packing-box beside me, I was entirely
+comfortable. Through the glasses I could see the red-haired man on
+the other shore sitting on a rock, with his head in his hands; but Mr.
+McDonald had clearly located on the other side of his island and was
+not in sight.
+
+Aggie and Tish were putting up the tent, and Hutchins was feeding the
+tea grounds to the worms, which had traveled comfortably, when I saw a
+canoe coming up the river. I called to Tish about it.
+
+"An Indian!" she said calmly. "Get the beads, Aggie; and put my shotgun
+on that rock, where he can see it." She stood and watched him.
+"Primitive man, every inch of him!" she went on. "Notice his uncovered
+head. Notice the freedom, almost the savagery, of the way he uses that
+paddle. I wish he would sing. You remember, in Hiawatha, how they sing
+as they paddle along?"
+
+She got the beads and went to the water's edge; but the Indian stooped
+just then and, picking up a Panama hat, put it on his head.
+
+"I have called," he said, "to see whether I can interest you in a set of
+books I am selling. I shall detain you only a moment. Sixty-three steel
+engravings by well-known artists; best hand-made paper; and the work
+itself is of high educational value."
+
+Tish suddenly put the beads behind her back and said we did not expect
+to have any time to read. We had come into the wilderness to rest our
+minds.
+
+"You are wrong, I fear," said the Indian. "Personally I find that I can
+read better in the wilds than anywhere else. Great thoughts in great
+surroundings! I take Nietzsche with me when I go fishing."
+
+Tish had the wretched beads behind her all the time; and, to make
+conversation, more than anything else, she asked about venison. He
+shrugged his shoulders. J. Fenimore Cooper had not prepared us for an
+Indian who shrugged his shoulders.
+
+"We Indians are allowed to kill deer," he said; "but I fear you are
+prohibited. I am not even permitted to sell it."
+
+"I should think," said Tish sharply, "that, since we are miles from a
+game warden, you could safely sell us a steak or two."
+
+He gazed at her disapprovingly. "I should not care to break the law,
+madam," he said.
+
+Then he picked up his paddle and took himself and his scruples and his
+hand-made paper and his sixty-three steel engravings down the river.
+
+"Primitive man!" I said to Tish, from my chair. "Notice the freedom,
+almost the savagery, with which he swings that paddle."
+
+We had brought a volume of Cooper along, not so much to read as to
+remind us how to address the Indians. Tish said nothing, but she got the
+book and flung it far out into the river.
+
+There were a number of small annoyances the first day or two. Hutchins
+was having trouble with the motor launch, which the steamer had towed up
+the day we came, and which she called the "Mebbe." And another civilized
+Indian, with a gold watch and a cigarette case, had rented us a leaky
+canoe for a dollar a day.
+
+[We patched the leak with chewing gum, which Aggie always carried for
+indigestion; and it did fairly well, so long as the gum lasted.]
+
+Then, on the second night, there was a little wind, and the tent
+collapsed on us, the ridgepole taking Aggie across the chest. It was
+that same night, I think, when Aggie's cat found a porcupine in the
+woods, and came in looking like a pincushion.
+
+What with chopping firewood for the stove, and carrying water, and
+bailing out the canoe, and with the motor boat giving one gasp and then
+dying for every hundred times somebody turned over the engine, we had no
+time to fish for two days.
+
+The police agent fished all day from a rock, for, of course, he had
+no boat; but he seemed to catch nothing. At times we saw him digging
+frantically, as though for worms. What he dug with I do not know; but,
+of course, he got no worms. Tish said if he had been more civil she
+would have taken something to him and a can of worms; but he had been
+rude, especially to Aggie's cat, and probably the boat would bring him
+things.
+
+What with getting settled and everything, we had not much time to think
+about the spy. It was on the third day, I believe, that he brought his
+green canoe to the open water in front of us and anchored there, just
+beyond earshot.
+
+He put out a line and opened a book; and from that time on he was a part
+of the landscape every day from 10 A.M. to 4 P.M. At noon he would eat
+some sort of a lunch, reading as he ate.
+
+He apparently never looked toward us, but he was always there. It was
+the most extraordinary thing. At first we thought he had found a
+remarkable fishing-place; but he seemed to catch very few fish. It was
+Tish, I think, who found the best explanation.
+
+"He's providing himself with an alibi," she stated. "How can he be a spy
+when we see him all day long? Don't you see how clever it is?"
+
+It was the more annoying because we had arranged a small cove for
+soap-and-water bathing, hanging up a rod for bath-towels and suspending
+a soap-dish and a sponge-holder from an overhanging branch. The cove was
+well shielded by brush and rocks from the island, but naturally was open
+to the river.
+
+It was directly opposite this cove that Mr. McDonald took up his
+position.
+
+This compelled us to bathe in the early morning, while the water was
+still cold, and resulted in causing Aggie a most uncomfortable half-hour
+on the fourth morning of our stay.
+
+She was the last one in the pool, and Tish absent-mindedly took her
+bathrobe and slippers back to the camp when she went. Tish went out
+in the canoe shortly after. She was learning to use one, with a life
+preserver on--Tish, of course, not the canoe. And Mr. McDonald arriving
+soon after, Aggie was compelled to sit in the water for two hours and
+twenty minutes. When Hutchins found her she was quite blue.
+
+This was the only disagreement we had all summer: Aggie's refusing to
+speak to Tish that entire day. She said Mr. McDonald had seen her head
+and thought it was some sort of swimming animal, and had shot at her.
+
+Mr. McDonald said afterward he knew her all the time, and was uncertain
+whether she was taking a cure for something or was trying to commit
+suicide. He said he spent a wretched morning. At five o'clock that
+evening we began to hear a curious tapping noise from the spy's island.
+It would last for a time, stop, and go on.
+
+Hutchins said it was woodpeckers; but Tish looked at me significantly.
+
+"Wireless!" she said. "What did I tell you?"
+
+That decided her next move, for that evening she put some tea and canned
+corn and a rubber blanket into the canoe; and in fear and trembling I
+went with her.
+
+"It's going to rain, Lizzie," she said, "and after all, that detective
+may be surly; but he's doing his duty by his country. It's just as
+heroic to follow a spy up here, and starve to death watching him, as it
+is to storm a trench--and less showy. And I've something to tell him."
+
+The canoe tilted just then, and only by heroic effort, were we able to
+calm it.
+
+"Then why not go comfortably in the motor boat?"
+
+Tish stopped, her paddle in the air. "Because I can't make that dratted
+engine go," she said, "and because I believe Hutchins would drown us all
+before she'd take any help to him. It's my belief that she's known him
+somewhere. I've seen her sit on a rock and look across at him with
+murder in her eyes."
+
+A little wind had come up, and the wretched canoe was leaking, the
+chewing gum having come out. Tish was paddling; so I was compelled to
+sit over the aperture, thus preventing water from coming in. Despite my
+best efforts, however, about three inches seeped in and washed about me.
+It was quite uncomfortable.
+
+The red-haired man was asleep when we landed. He had hung the comfort
+over a branch, like a tent, and built a fire at the end of it. He had
+his overcoat on, buttoned to the chin, and his head was on his
+suit-case. He sat up and looked at us, blinking.
+
+"We've brought you some tea and some canned corn," Tish said; "and a
+rubber blanket. It's going to rain."
+
+He slid out of the tent, feet first, and got up; but when he tried to
+speak he sneezed. He had a terrible cold.
+
+"I might as well say at once," Tish went on, "that we know why you are
+here--"
+
+"The deuce you do!" he said hoarsely.
+
+"We do not particularly care about you, especially since the way you
+acted to a friendly and innocent cat--one can always judge a man by the
+way he treats dumb animals; but we sympathize with your errand. We'll
+even help if we can."
+
+"Then the--the person in question has confided in you?"
+
+"Not at all," said Tish loftily. "I hope we can put two and two
+together. Have you got a revolver?"
+
+He looked startled at that. "I have one," he said; "but I guess I'll not
+need it. The first night or two a skunk hung round; two, in fact--mother
+and child--but I think they're gone."
+
+"Would you like some fish?"
+
+"My God, no!"
+
+This is a truthful narrative. That is exactly what he said.
+
+"I'll tell you what I do need, ladies," he went on: "If you've got
+a spare suit of underwear over there, I could use it. It'd stretch,
+probably. And I'd like a pen and some ink. I must have lost my fountain
+pen out of my pocket stooping over the bank to wash my face."
+
+"Do you know the wireless code?" Tish asked suddenly.
+
+"Wireless?"
+
+"I have every reason to believe," she said impressively, "that one of
+the great trees on that island conceals a wireless outfit."
+
+"I see!" He edged back a little from us both.
+
+"I should think," Tish said, eyeing him, "that a knowledge of the
+wireless code would be essential to you in your occupation."
+
+"We--we get a smattering of all sorts of things," he said; but he was
+uneasy--you could see that with half an eye.
+
+He accompanied us down to the canoe; but once, when Tish turned
+suddenly, he ducked back as though he had been struck and changed color.
+He thanked us for the tea and corn, and said he wished we had a spare
+razor--but, of course, he supposed not. Then:--
+
+"I suppose the--the person in question will stay as long as you do?" he
+asked, rather nervously.
+
+"It looks like it," said Tish grimly. "I've no intention of being driven
+away, if that's what you mean. We'll stay as long as the fishing's
+good."
+
+He groaned under his breath. "The whole d--d river is full of fish," he
+said. "They crawled up the bank last night and ate all the crackers I'd
+saved for to-day. Oh, I'll pay somebody out for this, all right! Good
+gracious, ladies, your boat's full of water!"
+
+"It has a hole in it," Tish replied and upturned it to empty it.
+
+When he saw the hole his eyes stuck out. "You can't go out in that leaky
+canoe! It's suicidal!"
+
+"Not at all," Tish assured him. "My friend here will sit on the leak.
+Get in quick, Lizzie. It's filling."
+
+The last we saw of the detective that night he was standing on the bank,
+staring after us. Afterward, when a good many things were cleared up, he
+said he decided that he'd been asleep and dreamed the whole thing--the
+wireless, and my sitting on the hole in the canoe, and the wind tossing
+it about, and everything--only, of course, there was the tea and the
+canned corn!
+
+We did our first fishing the next day. Hutchins had got the motor boat
+going, and I put over the spoon I had made from the feather duster.
+After going a mile or so slowly I felt a tug, and on drawing my line in
+I found I had captured a large fish. I wrapped the line about a part of
+the engine and Tish put the barrel hoop with the netting underneath it.
+The fish was really quite large--about four feet, I think--and it broke
+through the netting. I wished to hit it with the oar, but Hutchins said
+that might break the fin and free it. Unluckily we had not brought
+Tish's gun, or we might have shot it.
+
+At last we turned the boat round and went home, the fish swimming
+alongside, with its mouth open. And there Aggie, who is occasionally
+almost inspired, landed the fish by the simple expedient of getting out
+of the boat, taking the line up a bank and wrapping it round a tree. By
+all pulling together we landed the fish successfully. It was forty-nine
+inches by Tish's tape measure.
+
+Tish did not sleep well that night. She dreamed that the fish had a red
+mustache and was a spy in disguise. When she woke she declared there was
+somebody prowling round the tent.
+
+She got her shotgun and we all sat up in bed for an hour or so.
+
+Nothing happened, however, except that Aggie cried out that there was a
+small animal just inside the door of the tent. We could see it, too,
+though faintly. Tish turned the shotgun on it and it disappeared; but
+the next morning she found she had shot one of her shoes to pieces.
+
+
+
+
+III
+
+
+It was the day Tish began her diary that we discovered the red-haired
+man's signal. Tish was compelled to remain at home most of the day,
+breaking in another pair of shoes, and she amused herself by watching
+the river and writing down interesting things. She had read somewhere of
+the value of such records of impressions:--
+
+ 10 A.M. Gull on rock. Very pretty. Frightened away by the McDonald
+ person, who has just taken up his customary position. Is he reading
+ or watching this camp?
+
+ 10.22. Detective is breakfasting--through glasses, he is eating canned
+ corn. Aggie--pickerel, from bank.
+
+ 10.40. Aggie's cat, beside her, has caught a small fish. Aggie declares
+ that the cat stole one of her worms and held it in the water. I think
+ she is mistaken.
+
+ 11. Most extraordinary thing--Hutchins has asked permission to take pen
+ and ink across to the detective! Have consented.
+
+ 11.20. Hutchins is still across the river. If I did not know differently
+ I should say she and the detective are quarreling. He is whittling
+ something. Through glasses, she appears to stamp her foot.
+
+ 11.30. Aggie has captured a small sunfish. Hutchins is still across the
+ river. He seems to be appealing to her for something--possibly the
+ underwear. We have none to spare.
+
+ 11.40. Hutchins is an extraordinary girl. She hates men, evidently. She
+ has had some sort of quarrel with the detective and has returned flushed
+ with battle. Mr. McDonald called to her as she passed, but she ignored
+ him.
+
+ 12, noon. Really, there is something mysterious about all this. The
+ detective was evidently whittling a flagpole. He has erected it now,
+ with a red silk handkerchief at end. It hangs out over the water.
+ Aggie--bass, but under legal size.
+
+ 1.15 P.M. The flag puzzles Hutchins. She is covertly watching it. It is
+ evidently a signal--but to whom? Are the secret-service men closing in
+ on McDonald?
+
+ 1. Aggie--pike!
+
+ 2. On consulting map find unnamed lake only a few miles away. Shall
+ investigate to-morrow.
+
+ 3. Steamer has just gone. Detective now has canoe, blue in color. Also
+ food. He sent off his letter.
+
+ 4. Fed worms. Lizzie thinks they know me. How kindness is its own
+ reward! Mr. McDonald is drawing in his anchor, which is a large stone
+ fastened to a rope. Shall take bath.
+
+
+Tish's notes ended here. She did not take the bath after all, for Mr.
+McDonald made us a call that afternoon.
+
+He beached the green canoe and came up the rocks calmly and smilingly.
+Hutchins gave him a cold glance and went on with what she was doing,
+which was chopping a plank to cook the fish on. He bowed cheerfully to
+all of us and laid a string of fish on a rock.
+
+"I brought a little offering," he said, looking at Hutchins's back.
+"The fishing isn't what I expected but if the young lady with the hatchet
+will desist, so I can make myself heard, I've found a place where there
+are fish! This biggest fellow is three and a quarter pounds."
+
+Hutchins chopped harder than ever, and the plank flew up, striking her
+in the chest; but she refused all assistance, especially from Mr.
+McDonald, who was really concerned. He hurried to her and took the
+hatchet out of her hand, but in his excitement he was almost uncivil.
+
+"You obstinate little idiot!" he said. "You'll kill yourself yet."
+
+To my surprise, Hutchins, who had been entirely unemotional right along,
+suddenly burst into tears and went into the tent. Mr. McDonald took a
+hasty step or two after her, realizing, no doubt, that he had said more
+than he should to a complete stranger; but she closed the fly of the
+tent quite viciously and left him standing, with his arms folded,
+staring at it.
+
+It was at that moment he saw the large fish, hanging from a tree. He
+stood for a moment staring at it and we could see that he was quite
+surprised.
+
+"It is a fish, isn't it?" he said after a moment. "I--I thought for a
+moment it was painted on something."
+
+He sat down suddenly on one of our folding-chairs and looked at the
+fish, and then at each of us in turn.
+
+"You know," he said, "I didn't think there were such fish! I--you
+mustn't mind my surprise." He wiped his forehead with his handkerchief.
+"Just kick those things I brought into the river, will you? I apologize
+for them."
+
+"Forty-nine inches," Tish said. "We expect to do better when we really
+get started. This evening we shall go after its mate, which is probably
+hanging round."
+
+"Its mate?" he said, rather dazed. "Oh, I see. Of course!"
+
+He still seemed to doubt his senses, for he went over and touched it
+with his finger. "Ladies," he said, "I'm not going after the--the mate.
+I couldn't land it if I did get it. I am going to retire from the
+game--except for food; but I wish, for the sake of my reason, you'd tell
+me what you caught it with."
+
+Well, you may heartily distrust a person; but that is no reason why you
+should not answer a simple question. So I showed him the thing I had
+made--and he did not believe me!
+
+"You're perfectly right," he said. "Every game has its secrets. I had no
+business to ask. But you haven't caught me with that feather-duster
+thing any more than you caught that fish with it. I don't mind your not
+telling me. That's your privilege. But isn't it rather rubbing it in to
+make fun of me?"
+
+"Nothing of the sort!" Aggie said angrily. "If you had caught it--"
+
+"My dear lady," he said, "I couldn't have caught it. The mere shock of
+getting such a bite would have sent me out of my boat in a swoon." He
+turned to Tish. "I have only one disappointment," he said, "that it
+wasn't one of _our_ worms that did the work."
+
+Tish said afterward she was positively sorry for him, he looked so
+crestfallen. So, when he started for his canoe she followed him.
+
+"Look here," she said; "you're young, and I don't want to see you get
+into trouble. Go home, young man! There are plenty of others to take
+your place."
+
+He looked rather startled. "That's it exactly," he said, after a moment.
+"As well as I can make out there are about a hundred. If you think," he
+said fiercely, raising his voice, "that I'm going to back out and let
+somebody else in, I'm not. And that's flat."
+
+"It's a life-and-death matter," said Tish.
+
+"You bet it's a life-and-death matter."
+
+"And--what about the--the red-headed man over there?"
+
+His reply amazed us all. "He's harmless," he said. "I don't like him,
+naturally; but I admire the way he holds on. He's making the best of a
+bad business."
+
+"Do you know why he's here?"
+
+He looked uneasy for once.
+
+"Well, I've got a theory," he replied; but, though his voice was calm,
+he changed color.
+
+"Then perhaps you'll tell me what that signal means?"
+
+Tish gave him the glasses and he saw the red flag. I have never seen a
+man look so unhappy.
+
+"Holy cats!" he said, and almost dropped the glasses. "Why, he--he must
+be expecting somebody!"
+
+"So I should imagine," Tish commented dryly. "He sent a letter by the
+boat to-day."
+
+"The h--l he did!" And then: "That's ridiculous! You're mistaken. As
+a--as a matter of fact, I went over there the other night and
+commandeered his fountain pen."
+
+So it had not fallen out of his pocket!
+
+"I'll be frank, ladies," he said. "It's my object just now to keep that
+chap from writing letters. It doesn't matter why, but it's vital."
+
+He was horribly cast down when we told him about Hutchins and the pen
+and ink.
+
+"So that's it!" he said gloomily. "And the flag's a signal, of course.
+Ladies, you have done it out of the kindness of your hearts, I know; but
+I think you have wrecked my life."
+
+He took a gloomy departure and left us all rather wrought up. Who were
+we, as Tish said, to imperil a fellow man? And another thing--if there
+was a reward on him, why should we give it to a red-haired detective,
+who was rude to harmless animals and ate canned corn for breakfast?
+
+With her customary acumen Tish solved the difficulty that very evening.
+
+"The simplest thing," she said, "of course, would be to go over
+during the night and take the flag away; but he may have more red
+handkerchiefs. Then, too, he seems to be a light sleeper, and it would
+be awkward to have him shoot at us."
+
+She sat in thought for quite a while. Hutchins was watching the sunset,
+and seemed depressed and silent. Tish lowered her voice.
+
+"There's no reason why we shouldn't have a red flag, too," she said. "It
+gives us an even chance to get in on whatever is about to happen. We can
+warn Mr. McDonald, for one thing, if any one comes here. Personally I
+think he is unjustly suspected."
+
+[But Tish was to change her mind very soon.]
+
+We made the flag that night, by lantern light, out of Tish's red silk
+petticoat. Hutchins was curious, I am sure; but we explained nothing.
+And we fastened it obliquely over the river, like the one on the other
+side.
+
+Tish's change of heart, which occurred the next morning, was due
+to a most unfortunate accident that happened to her at nine o'clock.
+Hutchins, who could swim like a duck, was teaching Tish to swim, and
+she was learning nicely. Tish had put a life-preserver on, with a
+clothes-line fastened to it, and Aggie was sitting on the bank holding
+the rope while she went through the various gestures.
+
+Having completed the lesson Hutchins went into the woods for red
+raspberries, leaving Tish still practicing in the water with Aggie
+holding the rope. Happening to sneeze, the line slipped out of her hand,
+and she had the agonizing experience of seeing Tish carried away by the
+current.
+
+I was washing some clothing in the river a few yards down the stream
+when Tish came floating past. I shall never forget her expression or my
+own sense of absolute helplessness.
+
+"Get the canoe," said Tish, "and follow. I'm heading for Island Eleven."
+
+[Illustration: "Get the canoe and follow. I'm heading for Island Eleven"]
+
+She was quite calm, though pale; but, in her anxiety to keep well above
+the water, she did what was almost a fatal thing--she pushed the
+life-preserver lower down round her body. And having shifted the
+floating center, so to speak, without warning her head disappeared and
+her feet rose in the air.
+
+For a time it looked as though she would drown in that position; but
+Tish rarely loses her presence of mind. She said she knew at once what
+was wrong. So, though somewhat handicapped by the position, she replaced
+the cork belt under her arms and emerged at last.
+
+Aggie had started back into the woods for Hutchins; but, with one thing
+and another, it was almost ten before they returned together. Tish by
+that time was only a dot on the horizon through the binocular, having
+missed Island Eleven, as she explained later, by the rope being caught
+on a submerged log, which deflected her course.
+
+We got into the motor boat and followed her, and, except for a most
+unjust sense of irritation that I had not drowned myself by following
+her in the canoe, she was unharmed. We got her into the motor boat and
+into a blanket, and Aggie gave her some blackberry cordial at once. It
+was some time before her teeth ceased chattering so she could speak.
+When she did it was to announce that she had made a discovery.
+
+"He's a spy, all right!" she said. "And that Indian is another. Neither
+of them saw me as I floated past. They were on Island Eleven. Mr.
+McDonald wrote something and gave it to the Indian. It wasn't a letter
+or he'd have sent it by the boat. He didn't even put it in an envelope,
+so far as I could see. It's probably in cipher."
+
+Well, we took her home, and she had a boiled egg at dinner.
+
+The rest of us had fish. It is one of Tish's theories that fish should
+only be captured for food, and that all fish caught must be eaten. I do
+not know when I have seen fish come as easy. Perhaps it was the worms,
+which had grown both long and fat, so that one was too much for a hook;
+and we cut them with scissors, like tape or ribbon. Aggie and I finally
+got so sick of fish that while Tish's head was turned we dropped in our
+lines without bait. But, even at that, Aggie, reeling in her line to go
+home, caught a three-pound bass through the gills and could not shake
+it off.
+
+We tried to persuade Tish to lie down that afternoon, but she refused.
+
+"I'm not sick," she said, "even if you two idiots did try to drown me.
+And I'm on the track of something. If that was a letter, why didn't he
+send it by the boat?"
+
+Just then her eye fell on the flagpole, and we followed her horrified
+gaze. The flag had been neatly cut away!
+
+Tish's eyes narrowed. She looked positively dangerous; and within five
+minutes she had cut another flag out of the back breadth of the
+petticoat and flung it defiantly in the air. Who had cut away the
+signal--McDonald or the detective? We had planned to investigate the
+nameless lake that afternoon, Tish being like Colonel Roosevelt in her
+thirst for information, as well as in the grim pugnacity that is her
+dominant characteristic; but at the last minute she decided not to go.
+
+"You and Aggie go, Lizzie," she said. "I've got something on hand."
+
+"Tish!" Aggie wailed. "You'll drown yourself or something."
+
+"Don't be a fool!" Tish snapped. "There's a portage, but you and Lizzie
+can carry the canoe across on your heads. I've seen pictures of it. It's
+easy. And keep your eyes open for a wireless outfit. There's one about,
+that's sure!"
+
+"Lots of good it will do to keep our eyes open," I said with some
+bitterness, "with our heads inside the canoe!"
+
+We finally started and Hutchins went with us. It was Hutchins, too, who
+voiced the way we all felt when we had crossed the river and were
+preparing for what she called the portage.
+
+"She wants to get us out of the way, Miss Lizzie," she said. "Can you
+imagine what mischief she's up to?"
+
+"That is not a polite way to speak of Miss Tish, Hutchins," I said
+coldly. Nevertheless, my heart sank.
+
+Hutchins and I carried the canoe. It was a hot day and there was no
+path. Aggie, who likes a cup of hot tea at five o'clock, had brought
+along a bottle filled with tea, and a small basket containing sugar and
+cups.
+
+Personally I never had less curiosity about a lake. As a matter of fact
+I wished there was no lake. Twice--being obliged, as it were, to walk
+blindly and the canoe being excessively heavy--I, who led the way, ran
+the front end of the thing against the trunk of a tree, and both
+Hutchins and I sat down violently, under the canoe as a result of the
+impact.
+
+To add to the discomfort of the situation Aggie declared that we were
+being followed by a bear, and at the same instant stepped into a swamp
+up to her knees. She became calm at once, with the calmness of despair.
+
+"Go and leave me, Lizzie!" she said. "He is just behind those bushes. I
+may sink before he gets me--that's one comfort."
+
+Hutchins found a log and, standing on it, tried to pull her up; but she
+seemed firmly fastened. Aggie went quite white; and, almost beside
+myself, I poured her a cup of hot tea, which she drank. I remember she
+murmured Mr. Wiggins's name, and immediately after she yelled that the
+bear was coming.
+
+It was, however, the detective who emerged from the bushes. He got Aggie
+out with one good heave, leaving both her shoes gone forever; and while
+she collapsed, whimpering, he folded his arms and stared at all of us
+angrily.
+
+"What sort of damnable idiocy is this?" he demanded in a most unpleasant
+tone.
+
+Aggie revived and sat upright.
+
+"That's our affair, isn't it?" said Hutchins curtly.
+
+"Not by a blamed sight!" was his astonishing reply.
+
+"The next time I am sinking in a morass, let me sink," Aggie said, with
+simple dignity.
+
+He did not speak another word, but gave each of us a glance of the most
+deadly contempt, and finished up with Hutchins.
+
+"What I don't understand," he said furiously, "is why you have to lend
+yourself to this senile idiocy. Because some old women choose to sink
+themselves in a swamp is no reason why you should commit suicide!"
+
+Aggie said afterward only the recollection that he had saved her life
+prevented her emptying the tea on him. I should hardly have known
+Hutchins.
+
+"Naturally," she said in a voice thick with fury, "you are in a position
+to insult these ladies, and you do. But I warn you, if you intend to
+keep on, this swamp is nothing. We like it here. We may stay for months.
+I hope you have your life insured."
+
+Perhaps we should have understood it all then. Of course Charlie Sands,
+for whom I am writing this, will by this time, with his keen mind,
+comprehend it all; but I assure you we suspected nothing.
+
+How simple, when you line it up: The country house and the garden hose;
+the detective, with no camp equipment; Mr. McDonald and the green
+canoe; the letter on the train; the red flag; the girl in the pink
+tam-o'-shanter--who has not yet appeared, but will shortly; Mr.
+McDonald's incriminating list--also not yet, but soon.
+
+How inevitably they led to what Charlie Sands has called our crime!
+
+The detective, who was evidently very strong, only glared at her. Then
+he swung the canoe up on his head and, turning about, started back the
+way we had come. Though Hutchins and Aggie were raging, I was resigned.
+My neck was stiff and my shoulders ached. We finished our tea in silence
+and then made our way back to the river.
+
+I have now reached Tish's adventure. It is not my intention in this
+record to defend Tish. She thought her conclusions were correct. Charlie
+Sands says she is like Shaw--she has got a crooked point of view, but
+she believes she is seeing straight. And, after a while, if you look her
+way long enough you get a sort of mental astigmatism.
+
+So I shall confess at once that, at the time, I saw nothing immoral in
+what she did that afternoon while we were having our adventure in the
+swamp.
+
+I was putting cloths wrung out of arnica and hot water on my neck when
+she came home, and Hutchins was baking biscuit--she was a marvelous
+cook, though Aggie, who washed the dishes, objected to the number of
+pans she used.
+
+Tish ignored both my neck and the biscuits, and, marching up the bank,
+got her shotgun from the tent and loaded it.
+
+"We may be attacked at any time," she said briefly; and, getting the
+binocular, she searched the river with a splendid sweeping glance. "At
+any time. Hutchins, take these glasses, please, and watch that we are
+not disturbed."
+
+"I'm baking biscuit, Miss Letitia."
+
+"Biscuit!" said Tish scornfully. "Biscuit in times like these?"
+
+She walked up to the camp stove and threw the oven door open; but,
+though I believe she had meant to fling them into the river, she changed
+her mind when she saw them.
+
+"Open a jar of honey, Hutchins," she said, and closed the oven; but
+her voice was abstracted. "You can watch the river from the stove,
+Hutchins," she went on. "Miss Aggie and Miss Lizzie and I must confer
+together."
+
+So we went into the tent, and Tish closed and fastened it.
+
+"Now," she said, "I've got the papers."
+
+"Papers?"
+
+"The ones Mr. McDonald gave that Indian this morning. I had an idea he'd
+still have them. You can't hurry an Indian. I waited in the bushes until
+he went in swimming. Then I went through his pockets."
+
+"Tish Carberry!" cried Aggie.
+
+"These are not times to be squeamish," Tish said loftily. "I'm neutral;
+of course; but Great Britain has had this war forced on her and I'm
+going to see that she has a fair show. I've ordered all my stockings
+from the same shop in London, for twenty years, and squarer people never
+lived. Look at these--how innocent they look, until one knows!"
+
+She produced two papers from inside her waist. I must confess that, at
+first glance, I saw nothing remarkable.
+
+"The first one looks," said Tish, "like a grocery order. It's meant to
+look like that. It's relieved my mind of one thing--McDonald's got no
+wireless or he wouldn't be sending cipher messages by an Indian."
+
+It was written on a page torn out of a pocket notebook and the page was
+ruled with an inch margin at the left. This was the document:--
+
+ 1 Dozen eggs.
+ 20 Yards fishing-line.
+ 1 pkg. Needles--anything to sew a button on.
+ 1 doz. A B C bass hooks.
+ 3 lbs. Meat--anything so it isn't fish.
+ 1 bot. Ink for fountain pen.
+ 3 Tins sardines.
+ 1 Extractor.
+
+
+Well, I could not make anything of it; but, of course, I have not Tish's
+mind. Aggie was almost as bad.
+
+"What's an extractor?" she asked.
+
+"Exactly!" said Tish. "What is an extractor? Is the fellow going to pull
+teeth? No! He needed an _e_; so he made up a word."
+
+She ran her finger down the first letters of the second column.
+"D-y-n-a-m-i-t-e!" she said triumphantly. "Didn't I tell you?"
+
+
+
+
+IV
+
+
+Well, there it was--staring at us. I felt positively chilled. He looked
+so young and agreeable, and, as Aggie said, he had such nice teeth. And
+to know him for what he was--it was tragic! But that was not all.
+
+"Add the numbers!" said Tish. "Thirty-one tons, perhaps, of dynamite!
+And that's only part," said Tish. "Here's the most damning thing of
+all--a note to his accomplice!"
+
+"Damning" is here used in the sense of condemnatory. We are none of us
+addicted to profanity.
+
+We read the other paper, which had been in a sealed envelope, but
+without superscription. It is before me as I write, and I am copying it
+exactly:--
+
+ I shall have to see you. I'm going crazy! Don't you realize that this
+ is a matter of life and death to me? Come to Island Eleven to-night,
+ won't you? And give me a chance to talk, anyhow. Something has got to
+ be done and done soon. I'm desperate!
+
+
+Aggie sneezed three times in sheer excitement; for anyone can see how
+absolutely incriminating the letter was. It was not signed, but it was
+in the same writing as the list.
+
+Tish, who knows something about everything, said the writing denoted an
+unscrupulous and violent nature.
+
+"The _y_ is especially vicious," she said. "I wouldn't trust a man who
+made a _y_ like that to carry a sick child to the doctor!"
+
+The thing, of course, was to decide at once what measures to take. The
+boat would not come again for two days, and to send a letter by it to
+the town marshal or sheriff, or whatever the official is in Canada who
+takes charge of spies, would be another loss of time.
+
+"Just one thing," said Tish. "I'll plan this out and find some way to
+deal with the wretch; but I wouldn't say anything to Hutchins. She's a
+nice little thing, though she is a fool about a motor boat. There's no
+case in scaring her."
+
+For some reason or other, however, Hutchins was out of spirits that
+night.
+
+"I hope you're not sick, Hutchins?" said Tish.
+
+"No, indeed, Miss Tish."
+
+"You're not eating your fish."
+
+"I'm sick of fish," she said calmly. "I've eaten so much fish that when
+I see a hook I have a mad desire to go and hang myself on it."
+
+"Fish," said Tish grimly, "is good for the brain. I do not care to
+boast, but never has my mind been so clear as it is to-night."
+
+Now certainly, though Tish's tone was severe, there was nothing in it to
+hurt the girl; but she got up from the cracker box on which she was
+sitting, with her eyes filled with tears.
+
+"Don't mind me. I'm a silly fool," she said; and went down to the river
+and stood looking out over it.
+
+It quite spoiled our evening. Aggie made her a hot lemonade and, I
+believe, talked to her about Mr. Wiggins, and how, when he was living,
+she had had fits of weeping without apparent cause. But if the girl was
+in love, as we surmised, she said nothing about it. She insisted that it
+was too much fish and nervous strain about the Mebbe.
+
+"I never know," she said, "when we start out whether we're going to get
+back or be marooned and starve to death on some island."
+
+Tish said afterward that her subconscious self must have taken the word
+"marooned" and played with it; for in ten minutes or so her plan popped
+into her head.
+
+"'Full-panoplied from the head of Jove,' Lizzie," she said. "Really, it
+is not necessary to think if one only has faith. The supermind does it
+all without effort. I do not dislike the young man; but I must do my
+duty."
+
+Tish's plan was simplicity itself. We were to steal his canoe.
+
+"Then we'll have him," she finished. "The current's too strong there for
+him to swim to the mainland."
+
+"He might try it and drown," Aggie objected. "Spy or no spy, he's
+somebody's son."
+
+"War is no time to be chicken-hearted," Tish replied.
+
+I confess I ate little all that day. At noon Mr. McDonald came and
+borrowed two eggs from us.
+
+"I've sent over to a store across country, by my Indian guide,
+philosopher, and friend," he said, "for some things I needed; but I dare
+say he's reading Byron somewhere and has forgotten it."
+
+"Guide, philosopher, and friend!" I caught Tish's eye. McDonald had
+written the Updike letter! McDonald had meant to use our respectability
+to take him across the border!
+
+We gave him the eggs, but Tish said afterward she was not deceived for a
+moment.
+
+"The Indian has told him," she said, "and he's allaying our suspicions.
+Oh, he's clever enough! 'Know the Indian mind and my own!'" she quoted
+from the Updike letter. "'I know Canada thoroughly.' 'My object is not
+money.' I should think not!"
+
+Tish stole the green canoe that night. She put on the life preserver and
+we tied the end of the rope that Aggie had let slip to the canoe. The
+life-preserver made it difficult to paddle, Tish said, but she felt
+more secure. If she struck a rock and upset, at least she would not
+drown; and we could start after her at dawn with the Mebbe.
+
+"I'll be somewhere down the river," she said, "and safe enough, most
+likely, unless there are falls."
+
+Hutchins watched in a puzzled way, for Tish did not leave until dusk.
+
+"You'd better let me follow you with the launch, Miss Tish," she said.
+"Just remember that if the canoe sinks you're tied to it."
+
+"I'm on serious business to-night, Hutchins," Tish said ominously. "You
+are young, and I refuse to trouble your young mind; but your ears are
+sharp. If you hear any shooting, get the boat and follow me."
+
+The mention of shooting made me very nervous. We watched Tish as long as
+we could see her; then we returned to the tent, and Aggie and I
+crocheted by the hanging lantern. Two hours went by. At eleven o'clock
+Tish had not returned and Hutchins was in the motor boat, getting it
+ready to start.
+
+"I like courage, Miss Lizzie," she said to me; "but this thing of
+elderly women, with some sort of bug, starting out at night in canoes is
+too strong for me. Either she's going to stay in at night or I'm going
+home."
+
+"Elderly nothing!" I said, with some spirit. "She is in the prime of
+life. Please remember, Hutchins, that you are speaking of your employer.
+Miss Tish has no bug, as you call it."
+
+"Oh, she's rational enough," Hutchins retorted: "but she is a woman of
+one idea and that sort of person is dangerous."
+
+I was breathless at her audacity.
+
+"Come now, Miss Lizzie," she said, "how can I help when I don't know
+what is being done? I've done my best up here to keep you comfortable
+and restrain Miss Tish's recklessness; but I ought to know something."
+
+She was right; and, Tish or no Tish, then and there I told her. She was
+more than astonished. She sat in the motor boat, with a lantern at her
+feet, and listened.
+
+"I see," she said slowly. "So the--so Mr. McDonald is a spy and has sent
+for dynamite to destroy the railroad! And--and the red-haired man is a
+detective! How do you know he is a detective?"
+
+I told her then about the note we had picked up from beside her in the
+train, and because she was so much interested she really seemed quite
+thrilled. I brought the cipher grocery list and the other note down to
+her.
+
+"It's quite convincing, isn't it?" she said. "And--and exciting! I don't
+know when I've been so excited."
+
+She really was. Her cheeks were flushed. She looked exceedingly pretty.
+
+"The thing to do," she said, "is to teach him a lesson. He's young. He
+mayn't always have had to stoop to such--such criminality. If we can
+scare him thoroughly, it might do him a lot of good."
+
+I said I was afraid Tish took a more serious view of things and would
+notify the authorities. And at that moment there came two or three
+shots--then silence.
+
+I shall never forget the ride after Tish and how we felt when we failed
+to find her; for there was no sign of her. The wind had come up, and,
+what with seeing Tish tied to that wretched canoe and sinking with it or
+shot through the head and lying dead in the bottom of it, we were about
+crazy. As we passed Island Eleven we could see the spy's camp-fire and
+his tent, but no living person.
+
+At four in the morning we gave up and started back, heavy-hearted.
+What, therefore, was our surprise to find Tish sitting by the fire in
+her bathrobe, with a cup of tea in her lap and her feet in a foot-tub of
+hot water! Considering all we had gone through and that we had obeyed
+orders exactly, she was distinctly unjust. Indeed, at first she quite
+refused to speak to any of us.
+
+"I do think, Tish," Aggie said as she stood shivering by the fire, "that
+you might at least explain where you have been. We have been going up
+and down the river for hours, burying you over and over."
+
+Tish took a sip of tea, but said nothing.
+
+"You said," I reminded her, "that if there was shooting, we were to
+start after you at once. When we heard the shots, we went, of course."
+
+Tish leaned over and, taking the teakettle from the fire, poured more
+water into the foot-tub. Then at last she turned to speak.
+
+"Bring some absorbent cotton and some bandages, Hutchins," she said. "I
+am bleeding from a hundred wounds. As for you"--she turned fiercely on
+Aggie and me--"the least you could have done was to be here when I
+returned, exhausted, injured, and weary; but, of course, you were
+gallivanting round the lake in an upholstered motor boat."
+
+Here she poured more water into the foot-tub and made it much too hot.
+This thawed her rather, and she explained what was wrong. She was
+bruised, scratched to the knees, and with a bump the size of an egg on
+her forehead, where she had run into a tree.
+
+The whole story was very exciting. It seems she got the green canoe
+without any difficulty, the spy being sound asleep in his tent; but
+about that time the wind came up and Tish said she could not make an
+inch of progress toward our camp.
+
+The chewing gum with which we had repaired our canoe came out at that
+time and the boat began to fill, Tish being unable to sit over the leak
+and paddle at the same time. So, at last, she gave up and made for the
+mainland.
+
+"The shooting," Tish said with difficulty, "was by men from the Indian
+camp firing at me. I landed below the camp, and was making my way as
+best I could through the woods when they heard me moving. I believe they
+thought it was a bear."
+
+I think Tish was more afraid of the Indians, in spite of their
+sixty-three steel engravings and the rest of it, than she pretended,
+though she said she would have made herself known, but at that moment
+she fell over a fallen tree and for fifteen minutes was unable to speak
+a word. When at last she rose the excitement was over and they had gone
+back to their camp.
+
+"Anyhow," she finished, "the green canoe is hidden a couple of miles
+down the river, and I guess Mr. McDonald is safe for a time. Lizzie, you
+can take a bath to-morrow safely."
+
+Tish sat up most of the rest of the night composing a letter to the
+authorities of the town, telling them of Mr. McDonald and enclosing
+careful copies of the incriminating documents she had found.
+
+During the following morning the river was very quiet. Through the
+binocular we were able to see Mr. McDonald standing on the shore of his
+island and looking intently in our direction, but naturally we paid no
+attention to him.
+
+The red-haired man went in swimming that day and necessitated our
+retiring to the tent for an hour and a half; but at noon Aggie's
+naturally soft heart began to assert itself.
+
+"Spy or no spy," she said to Tish, "we ought to feed him."
+
+"Huh!" was Tish's rejoinder. "There is no sense is wasting good food on
+a man whose hours are numbered."
+
+We were surprised, however, to find that Hutchins, who had detested Mr.
+McDonald, was rather on Aggie's side.
+
+"The fact that he has but a few more hours," she said to Tish, "is an
+excellent reason for making those hours as little wretched as possible."
+
+It was really due to Hutchins, therefore, that Mr. McDonald had a
+luncheon. The problem of how to get it to him was a troublesome one, but
+Tish solved it with her customary sagacity.
+
+"We can make a raft," she said, "a small one, large enough to hold a
+tray. By stopping the launch some yards above the island we can float
+his luncheon to him quite safely."
+
+That was the method we ultimately pursued and it worked most
+satisfactorily.
+
+Hutchins baked hot biscuits; and, by putting a cover over the pan, we
+were enabled to get them to him before they cooled.
+
+We prepared a really appetizing luncheon of hot biscuits, broiled ham,
+marmalade, and tea, adding, at Aggie's instructions, a jar of preserved
+peaches, which she herself had put up.
+
+Tish made the raft while we prepared the food, and at exactly half-past
+twelve o'clock we left the house. Mr. McDonald saw us coming and was
+waiting smilingly at the upper end of the island.
+
+"Great Scott!" he said. "I thought you were never going to hear me.
+Another hour and I'd have made a swim for it, though it's suicidal with
+this current. I'll show you where you can come in so you won't hit a
+rock."
+
+Hutchins had stopped the engine of the motor boat and we threw out the
+anchor at a safe distance from the shore.
+
+"We are not going to land," said Tish, "and I think you know perfectly
+well the reason why."
+
+"Oh, now," he protested; "surely you are going to land! I've had an
+awfully uncomfortable accident--my canoe's gone."
+
+"We know that," Tish said calmly. "As a matter of fact, we took it."
+
+Mr. McDonald sat down suddenly on a log at the water's edge and looked
+at us.
+
+"Oh!" he said.
+
+"You may not believe it," Tish said, "but we know everything--your
+dastardly plot, who the red-haired man is, and all the destruction and
+wretchedness you are about to cause."
+
+"Oh, I say!" he said feebly. "I wouldn't go as far as that. I'm--I'm
+not such a bad sort."
+
+"That depends on the point of view," said Tish grimly.
+
+Aggie touched her on the arm then and reminded her that the biscuits
+were getting cold; but Tish had a final word with him.
+
+"Your correspondence has fallen into my hands, young man," she said,
+"and will be turned over to the proper authorities."
+
+"It won't tell them anything they don't know," he said doggedly. "Look
+here, ladies: I am not ashamed of this thing. I--I am proud of it. I am
+perfectly willing to yell it out loud for everybody to hear. As a matter
+of fact, I think I will."
+
+Mr. McDonald stood up suddenly and threw his head back; but here
+Hutchins, who had been silent, spoke for the first time.
+
+"Don't be an idiot!" she said coldly. "We have something here for you to
+eat if you behave yourself."
+
+He seemed to see her then for the first time, for he favored her with a
+long stare.
+
+"Ah!" he said. "Then you are not entirely cold and heartless?"
+
+She made no reply to this, being busy in assisting Aggie to lower the
+raft over the side of the boat.
+
+"Broiled ham, tea, hot biscuits, and marmalade," said Aggie gently. "My
+poor fellow, we are doing what we consider our duty; but we want you to
+know that it is hard for us--very hard."
+
+When he saw our plan, Mr. McDonald's face fell; but he stepped out into
+the water up to his knees and caught the raft as it floated down.
+
+Before he said "Thank you" he lifted the cover of the pan and saw the
+hot biscuits underneath.
+
+"Really," he said, "it's very decent of you. I sent off a grocery order
+yesterday, but nothing has come."
+
+Tish had got Hutchins to start the engine by that time and we were
+moving away. He stood there, up to his knees in water, holding the tray
+and looking after us. He was really a pathetic figure, especially in
+view of the awful fate we felt was overtaking him.
+
+He called something after us. On account of the noise of the engine, we
+could not be certain, but we all heard it the same way.
+
+"Send for the whole d--d outfit!" was the way it sounded to us. "It
+won't make any difference to me."
+
+
+
+
+V
+
+
+The last thing I recall of Mr. McDonald that day is seeing him standing
+there in the water, holding the tray, with the teapot steaming under his
+nose, and gazing after us with an air of bewilderment that did not
+deceive us at all.
+
+As I look back, there is only one thing we might have noticed at the
+time. This was the fact that Hutchins, having started the engine, was
+sitting beside it on the floor of the boat and laughing in the cruelest
+possible manner. As I said to Aggie at the time: "A spy is a spy and
+entitled to punishment if discovered; but no young woman should laugh
+over so desperate a situation."
+
+I come now to the denouement of this exciting period. It had been Tish's
+theory that the red-haired man should not be taken into our confidence.
+If there was a reward for the capture of the spy, we ourselves intended
+to have it.
+
+The steamer was due the next day but one. Tish was in favor of not
+waiting, but of at once going in the motor boat to the town, some thirty
+miles away, and telling of our capture; but Hutchins claimed there was
+not sufficient gasoline for such an excursion. That afternoon we went in
+the motor launch to where Tish had hidden the green canoe and, with a
+hatchet, rendered it useless.
+
+The workings of the subconscious mind are marvelous. In the midst of
+chopping, Tish suddenly looked up.
+
+"Have you noticed," she said, "that the detective is always watching our
+camp?"
+
+"That's all he has to do," Aggie suggested.
+
+"Stuff and nonsense! Didn't he follow you into the swamp? Does Hutchins
+ever go out in the canoe that he doesn't go out also? I'll tell you what
+has happened: She's young and pretty, and he's fallen in love with her."
+
+I must say it sounded reasonable. He never bothered about the motor
+boat, but the instant she took the canoe and started out he was hovering
+somewhere near.
+
+"She's noticed it," Tish went on. "That's what she was quarreling about
+with him yesterday."
+
+"How are we to know," said Aggie, who was gathering up the scraps of the
+green canoe and building a fire under them--"how are we to know they are
+not old friends, meeting thus in the wilderness? Fate plays strange
+tricks, Tish. I lived in the same street with Mr. Wiggins for years, and
+never knew him until one day when my umbrella turned wrong side out in a
+gust of wind."
+
+"Fate fiddlesticks!" said Tish. "There's no such thing as fate in
+affairs of this sort. It's all instinct--the instinct of the race to
+continue itself."
+
+This Aggie regarded as indelicate and she was rather cool to Tish the
+balance of the day.
+
+Our prisoner spent most of the day at the end of the island toward us,
+sitting quietly, as we could sec through the glasses. We watched
+carefully, fearing at any time to see the Indian paddling toward him.
+
+[Tish was undecided what to do in such an emergency, except to intercept
+him and explain, threatening him also with having attempted to carry the
+incriminating papers. As it happened, however, the entire camp had gone
+for a two-days' deer hunt, and before they returned the whole thing had
+come to its surprising end.]
+
+Late in the afternoon Tish put her theory of the red-haired man to the
+test.
+
+"Hutchins," she said, "Miss Lizzie and I will cook the dinner if you
+want to go in the canoe to Harvey's Bay for water-lilies."
+
+Hutchins at once said she did not care a rap for water-lilies; but,
+seeing a determined glint in Tish's eye, she added that she would go for
+frogs if Tish wanted her out of the way.
+
+"Don't talk like a child!" Tish retorted. "Who said I wanted you out of
+the way?"
+
+It is absolutely true that the moment Hutchins put her foot into the
+canoe the red-haired man put down his fishing-rod and rose. And she had
+not taken three strokes with the paddle before he was in the blue canoe.
+
+Hutchins saw him just then and scowled. The last we saw of her she was
+moving rapidly up the river and the detective was dropping slowly
+behind. They both disappeared finally into the bay and Tish drew a long
+breath.
+
+"Typical!" she said curtly. "He's sent here to watch a dangerous man and
+spends his time pursuing the young woman who hates the sight of him.
+When women achieve the suffrage they will put none but married men in
+positions of trust."
+
+Hutchins and the detective were still out of sight when supper-time
+came. The spy's supper weighed on us, and at last Tish attempted to
+start the motor launch. We had placed the supper and the small raft
+aboard, and Aggie was leaning over the edge untying the painter,--not a
+man, but a rope,--when unexpectedly the engine started at the first
+revolution of the wheel.
+
+It darted out to the length of the rope, where it was checked abruptly,
+the shock throwing Aggie entirely out and into the stream. Tish caught
+the knife from the supper tray to cut us loose, and while Tish cut I
+pulled Aggie in, wet as she was. The boat was straining and panting,
+and, on being released, it sprang forward like a dog unleashed.
+
+Aggie had swallowed a great deal of water and was most disagreeable; but
+the Mebbe was going remarkably well, and there seemed to be every
+prospect that we should get back to the camp in good order. Alas, for
+human hopes! Mr. McDonald was not very agreeable.
+
+"You know," he said as he waited for his supper to float within reach,
+"you needn't be so blamed radical about everything you do! If you object
+to my hanging round, why not just say so? If I'm too obnoxious I'll
+clear out."
+
+"Obnoxious is hardly the word," said Tish. "How long am I to be a
+prisoner?"
+
+"I shall send letters off by the first boat."
+
+He caught the raft just then and examined the supper with interest.
+
+"Of course things might be worse," he said; "but it's dirty treatment,
+anyhow. And it's darned humiliating. Somebody I know is having a good
+time at my expense. It's heartless! That's what it is--heartless!"
+
+Well, we left him, the engine starting nicely and Aggie being wrapped in
+a tarpaulin; but about a hundred yards above the island it began to slow
+down, and shortly afterward it stopped altogether. As the current caught
+us, we luckily threw out the anchor, for the engine refused to start
+again. It was then we saw the other canoes.
+
+The girl in the pink tam-o'-shanter was in the first one.
+
+They glanced at us curiously as they passed, and the P.T.S.--that is the
+way we grew to speak of the pink tam-o'-shanter--raised one hand in the
+air, which is a form of canoe greeting, probably less upsetting to the
+equilibrium than a vigorous waving of the arm.
+
+It was just then, I believe, that they saw our camp and headed for it.
+The rest of what happened is most amazing. They stopped at our landing
+and unloaded their canoes. Though twilight was falling, we could see
+them distinctly. And what we saw was that they calmly took possession
+of the camp.
+
+"Good gracious!" Tish cried. "The girls have gone into the tent! And
+somebody's working at the stove. The impertinence!"
+
+Our situation was acutely painful. We could do nothing but watch. We
+called, but our voices failed to reach them. And Aggie took a chill,
+partly cold and partly fury. We sat there while they ate the entire
+supper!
+
+They were having a very good time. Now and then somebody would go into
+the tent and bring something out, and there would be shrieks of
+laughter.
+
+[We learned afterward that part of the amusement was caused by Aggie's
+false front, which one of the wretches put on as a beard.]
+
+It was while thus distracted that Aggie suddenly screamed, and a moment
+later Mr. McDonald climbed over the side and into the boat, dripping.
+
+"Don't be alarmed!" he said. "I'll go back and be a prisoner again just
+as soon as I've fired the engine. I couldn't bear to think of the lady
+who fell in sitting here indefinitely and taking cold." He was examining
+the engine while he spoke. "Have visitors, I see," he observed, as
+calmly as though he were not dripping all over the place.
+
+"Intruders, not visitors!" Tish said angrily. "I never saw them before."
+
+"Rather pretty, the one with the pink cap. May I examine the gasoline
+supply?" There was no gasoline. He shrugged his shoulders. "I'm afraid
+no amount of mechanical genius I intended to offer you will start her,"
+he said; "but the young lady--Hutchins is her name, I believe?--will
+see you here and come after you, of course."
+
+Well, there was no denying that, spy or no spy, his presence was a
+comfort. He offered to swim back to the island and be a prisoner again,
+but Tish said magnanimously that there was no hurry. On Aggie's offering
+half of her tarpaulin against the wind, which had risen, he accepted.
+
+"Your Miss Hutchins is reckless, isn't she?" he said when he was
+comfortably settled. "She's a strong swimmer; but a canoe is uncertain
+at the best."
+
+"She's in no danger," said Tish. "She has a devoted admirer watching out
+for her."
+
+"The deuce she has!" His voice was quite interested. "Why, who on
+earth--"
+
+"Your detective," said Aggie softly. "He's quite mad about her. The way
+he follows her and the way he looks at her--it's thrilling!"
+
+Mr. McDonald said nothing for quite a while. The canoe party had
+evidently eaten everything they could find, and somebody had brought out
+a banjo and was playing.
+
+Tish, unable to vent her anger, suddenly turned on Mr. McDonald. "If you
+think," she said, "that the grocery list fooled us, it didn't!"
+
+"Grocery list?"
+
+"That's what I said."
+
+"How did you get my grocery list?"
+
+So she told him, and how she had deciphered it, and how the word
+"dynamite" had only confirmed her early suspicions.
+
+His only comment was to say, "Good Heavens!" in a smothered voice.
+
+"It was the extractor that made me suspicious," she finished. "What were
+you going to extract? Teeth?"
+
+"And so, when my Indian was swimming, you went through his things! It's
+the most astounding thing I ever--My dear lady, an extractor is used to
+get the hooks out of fish. It was no cipher, I assure you. I needed an
+extractor and I ordered it. The cipher you speak of is only a remarkable
+coincidence."
+
+"Huh!" said Tish. "And the paper you dropped in the train--was that a
+coincidence?"
+
+"That's not my secret," he said, and turned sulky at once.
+
+"Don't tell me," Tish said triumphantly, "that any young man comes here
+absolutely alone without a purpose!"
+
+"I had a purpose, all right; but it was not to blow up a railroad
+train."
+
+Apparently he thought he had said too much, for he relapsed into silence
+after that, with an occasional muttering.
+
+It was eight o'clock when Hutchins's canoe came into sight. She was
+paddling easily, but the detective was far behind and moving slowly.
+
+She saw the camp with its uninvited guests, and then she saw us. The
+detective, however, showed no curiosity; and we could see that he made
+for his landing and stumbled exhaustedly up the bank. Hutchins drew up
+beside us. "He'll not try that again, I think," she said in her crisp
+voice. "He's out of training. He panted like a motor launch. Who are our
+visitors?"
+
+Here her eyes fell on Mr. McDonald and her face set in the dusk.
+
+"You'll have to go back and get some gasoline, Hutchins."
+
+"What made you start out without looking?"
+
+"And send the vandals away. If they wait until I arrive, I'll be likely
+to do them some harm. I have never been so outraged."
+
+"Let me go for gasoline in the canoe," said Mr. McDonald. He leaned over
+the thwart and addressed Hutchins. "You're worn out," he said. "I
+promise to come back and be a perfectly well-behaved prisoner again."
+
+"Thanks, no."
+
+"I'm wet. The exercise will warm me."
+
+"Is it possible," she said in a withering tone that was lost on us at
+the time, "that you brought no dumb-bells with you?"
+
+If we had had any doubts they should have been settled then; but we
+never suspected. It is incredible, looking back.
+
+The dusk was falling and I am not certain of what followed. It was,
+however, something like this: Mr. McDonald muttered something angrily
+and made a motion to get into the canoe. Hutchins replied that she would
+not have help from him if she died for it. The next thing we knew she
+was in the launch and the canoe was floating off on the current. Aggie
+squealed; and Mr. McDonald, instead of swimming after the thing, merely
+folded his arms and looked at it.
+
+"You know," he said to Hutchins, "you have so unpleasant a disposition
+that somebody we both know of is better off than he thinks he is!"
+
+Tish's fury knew no bounds, for there we were marooned and two of us wet
+to the skin. I must say for Hutchins, however, that when she learned
+about Aggie she was bitterly repentant, and insisted on putting her own
+sweater on her. But there we were and there we should likely stay.
+
+It was quite dark by that time, and we sat in the launch, rocking
+gently. The canoeing party had lighted a large fire on the beach, using
+the driftwood we had so painfully accumulated.
+
+We sat in silence, except that Tish, who was watching our camp, said
+once bitterly that she was glad there were three beds in the tent. The
+girls of the canoeing party would be comfortable.
+
+After a time Tish turned on Mr. McDonald sharply. "Since you claim to be
+no spy," she said, "perhaps you will tell us what brings you alone to
+this place? Don't tell me it's fish--I've seen you reading, with a line
+out. You're no fisherman."
+
+He hesitated. "No," he admitted. "I'll be frank, Miss Carberry. I did
+not come to fish."
+
+"What brought you?"
+
+"Love," he said, in a low tone. "I don't expect you to believe me, but
+it's the honest truth."
+
+"Love!" Tish scoffed.
+
+"Perhaps I'd better tell you the story," he said. "It's long and--and
+rather sad."
+
+"Love stories," Hutchins put in coldly, "are terribly stupid, except to
+those concerned."
+
+"That," he retorted, "is because you have never been in love. You are
+young and--you will pardon the liberty?--attractive; but you are totally
+prosaic and unromantic."
+
+"Indeed!" she said, and relapsed into silence.
+
+"These other ladies," Mr. McDonald went on, "will understand the
+strangeness of my situation when I explain that the--the young lady I
+care for is very near; is, in fact, within sight."
+
+"Good gracious!" said Aggie. "Where?"
+
+"It is a long story, but it may help to while away the long night hours;
+for I dare say we are here for the night. Did any one happen to notice
+the young lady in the first canoe, in the pink tam-o'-shanter?"
+
+We said we had--all except Hutchins, who, of course, had not seen her.
+Mr. McDonald got a wet cigarette from his pocket and, finding a box of
+matches on the seat, made an attempt to dry it over the flames; so his
+story was told in the flickering light of one match after another.
+
+
+
+
+VI
+
+
+"I am," Mr. McDonald said, as the cigarette steamed, "the son of poor
+but honest parents. All my life I have been obliged to labor. You may
+say that my English is surprisingly pure, under such conditions. As a
+matter of fact, I educated myself at night, using a lantern in the top
+of my father's stable."
+
+"I thought you said he was poor," Hutchins put in nastily. "How did he
+have a stable?"
+
+"He kept a livery stable. Any points that are not clear I will explain
+afterward. Once the thread of a narrative is broken, it is difficult to
+resume, Miss Hutchins. Near us, in a large house, lived the lady of my
+heart."
+
+"The pink tam-o'-shanter girl!" said Aggie. "I begin to understand."
+
+"But," he added, "near us also lived a red-headed boy. She liked him
+very much, and even in the long-ago days I was fiercely jealous of him.
+It may surprise you to know that in those days I longed--fairly
+longed--for red hair and a red mustache."
+
+"I hate to interrupt," said Hutchins; "but did he have a mustache as a
+boy?"
+
+He ignored her. "We three grew up together. The girl is
+beautiful--you've probably noticed that--and amiable. The one thing I
+admire in a young woman is amiability. It would not, for instance, have
+occurred to her to isolate an entire party on the bosom of a northern
+and treacherous river out of pure temper."
+
+"To think," said Aggie softly, "that she is just over there by the
+camp-fire! Don't you suppose, if she loves you, she senses your
+nearness?"
+
+"That's it exactly," he replied in a gloomy voice, "if she loves me! But
+does she? In other words, has she come up the river to meet me or to
+meet my rival? She knows we are here. Both of us have written her. The
+presence of one or the other of us is the real reason for this excursion
+of hers. But again the question is--which?"
+
+Here the match he was holding under the cigarette burned his fingers and
+he flung it overboard with a violent gesture.
+
+"The detective, of course," said Tish. "I knew it from the beginning of
+your story."
+
+"The detective," he assented. "You see his very profession attracts.
+There's an element of romance in it. I myself have kept on with my
+father and now run the--er--livery stable. My business is a handicap
+from a romantic point of view.
+
+"I am aware," Mr. McDonald went on, "that it is not customary to speak
+so frankly of affairs of this sort; but I have two reasons. It hurts me
+to rest under unjust suspicion. I am no spy, ladies. And the second
+reason is even stronger. Consider my desperate position: In the morning
+my rival will see her; he will paddle his canoe to the great rock below
+your camp and sing his love song from the water. In the morning I shall
+sit here helpless--ill, possibly--and see all that I value in life slip
+out of my grasp. And all through no fault of my own! Things are so
+evenly balanced, so little will shift the weight of her favor, that
+frankly the first one to reach her will get her."
+
+I confess I was thrilled. And even Tish was touched; but she covered her
+emotion with hard common sense.
+
+"What's her name?" she demanded.
+
+"Considering my frankness I must withhold that. Why not simply refer to
+her as the pink tam-o'-shanter--or, better still and more briefly, the
+P.T.S.? That may stand for pink tam-o'-shanter, or the Person That
+Smiles,--she smiles a great deal,--or--or almost anything."
+
+"It also stands," said Hutchins, with a sniff, "for Pretty Tall Story."
+
+Tish considered her skepticism unworthy in one so young, and told her
+so; on which she relapsed into a sulky silence.
+
+In view of what we knew, the bonfire at our camp and the small figure
+across the river took on a new significance.
+
+As Aggie said, to think of the red-haired man sleeping calmly while his
+lady love was so near and his rival, so to speak, _hors de combat!_
+Shortly after finishing his story, Mr. McDonald went to the stern of the
+boat and lifted the anchor rope.
+
+"It is possible," he said, "that the current will carry us to my island
+with a little judicious management. Even though we miss it, we'll hardly
+be worse off than we are."
+
+It was surprising we had not thought of it before, for the plan
+succeeded admirably. By moving a few feet at a time and then anchoring,
+we made slow but safe progress, and at last touched shore. We got out,
+and Mr. McDonald built a large fire, near which we put Aggie to steam.
+His supper, which he had not had time to eat, he generously divided, and
+we heated the tea. Hutchins, however, refused to eat.
+
+Warmth and food restored Tish's mind to its usual keenness. I recall now
+the admiration in Mr. McDonald's eyes when she suddenly put down the
+sandwich she was eating and exclaimed:--
+
+"The flags, of course! He told her to watch for a red flag as she came
+up the river; so when the party saw ours they landed. Perhaps they still
+think it is his camp and that he is away overnight."
+
+"That's it, exactly," he said. "Think of the poor wretch's excitement
+when he saw your flag!"
+
+Still, on looking back, it seems curious that we overlooked the way the
+red-headed man had followed Hutchins about. True, men are polygamous
+animals, Tish says, and are quite capable of following one woman about
+while they are sincerely in love with somebody else. But, when you think
+of it, the detective had apparently followed Hutchins from the start,
+and had gone into the wilderness to be near her, with only a suitcase
+and a mackintosh coat; which looked like a mad infatuation.
+
+[Tish says she thought of this at the time, and that; from what she had
+seen of the P.T.S., Hutchins was much prettier. But she says she decided
+that men often love one quality in one girl and another in another; that
+he probably loved Hutchins's beauty and the amiability of the P.T.S.
+Also, she says, she reflected that the polygamy of the Far East is
+probably due to this tendency in the male more than to a preponderance
+of women.]
+
+Tish called me aside while Mr. McDonald was gathering firewood. "I'm a
+fool and a guilty woman, Lizzie," she said. "Because of an unjust
+suspicion I have possibly wrecked this poor boy's life."
+
+I tried to soothe her. "They might have been wretchedly unhappy
+together, Tish," I said; "and, anyhow, I doubt whether he is able to
+support a wife. There's nothing much in keeping a livery stable
+nowadays."
+
+"There's only one thing that still puzzles me," Tish observed: "granting
+that the grocery order was a grocery order, what about the note?"
+
+We might have followed this line of thought, and saved what occurred
+later, but that a new idea suddenly struck Tish. She is curious in that
+way; her mind works very rapidly at times, and because I cannot take her
+mental hurdles, so to speak, she is often impatient.
+
+"Lizzie," she said suddenly, "did you notice that when the anchor was
+lifted, we drifted directly to this island? Don't stare at me like that.
+Use your wits."
+
+When I failed instantly to understand, however, she turned abruptly and
+left me, disappearing in the shadows.
+
+For the next hour nothing happened. Tish was not in sight and Aggie
+slept by the fire. Hutchins sat with her chin cupped in her hands, and
+Mr. McDonald gathered driftwood.
+
+Hutchins only spoke once. "I'm awfully sorry about the canoe, Miss
+Lizzie," she said; "it was silly and--and selfish. I don't always act
+like a bad child. The truth is, I'm rather upset and nervous. I hate to
+be thwarted--I'm sorry I can't explain any further."
+
+I was magnanimous. "I'm sure, until to-night, you've been perfectly
+satisfactory," I said; "but it seems extraordinary that you should
+dislike men the way you do."
+
+She only eyed me searchingly.
+
+It is my evening custom to prepare for the night by taking my switch off
+and combing and braiding my hair; so, as we seemed to be settled for the
+night, I asked Mr. McDonald whether the camp afforded an extra comb. He
+brought out a traveling-case at once from the tent and opened it.
+
+"Here's a comb," he said. "I never use one. I'm sorry this is all I can
+supply."
+
+My eyes were glued to the case. It was an English traveling-case, with
+gold-mounted fittings. He saw me staring at it and changed color.
+
+"Nice bag, isn't it?" he said. "It was a gift, of course. The--the
+livery stable doesn't run much to this sort of thing."
+
+But the fine edge of suspicion had crept into my mind again.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Tish did not return to the fire for some time. Before she came back we
+were all thoroughly alarmed. The island was small, and a short search
+convinced us that she was not on it!
+
+We wakened Aggie and told her, and the situation was very painful. The
+launch was where we had left it. Mr. McDonald looked more and more
+uneasy.
+
+"My sane mind tells me she's perfectly safe," he said. "I don't know
+that I've ever met a person more able to take care of herself; but it's
+darned odd--that's all I can say."
+
+Just as he spoke a volley of shots sounded from up the river near our
+camp, two close together and then one; and somebody screamed.
+
+It was very dark. We could see lanterns flashing at our camp and
+somebody was yelling hoarsely. One lantern seemed to run up and down the
+beach in mad excitement, and then, out of the far-off din, Aggie, whose
+ears are sharp, suddenly heard the splash of a canoe paddle.
+
+I shall tell Tish's story of what happened as she told it to Charlie
+Sands two weeks or so later.
+
+"It is perfectly simple," she said, "and it's stupid to make such a fuss
+over it. Don't talk to me about breaking the law! The girl came; I
+didn't steal her."
+
+Charlie Sands, I remember, interrupted at that moment to remind her that
+she had shot a hole in the detective's canoe; but this only irritated
+her.
+
+"Certainly I did," she snapped; "but it's perfectly idiotic of him to
+say that it took off the heel of his shoe. In that stony country it's
+always easy to lose a heel."
+
+But to return to Tish's story:--
+
+"It occurred to me," she said, "that, if the launch had drifted to Mr.
+McDonald's island, the canoe might have done so too; so I took a look
+round. I'd been pretty much worried about having called the boy a spy
+when he wasn't, and it worried me to think that he couldn't get away
+from the place. I never liked the red-haired man. He was cruel to
+Aggie's cat--but we've told you that.
+
+"I knew that in the morning the detective would see the P.T.S., as we
+called her, and he could get over and propose before breakfast. But when
+I found the canoe--yes, I found it--I didn't intend to do anything more
+than steal the detective's boat."
+
+"Is that all?" said Charlie Sands sarcastically. "You disappoint me,
+Aunt Letitia! With all the chances you had--to burn his pitiful little
+tent, for instance, or steal his suitcase--"
+
+"But on my way," Tish went on with simple dignity, "it occurred to me
+that I could move things a step farther by taking the girl to Mr.
+McDonald and letting him have his chance right away. Things went well
+from the start, for she was standing alone, looking out over the river.
+It was dark, except for the starlight, and I didn't know it was she. I
+beached the canoe and she squealed a little when I spoke to her."
+
+"Just what," broke in Charlie Sands, "does one say under such
+circumstances? Sometime I may wish to abduct a young woman and it is
+well to be prepared."
+
+"I told her the young man she had expected was on Island Eleven and had
+sent me to get her. She was awfully excited. She said they'd seen his
+signal, but nothing of him. And when they'd found a number of feminine
+things round they all felt a little--well, you can understand. She went
+back to get a coat, and while she was gone I untied the canoes and
+pushed them out into the river. I'm thorough, and I wasn't going to have
+a lot of people interfering before we got things fixed."
+
+It was here, I think, that Charlie Sands gave a low moan and collapsed
+on the sofa. "Certainly!" he said in a stifled voice. "I believe in
+being thorough. And, of course, a few canoes more or less do not
+matter."
+
+"Later," Tish said, "I knew I'd been thoughtless about the canoes; but,
+of course, it was too late then."
+
+"And when was it that you assaulted the detective?"
+
+"He fired first," said Tish. "I never felt more peaceable in my life.
+It's absurd for him to say that he was watching our camp, as he had
+every night we'd been there. Who asked him to guard us? And the idea of
+his saying he thought we were Indians stealing things, and that he fired
+into the air! The bullets sang past me. I had hardly time to get my
+revolver out of my stocking."
+
+"And then?" asked Charlie Sands.
+
+"And then," said Tish, "we went calmly down the river to Island Eleven.
+We went rapidly, for at first the detective did not know I had shot a
+hole in his canoe, and he followed us. It stands to reason that if I'd
+shot his heel off he'd have known there was a hole in the boat. Luckily
+the girl was in the bottom of the canoe when she fainted or we might
+have been upset."
+
+It was at this point, I believe, that Charlie Sands got his hat and
+opened the door.
+
+"I find," he said, "that I cannot stand any more at present, Aunt Tish.
+I shall return when I am stronger."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+So I shall go back to my own narrative. Really my justification is
+almost complete. Any one reading to this point will realize the
+injustice of the things that have been said about us.
+
+We were despairing of Tish, as I have said, when we heard the shots and
+then the approach of a canoe. Then Tish hailed us.
+
+"Quick, somebody!" she said. "I have a cramp in my right leg."
+
+[The canoeing position, kneeling as one must, had been always very
+trying for her. She frequently developed cramps, which only a hot
+footbath relieved.]
+
+Mr. McDonald waded out into the water. Our beach fire illuminated the
+whole scene distinctly, and when he saw the P.T.S. huddled in the canoe
+he stopped as though he had been shot.
+
+"How interesting!" said Hutchins from the bank, in her cool voice.
+
+I remember yet Tish, stamping round on her cramped limb and smiling
+benevolently at all of us. The girl, however, looked startled and
+unhappy, and a little dizzy. Hutchins helped her to a fallen tree.
+
+"Where--where is he?" said the P.T.S.
+
+Tish stared at her. "Bless the girl!" she said. "Did you think I meant
+the other one?"
+
+"I--What other one?"
+
+Tish put her hand on Mr. McDonald's arm. "My dear girl," she said, "this
+young man adores you. He's all that a girl ought to want in the man she
+loves. I have done him a grave injustice and he has borne it nobly. Come
+now--let me put your hand in his and say you will marry him."
+
+"Marry him!" said the P.T.S. "Why, I never saw him in my life before!"
+
+We had been so occupied with this astounding scene that none of us had
+noticed the arrival of the detective. He limped rapidly up the
+bank--having lost his heel, as I have explained--and, dripping with
+water, confronted us. When a red-haired person is pale, he is very pale.
+And his teeth showed.
+
+He ignored all of us but the P.T.S., who turned and saw him, and went
+straight into his arms in the most unmaidenly fashion.
+
+"By Heaven," he said, "I thought that elderly lunatic had taken you off
+and killed you!"
+
+He kissed her quite frantically before all of us; and then, with one arm
+round her, he confronted Tish.
+
+"I'm through!" he said. "I'm done! There isn't a salary in the world
+that will make me stay within gunshot of you another day." He eyed her
+fiercely. "You are a dangerous woman, madam," he said. "I'm going to
+bring a charge against you for abduction and assault with intent to
+kill. And if there's any proof needed I'll show my canoe, full of water
+to the gunwale."
+
+Here he kissed the girl again.
+
+"You--you know her?" gasped Mr. McDonald, and dropped on a tree-trunk,
+as though he were too weak to stand.
+
+"It looks like it, doesn't it?"
+
+Here I happened to glance at Hutchins, and she was convulsed with mirth!
+Tish saw her, too, and glared at her; but she seemed to get worse. Then,
+without the slightest warning, she walked round the camp-fire and kissed
+Mr. McDonald solemnly on the top of his head.
+
+"I give it up!" she said. "Somebody will have to marry you and take care
+of you. I'd better be the person."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"But why was the detective watching Hutchins?" said Charlie Sands. "Was
+it because he had heard of my Aunt Letitia's reckless nature? I am still
+bewildered."
+
+"You remember the night we got the worms?"
+
+"I see. The detective was watching all of you because you stole the
+worms."
+
+"Stole nothing!" Tish snapped. "That's the girl's house. She's the Miss
+Newcomb you read about in the papers. Now do you understand?"
+
+"Certainly I do. She was a fugitive from justice because the cat found
+dynamite in the woods. Or--perhaps I'm a trifle confused, but--Now I
+have it! She had stolen a gold-mounted traveling-bag and given it to
+McDonald. Lucky chap! I was crazy about Hutchins myself. You might tip
+her the word that I'm badly off for a traveling-case myself. But what
+about the P.T.S.? How did she happen on the scene?"
+
+"She was engaged to the detective, and she was camping down the river.
+He had sent her word where he was. The red flag was to help her find
+him."
+
+Tish knows Charlie Sands, so she let him talk. Then:--
+
+"Mr. McDonald was too wealthy, Charlie," she said; "so when she wanted
+him to work and be useful, and he refused, she ran off and got a
+situation herself to teach him a lesson. She could drive a car. But her
+people heard about it, and that wretched detective was responsible for
+her safety. That's why he followed her about."
+
+"I should like to follow her about myself," said Charlie Sands. "Do you
+think she's unalterably decided to take McDonald, money and all? He's
+still an idler. Lend me your car, Aunt Tish. There's a theory there;
+and--who knows?"
+
+"He is going to work for six months before she marries him," Tish said.
+"He seems to like to work, now he has started."
+
+She rang the bell and Hannah came to the door.
+
+"Hannah," said Tish calmly, "call up the garage and tell McDonald to
+bring the car round. Mr. Sands is going out."
+
+
+
+
+MY COUNTRY TISH OF THEE--
+
+
+We had meant to go to Europe this last summer, and Tish would have gone
+anyhow, war or no war, if we had not switched her off onto something
+else. "Submarines fiddlesticks!" she said. "Give me a good life
+preserver, with a bottle of blackberry cordial fastened to it, and the
+sea has no terrors for me."
+
+She said the proper way to do, in case the ship was torpedoed, was to go
+up on an upper deck, and let the vessel sink under one.
+
+"Then without haste," she explained, "as the water rises about one,
+strike out calmly. The life-belt supports one, but swim gently for the
+exercise. It will prevent chilling. With a waterproof bag of crackers,
+and mild weather, one could go on comfortably for a day or two."
+
+I still remember the despairing face Aggie turned to me. It was December
+then, and very cold.
+
+However, she said nothing more until January. Early in that month
+Charlie Sands came to Tish's to Sunday dinner, and we were all there.
+The subject came up then.
+
+It was about the time Tish took up vegetarianism, I remember that,
+because the only way she could induce Charlie Sands to come to dinner
+was to promise to have two chops for him. Personally I am not a
+vegetarian. I am not and never will be. I took a firm stand except when
+at Tish's home. But Aggie followed Tish's lead, of course, and I believe
+lived up to it as far as possible, although it is quite true that,
+stopping in one day unexpectedly to secure a new crochet pattern, I
+smelled broiling steak. But Aggie explained that she merely intended to
+use the juice from a small portion, having had one of her weak spells,
+the balance to go to the janitor's dog.
+
+However, this is a digression.
+
+"Europe!" said Charlie Sands. "Forget it! What in the name of the
+gastric juice is this I'm eating?"
+
+It was a mixture of bran, raisins, and chopped nuts, as I recall it,
+moistened with water and pressed into a compact form. It was Tish's own
+invention. She called it "Bran-Nut," and was talking of making it in
+large quantities for sale.
+
+Charlie Sands gave it up with a feeble gesture. "I'm sorry, Aunt
+Letitia," he said at last; "I'm a strong man ordinarily, but by the time
+I've got it masticated I'm too weak to swallow it. If--if one could
+have a stream of water playing on it while working, it would facilitate
+things."
+
+"The Ostermaiers," said Aggie, "are going West."
+
+"Good for the Ostermaiers," said Charlie Sands. "Great idea. See America
+first. 'My Country Tish of Thee,' etc. Why don't you three try it?"
+
+Tish relinquished Europe slowly.
+
+"One would think," Charlie Sands said, "that you were a German being
+asked to give up Belgium."
+
+"What part of the West?" she demanded. "It's all civilized, isn't it?"
+
+"The Rocky Mountains," said Charlie Sands, "will never be civilized."
+
+Tish broke off a piece of Bran-Nut, and when she thought no one was
+looking poured a little tea over it. There was a gleam in her eye that
+Aggie and I have learned to know.
+
+"Mountains!" she said. "That ought to be good for Aggie's hay fever."
+
+"I'd rather live with hay fever," Aggie put in sharply, "than cure it by
+falling over a precipice."
+
+"You'll have to take a chance on that, of course," Charlie Sands said.
+"I'm not sure it will be safe, but I am sure it will be interesting."
+
+Oh, he knew Tish well enough. Tell her a thing was dangerous, and no
+power could restrain her.
+
+I do not mind saying that I was not keen about the thing. I had my
+fortune told years ago, and the palmist said that if a certain line had
+had a bend in it I should have been hanged. But since it did not, to be
+careful of high places.
+
+"It's a sporting chance," said Charlie Sands, although I was prodding
+him under the table. "With some good horses and a bag of
+this--er--concentrated food, you would have the time of your young
+lives."
+
+This was figurative. We are all of us round fifty.
+
+"The--the Bran-Nut," he said, "would serve for both food and ammunition.
+I can see you riding along, now and then dropping a piece of it on the
+head of some unlucky mountain goat, and watching it topple over into
+eternity. I can see--"
+
+"Riding!" said Aggie. "Then I'm not going. I have never been on a horse
+and I never intend to be."
+
+"Don't be a fool," Tish snapped. "If you've never been on a horse, it's
+time and to spare you got on one."
+
+Hannah had been clearing the table with her lips shut tight. Hannah is
+an old and privileged servant and has a most unfortunate habit of
+speaking her mind. So now she stopped beside Tish.
+
+"You take my advice and go, Miss Tish," she said. "If you ride a horse
+round some and get an appetite, you'll go down on your knees and
+apologize to your Maker for the stuff we've been eating the last four
+weeks." She turned to Charlie Sands, and positively her chin was
+quivering. "I'm a healthy woman," she said, "and I work hard and need
+good nourishing food. When it's come to a point where I eat the cat's
+meat and let it go hungry," she said, "it's time either I lost my
+appetite or Miss Tish went away."
+
+Well, Tish dismissed Hannah haughtily from the room, and the
+conversation went on. None of us had been far West, although Tish has a
+sister-in-law in, Toledo, Ohio. But owing to a quarrel over a pair of
+andirons that had been in the family for a time, she had never visited
+her.
+
+"You'll like it, all of you," Charlie Sands said as we waited for the
+baked apples. "Once get started with a good horse between your knees,
+and--"
+
+"I hope," Tish interrupted him, "that you do not think we are going to
+ride astride!"
+
+"I'm darned sure of it."
+
+That was Charlie Sands's way of talking. He does not mean to be rude,
+and he is really a young man of splendid character. But, as Tish says,
+contact with the world, although it has not spoiled him, has roughened
+his speech.
+
+"You see," he explained, "there are places out there where the horses
+have to climb like goats. It's only fair to them to distribute your
+weight equally. A side saddle is likely to turn and drop you a mile or
+two down a crack."
+
+Aggie went rather white and sneezed violently.
+
+But Tish looked thoughtful. "It sounds reasonable," she said. "I've felt
+for along time that I'd be glad to discard skirts. Skirts," she said,
+"are badge of servitude, survivals of the harem, reminders of a time
+when nothing was expected of women but parasitic leisure."
+
+I tried to tell her that she was wrong about the skirts. Miss
+MacGillicuddy, our missionary in India, had certainly said that the
+women in harems wore bloomers. But Tish left the room abruptly,
+returning shortly after with a volume of the encyclopaedia, and looked up
+the Rocky Mountains.
+
+I remember it said that the highest ranges were, as compared with the
+size and shape of the earth, only as the corrugations on the skin of an
+orange. Either the man who wrote that had never seen an orange or he had
+never seen the Rocky Mountains. Orange, indeed! If he had said the upper
+end of a pineapple it would have been more like it. I wish the man who
+wrote it would go to Glacier Park. I am not a vindictive woman, but I
+know one or two places where I would like to place him and make him
+swallow that orange. I'd like to see him on a horse, on the brink of a
+canon a mile deep, and have his horse reach over the edge for a stray
+plant or two, or standing in a cloud up to his waist, so that, as Aggie
+so plaintively observed, "The lower half of one is in a snowstorm while
+the upper part is getting sunburned."
+
+For we went. Oh, yes, we went. It is not the encyclopaedia's fault that
+we came back. But now that we are home, and nothing wrong except a touch
+of lumbago that Tish got from sleeping on the ground, and, of course,
+Aggie's unfortunate experience with her teeth, I look back on our
+various adventures with pleasure. I even contemplate a return next year,
+although Aggie says she will die first. But even that is not to be taken
+as final. The last time I went to see her, she had bought a revolver
+from the janitor and was taking lessons in loading it.
+
+The Ostermaiers went also. Not with us, however. The congregation made
+up a purse for the purpose, and Tish and Aggie and I went further, and
+purchased a cigar-case for Mr. Ostermaier and a quantity of cigars.
+Smoking is the good man's only weakness.
+
+I must say, however, that it is absurd to hear Mrs. Ostermaier boasting
+of the trip. To hear her talk, one would think they had done the whole
+thing, instead of sitting in an automobile and looking up at the
+mountains. I shall never forget the day they were in a car passing along
+a road, and we crossed unexpectedly ahead of them and went on straight
+up the side of a mountain.
+
+Tish had a sombrero on the side of her head, and was resting herself in
+the saddle by having her right leg thrown negligently over the horse's
+neck. With the left foot she was kicking our pack-horse, a creature so
+scarred with brands that Tish had named her Jane, after a cousin of hers
+who had had so many operations that Tish says she is now entirely
+unfurnished.
+
+Mr. Ostermaier's face was terrible, and only two days ago Mrs.
+Ostermaier came over to ask about putting an extra width in the skirt to
+her last winter's suit. But it is my belief that she came to save Tish's
+soul, and nothing else.
+
+"I'm so glad wide skirts have come in," she said. "They're so modest,
+aren't they, Miss Tish?"
+
+"Not in a wind," Tish said, eying her coldly.
+
+"I do think, dear Miss Tish," she went on with her eyes down, "that
+to--to go about in riding-breeches before a young man is--well, it is
+hardly discreet, is it?"
+
+I saw Tish glancing about the room. She was pretty angry, and I knew
+perfectly well what she wanted. I put my knitting-bag over Charlie
+Sands's tobacco-pouch.
+
+Tish had learned to roll cigarettes out in Glacier Park. Not that she
+smoked them, of course, but she said she might as well know how. There
+was no knowing when it would come in handy. And when she wishes to calm
+herself she reaches instinctively for what Bill used to call, strangely,
+"the makings."
+
+"If," she said, her eye still roving,--"if it was any treat to a
+twenty-four-year-old cowpuncher to see three elderly women in
+riding-breeches, Mrs. Ostermaier,--and it's kind of you to think
+so,--why, I'm not selfish."
+
+Mrs. Ostermaier's face was terrible. She gathered up her skirt and rose.
+"I shall not tell Mr. Ostermaier what you have just said," she observed
+with her mouth set hard. "We owe you a great deal, especially the return
+of my earrings. But I must request, Miss Tish, that you do not voice
+such sentiments in the Sunday school."
+
+Tish watched her out. Then she sat down and rolled eleven cigarettes for
+Charlie Sands, one after the other. At last she spoke.
+
+"I'm not sure," she said tartly, "that if I had it to do over again I'd
+do it. That woman's not a Christian. I was thinking," she went on, "of
+giving them a part of the reward to go to Asbury Park with. But she'd
+have to wear blinders on the bathing-beach, so I'll not do it."
+
+However, I am ahead of my recital.
+
+For a few days Tish said nothing more, but one Sunday morning, walking
+home from church, she turned to me suddenly and said:--
+
+"Lizzie, you're fat."
+
+"I'm as the Lord made me," I replied with some spirit.
+
+"Fiddlesticks!" said Tish. "You're as your own sloth and overindulgence
+has made you. Don't blame the Good Man for it."
+
+Now, I am a peaceful woman, and Tish is as my own sister, and indeed
+even more so. But I was roused to anger by her speech.
+
+"I've been fleshy all my life," I said. "I'm no lazier than most, and
+I'm a dratted sight more agreeable than some I know, on account of
+having the ends of my nerves padded."
+
+But she switched to another subject in her characteristic manner.
+
+"Have you ever reflected, either of you," she observed, "that we know
+nothing of this great land of ours? That we sing of loving 'thy rocks
+and rills, thy woods and templed hills'--although the word 'templed'
+savors of paganism and does not belong in a national hymn? And that it
+is all balderdash?"
+
+Aggie took exception to this and said that she loved her native land,
+and had been south to Pinehurst and west to see her niece in
+Minneapolis, on account of the baby having been named for her.
+
+But Tish merely listened with a grim smile. "Travel from a car window,"
+she observed, "is no better than travel in a nickelodeon. I have done
+all of that I am going to. I intend to become acquainted with my native
+land, closely acquainted. State by State I shall wander over it,
+refreshing soul and body and using muscles too long unused."
+
+"Tish!" Aggie quavered. "You are not going on another walking-tour?"
+
+Only a year or two before Tish had read Stevenson's "Travels with a
+Donkey," and had been possessed to follow his example. I have elsewhere
+recorded the details of that terrible trip. Even I turned pale, I fear,
+and cast a nervous eye toward the table where Tish keeps her
+reading-matter.
+
+Tish is imaginative, and is always influenced by the latest book she has
+read. For instance, a volume on "Nursing at the Front" almost sent her
+across to France, although she cannot make a bed and never could, and
+turns pale at the sight of blood; and another time a book on flying
+machines sent her up into the air, mentally if not literally. I shall
+never forget the time she secured some literature on the Mormon Church,
+and the difficulty I had in smuggling it out under my coat.
+
+Tish did not refute the walking-tour at once, but fell into a deep
+reverie.
+
+It is not her custom to confide her plans to us until they are fully
+shaped and too far on to be interfered with, which accounts for our
+nervousness.
+
+On arriving at her apartment, however, we found a map laid out on the
+table and the Rocky Mountains marked with pins. We noticed that whenever
+she straightened from the table she grunted.
+
+"What we want," Tish said, "is isolation. No people. No crowds. No
+servants. If I don't get away from Hannah soon I'll murder her."
+
+"It wouldn't hurt to see somebody now and then, Tish," Aggie objected.
+
+"Nobody," Tish said firmly. "A good horse is companion enough." She
+forgot herself and straightened completely, and she groaned.
+
+"We might meet some desirable people, Tish," I put in firmly. "If we do,
+I don't intend to run like a rabbit."
+
+"Desirable people!" Tish scoffed. "In the Rocky Mountains! My dear
+Lizzie, every desperado in the country takes refuge in the Rockies. Of
+course, if you want to take up with that class--"
+
+Aggie sneezed and looked wretched. As for me, I made up my mind then and
+there that if Letitia Carberry was going to such a neighborhood, she was
+not going alone. I am not much with a revolver, but mighty handy with a
+pair of lungs.
+
+Well, Tish had it all worked out. "I've found the very place," she said.
+"In the first place, it's Government property. When our country puts
+aside a part of itself as a public domain we should show our
+appreciation. In the second place, it's wild. I'd as soon spend a
+vacation in Central Park near the Zoo as in the Yellowstone. In the
+third place, with an Indian reservation on one side and a national
+forest on the other, it's bound to be lonely. Any tourist," she said
+scornfully, "can go to the Yosemite and be photographed under a redwood
+tree."
+
+"Do the Indians stay on the reservation?" Aggie asked feebly.
+
+"Probably not," Tish observed coldly. "Once for all, Aggie--if you are
+going to run like a scared deer every time you see an Indian or a bear,
+I wish you would go to Asbury Park."
+
+She forgot herself then and sat down quickly, an action which was
+followed by an agonized expression.
+
+"Tish," I said sharply, "you have been riding a horse!
+
+"Only in a cinder ring," she replied with unwonted docility. "The
+teacher said I would be a trifle stiff."
+
+"How long did you ride?"
+
+"Not more than twenty minutes," she said. "The lesson was to be an hour,
+but somebody put a nickel in a mechanical piano, and the creature I was
+on started going sideways."
+
+Well, she had fallen off and had to be taken home in a taxicab. When
+Aggie heard it she simply took the pins out of the map and stuck them in
+Tish's cushion. Her mouth was set tight.
+
+"I didn't really fall," Tish said. "I sat down, and it was cinders, and
+not hard. It has made my neck stiff, that's all."
+
+"That's enough," said Aggie. "If I've got to seek pleasure by ramming my
+spinal column up into my skull and crowding my brains, I'll stay at
+home."
+
+"You can't fall out of a Western saddle," Tish protested rather
+bitterly. "And if I were you, Aggie, I wouldn't worry about crowding my
+brains."
+
+However, she probably regretted this speech, for she added more gently:
+"A high altitude will help your hay fever, Aggie."
+
+Aggie said with some bitterness that her hay fever did not need to be
+helped. That, as far as she could see, it was strong and flourishing. At
+that matters rested, except for a bit of conversation just before we
+left. Aggie had put on her sweater vest and her muffler and the jacket
+of her winter suit and was getting into her fur coat, when Tish said:
+"Soft as mush, both of you!"
+
+"If you think, Tish Carberry," I began, "that I--"
+
+"Apple dumplings!" said Tish. "Sofa pillows! Jellyfish! Not a muscle to
+divide between you!"
+
+I drew on my woolen tights angrily.
+
+"Elevators!" Tish went on scornfully. "Street cars and taxicabs! No
+wonder your bodies are mere masses of protoplasm, or cellulose, or
+whatever it is."
+
+"Since when," said Aggie, "have you been walking to develop yourself,
+Tish? I must say--"
+
+Here anger brought on one of her sneezing attacks, and she was unable to
+finish.
+
+Tish stood before us oracularly. "After next September," she said, "you
+will both scorn the sloth of civilization. You will move about for the
+joy of moving about. You will have cast off the shackles of the flesh
+and be born anew. That is, if a plan of mine goes through. Lizzie, you
+will lose fifty pounds!"
+
+Well, I didn't want to lose fifty pounds. After our summer in the Maine
+woods I had gone back to find that my new tailor-made coat, which had
+fitted me exactly, and being stiffened with haircloth kept its shape off
+and looked as if I myself were hanging to the hook, had caved in on me
+in several places. Just as I had gone to the expense of having it taken
+in I began to put on flesh again, and had to have it let out. Besides,
+no woman over forty should ever reduce, at least not violently. She
+wrinkles. My face that summer had fallen into accordion plaits, and I
+had the curious feeling of having enough skin for two.
+
+Aggie had suggested at that time that I have my cheeks filled out with
+paraffin, which I believe cakes and gives the appearance of youth. But
+Mrs. Ostermaier knew a woman who had done so, and being hit on one side
+by a snowball, the padding broke in half, one part moving up under her
+eye and the second lodging at the angle of her jaw. She tried lying on a
+hot-water bottle to melt the pieces and bring them together again, but
+they did not remain fixed, having developed a wandering habit and
+slipping unexpectedly now and then. Mrs. Ostermaier says it is painful
+to watch her holding them in place when she yawns.
+
+Strangely enough, however, a few weeks later Tish's enthusiasm for the
+West had apparently vanished. When several weeks went by and the atlas
+had disappeared from her table, and she had given up vegetarianism for
+Swedish movements, we felt that we were to have a quiet summer after
+all, and Aggie wrote to a hotel in Asbury Park about rooms for July and
+August.
+
+There was a real change in Tish. She stopped knitting abdominal bands
+for the soldiers in Europe, for one thing, although she had sent over
+almost a dozen very tasty ones. In the evenings, when we dropped in to
+chat with her, she said very little and invariably dozed in her chair.
+
+On one such occasion, Aggie having inadvertently stepped on the rocker
+of her chair while endeavoring by laying a hand on Tish's brow to
+discover if she was feverish, the chair tilted back and Tish wakened
+with a jerk.
+
+She immediately fell to groaning and clasped her hands to the small of
+her back, quite ignoring poor Aggie, whom the chair had caught in the
+epigastric region, and who was compelled for some time to struggle for
+breath.
+
+"Jumping Jehoshaphat!" said Tish in an angry tone. It is rare for Tish
+to use the name of a Biblical character in this way, but she was clearly
+suffering. "What in the world are you doing, Aggie?"
+
+"T-t-trying to breathe," poor Aggie replied.
+
+"Then I wish," Tish said coldly, "that you would make the effort some
+place else than on the rocker of my chair. You jarred me, and I am in no
+state to be jarred."
+
+But she refused to explain further, beyond saying, in reply to a
+question of mine, that she was not feverish and that she had not been
+asleep, having merely closed her eyes to rest them. Also she affirmed
+that she was not taking riding-lessons. We both noticed however, that
+she did not leave her chair during the time we were there, and that she
+was sitting on the sofa cushion I had made her for the previous
+Christmas, and on which I had embroidered the poet Moore's beautiful
+words: "Come, rest in this bosom."
+
+As Aggie was still feeling faint, I advised her to take a mouthful of
+blackberry cordial, which Tish keeps for emergencies in her bathroom
+closet. Immediately following her departure the calm of the evening was
+broken by a loud shriek.
+
+It appeared, on my rushing to the bathroom, while Tish sat heartlessly
+still, that Aggie, not seeing a glass, had placed the bottle to her lips
+and taken quite a large mouthful of liniment, which in color resembled
+the cordial. I found her sitting on the edge of the bathtub in a state
+of collapse.
+
+"I'm poisoned!" she groaned. "Oh, Lizzie, I am not fit to die!"
+
+I flew with the bottle to Tish, who was very calm and stealthily rubbing
+one of her ankles.
+
+"Do her good," Tish said. "Take some of the stiffness out of her liver,
+for one thing. But you might keep an eye on her. It's full of alcohol."
+
+"What's the antidote?" I asked, hearing Aggie's low groans.
+
+"The gold cure is the only thing I can think of at the moment," said
+Tish coldly, and started on the other ankle.
+
+I merely record this incident to show the change in Tish. Aggie was not
+seriously upset, although dizzy for an hour or so and very talkative,
+especially about Mr. Wiggins.
+
+Tish was changed. Her life, which mostly had been an open book to us,
+became filled with mystery. There were whole days when she was not to be
+located anywhere, and evenings, as I have stated, when she dozed in her
+chair.
+
+As usual when we are worried about Tish, we consulted her nephew,
+Charlie Sands. But like all members of the masculine sex he refused to
+be worried.
+
+"She'll be all right," he observed. "She takes these spells. But trust
+the old lady to come up smiling."
+
+"It's either Christian Science or osteopathy," Aggie said dolefully.
+"She's not herself. The fruit cake she sent me the other day tasted very
+queer, and Hannah thinks she put ointment in instead of butter."
+
+"Ointments!" observed Charlie thoughtfully. "And salves! By George, I
+wonder--I'll tell you," he said: "I'll keep an eye open for a few days.
+The symptoms sound like--But never mind. I'll let you know."
+
+We were compelled to be satisfied with this, but for several days we
+lingered in anxiety. During that painful interval nothing occurred to
+enlighten us, except one conversation with Tish.
+
+We had taken dinner with her, and she seemed to be all right again and
+more than usually active. She had given up the Bran-Nut after breaking
+a tooth on it, and was eating rare beef, which she had heard was
+digested in the spleen or some such place, thus resting the stomach for
+a time. She left us, however, immediately after the meal, and Hannah,
+her maid, tiptoed into the room.
+
+"I'm that nervous I could scream," she said. "Do you know what she's
+doing now?
+
+"No, Hannah," I said with bitter sarcasm. "Long ago I learned never to
+surmise what Miss Tish is doing."
+
+"She's in the bathroom, standing on one foot and waving the other in the
+air. She's been doing it," Hannah said, "for weeks. First one foot, then
+the other. And that ain't all."
+
+"You've been spying on Miss Tish," Aggie said. "Shame on you, Hannah!"
+
+"I have, Miss Aggie. Spy I have and spy I will, while there's breath in
+my body. Twenty years have I--Do you know what she does when she come
+home from these sneakin' trips of hers? She sits in a hot bath until the
+wonder is that her blood ain't turned to water. And after that she uses
+liniment. Her underclothes is that stained up with it that I'm ashamed
+to hang 'em out."
+
+Here Tish returned and, after a suspicious glance at Hannah, sat down.
+Aggie and I glanced at each other. She did not, as she had for some time
+past, line the chair with pillows, and there was an air about her almost
+of triumph.
+
+She did not, however, volunteer any explanation. Aggie and I were driven
+to speculation, in which we indulged on our way home, Aggie being my
+guest at the time, on account of her janitor's children having measles,
+and Aggie never having had them, although recalling a severe rash as a
+child, with other measly symptoms.
+
+"She has something in mind for next summer," said Aggie apprehensively,
+"and she is preparing her strength for it. Tish is forehanded if nothing
+else."
+
+"Well," I remarked with some bitterness, "if we are going along it might
+be well to prepare us too."
+
+"Something," Aggie continued, "that requires landing on one foot with
+the other in the air."
+
+"Don't drivel," said I. "She's not likely going into the Russian ballet.
+She's training her muscles, that's all."
+
+But the mystery was solved the following morning when Charlie Sands
+called me up.
+
+"I've got it, beloved aunt," he said.
+
+"Got what?" said I.
+
+"What the old lady is up to. She's a wonder, and no mistake. Only I
+think it was stingy of her not to let you and Aunt Aggie in."
+
+He asked me to get Aggie and meet him at the office as soon as possible,
+but he refused to explain further. And he continued to refuse until we
+had arrived at our destination, a large brick building in the center of
+the city.
+
+"Now," he said, "take a long breath and go in. And mind--no excitement."
+
+We went in. There was a band playing and people circling at a mile a
+minute. In the center there was a cleared place, and Tish was there on
+ice skates. An instructor had her by the arm, and as we looked she waved
+him off, gave herself a shove forward with one foot, and then, with her
+arms waving, she made a double curve, first on one foot and then on the
+other.
+
+"The outside edge, by George!" said Charlie Sands. "The old sport!"
+
+Unluckily at that moment Tish saw us, and sat down violently on the ice.
+And a quite nice-looking young man fell over her and lay stunned for
+several seconds. We rushed round the arena, expecting to see them both
+carried out, but Tish was uninjured, and came skating toward us with her
+hands in her pockets. It was the young man who had to be assisted out.
+
+"Well," she said, fetching up against the railing with a bang, "of
+course you had to come before I was ready for you! In a week I'll really
+be skating."
+
+We said nothing, but looked at her, and I am afraid our glances showed
+disapproval, for she straightened her hat with a jerk.
+
+"Well?" she said. "You're not tongue-tied all of a sudden, are you?
+Can't a woman take a little exercise without her family and friends
+coming snooping round and acting as if she'd broken the Ten
+Commandments?"
+
+"Breaking the Ten Commandments!" I said witheringly. "Breaking a leg
+more likely. If you could have seen yourself, Tish Carberry, sprawled on
+that ice at your age, and both your arteries and your bones brittle, as
+the specialist told you,--and I heard him myself,--you'd take those
+things off your feet and go home and hide your head."
+
+"I wish I had your breath, Lizzie," Tish said. "I'd be a submarine
+diver."
+
+Saying which she skated off, and did not come near us again. A young
+gentleman went up to her and asked her to skate, though I doubt if she
+had ever seen him before. And as we left the building in disapproval
+they were doing fancy turns in the middle of the place, and a crowd was
+gathering round them.
+
+Owing to considerable feeling being roused by the foregoing incident,
+we did not see much of Tish for a week. If a middle-aged woman wants to
+make a spectacle of herself, both Aggie and I felt that she needed to be
+taught a lesson. Besides, we knew Tish. With her, to conquer a thing is
+to lose interest.
+
+On the anniversary of the day Aggie became engaged to Mr. Wiggins, Tish
+asked us both to dinner, and we buried the hatchet, or rather the
+skates. It was when dessert came that we realized how everything that
+had occurred had been preparation for the summer, and that we were not
+going to Asbury Park, after all.
+
+"It's like this," said Tish. "Hannah, go out and close the door, and
+don't stand listening. I have figured it all out," she said, when Hannah
+had slammed out. "The muscles used in skating are the ones used in
+mountain-climbing. Besides, there may be times when a pair of skates
+would be handy going over the glaciers. It's not called Glacier Park for
+nothing, I dare say. When we went into the Maine woods we went
+unprepared. This time I intend to be ready for any emergency."
+
+But we gave her little encouragement. We would go along, and told her
+so. But further than that I refused to prepare. I would not skate, and
+said so.
+
+"Very well, Lizzie," she said. "Don't blame me if you find yourself
+unable to cope with mountain hardships. I merely felt this way: if each
+of us could do one thing well it might be helpful. There's always snow,
+and if Aggie would learn to use snowshoes it might be valuable."
+
+"Where could I practice?" Aggie demanded.
+
+But Tish went on, ignoring Aggie's sarcastic tone. "And if you, Lizzie,
+would learn to throw a lasso, or lariat,--I believe both terms are
+correct,--it would be a great advantage, especially in case of meeting
+ferocious animals. The park laws will not allow us to kill them, and it
+would be mighty convenient, Lizzie. Not to mention that it would be an
+accomplishment few women possess."
+
+I refused to make the attempt, although Tish sent for the clothesline,
+and with the aid of the encyclopaedia made a loop in the end of it.
+Finally she became interested herself, and when we left rather
+downhearted at ten o'clock she had caught the rocking-chair three times
+and broken the clock.
+
+Aggie and I prepared with little enthusiasm, I must confess. We had as
+much love for the rocks and rills of our great country as Tish, but, as
+Aggie observed, there were rocks and rocks, and one could love them
+without climbing up them or falling off them.
+
+The only comfort we had was that Charlie Sands said that we should ride
+ponies, and not horses. My niece's children have a pony which is very
+gentle and not much larger than a dog, which comes up on the porch for
+lumps of sugar. We were lured to a false sense of security, I must say.
+
+As far as we could see, Tish was making few preparations for the trip.
+She said we could get everything we needed at the park entrance, and
+that the riding was merely sitting in a saddle and letting the pony do
+the rest. But on the 21st of June, the anniversary of the day Aggie was
+to have been married, we went out to decorate Mr. Wiggins's last
+resting-place, and coming out of the cemetery we met Tish.
+
+She was on a horse, astride!
+
+She was not alone. A gentleman was riding beside her, and he had her
+horse by a long leather strap.
+
+She pretended not to see us, and Aggie unfortunately waved her red
+parasol at her. The result was most amazing. The beast she was on jerked
+itself free in an instant, and with the same movement, apparently,
+leaped the hedge beside the road. One moment there was Tish, in a derby
+hat and breeches, and the next moment there was only the gentleman, with
+his mouth open.
+
+Aggie collapsed, moaning, in the road, and beyond the hedge we could
+hear the horse leaping tombstones in the cemetery.
+
+"Oh, Tish!" Aggie wailed.
+
+I broke my way through the hedge to find what was left of her, while the
+riding-master bolted for the gate. But to my intense surprise Tish was
+not on the ground. Then I saw her. She was still on the creature, and
+she was coming back along the road, with her riding-hat on the back of
+her head and a gleam in her eye that I knew well enough was a gleam of
+triumph.
+
+She halted the thing beside me and looked down with a patronizing air.
+
+"He's a trifle nervous this morning," she said calmly. "Hasn't been
+worked enough. Good horse, though,--very neat jump."
+
+Then she rode on and out through the gates, ignoring Aggie's pitiful
+wail and scorning the leading-string the instructor offered.
+
+We reached Glacier Park without difficulty, although Tish insisted on
+talking to the most ordinary people on the train, and once, losing her,
+we found her in the drawing-room learning to play bridge, although not a
+card-player, except for casino. Though nothing has ever been said, I
+believe she learned when too late that they were playing for money, as
+she borrowed ten dollars from me late in the afternoon and was looking
+rather pale.
+
+"What do you think?" she said, while I was getting the money from the
+safety pocket under my skirt. "The young man who knocked me down on the
+ice that day is on the train. I've just exchanged a few words with him.
+He was not much hurt, although unconscious for a short time. His name is
+Bell--James C. Bell."
+
+Soon after that Tish brought him to us, and we had a nice talk. He said
+he had not been badly hurt on the ice, although he got a cut on the
+forehead from Tish's skate, requiring two stitches.
+
+After a time he and Aggie went out on the platform, only returning when
+Aggie got a cinder in her eye.
+
+"Just think," she said as he went for water to use in my eye-cup, "he
+is going to meet the girl he is in love with out at the park. She has
+been there for four weeks. They are engaged. He is very much in love. He
+didn't talk of anything else."
+
+She told him she had confided his tender secret to us, and instead of
+looking conscious he seemed glad to have three people instead of one to
+talk to about her.
+
+"You see, it's like this," he said: "She is very good looking, and in
+her town a moving-picture company has its studio. That part's all right.
+I suppose we have to have movies. But the fool of a director met her at
+a party, and said she would photograph well and ought to be with them.
+He offered her a salary, and it went to her head. She's young," he
+added, "and he said she could be as great a hit as Mary Pickford."
+
+"How sad!" said Aggie. "But of course she refused?"
+
+"Well, no, she liked the idea. It got me worried. Worried her people
+too. Her father's able to give her a good home, and I'm expecting to
+take that job off his hands in about a year. But girls are queer. She
+wanted to try it awfully."
+
+It developed that he had gone to her folks about it, and they'd offered
+her a vacation with some of her school friends in Glacier Park.
+
+"It's pretty wild out there," he went on, "and we felt that the air, and
+horseback riding and everything, would make her forget the movies. I
+hope so. She's there now. But she's had the bug pretty hard. Got so she
+was always posing, without knowing it."
+
+But he was hopeful that she would be cured, and said she was to meet him
+at the station.
+
+"She's an awfully nice girl, you understand," he finished. "It's only
+that this thing got hold of her and needed driving out."
+
+Well, we were watching when the train drew in at Glacier Park Station,
+and she was there. She was a very pretty girl, and it was quite touching
+to see him look at her. But Aggie observed something and remarked on it.
+
+"She's not as glad to see him as he is to see her," she said. "He was
+going to kiss her, and she moved back."
+
+In the crowd we lost sight of them, but that evening, sitting in the
+lobby of the hotel, we saw Mr. Bell wandering round alone. He looked
+depressed, and Aggie beckoned to him.
+
+"How is everything?" she asked. "Is the cure working?"
+
+He dropped into a chair and looked straight ahead.
+
+"Not so you could notice it!" he said bitterly. "Would you believe that
+there's a moving-picture outfit here, taking scenes in the park?"
+
+"No!"
+
+"There is. They've taken two thousand feet of her already, dressed like
+an Indian," he said in a tone of suppressed fury. "It makes me sick. I
+dare say if we tied her in a well some fool would lower a camera on a
+rope."
+
+Just at that moment she sauntered past us with a reddish-haired young
+man. Mr. Bell ignored her, although I saw her try to catch his eye.
+
+"That's the moving-picture man with her," he said in a low, violent tone
+when they had passed. "Name's Oliver." He groaned. "He's told her she
+ought to go in for the business. She'd be a second Mary Pickford! I'd
+like to kill him!" He rose savagely and left us.
+
+We spent the night in the hotel at the park entrance, and I could not
+get to sleep. Tish was busy engaging a guide and going over our
+supplies, and at eleven o'clock Aggie came into my room and sat down on
+the bed.
+
+"I can't sleep, Lizzie," she said. "That poor Mr. Bell is on my mind.
+Besides, did you see those ferocious Indians hanging round?"
+
+Well, I had seen them, but said nothing.
+
+"They would scalp one as quick as not," Aggie went on. "And who's to
+know but that our guide will be in league with them? I've lost my
+teeth," she said with a flash of spirit, "but so far I've kept my hair,
+and mean to if possible. That old Indian has a scalp tied to the end of
+a stick. Lizzie, I'm nervous."
+
+"If it is only hair they want, I don't mind their taking my switch," I
+observed, trying to be facetious, although uneasy. As to the switch, it
+no longer matched my hair, and I would have parted from it without a
+pang.
+
+"And another thing," said Aggie: "Tish can talk about ponies until she
+is black in the face. The creatures are horses. I've seen them."
+
+Well, I knew that, too, by that time. As we walked to the hotel from the
+train I had seen one of than carrying on. It was arching its back like a
+cat that's just seen a strange dog, and with every arch it swelled its
+stomach. At the third heave it split the strap that held the saddle on,
+and then it kicked up in the rear and sent saddle and rider over its
+head. So far as I had seen, no casualty had resulted, but it had set me
+thinking. Given a beast with an India-rubber spine and no sense of
+honor, I felt I would be helpless.
+
+Tish came in just then and we confronted her.
+
+[Illustration: "It's well enough for you, Tish Carberry, to talk about
+gripping a horse with your knees"]
+
+"Ponies!" I said bitterly. "They are horses, if I know a horse. And,
+moreover, it's well enough for you, Tish Carberry, to talk about
+gripping a horse with your knees. I'm not built that way, and you know
+it. Besides, no knee grip will answer when a creature begins to act like
+a cat in a fit."
+
+Aggie here had a bright idea. She said that she had seen pictures of
+pneumatic jackets to keep people from drowning, and that Mr. McKee, a
+buyer at one of the stores at home, had taken one, fully inflated, when
+he crossed to Paris for autumn suits.
+
+"I would like to have one, Tish," she finished. "It would break the
+force of a fall anyhow, even if it did puncture."
+
+Tish, who was still dressed, went out to the curio shop in the lobby,
+and returned with the sad news that there was nothing of the sort on
+sale.
+
+We were late in getting started the next morning owing partly to Aggie's
+having put her riding-breeches on wrong, and being unable to sit down
+when once in the saddle. But the main reason was the guide we had
+engaged. Tish heard him using profane language to one of the horses and
+dismissed him on the spot.
+
+The man who was providing our horses and outfit, however, understood,
+and in a short time returned with another man.
+
+"I've got a good one for you now, Miss Carberry," he said. "Safe and
+perfectly gentle, and as mild as milk. Only has one fault, and maybe you
+won't mind that. He smokes considerably."
+
+"I don't object, as long as it's in the open air," Tish said.
+
+So that was arranged. But I must say that the new man did not look mild.
+He had red hair, although a nice smile with a gold tooth, and his
+trousers were of white fur, which looked hot for summer.
+
+"You are sure that you don't use strong language?" Tish asked.
+
+"No, ma'am," he said. "I was raised strict, and very particular as to
+swearing. Dear, dear now, would you look at that cinch! Blow up their
+little tummies, they do, when they're cinched, and when they breathe it
+out, the saddle's as loose as the tongues of some of these here
+tourists."
+
+Tish swung herself up without any trouble, but owing to a large canvas
+bag on the back of my saddle I was unable to get my leg across, and
+was compelled to have it worked over, a little at a time. At last,
+however, we were ready. A white pack-horse, carrying our tents and
+cooking-utensils, was led by Bill, which proved to be the name of our
+cowboy guide.
+
+Mr. Bell came to say good-bye and to wish us luck. But he looked
+unhappy, and there was no sign whatever of the young lady, whose name we
+had learned was Helen.
+
+"I may see you on the trail," he said sadly. "I'm about sick of this
+place, and I'm thinking of clearing out."
+
+Aggie reminded him that faint heart never won fair lady, but he only
+shook his head.
+
+"I'm not so sure that I want to win," he said. "Marriage is a serious
+business, and I don't know that I'd care to have a wife that followed a
+camera like a street kid follows a brass band. It wouldn't make for a
+quiet home."
+
+We left him staring wistfully into the distance.
+
+Tish sat in her saddle and surveyed the mountain peaks that rose behind
+the hotel.
+
+"Twenty centuries are looking down upon us!" she said. "The crest of our
+native land lies before us. We will conquer those beetling crags, or die
+trying. All right, Bill. Forward!"
+
+Bill led off, followed by the pack-horse, then Tish, Aggie and myself.
+We kept on in this order for some time, which gave me a chance to
+observe Aggie carefully. I am not much of a horsewoman myself, having
+never been on a horse before. But my father was fond of riding, and I
+soon adapted myself to the horse's gait, especially when walking. On
+level stretches, however, where Bill spurred his horse to a trot, I was
+not so comfortable, and Aggie appeared to strike the saddle in a
+different spot every time she descended.
+
+Once, on her turning her profile to me in a glance of despair, I was
+struck by the strange and collapsed appearance of her face. This was
+explained, however, when my horse caught up to hers on a wider stretch
+of road, and I saw that she had taken out her teeth and was holding them
+in her hand.
+
+"Al-almost swallowed them," she gasped. "Oh, Lizzie, to think of a
+summer of this!"
+
+At last we left the road and turned onto a footpath, which instantly
+commenced to rise. Tish called back something about the beauties of
+nature and riding over a carpet of flowers, but my horse was fording a
+small stream at the time and I was too occupied to reply. The path--or
+trail, which is what Bill called it--grew more steep, and I let go of
+the lines and held to the horn of my saddle. The horses were climbing
+like goats.
+
+"Tish," Aggie called desperately, "I can't stand this. I'm going back!
+I'm--Lordamighty!"
+
+Fortunately Tish did not hear this. We had suddenly emerged on the brink
+of a precipice. A two-foot path clung to the cliff, and along the very
+edge of this the horses walked, looking down in an interested manner now
+and then. My blood turned to water and I closed my eyes.
+
+"Tish!" Aggie shrieked.
+
+But the only effect of this was to start her horse into a trot. I had
+closed my eyes, but I opened them in time to see Aggie give a wild
+clutch and a low moan.
+
+In a few moments the trail left the edge, and Aggie turned in her saddle
+and looked back at me.
+
+"I lost my lower set back there," she said. "They went over the edge. I
+suppose they're falling yet."
+
+"It's a good thing it wasn't the upper set," I said, to comfort her. "As
+far as appearance goes--"
+
+"Appearance!" she said bitterly. "Do you suppose we'll meet anybody but
+desperadoes and Indians in a place like this? And not an egg with us, of
+course."
+
+The eggs referred to her diet, as at different times, when having her
+teeth repaired, she can eat little else.
+
+"Ham," she called back in a surly tone, "and hard tack, I suppose! I'll
+starve, Lizzie, that's all. If only we had brought some junket tablets!"
+
+With the exception of this incident the morning was quiet. Tish and Bill
+talked prohibition, which he believed in, and the tin pans on the
+pack-horse clattered, and we got higher all the time, and rode through
+waterfalls and along the edge of death. By noon I did not much care if
+the horses fell over or not. The skin was off me in a number of places,
+and my horse did not like me, and showed it by nipping back at my leg
+here and there.
+
+At eleven o'clock, riding through a valley on a trail six inches wide,
+Bill's horse stepped on a hornets' nest. The insects were probably dazed
+at first, but by the time Tish's horse arrived they were prepared, and
+the next thing we knew Tish's horse was flying up the mountain-side as
+if it had gone crazy, and Bill was shouting to us to stop.
+
+The last we saw of Tish for some time was her horse leaping a mountain
+stream, and jumping like a kangaroo, and Bill was following.
+
+"She'll be killed!" Aggie cried. "Oh, Tish, Tish!"
+
+"Don't yell," I said. "You'll start the horses. And for Heaven's sake,
+Aggie," I added grimly, "remember that this is a pleasure trip."
+
+It was a half-hour before Tish and Bill returned. Tish was a chastened
+woman. She said little or nothing, but borrowed some ointment from me
+for her face, where the branches of trees had scraped it, while Bill led
+the horses round the fatal spot. I recall, however, that she said she
+wished now that we had brought the other guide.
+
+"Because I feel," she observed, "that a little strong language would be
+a relief."
+
+We had luncheon at noon in a sylvan glade, and Aggie was pathetic. She
+dipped a cracker in a cup of tea, and sat off by herself under a tree.
+Tish, however, had recovered her spirits.
+
+"Throw out your chests, and breathe deep of this pure air unsullied by
+civilization," she cried. "Aggie, fill yourself with ozone."
+
+"Humph!" said Aggie. "It's about all I will fill myself with."
+
+"Think," Tish observed, "of the fools and dolts who are living under
+roofs, struggling, contending, plotting, while all Nature awaits them."
+
+"With stings," Aggie said nastily, "and teeth, and horns, and claws, and
+every old thing! Tish, I want to go back. I'm not happy, and I don't
+enjoy scenery when I'm not happy. Besides, I can't eat the landscape."
+
+As I look back, I believe it would have been better if we had returned.
+I think of that day, some time later, when we made the long descent from
+the Piegan Pass under such extraordinary circumstances, and I realize
+that, although worse for our bodies, which had grown strong and agile,
+so that I have, later on, seen Aggie mount her horse on a run, it would
+have been better for our nerves had we returned.
+
+We were all perfectly stiff after luncheon, and Aggie was sulking also.
+Bill was compelled to lift us into our saddles, and again we started up
+and up. The trail was now what he called a "switchback." Halfway up
+Aggie refused to go farther, but on looking back decided not to return
+either.
+
+"I shall not go another step," she called. "Here I am, and here I stay
+till I die."
+
+"Very well," Tish said from overhead. "I suppose you don't expect us all
+to stay and die with you. I'll tell your niece when I see her."
+
+Aggie thought better of it, however, and followed on, with her eyes
+closed and her lips moving in prayer. She happened to open them at a bad
+place, although safe enough, according to Bill, and nothing to what we
+were coming to a few days later. Opening them as she did on a ledge of
+rock which sloped steeply for what appeared to be several miles down
+on each side, she uttered a piercing shriek, followed by a sneeze. As
+before, her horse started to run, and Aggie is, I believe Bill said,
+the only person in the world who ever took that place at a canter.
+
+We were to take things easy the first day, Bill advised. "Till you get
+your muscles sort of eased up, ladies," he said. "If you haven't been
+riding astride, a horse's back seems as wide as the roof of a church.
+But we'll get a rest now. The rest of the way is walking."
+
+"I can't walk," Aggie said. "I can't get my knees together."
+
+"Sorry, ma'am," said Bill. "We're going down now, and the animals has to
+be led. That's one of the diversions of a trip like this. First you ride
+and than you walk. And then you ride again. This here's one of the show
+places, although easy of access from the entrance. Be a good place for a
+holdup, I've always said."
+
+"A holdup?" Tish asked. Her enthusiasm seemed to have flagged somewhat,
+but at this she brightened up.
+
+"Yes'm. You see, we're near the Canadian border, and it would be easy
+for a gang to slip over and back again. Don't know why we've never had
+one. Yellowstone can boast of a number."
+
+I observed tartly that I considered it nothing to boast of, but Bill did
+not agree with me.
+
+"It doesn't hurt a neighborhood none," he observed. "Adds romance, as
+you might say."
+
+He went on and, happening to slide on a piece of shale at that moment, I
+sat down unexpectedly and the horse put its foot on me.
+
+I felt embittered and helpless, but the others kept on.
+
+"Very well," I said, "go on. Don't mind me. If this creature wants to
+sit in my lap, well and good. I expect it's tired."
+
+But as they went on callously, I was obliged to shove the creature off
+and to hobble on. Bill was still babbling about holdups, and Aggie was
+saying that he was sunstruck, but of course it did not matter.
+
+We made very slow progress, owing to taking frequent rests, and late in
+the afternoon we were overtaken by Mr. Bell, on foot and carrying a
+pack. He would have passed on without stopping, but Aggie hailed him.
+
+"Not going to hike, are you?" she said pleasantly. Aggie is fond of
+picking up the vernacular of a region.
+
+"No," he said in a surly tone quite unlike his former urbane manner,
+"I'm merely taking this pack out for a walk."
+
+But he stopped and mopped his face.
+
+"To tell you the truth, ladies," he said, "I'm working off a little
+steam, that's all. I was afraid, if I stayed round the hotel, I'd do
+something I'd be sorry for. There are times when I am not a fit
+companion for any one, and this is one of them."
+
+We invited him to join us, but he refused.
+
+"No, I'm better alone," he said. "When things get too strong for me on
+the trail I can sling things about. I've been throwing boulders down the
+mountain every now and then. I'd just as soon they hit somebody as not.
+Also," he added, "I'm safer away from any red-headed men."
+
+We saw him glance at Bill, and understood. Mr. Oliver was red-headed.
+
+"Love's an awful thing," said Bill as the young man went on, kicking
+stones out of his way. "I'm glad I ain't got it."
+
+Tish turned and eyed him. "True love is a very beautiful thing," she
+rebuked him. "Although a single woman myself, I believe in it. 'Come
+live with me and be my love,'" she quoted, sitting down to shake a stone
+out of her riding-boot.
+
+Bill looked startled. "I might say," he said hastily, "that I may have
+misled you, ladies. I'm married."
+
+"You said you had never been in love," Tish said sharply.
+
+"Well, not to say real love," he replied. "She was the cook of an outfit
+I was with and it just came about natural. She was going to leave, which
+meant that I'd have to do the cooking, which I ain't much at, especially
+pastry. So I married her."
+
+Tish gave him a scornful glance but said nothing and we went on.
+
+We camped late that afternoon beside Two Medicine Lake, and while Bill
+put up the tents the three of us sat on a log and soaked our aching feet
+in the water which was melted glacier, and naturally cold.
+
+What was our surprise, on turning somewhat, to see the angry lover
+fishing on a point near by. While we stared he pulled out a large trout,
+and stalked away without a glance in our direction. As Tish, with her
+usual forethought, had brought a trout rod, she hastily procured it, but
+without result.
+
+"Of course," Aggie said, "no fish! I could eat a piece of broiled fish.
+I dare say I shall be skin and bone at the end of this trip--and not
+much skin."
+
+Bill had set up the sleeping-tent and built a fire, and it looked cozy
+and comfortable. But Tish had the young man on her mind, and after
+supper she put on a skirt which she had brought along and went to see
+him.
+
+"I'd take him some supper, Bill," she said, "but you are correct: you
+are no cook."
+
+She disappeared among the bushes, only to return in a short time,
+jerking off her skirt as she came.
+
+"He says all he wants is to be let alone," she said briefly. "I must say
+I'm disappointed in him. He was very agreeable before."
+
+I pass without comment over the night. Bill had put up the tent over the
+root of a large tree, and we disposed ourselves about it as well as we
+could. In the course of the night one of the horses broke loose and put
+its head inside the tent. Owing to Aggie's thinking it was a bear, Tish
+shot at it, fortunately missing it.
+
+But the frightened animal ran away, and Bill was until noon the next day
+finding it. We cooked our own breakfast, and Tish made some gems, having
+brought the pan along. But the morning dragged, although the scenery was
+lovely.
+
+At twelve Bill brought the horse back and came over to us.
+
+"If you don't mind my saying it, Miss Carberry," he observed, "you're a
+bit too ready with that gun. First thing you know you'll put a hole
+through me, and then where will you be?"
+
+"I've got along without men most of my life," Tish said sharply. "I
+reckon we'd manage."
+
+"Well," he said, "there's another angle to it. Where would I be?"
+
+"That's between you and your Creator," Tish retorted.
+
+We went on again that afternoon, and climbed another precipice. We saw
+no human being except a mountain goat, although Bill claimed to have
+seen a bear. Tish was quite calm at all times, and had got so that she
+could look down into eternity without a shudder. But Aggie and I were
+still nervous, and at the steepest places we got off and walked.
+
+The unfortunate part was that the exercise and the mountain air made
+Aggie hungry, and there was little that she could eat.
+
+"If any one had told me a month ago," she said, mopping her forehead,
+"that I would be scaling the peaks of my country on crackers and tea, I
+wouldn't have believed it. I'm done out, Lizzie. I can't climb another
+inch."
+
+Bill was ahead with the pack horse, and Tish, overhearing her, called
+back some advice.
+
+"Take your horse's tail and let him pull you up, Aggie," she said. "I've
+read it somewhere."
+
+Aggie, although frequently complaining, always does as Tish suggests. So
+she took the horse's tail, when a totally unexpected thing happened.
+Docile as the creature generally was, it objected at once, and kicked
+out with both rear feet. In a moment, it seemed to me, Aggie was gone,
+and her horse was moving on alone.
+
+"Aggie!" I called in a panic.
+
+Tish stopped, and we both looked about. Then we saw her, lying on a
+ledge about ten feet below the trail. She was flat on her back, and her
+riding-hat was gone. But she was uninjured, although shaken, for as we
+looked she sat up, and an agonized expression came over her face.
+
+"Aggie!" I cried. "Is anything broken?"
+
+"Damnation!" said Aggie in an awful voice. "The upper set is gone!"
+
+I have set down exactly what Aggie said. I admit that the provocation
+was great. But Tish was not one to make allowances, and she turned and
+went on, leaving us alone. She is not without feeling, however, for from
+the top of the pass she sent Bill down with a rope, and we dragged poor
+Aggie to the trail again. Her nerves were shaken and she was repentant
+also, for when she found that her hat was gone she said nothing,
+although her eyes took on a hunted look.
+
+At the top of the pass Tish was sitting on a stone. She had taken her
+mending-box from the saddle, where she always kept it handy, and was
+drawing up a hole in her stocking. I observed to her pleasantly that it
+was a sign of scandal to mend clothing while still on, but she ignored
+me, although, as I reflected bitterly, I had not been kicked over the
+cliff.
+
+It was a subdued and speechless Aggie who followed us that afternoon
+along the trail. As her hat was gone, I took the spare dish towel and
+made a turban for her, with an end hanging down to protect the back of
+her neck. But she expressed little gratitude, beyond observing that as
+she was going over the edge piecemeal, she'd better have done it all at
+once and be through with it.
+
+The afternoon wore away slowly. It seemed a long time until we reached
+our camping-place, partly because, although a small eater ordinarily,
+the air and exercise had made me feel famished. But the disagreement
+between Tish and Aggie, owing to the latter's unfortunate exclamation
+while kicked over the cliff, made the time seem longer. There was not
+the usual exchange of pleasant nothings between us.
+
+But by six o'clock Tish was more amiable, having seen bear scratches on
+trees near the camp, and anticipating the sight of a bear. She mixed up
+a small cup cake while Bill was putting up our tent, and then, taking
+her rod, proceeded to fish, while Aggie and I searched for grasshoppers.
+These were few, owing to the altitude, but we caught four, which we
+imprisoned in a match-box.
+
+With them Tish caught four trout and, broiling them nicely, she offered
+one to poor Aggie. It was a peace offering, and taken as such, so that
+we were soon on our former agreeable footing, and all forgotten.
+
+The next day it rained, and we were obliged to sit in the tent. Bill sat
+with us, and talked mainly of desperadoes.
+
+"As I observed before," he said, "there hasn't been any tourist holdup
+yet. But it's bound to come. Take the Yellowstone, now,--one holdup a
+year's the average, and it's full of soldiers at that."
+
+"It's a wonder people keep on going," I observed moving out of a puddle.
+
+"Oh, I don't know," he said. "In one way it's good business. I take it
+this way: When folks come West they want the West they've read about.
+What do they care for irrigation and apple orchards? What they like is
+danger and a little gunplay, the sort of thing they see in these here
+moving pictures."
+
+"I'm sure I don't," Aggie remarked. It was growing dusk, and she peered
+out into the forest round us. "There is something crackling out there
+now," she said.
+
+"Only a bear, likely," Bill assured her. "We have a sight of bears here.
+No, ma'am, they want danger. And every holdup's an advertisement. You
+see, the Government can't advertise these here parks; not the way it
+should, anyhow. But a holdup's news, so the papers print it, and it sets
+people to thinking about the park. Maybe they never thought of the place
+and are arranging to go elsewhere. Then along comes a gang and raises
+h--, raises trouble, and the park's in every one's mouth, so to speak.
+We'd get considerable business if there was one this summer."
+
+At that moment the crackling outside increased, and a shadowy form
+emerged from the bushes. Even Bill stood up, and Aggie screamed.
+
+It was, however, only poor Mr. Bell.
+
+"Mind if I borrow some matches?" he said gruffly.
+
+"We can't lend matches," Tish replied. "At least, I don't see the use of
+sending them back after they've been lighted. We can give you some."
+
+"My mistake," he said.
+
+That was all he said, except the word "Thanks" when I reached him a box.
+
+"He's a surly creature," Tish observed as he crackled through the brush
+again. "More than likely that girl's better off without him."
+
+"He looks rather downhearted," Aggie remarked. "Much that we think is
+temper is due to unhappiness."
+
+"Much of your charitable view is due to a good dinner too," Tish said.
+"Here we are, in the center of the wilderness, with great peaks on every
+hand, and we meet a fellow creature who speaks nine words, and begrudges
+those. If he's as stingy with money as with language she's hard a narrow
+escape."
+
+"He's had kind of a raw deal," Bill put in. "The girl was stuck on him
+all right, until this moving-picture chap came along. He offered to take
+some pictures with her in them, and it was all off. They're making up a
+play now, and she's to be in it."
+
+"What sort of a play?" Tish demanded.
+
+"Sorry not to oblige," Bill replied. "Can't say the nature of it."
+
+But all of us felt that Bill knew and would not say.
+
+Tish, to whom a mystery is a personal affront, determined to find out
+for herself; and when later in the evening we saw the light of Bell's
+camp-fire, it was Tish herself who suggested that we go over and visit
+with him.
+
+"We can converse about various things," she said, "and take his mind
+from his troubles. But it would be better not to mention affairs of the
+heart. He's probably sensitive."
+
+So we left Bill to look after things, and went to call on Mr. Bell. It
+was farther to his camp than it had appeared, and Tish unfortunately ran
+into a tree and bruised her nose badly. When it had stopped bleeding,
+however, we went on, and at last arrived.
+
+He was sitting on a log by the fire, smoking a pipe and looking very
+sad. Behind him was a bit of a tent not much larger than an umbrella.
+
+Aggie touched my arm. "My heart aches for him," she said. "There is
+despair in his very eyes."
+
+I do not believe that at first he was very glad to see us, but he
+softened somewhat when Tish held out the cake she had brought.
+
+"That's very nice of you," he said, rising. "I'm afraid I can't ask you
+to sit down. The ground's wet and there is only this log."
+
+"I've sat on logs before," Tish replied. "We thought we'd call, seeing
+we are neighbors. As the first comers it was our place to call first, of
+course."
+
+"I see," he said, and poked up the fire with a piece of stick.
+
+"We felt that you might be lonely," said Aggie.
+
+"I came here to be lonely," he replied gloomily. "I want to be lonely."
+
+Tish, however, was determined to be cheerful, and asked him, as a safe
+subject, how he felt about the war.
+
+"War?" he said. "That's so, there is a war. To tell the truth, I had
+forgotten about it. I've been thinking of other things."
+
+We saw that it was going to be difficult to cheer him. Tish tried the
+weather, which brought us nowhere, as he merely grunted. But Aggie
+broached the subject of desperadoes, and he roused somewhat.
+
+"There are plenty of shady characters in the park," he said shortly.
+"Wolves in sheep's clothing, that's what they are."
+
+"Bill, our guide, says there may be a holdup at any time."
+
+"Sure there is," he said calmly. "There's one going to be pulled off in
+the next day or two."
+
+We sat petrified, and Aggie's eyes were starting out of her head.
+
+"All the trimmings," he went on, staring at the fire. "Innocent and
+unsuspecting tourists, lunch, laughter, boiled coffee, and cold ham.
+Ambush. The whole business--followed by highwaymen in flannel shirts and
+revolvers. Dead tourist or two, desperate resistance--everything."
+
+Aggie rose, pale as an aspen. "You--you are joking!" she cried.
+
+"Do I look like it?" he demanded fiercely. "I tell you there is going to
+be the whole thing. At the end the lovely girl will escape on horseback
+and ride madly for aid. She will meet the sheriff and a posse, who are
+out for a picnic or some such damfool nonsense, and--"
+
+"Young man," Tish said coldly, "if you know all this, why are you
+sitting here and not alarming the authorities?"
+
+"Pooh!" he said disagreeably. "It's a put-up scheme, to advertise the
+park. Yellowstone's got ahead of them this year, and has had its
+excitement, with all the papers ringing with it. That was a gag, too,
+probably."
+
+"Do you mean--"
+
+"I mean considerable," he said. "That red-headed movie idiot will be on
+a rise, taking the tourists as they ride through. Of course he doesn't
+expect the holdup--not in the papers anyhow. He happens to have the
+camera trained on the party, and gets it all. Result--a whacking good
+picture, revolvers firing blank cartridges, everything which people will
+crowd to see. Oh, it's good business all right. I don't mind admitting
+that."
+
+Tish's face expressed the greatest rage. She rose, drawing herself to
+her full height.
+
+"And the tourists?" she demanded. "They lend themselves to this
+imposition? To this infamy? To this turpitude?"
+
+"Certainly not. They think it's the real thing. The whole business hangs
+on that. And as the sheriff, or whoever it is in the fool plot, captures
+the bandits, the party gets its money back, and has material for
+conversation for the next twenty years."
+
+"To think," said Tish, "of our great National Government lending itself
+to such a scheme!"
+
+"Wrong," said the young man. "It's a combination of Western railroads
+and a movie concern acting together."
+
+"I trust," Tish observed, setting her lips firmly, "that the tourists
+will protest."
+
+"The more noise, the better." The young man, though not more cheerful as
+to appearance, was certainly more talkative. "Trust a clergyman for
+yelling when his pocket's picked."
+
+With one voice the three of us exclaimed: "Mr. Ostermaier!"
+
+He was not sure of the name, but "Helen" had pointed the clergyman out
+to him, and it was Mr. Ostermaier without a doubt.
+
+We talked it over with Bill when we got back, and he was not as
+surprised as we'd expected.
+
+"Knew they were cooking up something. They've got some Indians in it
+too. Saw them rehearsing old Thunder Mountain the other day in nothing
+but a breech-clout."
+
+Tish reproved him for a lack of delicacy of speech, and shortly
+afterward we went to bed. Owing to the root under the tent, and puddles
+here and there, we could not go to sleep for a time, and we discussed
+the "nefarious deed," as Tish aptly termed it, that was about to take
+place.
+
+"Although," Tish observed, "Mr. Ostermaier has been receiving for so
+many years that it might be a good thing, for his soul's sake, to have
+him give up something, even if to bandits." I dozed off after a time,
+but awakened to find Tish sitting up, wide awake.
+
+"I've been thinking that thing over, Lizzie," she said in a low tone. "I
+believe it's our duty to interfere."
+
+"Of course," I replied sarcastically; "and be shown all over the country
+in the movies making fools of ourselves."
+
+"Did you notice that that young man said they would be firing blank
+cartridges?"
+
+Well, even a blank cartridge can be a dangerous thing. Then and there I
+reminded her of my niece's boy, who was struck on the Fourth of July by
+a wad from one, and had to be watched for lockjaw for several weeks.
+
+It was at that moment that we heard Bill, who had no tent, by choice,
+and lay under a tree, give a loud whoop, followed by what was
+unmistakably an oath.
+
+"Bear!" he yelled. "Watch out, he's headed for the tent! It's a
+grizzly."
+
+Tish felt round wildly for her revolver, but it was gone! And the bear
+was close by. We could hear it snuffing about, and to add to the
+confusion Aggie wakened and commenced to sneeze with terror.
+
+"Bill!" Tish called. "I've lost my revolver!"
+
+"I took it, Miss Carberry. But I've been lying in a puddle, and it won't
+go off."
+
+All hope seemed gone. The frail walls of our tent were no protection
+whatever, and as we all knew, even a tree was no refuge from a bear,
+which, as we had seen in the Zoological Garden at home, can climb like a
+cat, only swifter. Besides, none of us could climb a tree.
+
+It was at that moment that Tish had one of those inspirations that make
+her so dependable in emergencies. Feeling round in the tent for a
+possible weapon, she touched a large ham, from which we had broiled a
+few slices at supper. In her shadowy form there was both purpose and
+high courage. With a single sweeping gesture she flung the ham at the
+bear so accurately that we heard the thud with which it struck.
+
+"What the hell are you doing?" Bill called from a safe distance. Even
+then we realized that his restraint of speech was a pose, pure and
+simple. "If you make him angry he'll tear up the whole place."
+
+But Tish did not deign to answer. The rain had ceased, and suddenly the
+moon came out and illuminated the whole scene. We saw the bear sniffing
+at the ham, which lay on the ground. Then he picked it up in his jaws
+and stood looking about.
+
+Tish said later that the moment his teeth were buried in the ham she
+felt safe. I can still see the majestic movement with which she walked
+out of the tent and waved her arms.
+
+"Now, scat with you!" she said firmly. "Scat!"
+
+He "scatted." Snarling through his nose, for fear of dropping the ham,
+he turned and fled up the mountainside. In the open space Tish stood the
+conqueror. She yawned and glanced about.
+
+"Going to be a nice night, after all," she said. "Now, Bill, bring me
+that revolver, and if I catch you meddling with it again I'll put that
+pair of fur rugs you are so proud of in the fire."
+
+Bill, who was ignorant of the ham, emerged sheepishly into the open.
+"Where the--where the dickens did you hit him, Miss Tish?" he asked.
+
+"In the stomach," Tish replied tartly, and taking her revolver went back
+to the tent.
+
+All the next day Tish was quiet. She rode ahead, hardly noticing the
+scenery, with her head dropped on her chest. At luncheon she took a
+sardine sandwich and withdrew to a tree, underneath which she sat, a
+lonely and brooding figure.
+
+When luncheon was over and Aggie and I were washing the dishes and
+hanging out the dish towels to dry on a bush, Tish approached Bill, who
+was pouring water on the fire to extinguish it.
+
+"Bill," she stated, "you came to us under false pretenses. You swear,
+for one thing."
+
+"Only under excitement, Miss Tish," he said. "And as far as that goes,
+Miss Aggie herself said--"
+
+"Also," Tish went on hastily, "you said you could cook. You cannot
+cook."
+
+"Now, look here, Miss Tish," he said in a pleading tone, "I can cook. I
+didn't claim to know the whole cookbook. I can make coffee and fry
+bacon. How'd I know you ladies wanted pastry? As for them canned salmon
+croquettes with white sauce, I reckon to make them with a little
+showing, and--"
+
+"Also," said Tish, cutting in sternly, "you took away my revolver, and
+left us helpless last night, and in peril of wild beasts."
+
+"Tourists ain't allowed to carry guns."
+
+He attempted to look injured, but Tish ignored him.
+
+"Therefore," she said, "if I am not to send you back--which I have been
+considering all day, as I've put up a tent myself before this, and you
+are only an extra mouth to feed, which, as we are one ham short, is
+inconvenient--you will have to justify my keeping you."
+
+"If you will just show me once about them gems, Miss Tish--" he began.
+
+But Tish cut him off. "No," she said firmly, "you are too casual about
+cooking. And you are no dish-washer. Setting a plate in a river and
+letting the current wash it may satisfy cow-punchers. It doesn't go with
+me. The point is this: You know all about the holdup that is going to
+take place. Don't lie. I know you know. Now, you take us there and tell
+us all you know about it."
+
+He scratched his head reflectively. "I'll tell you," he said. "I'm a
+slow thinker. Give me about twenty minutes on it, will you? It's a sort
+of secret, and there's different ways of looking at it."
+
+Tish took out her watch. "Twenty minutes," she said. "Start thinking
+now."
+
+He wandered off and rolled a cigarette. Later on, as I have said, he
+showed Tish how to do it--not, of course, that she meant to smoke, but
+Tish is fond of learning how to do things. She got so she could roll
+them with one hand, and she does it now in the winter evenings, instead
+of rolling paper spills as formerly. When Charlie Sands comes, she
+always has a supply ready for him, although occasionally somewhat dry
+from waiting for a few weeks.
+
+At the end of twenty minutes Tish snapped her watch shut.
+
+"Time!" she called, and Bill came back.
+
+"Well, I'll do it," he said. "I don't know as they'll put you in the
+picture, but I'll see what I can do."
+
+"Picture nothing!" Tish snapped. "You take us there and hide us. That's
+the point. There must be caves round to put us in, although I don't
+insist on a cave. They're damp usually."
+
+Well, he looked puzzled, but he agreed. I caught Aggie's eye, and we
+exchanged glances. There was trouble coming, and we knew it. Our long
+experience with Tish had taught us not to ask questions. "Ours but to do
+and die," as Aggie later said. But I confess to a feeling of uneasiness
+during the remainder of that day.
+
+We changed our course that afternoon, turning off at Saint Mary's and
+spending the night near the Swiss Chalet at Going-to-the-Sun. Aggie and
+I pleaded to spend the night in the chalet, but Tish was adamant.
+
+"When I am out camping, I camp," she said. "I can have a bed at home,
+but I cannot sleep under the stars, on a bed of pine needles, and be
+lured to rest by the murmur of a mountain stream."
+
+Well, we gave it up and went with her. I must say that the trip had
+improved us already. Except when terrified or kicked by a horse, Aggie
+was not sneezing at all, and I could now climb into the saddle
+unassisted. My waistbands were much looser, too, and during a short rest
+that afternoon I put a dart in my riding-breeches, during the absence
+of Bill after the pack-horse, which had strayed.
+
+It was on that occasion that Tish told us as much of her plan as she
+thought it wise for us to know.
+
+"The holdup," she explained, "is to be the day after to-morrow on the
+Piegan Pass. Bill says there is a level spot at the top with rocks all
+about. That is the spot. The Ostermaiers and their party leave the
+automobiles at Many Glaciers and take horses to the pass. It will be
+worth coming clear to Montana to see Mrs. Ostermaier on a horse."
+
+"I still don't see," Aggie observed in a quavering voice, "what we have
+to do with it."
+
+"Naturally not," said Tish. "You'll know as soon as is good for you."
+
+"I don't believe it will ever be good for me," said poor Aggie. "It
+isn't good for anybody to be near a holdup. And I don't want to be in a
+moving picture with no teeth. I'm not a vain woman," she said, "but I
+draw the line at that."
+
+But Tish ignored her. "The only trouble," she said, "is having one
+revolver. If we each had one--Lizzie, did you bring any ink?"
+
+Well, I had, and said so, but that I needed it for postcards when we
+struck a settlement.
+
+Tish waved my objection aside. "I guess it can be managed," she
+observed. "Bill has a knife. Yes, I think it can be done."
+
+She and Bill engaged in an earnest conference that afternoon. At first
+Bill objected. I could see him shaking his head. Then Tish gave him
+something which Aggie said was money. I do not know. She had been short
+of cash on the train, but she may have had more in her trunk. Then I saw
+Bill start to laugh. He laughed until he had to lean against a tree,
+although Tish was quite stern and serious.
+
+We reached Piegan Pass about three that afternoon, and having inspected
+it and the Garden Wall, which is a mile or two high at that point, we
+returned to a "bench" where there were some trees, and dismounted.
+
+Here, to our surprise, we found Mr. Bell again. As Tish remarked, he was
+better at walking than at talking. He looked surprised at seeing us, and
+was much more agreeable than before.
+
+"I'm afraid I was pretty surly the other night," he said. "The truth is,
+I was so blooming unhappy that I didn't give a damn for anything."
+
+But when he saw that Bill was preparing to take the pack off the horse
+he looked startled.
+
+"I say," he said, "you don't mean to camp here, do you?"
+
+"Such is my intention," Tish observed grimly.
+
+"But look here. Just beyond, at the pass, is where the holdup is to take
+place to-morrow."
+
+"So I believe," said Tish. "What has that to do with us? What are you
+going to do?"
+
+"Oh, I'm going to hang round."
+
+"Well, we intend to hang round also."
+
+He stood by and watched our preparations for camp. Tish chose a small
+grove for the tent, and then left us, clambering up the mountain-side.
+She finally disappeared. Aggie mixed some muffins for tea, and we
+invited the young man to join us. But he was looking downhearted again
+and refused.
+
+However, when she took them out of the portable oven, nicely browned,
+and lifting the tops of each one dropped in a teaspoonful of grape
+jelly, he changed his mind.
+
+"I'll stay, if you don't mind," he said. "Maybe some decent food will
+make me see things clearer."
+
+When Tish descended at six o'clock, she looked depressed. "There is no
+cave," she said, "although I have gone where a mountain goat would get
+dizzy. But I have found a good place to hide the horses, where we can
+get them quickly when we need them."
+
+Aggie was scooping the inside out of her muffin, being unable to eat the
+crust, but she went quite pale.
+
+"Tish," she said, "you have some desperate plan in view, and I am not
+equal to it. I am worn with travel and soft food, and am not as young as
+I once was."
+
+"Desperate nothing!" said Tish, pouring condensed milk into her tea. "I
+am going to teach a lot of idiots a lesson, that's all. There should be
+one spot in America free from the advertising man and his schemes, and
+this is going to be it. Commercialism," she went on, growing oratorical,
+"does not belong here among these mighty mountains. Once let it start,
+and these towering cliffs will be defaced with toothpowder and
+intoxicating-liquor signs."
+
+The young man knew the plans for the holdup even letter than Bill. He
+was able to show us the exact spot which had been selected, and to tell
+us the hour at which the Ostermaier party was to cross the pass.
+
+"They'll lunch on the pass," he said, "and, of course, they suspect
+nothing. The young lady of whom I spoke to you will be one of their
+party. She, however, knows what is coming, and is, indeed, a party to
+it. The holdup will take place during luncheon."
+
+Here his voice broke, and he ate an entire muffin before he went on:
+"The holdup will take place on the pass, the bandits having been hidden
+on this 'bench' right here. Then the outlaws, having robbed the
+tourists, will steal the young lady and escape down the trail on the
+other side. The guide, who is in the plot, will ride ahead in this
+direction and raise the alarm. You understand," he added, "that as it's
+a put-up job, the tourists will get all their stuff back. I don't know
+how that's to be arranged."
+
+"But the girl?" Tish asked.
+
+"She's to make her escape later," Mr. Bell said grimly, "and will be
+photographed galloping down the trail, by another idiot with a camera,
+who, of course, just happens to be on the spot. She'll do it too," he
+added with a pathetic note of pride in his voice. "She's got nerve
+enough for anything."
+
+He drew a long breath, and Aggie poured him a third cup of tea.
+
+"I dare say this will finish everything," he said dejectedly. "I can't
+offer her any excitement like this. We live in a quiet suburb, where
+nobody ever fires a revolver except on the Fourth of July."
+
+"What she needs," Tish said, bending forward, "is a lesson, Mr.
+Bell--something to make her hate the very thought of a moving picture
+and shudder at the sound of a shot."
+
+"Exactly," said Mr. Bell. "I've thought of that. Something to make her
+gun-shy and camera-shy. It's curious about her. In some ways she's a
+timid girl. She's afraid of thunder, for one thing."
+
+Tish bent forward. "Do you know," she said, "the greatest weapon in the
+world?"
+
+"Weapon? Well, I don't know. These new German guns--"
+
+"The greatest weapon in the world," Tish explained, "is ridicule. Man is
+helpless against it. To be absurd is to be lost. When the bandits take
+the money, where do they go?"
+
+"Down the other side from the pass. A photographer will photograph them
+there, making their escape with the loot."
+
+"And the young lady?"
+
+"I've told you that," he said bitterly. "She is to be captured by the
+attacking party."
+
+"They will all be armed?"
+
+"Sure, with blanks. The Indians have guns and arrows, but the arrows
+have rubber tips."
+
+Tish rose majestically. "Mr. Bell," she said, "you may sleep to-night
+the sleep of peace. When I undertake a thing, I carry it through. My
+friends will agree with me. I never fail, when my heart is set on it. By
+the day after to-morrow the young lady in the case will hate the sight
+of a camera."
+
+Although not disclosing her plan, she invited the young man to join us.
+But his face fell and he shook his head.
+
+Tish said that she did not expect to need him, but that, if the time
+came, she would blow three times on a police whistle, which she had,
+with her usual foresight, brought along. He agreed to that, although
+looking rather surprised, and we parted from him.
+
+"I would advise," Tish said as he moved away, "that you conceal yourself
+in the valley below the pass on the other side."
+
+He agreed to this, and we separated for the night. But long after Aggie
+and I had composed ourselves to rest Tish sat on a stone by the
+camp-fire and rolled cigarettes.
+
+At last she came into the tent and wakened us by prodding us with her
+foot.
+
+"Get all the sleep you can," she said. "We'll leave here at dawn
+to-morrow, and there'll be little rest for any of us to-morrow night."
+
+At daylight next morning she roused us. She was dressed, except that she
+wore her combing-jacket, and her hair was loose round her face.
+
+"Aggie, you make an omelet in a hurry, and, Lizzie, you will have to get
+the horses."
+
+"I'll do nothing of the sort," I said, sitting up on the ground. "We've
+got a man here for that. Besides, I have to set the table."
+
+"Very well," Tish replied, "we can stay here, I dare say. Bill's busy at
+something I've set him to doing."
+
+"Whose fault is it," I demanded, "that we are here in 'Greenland's Icy
+Mountains'? Not mine. Id never heard of the dratted place. And those
+horses are five miles away by now, most likely."
+
+"Go and get a cup of tea. You'll have a little sense then," said Tish,
+not unkindly. "And as for what Bill's doing, he's making revolvers.
+Where's your writing ink?"
+
+_I had none!_ I realized it that moment. I had got it out at the first
+camp to record in my diary the place, weather, temperature, and my own
+pulse rate, which I had been advised to watch, on account of the effect
+of altitude on the heart, and had left the bottle sitting on a stone.
+
+When I confessed this to Tish, she was unjustly angry and a trifle
+bitter.
+
+"It's what I deserve, most likely, for bringing along two incompetents,"
+was her brief remark. "Without ink we are weaponless."
+
+But she is a creature of resource, and a moment later she emerged from
+the tent and called to Bill in a cheerful tone.
+
+"No ink, Bill," she said, "but we've got blackberry cordial, and by
+mixing it with a little soot we may be able to manage."
+
+Aggie demurred loudly, as there are occasions when only a mouthful of
+the cordial enables her to keep doing. But Tish was firm. When I went to
+the fire, I found Bill busily carving wooden revolvers, copying Tish's,
+which lay before him. He had them done well enough, and could have gone
+for the horses as easy as not, but he insisted on trimming them up.
+Mine, which I still have, has a buffalo head carved on the handle, and
+Aggie's has a wreath of leaves running round the barrel.
+
+In spite of Aggie's wails Tish poured a large part of the blackberry
+cordial into a biscuit pan, and put in a chip of wood.
+
+"It makes it red," she said doubtfully. "I never saw a red revolver,
+Bill."
+
+"Seems like an awful waste," Bill said. But having now completed the
+wreath he placed all three weapons--he had made one for himself--in the
+pan. The last thing I saw, as I started for the horses, was the three of
+them standing about, looking down, and Aggie's face was full of misery.
+
+I was gone for a half-hour. The horses had not wandered far, and having
+mounted mine, although without a saddle, I copied as well as I could the
+whoop Bill used to drive them in, and rounded them up. When I returned,
+driving them before me, the pack was ready, and on Tish's face was a
+look of intense satisfaction. I soon perceived the reason.
+
+Lying on a stone by the fire were three of the shiniest black revolvers
+any one could want. I eyed Tish and she explained.
+
+"Stove polish," she said. "Like a fool I'd forgot it. Gives a true
+metallic luster, as it says on the box."
+
+Tish is very particular about a stove, and even on our camping-trips we
+keep the portable stove shining and clean.
+
+"Does it come off?"
+
+"Well, more or less," she admitted. "We can keep the box out and renew
+when necessary. It is a great comfort," she added, "to feel that we are
+all armed. We shall need weapons."
+
+"In an emergency," I observed rather tartly, "I hope you will not depend
+on us too much. While I don't know what you intend to do, if it is
+anything desperate, just remember that the only way Aggie or I can do
+any damage with these things is to thrust them down somebody's throat
+and strangle him to death."
+
+She ignored my remark, however, and soon we were on our horses and
+moving along the trail toward the pass.
+
+
+
+
+II
+
+
+It will be unnecessary to remind those familiar with Glacier Park of the
+trail which hugs the mountain above timber-line, and extends toward the
+pass for a mile or so, in a long semicircle which curves inward.
+
+At the end it turns to the right and mounts to an acre or so of level
+ground, with snow and rocks but no vegetation. This is the Piegan Pass.
+Behind it is the Garden Wall, that stupendous mass of granite rising to
+incredible heights. On the other side the trail drops abruptly, by means
+of stepladders which I have explained.
+
+Tish now told us of her plan.
+
+"The unfortunate part is," she said, "that the Ostermaiers will not see
+us. I tried to arrange it so they could, but it was impossible. We must
+content ourselves with the knowledge of a good deed done."
+
+Her plan, in brief, was this: The sham attacking party was to turn and
+ride away down the far side of the pass, up which the Ostermaiers had
+come. They were, according to the young man, to take the girl with them,
+with the idea of holding her for ransom. She was to escape, however,
+while they were lunching in some secluded fastness, and, riding back to
+the pass, was to meet there a rescue party, which the Ostermaiers were
+to meet on the way down to Gunsight Chalet.
+
+Tish's idea was this: We would ride up while they were lunching, pretend
+to think them real bandits, paying no attention to them if they fired at
+us, as we knew they had only blank cartridges, and, having taken them
+prisoners, make them walk in ignominy to the nearest camp, some miles
+farther.
+
+"Then," said Tish, "either they will confess the ruse, and the country
+will ring with laughter, or they will have to submit to arrest and much
+unpleasantness. It will be a severe lesson."
+
+We reached the pass safely, and on the way down the other side we passed
+Mr. Oliver, the moving-picture man, with his outfit on a horse. He
+touched his hat politely and moved out on a ledge to let us by.
+
+"Mind if I take you as you go down the mountain?" he called. "It's a
+bully place for a picture." He stared at Aggie, who was muffled in a
+cape and had the dish towel round her head. "I'd particularly like to
+get your Arab," he said. "The Far East and the Far West, you know."
+
+Aggie gave him a furious glance. "Arab nothing!" she snapped. "If you
+can't tell a Christian lady from a heathen, on account of her having
+lost her hat, then you belong in the dirty work you're doing."
+
+"Aggie, be quiet!" Tish said in an awful voice.
+
+But wrath had made Aggie reckless. "'Dirty work' was what I said," she
+repeated, staring at the young man.
+
+"I beg your pardon. I'm sure I--"
+
+"Don't think," Aggie went on, to Tish's fury, "that we don't know a few
+things. We do."
+
+"I see," he said slowly. "All right. Although I'd like to know--"
+
+"Good-morning," said Aggie, and kicked her horse to go on.
+
+I shall never forget Tish's face. Round the next bend she got off her
+horse and confronted Aggie.
+
+[Illustration: "The older I get, Aggie Pilkington, the more I realize
+that to take you anywhere means ruin."]
+
+"The older I get, Aggie Pilkington," she said, "the more I realize that
+to take you anywhere means ruin. We are done now. All our labor is for
+nothing. There will be no holdup, no nothing. They are scared off."
+
+But Aggie was still angry. "Just let some one take you for a lousy
+Bedouin, Tish," she said, "and see what you would do. I'm not sorry
+anyhow. I never did like the idea."
+
+But Tish dislikes relinquishing an idea, once it has taken hold. And,
+although she did not speak to Aggie again for the next hour, she went
+ahead with her preparations.
+
+"There's still a chance, Lizzie," she said. "It's not likely they'll
+give up easy, on account of hiring the Indians and everything."
+
+About a mile and a half down the trail, she picked out a place to hide.
+This time there was a cave. We cleared our saddles for action, as Tish
+proposed to let them escape past us with the girl, and then to follow
+them rapidly, stealing upon them if possible while they were at
+luncheon, and covering them with the one real revolver and the three
+wooden ones.
+
+The only thing that bothered us was Bill's attitude. He kept laughing to
+himself and muttering, and when he was storing things in the cave, Tish
+took me aside.
+
+"I don't like his attitude, Lizzie," she said. "He's likely to giggle or
+do something silly, just at the crucial moment. I cannot understand why
+he thinks it is funny, but he does. We'd be much better without him."
+
+"You'd better talk to him, Tish," I said. "You can't get rid of him
+now."
+
+But to tell Tish she cannot do a thing is to determine her to do it.
+
+It was still early, only half-past eight, when she came to me with an
+eager face.
+
+"I've got it, Lizzie," she said. "I'll send off Mona Lisa, and he will
+have to search for her. The only thing is, she won't move unless she's
+driven. If we could only find a hornet's nest again, we could manage. It
+may be cruel, but I understand that a hornet's sting is not as painful
+to a horse as to a human being."
+
+Mona Lisa, I must explain, was the pack-horse. Tish had changed her name
+from Jane to Mona Lisa because in the mornings she was constantly
+missing, and having to be looked for.
+
+Tish disappeared for a time, and we settled down to our long wait. Bill
+put another coat of stove polish on the weapons, and broke now and then
+into silent laughter. On my giving him a haughty glance, however, he
+became sober and rubbed with redoubled vigor.
+
+In a half-hour, however, I saw Tish beckoning to me from a distance, and
+I went to her. I soon saw that she was holding her handkerchief to one
+cheek, but when I mentioned the fact she ignored me.
+
+"I have found a nest, Lizzie," she cried. "Slip over and unfasten Mona
+Lisa. She's not near the other horses, which is fortunate."
+
+I then perceived that Tish's yellow slicker was behind her on the ground
+and tied into a bundle, from which emerged a dull roaring. I was
+wondering how Tish expected to open it, when she settled the question by
+asking me to cut a piece from the mosquito netting which we put in the
+doorway of the tent at night, and to bring her riding-gloves.
+
+Aggie was darning a hole in the tablecloth when I went back and Bill was
+still engaged with the weapons. Having taken what she required to Tish,
+under pretense of giving Mona Lisa a lump of sugar, I untied her. What
+followed was exactly as Tish had planned. Mona Lisa, not realizing her
+freedom, stood still while Tish untied the slicker and freed its furious
+inmates. She then dropped the whole thing under the unfortunate animal,
+and retreated, not too rapidly, for fear of drawing Bill's attention.
+For possibly sixty seconds nothing happened, except that Mona Lisa
+raised her head and appeared to listen. Then, with a loud scream, she
+threw up her head and bolted. By the time Bill had put down the stove
+brush she was out of sight among the trees, but we could hear her
+leaping and scrambling through the wood.
+
+"Jumping cats!" said Bill, and ran for his horse. "Acts as though she'd
+started for the Coast!" he yelled to me, and flung after her.
+
+When he had disappeared, Tish came out of the woods, and, getting a
+kettle of boiling water, poured it over the nest. In spite of the
+netting, however, she was stung again, on the back of the neck, and
+spent the rest of the morning holding wet mud to the affected parts.
+
+Her brain, however, was as active as ever, and by half-past eleven,
+mounting a boulder, she announced that she could see the Ostermaier
+party far down the trail, and that in an hour they would probably be at
+the top. She had her field-glasses, and she said that Mrs. Ostermaier
+was pointing up to the pass and shaking her head, and that the others
+were arguing with her.
+
+[Illustration: "It would be just like the woman, to refuse to come any
+farther and spoil everything"]
+
+"It would be just like the woman," Tish said bitterly, "to refuse to
+come any farther and spoil everything."
+
+But a little later she announced that the guide was leading Mrs.
+Ostermaier's horse and that they were coming on.
+
+We immediately retreated to the cave and waited, it being Tish's
+intention to allow them to reach the pass without suspecting our
+presence, and only to cut off the pseudo-bandits in their retreat, as I
+have explained.
+
+It was well that we had concealed the horses also, for the party stopped
+near the cave, and Mrs. Ostermaier was weeping. "Not a step farther!"
+she said. "I have a family to consider, and Mr. Ostermaier is a man of
+wide usefulness and cannot be spared."
+
+We did not dare to look out, but we heard the young lady speaking, and
+as Aggie remarked later, no one would have thought, from the sweetness
+of her voice, that she was a creature of duplicity.
+
+"But it is perfectly safe, dear Mrs. Ostermaier," she said "And think,
+when you go home, of being able to say that you have climbed a mountain
+pass."
+
+"Pass!" sniffed Mrs. Ostermaier. "Pass nothing! I don't call a wall a
+mile high a pass."
+
+"Think," said the girl, "of being able to crow over those three old
+women who are always boasting of the things they do. Probably you are
+right, and they never do them at all, but you--there's a moving-picture
+man waiting, remember, and you can show the picture before the Dorcas
+Society. No one can ever doubt that you have done a courageous thing.
+You'll have the proof."
+
+"George," said Mrs. Ostermaier in a small voice, "if anything happens, I
+have told you how I want my things divided."
+
+"Little devil!" whispered Aggie, referring to the girl. "If that young
+man knows when he is well off, he'll let her go."
+
+But beyond rebuking her for the epithet, Tish made no comment, and the
+party moved on. We lost them for a time among the trees, but when they
+moved out above timber-line we were able to watch them, and we saw that
+Mrs. Ostermaier got off her horse, about halfway up, and climbed slowly
+on foot. Tish, who had the glasses, said that she looked purple and
+angry, and that she distinctly saw the guide give her something to drink
+out of a bottle. It might, however, have been vichy or some similar
+innocent beverage, and I believe in giving her the benefit of the doubt.
+
+When at last they vanished over the edge of the pass, we led out our
+horses and prepared for what was to come. Bill had not returned, and,
+indeed, we did not see him until the evening of the second day after
+that, when, worn but triumphant, we emerged from the trail at the Many
+Glaciers Hotel. That, however, comes later in this narrative.
+
+With everything prepared, Tish judged it best to have luncheon. I made a
+few mayonnaise-and-lettuce sandwiches, beating the mayonnaise in the
+cool recesses of the cave, and we drank some iced tea, to which Aggie
+had thoughtfully added sliced lemon and a quantity of ginger ale.
+Feeling much refreshed, we grasped our weapons and waited.
+
+At half-past twelve we heard a loud shriek on the pass, far overhead,
+followed almost immediately by a fusillade of shots. Then a silence,
+followed by more shots. Then a solitary horseman rode over the edge of
+the pass and, spurring his horse, rode recklessly down the precipitous
+trail. Aggie exclaimed that it was Mr. Ostermaier, basely deserting his
+wife in her apparent hour of need. But Tish, who had the glasses,
+reported finally that it was the moving-picture man.
+
+We were greatly surprised, as it had not occurred to us that this would
+be a part of the program.
+
+As he descended, Tish announced that there must be another photographer
+on top, as he was "registering" signs of terror--a moving-picture
+expression which she had acquired from Charlie Sands--and looking back
+frequently over his shoulder.
+
+We waited until he reached timber-line, and then withdrew to a group of
+trees. It was not our intention to allow him to see us and spoil
+everything. But when he came near, through the woods, and his horse
+continued at unabated speed, Tish decided that the animal, frightened by
+the shots, was running away.
+
+She therefore placed herself across the trail to check its headlong
+speed, but the animal merely rushed round her. Mr. Oliver yelled
+something at us, which we were, however, unable to hear, and kept madly
+on.
+
+Almost immediately four men, firing back over their shoulders, rode into
+sight at the pass and came swiftly down toward us.
+
+"Where's the girl?" Tish cried with her glasses to her eyes. "The idiots
+have got excited and have forgotten to steal her."
+
+That was plainly what had happened, but she was determined to be stolen
+anyhow, for the next moment she rode into view, furiously following the
+bandits.
+
+"She's kept her head anyhow," Tish observed with satisfaction. "Trust a
+lot of men to go crazy and do the wrong thing. But they'll have to
+change the story and make her follow them."
+
+At timber-line the men seemed to realize that she was behind them, and
+they turned and looked up. They seemed to be at a loss to know what to
+do, in view of the picture. But they were quick thinkers, too, we
+decided. Right then and there they took her prisoner, surrounding her.
+
+She made a desperate resistance, even crying out, as we could plainly
+see. But Tish was irritated. She said she could not see how the story
+would hold now. Either the girl should have captured them, they being
+out of ammunition, or the whole thing should have been done again,
+according to the original plan. However, as she said, it was not our
+affair. Our business was to teach them a lesson not to impose on
+unsuspecting tourists, for although not fond of Mrs. Ostermaier, we had
+been members of Mr. Ostermaier's church, and liked him, although his
+sermons were shorter than Tish entirely approved of.
+
+We withdrew again to seclusion until they had passed, and Tish gave them
+ten minutes to get well ahead. Then we rode out.
+
+Tish's face was stern as she led off. The shriek of Mrs. Ostermaier was
+still, as she said in a low tone, ringing in her ears. But before we had
+gone very far, Tish stopped and got off her horse. "We've got to pad the
+horses' feet," she said. "How can we creep up on them when on every
+stony place we sound like an artillery engagement?"
+
+Here was a difficulty we had not anticipated. But Tish overcame it with
+her customary resource, by taking the blanket from under her saddle and
+cutting it into pieces with her scissors, which always accompany her. We
+then cut the leather straps from our saddles at her direction, and each
+of us went to work. Aggie, however, protested.
+
+"I never expected," she said querulously, "to be sitting on the Rocky
+Mountains under a horse, tying a piece of bed quilt on his feet. I
+wouldn't mind," she added, "if the creature liked me. But the way he
+feels toward me he's likely to haul off and murder me at any moment."
+
+However, it was done at last, and it made a great change. We moved along
+silently, and all went well except that, having neglected to draw the
+cinch tight, and the horse's back being slippery without the padding, my
+saddle turned unexpectedly, throwing me off into the trail. I bruised my
+arm badly, but Tish only gave me a glance of scorn and went on.
+
+Being above carelessness herself, she very justly resents it in others.
+
+We had expected, with reason, that the so-called highwaymen, having
+retreated to a certain distance, would there pause and very possibly
+lunch before returning. It was, therefore, a matter of surprise to find
+that they had kept on.
+
+Moreover, they seemed to have advanced rapidly, and Tish, who had read a
+book on signs of the trail, examined the hoofprints of their horses in a
+soft place beside a stream, and reported that they had been going at a
+lope.
+
+"Now, remember," she said as she prepared to mount again, "to all
+intents and purposes these are real bandits and to be treated
+accordingly. Our motto is 'No quarter.' I shall be harsh, and I expect
+no protest from either of you. They deserve everything they get."
+
+But when, after another mile or two, we came to a side trail, leading,
+by Tish's map, not to Many Glaciers, but up a ravine to another pass,
+and Tish saw that they had taken that direction, we were puzzled.
+
+But not for long.
+
+"I understand now," she said. "It is all clear. The photographer was
+riding ahead to get them up this valley somewhere. They've probably got
+a rendezvous all ready, with another camera in place. I must say," she
+observed, "that they are doing it thoroughly."
+
+We rode for two hours, and no sign of them. The stove polish had come
+off the handles of our revolvers by that time, and Aggie, having rubbed
+her face ever and anon to remove perspiration, presented under her
+turban a villainous and ferocious expression quite at variance with her
+customary mildness.
+
+I urged her to stop and wash, but Tish, after a glance, said to keep on.
+
+"Your looking like that's a distinct advantage, Aggie," she said. "Like
+as not they'll throw up their hands the minute they see you. I know I
+should. You'd better ride first when we get near."
+
+"Like as not they'll put a hole in me," Aggie objected. "And as to
+riding first, I will not. This is your doing, Tish Carberry, and as for
+their having blank cartridges--how do we know someone hasn't made a
+mistake and got a real one?"
+
+Tish reflected on that. "It's a possibility," she agreed. "If we find
+that they're going to spend the night out, it might be better to wait
+until they've taken off all the hardware they're hung with."
+
+But we did not come up with them. We kept on finding traces of the party
+in marshy spots, and once Tish hopped off her horse and picked up a
+small handkerchief with a colored border and held it up to us.
+
+"It's hers," she said. "Anybody would know she is the sort to use
+colored borders. They're ahead somewhere."
+
+But it seemed strange that they would go so far, and I said so.
+
+"We're far enough off the main trail, Tish," I said. "And it's getting
+wilder every minute. There's nothing I can see to prevent a mountain
+lion dropping on us most any time."
+
+"Not if it gets a good look at Aggie!" was Tish's grim response.
+
+It began to grow dark in the valley, and things seemed to move on either
+side of the trail. Aggie called out once that we had just passed a
+grizzly bear, but Tish never faltered. The region grew more and more
+wild. The trail was broken with mudholes and crossed by fallen logs.
+With a superb disdain Tish rode across all obstacles, not even glancing
+at them. But Aggie and I got off at the worst places and led our horses.
+At one mudhole I was unfortunate enough to stumble. A horse with a
+particle of affection for a woman who had ridden it and cared for it for
+several days would have paused.
+
+Not so my animal. With a heartlessness at which I still shudder the
+creature used me as a bridge, and stepped across, dryfoot, on my back.
+Owing to his padded feet and to the depth of the mud--some eight feet, I
+believe--I was uninjured. But it required ten minutes of hard labor on
+the part of both Tish and Aggie to release me from the mud, from which I
+was finally raised with a low, hissing sound.
+
+"Park!" said Aggie as she scraped my obliterated features with a small
+branch. "Park, indeed! It's a howling wilderness. I'm fond of my native
+land," she went on, digging out my nostrils, so I could breathe, "but I
+don't calculate to eat it. As for that unfeeling beast of yours, Lizzie,
+I've never known a horse to show such selfishness. Never."
+
+Well, we went on at last, but I was not so enthusiastic about teaching
+people lessons as I had been. It seemed to me that we might have kept on
+along the trail and had a mighty good time, getting more and more nimble
+and stopping now and then to bake a pie and have a decent meal, and
+putting up our hair in crimps at night, without worrying about other
+folks' affairs.
+
+Late in the afternoon of that day, when so far as I could see Tish was
+lost, and not even her gathering a bunch of wild flowers while the
+horses rested could fool me, I voiced my complaint.
+
+"Let me look at the map, Tish," I suggested. "I'm pretty good at maps.
+You know how I am at charades and acrostics. At the church supper--"
+
+"Nonsense, Lizzie," she returned. "You couldn't make head or tail of
+this map. It's my belief that the man who made it had never been here.
+Either that or there has been an earthquake since. But," she went on,
+more cheerfully, "if we are lost, so are the others."
+
+"If we even had Bill along!"
+
+"Bill!" Tish said scornfully. "It's my belief Bill is in the whole
+business, and that if we hadn't got rid of him we'd have been the next
+advertising dodge. As far as that goes," she said thoughtfully, "it
+wouldn't surprise me a particle to find that we've been taken, without
+our knowing it, most any time. Your horse just now, walking across that
+bridge of size, for one thing."
+
+Tish seldom makes a pun, which she herself has said is the lowest form
+of humor. The dig at my figure was unkind, also, and unworthy of her. I
+turned and left her.
+
+At last, well on in the evening, I saw Tish draw up her horse and point
+ahead.
+
+"The miscreants!" she said.
+
+True enough, up a narrow side canon we could see a camp-fire. It was a
+small one, and only noticeable from one point. But Tish's keen eye had
+seen it. She sat on her horse and gazed toward it.
+
+"What a shameful thing it is," she said, "to prostitute the beauties of
+this magnificent region to such a purpose. To make of these beetling
+crags a joke! To invade these vast gorges with the spirit of
+commercialism and to bring a pack of movie actors to desecrate the
+virgin silence with ribald jests and laughter! Lizzie, I wish you
+wouldn't wheeze!"
+
+"You would wheeze, too, Tish Carberry," I retorted, justly indignant,
+"if a horse had just pressed your spinal column into your breast bone.
+Goodness knows," I said, "where my lungs are. I've missed them ever
+since my fall."
+
+However, she was engrossed with larger matters, and ignored my
+petulance. She is a large-natured woman and above pettiness.
+
+We made our way slowly up the canon. The movie outfit was securely
+camped under an overhanging rock, as we could now see. At one point
+their position commanded the trail, which was hardly more than a track
+through the wilderness, and before we reached this point we dismounted
+and Tish surveyed the camp through her glasses.
+
+"We'd better wait until dark," Tish said. "Owing to the padding they
+have not heard us, but it looks to me as if one of them is on a rock,
+watching."
+
+It seemed rather strange to me that they were keeping a lookout, but
+Tish only shrugged her shoulders.
+
+"If I know anything of that red-headed Oliver man," she said, "he hates
+to let a camera rest. Like as not he's got it set up among the trees
+somewhere, taking flashlights of wild animals. It's rather a pity," she
+said, turning and surveying Aggie and myself, "that he cannot get you
+two. If you happen to see anything edible lying on the ground, you'd
+better not pick it up. It's probably attached to the string that sets
+off the flash."
+
+We led our horses into the woods, which were very thick at that point,
+and tied them. My beast, however, lay down and rolled, saddle and all,
+thus breaking my mirror--a most unlucky omen--and the bottle of olive
+oil which we had brought along for mayonnaise dressing. Tish is fond of
+mayonnaise, and, besides, considers olive oil most strengthening.
+However, it was gone, and although Aggie comforted me by suggesting that
+her boiled salad dressing is quite tasty, I was disconsolate.
+
+It was by that time seven o'clock and almost dark. We held a conference.
+Tish was of the opinion that we should first lead off their horses, if
+possible.
+
+"I intend," she said severely, "to make escape impossible. If they fire,
+when taken by surprise, remember that they have only blank cartridges. I
+must say," she added with a confession of unusual weakness, "that I am
+glad the Indians escaped the other way. I would hardly know what to do
+with Indians, even quite tame ones. While I know a few letters of the
+deaf-and-dumb language, which I believe all tribes use in common, I fear
+that in a moment of excitement I would forget what I know."
+
+The next step, she asserted, was to secure their weapons.
+
+"After all," she said, "the darkness is in our favor. I intend to fire
+once, to show them that we are armed and dangerous. And if you two will
+point the guns Bill made, they cannot possibly tell that they are not
+real."
+
+"But we will know it," Aggie quavered. Now that the quarry was in sight
+she was more and more nervous, sneezing at short intervals in spite of
+her menthol inhaler. "I am sorry, Tish, but I cannot feel the same about
+that wooden revolver as I would about a real one. And even when I try to
+forget that it is only wood the carving reminds me."
+
+But Tish silenced her with a glance. She had strangely altered in the
+last few minutes. All traces of fatigue had gone, and when she struck a
+match and consulted her watch I saw in her face that high resolve, that
+stern and matchless courage, which I so often have tried to emulate and
+failed.
+
+"Seven o'clock," she announced. "We will dine first. There is nothing
+like food to restore failing spirits."
+
+But we had nothing except our sandwiches, and Tish suggested snaring
+some of the stupid squirrels with which the region abounded.
+
+"Aggie needs broth," she said decidedly. "We have sandwiches, but Aggie
+is frail and must be looked to."
+
+Aggie was pathetically grateful, although sorry for the squirrels, which
+were pretty and quite tame. But Tish was firm in her kindly intent, and
+proceeded at once to set a rabbit snare, a trick she had learned in the
+Maine woods. Having done this, and built a small fire, well hidden, we
+sat down to wait.
+
+In a short time we heard terrible human cries proceeding from the snare,
+and, hurrying thither, found in it a young mountain lion. It looked
+dangerous, and was biting in every direction. I admit that I was
+prepared to leave in haste, but not so Tish. She fetched her umbrella,
+without which she never travels, and while the animal set its jaws in
+it--a painful necessity, as it was her best umbrella--Tish hit it on the
+head--not the umbrella, but the lion--with a large stone.
+
+Tish's satisfaction was unbounded. She stated that the flesh of the
+mountain lion was much like veal, and so indeed it proved. We made a
+nourishing soup of it, with potatoes and a can of macedoine vegetables,
+and within an hour and a half we had dined luxuriously, adding to our
+repast what remained of the sandwiches, and a tinned plum pudding of
+English make, very nutritious and delicious.
+
+For twenty minutes after the meal we all stood. Tish insists on this, as
+aiding digestion. Then we prepared for the night's work.
+
+I believe that our conduct requires no defense. But it may be well again
+to explain our position. These people, whose camp-fire glowed so
+brazenly against the opposite cliff, had for purely mercenary motives
+committed a cruel hoax. They had posed as bandits, and as bandits they
+deserved to be treated. They had held up our own clergyman, of a nervous
+temperament, on a mountain pass, and had taken from him a part of his
+stipend. It was heartless. It was barbarous. It was cruel.
+
+My own courage came back with the hot food, which I followed by a
+charcoal tablet. And the difference in Aggie was marked. Possibly some
+of the courage of the mountain lion, that bravest of wild creatures, had
+communicated itself to her through the homely medicine of digestion.
+
+"I can hardly wait to get after them," she said.
+
+However, it was still too early for them to have settled for the night.
+We sat down, having extinguished our fire, and I was just dozing off
+when Tish remembered the young man who was to have listened for the
+police whistle.
+
+"I absolutely forgot him," she said regretfully. "I suppose he is
+hanging round the foot of Piegan's Pass yet. I'm sorry to have him miss
+this. I shall tell him, when I see him, that no girl worth having would
+be sitting over there at supper with four moving-picture actors without
+a chaperon. The whole proceeding is scandalous. I have noticed," she
+added, "that it is the girls from quiet suburban towns who are really
+most prone to defy the conventions when the chance comes."
+
+We dozed for a short time.
+
+Then Tish sat up suddenly. "What's that?" she said.
+
+We listened and distinctly heard the tramp of horses' feet. We started
+up, but Tish was quite calm.
+
+"They've turned their horses out," she said. "Fortune is with us. They
+are coming this way."
+
+But at first it did not seem so fortunate, for we heard one of the men
+following them, stumbling along, and, I regret to say, using profane
+language. They came directly toward us, and Aggie beside me trembled.
+But Tish was equal to the emergency.
+
+She drew us behind a large rock, where, spreading out a raincoat to
+protect us from the dampness, we sat down and waited.
+
+When one of the animals loomed up close to the rock Aggie gave a low
+cry, but Tish covered her mouth fiercely with an ungentle hand.
+
+"Be still!" she hissed.
+
+It was now perfectly dark, and the man with the horses was not far off.
+We could not see him, but at last he came near enough so that we could
+see the flare of a match when he lighted a cigarette. I put my hand on
+Aggie, and she was shaking with nervousness.
+
+"I am sure I am going to sneeze, Lizzie," she gasped.
+
+And sneeze she did. She muffled it considerably, however, and we were
+not discovered. But, Tish, I knew, was silently raging.
+
+The horses came nearer.
+
+One of them, indeed, came quite close, and took a nip at the toe of my
+riding-boot. I kicked at it sharply, however, and it moved away.
+
+The man had gone on. We watched the light of his cigarette, and thus, as
+he now and then turned his head, knew where he was. It was now that I
+felt, rather than heard, that Tish was crawling out from the shelter of
+the rock. At the same time we heard, by the crunching of branches, that
+the man had sat down near at hand.
+
+Tish's progress was slow but sure. For a half-hour we sat there. Then
+she returned, still crawling, and on putting out my hand I discovered
+that she had secured the lasso from her saddle and had brought it back.
+How true had been her instinct when she practiced its use! How my own
+words, that it was all foolishness, came back and whispered lessons of
+humility in my ear!
+
+At this moment a deep, resonant sound came from the tree where the movie
+actor sat. At the same moment a small creature dropped into my lap from
+somewhere above, and ran up my sleeve. I made frantic although
+necessarily silent efforts to dislodge it, and it bit me severely.
+
+The necessity for silence taxed all my strength, but managing finally to
+secure it by the tail, I forcibly withdrew it and flung it away.
+Unluckily it struck Aggie in the left eye and inflicted a painful
+bruise.
+
+Tish had risen to her feet and was standing, a silent and menacing
+figure, while this event transpired. The movements of the horses as they
+grazed, the soft breeze blowing through the pines, were the only sounds.
+Now she took a step forward.
+
+"He's asleep!" she whispered. "Aggie, sit still and watch the horses.
+Lizzie, come with me."
+
+As I advanced to her she thrust her revolver into my hand.
+
+"When I give the word," she said in a whisper, "hold it against his
+neck. But keep your finger off the trigger. It's loaded."
+
+We advanced slowly, halting now and then to listen. Although brush
+crackled under our feet, the grazing horses were making a similar
+disturbance, and the man slept on. Soon we could see him clearly,
+sitting back against a tree, his head dropped forward on his breast.
+Tish surveyed the scene with her keen and appraising eye, and raised
+the lasso.
+
+The first result was not good. The loaded end struck a branch, and,
+being deflected, the thing wrapped itself perhaps a dozen times round my
+neck. Tish, being unconscious of what had happened, drew it up with a
+jerk, and I stood helpless and slowly strangling. At last, however, she
+realized the difficulty and released me. I was unable to breathe
+comfortably for some time, and my tongue felt swollen for several hours.
+
+Through all of this the movie actor had slept soundly. At the second
+effort Tish succeeded in lassoing him without difficulty. We had feared
+a loud outcry before we could get to him, but owing to Tish's swiftness
+in tightening the rope he was able to make, at first, only a low,
+gurgling sound. I had advanced to him, and was under the impression that
+I was holding the revolver to his neck. On discovering, however, that I
+was pressing it to the trunk of the tree, to which he was now secured by
+the lariat, I corrected the error and held it against his ear.
+
+He was now wide awake and struggling violently. Then, I regret to say,
+he broke out into such language as I have never heard before. At Tish's
+request I suppress his oaths, and substitute for them harmless
+expressions in common use.
+
+"Good gracious!" he said. "What in the world are you doing anyhow?
+Jimminy crickets, take that thing away from my neck! Great Scott and
+land alive, I haven't done anything! My word, that gun will go off if
+you aren't careful!"
+
+I am aware that much of the strength of what he said is lost in this
+free translation. But it is impossible to repeat his real language.
+
+"Don't move," Tish said, "and don't call out. A sound, and a bullet goes
+crashing through your brain."
+
+"A woman!" he said in most unflattering amazement. "Great Jehoshaphat, a
+woman!"
+
+This again is only a translation of what he said.
+
+"Exactly," Tish observed calmly. She had cut the end off the lasso with
+her scissors, and was now tying his feet together with it. "My friend,
+we know the whole story, and I am ashamed, ashamed," she said
+oratorically, "of your sex! To frighten a harmless and well-meaning
+preacher and his wife for the purpose of publicity is not a joke. Such
+hoaxes are criminal. If you must have publicity, why not seek it in some
+other way?"
+
+"Crazy!" he groaned to himself. "In the hands of lunatics! Oh, my
+goodness!" Again these were not exactly his words.
+
+Having bound him tightly, hand and foot, and taken a revolver from his
+pocket, Tish straightened herself.
+
+"Now we'll gag him, Lizzie," she said. "We have other things to do
+to-night than to stand here and converse." Then she turned to the man
+and told him a deliberate lie. I am sorry to record this. But a tendency
+to avoid the straight and narrow issues of truth when facing a crisis is
+one of Tish's weaknesses, the only flaw in an otherwise strong and
+perfect character.
+
+"We are going to leave you here," she said. "But one of our number,
+fully armed, will be near by. A sound from you, or any endeavor to call
+for succor, will end sadly for you. A word to the wise. Now, Lizzie,
+take that bandanna off his neck and tie it over his mouth."
+
+Tish stood, looking down at him, and her very silhouette was scornful.
+
+"Think, my friend," she said, "of the ignominy of your position! Is any
+moving picture worth it? Is the pleasure of seeing yourself on the
+screen any reward for such a shameful position as yours now is? No. A
+thousand times no."
+
+He made a choking sound in his throat and writhed helplessly. And so we
+left him, a hopeless and miserable figure, to ponder on his sins.
+
+"That's one," said Tish briskly. "There are only three left. Come,
+Aggie," she said cheerfully--"to work! We have made a good beginning."
+
+It is with modesty that I approach that night's events, remembering
+always that Tish's was the brain which conceived and carried out the
+affair. We were but her loyal and eager assistants. It is for this
+reason that I thought, and still think, that the money should have been
+divided so as to give Tish the lion's share. But she, dear, magnanimous
+soul, refused even to hear of such a course, and insisted that we share
+it equally.
+
+Of that, however, more anon.
+
+We next proceeded to capture their horses and to tie them up. We
+regretted the necessity for this, since the unfortunate animals had
+traveled far and were doubtless hungry. It went to my heart to drag them
+from their fragrant pasture and to tie them to trees. But, as Tish said,
+"Necessity knows no law," not even kindness. So we tied them up. Not,
+however, until we had moved them far from the trail.
+
+Tish stopped then, and stared across the canon to the enemy's camp-fire.
+
+"No quarter, remember," she said. "And bring your weapons."
+
+We grasped our wooden revolvers and, with Tish leading, started for the
+camp. Unluckily there was a stream between us, and it was necessary to
+ford it. It shows Tish's true generalship that, instead of removing her
+shoes and stockings, as Aggie and I were about to do, she suggested
+getting our horses and riding across. This we did, and alighted on the
+other side dryshod.
+
+It was, on consulting my watch, nine o'clock and very dark. A few drops
+of rain began to fall also, and the distant camp-fire was burning low.
+Tish gave us each a little blackberry cordial, for fear of dampness, and
+took some herself. The mild glow which followed was very comforting.
+
+It was Tish, naturally, who went forward to reconnoiter. She returned in
+an hour, to report that the three men were lying round the fire, two
+asleep and one leaning on his elbow with a revolver handy. She did not
+see Mr. Oliver, and it was possible that it was he we had tied to the
+tree. The girl, she said, was sitting on a log, with her chin propped in
+her hands.
+
+"She looked rather low-spirited," Tish said. "I expect she liked the
+first young man better than she thought she did. I intend to give her a
+piece of my mind as soon as I get a chance. This playing hot and cold
+isn't maidenly, to say the least."
+
+We now moved slowly forward, after tying our horses. Toward the last,
+following Tish's example, we went on our hands and knees, and I was
+thankful then for no skirts. It is wonderful the freedom a man has. I
+was never one to approve of Doctor Mary Walker, but I'm not so sure she
+isn't a wise woman and the rest of us fools. I haven't put on a skirt
+braid since that time without begrudging it.
+
+Well, as I have stated, we advanced, and at last we were in full sight
+of the camp. I must say I'd have thought they'd have a tent. We expected
+something better, I suppose, because of the articles in the papers about
+movie people having their own limousines, and all that. But there they
+were, open to the wrath of the heavens, and deserving it, if I do say
+so.
+
+The girl was still sitting, as Tish had described her. Only now she was
+crying. My heart was downright sore for her. It is no comfort, having
+made a wrong choice, to know that it is one's own fault.
+
+Having now reached the zone of firelight Tish gave the signal, and we
+rose and pointed our revolvers at them. Then Tish stepped forward and
+said:--
+
+"Hands up!"
+
+I shall never forget the expression on the man's face.
+
+He shouted something, but he threw up his hands also, with his eyes
+popping out of his head. The others scrambled to their feet, but he
+warned them.
+
+"Careful, boys!" he yelled. "They're got the drop on us."
+
+Just then his eyes fell on Aggie, and he screeched:--
+
+"Two women and a Turk, by ----." The blank is mine.
+
+"Lizzie," said Tish sternly, as all of them, including the girl, held
+their hands up, "just give me your weapon and go over them."
+
+"Go over them?" I said, not understanding.
+
+"Search them," said Tish. "Take everything out of their pockets. And
+don't move," she ordered them sternly. "One motion, and I fire. Go on,
+Lizzie."
+
+Now I have never searched a man's pockets, and the idea was repugnant to
+me. I am a woman of delicate instincts. But Tish's face was stern. I did
+as commanded, therefore, the total result being:--
+
+Four revolvers.
+
+Two large knives.
+
+One small knife.
+
+One bunch of keys.
+
+One plug of chewing-tobacco.
+
+Four cartridge belts.
+
+Two old pipes.
+
+Mr. Ostermaier's cigar-case, which I recognized at once, being the one
+we had presented to him.
+
+Mrs. Ostermaier's wedding-ring and gold bracelet, which her sister gave
+her on her last birthday.
+
+A diamond solitaire, unknown, as Mrs. Ostermaier never owned one,
+preferring instead earrings as more showy.
+
+And a considerable sum of money, which I kept but did not count.
+
+There were other small articles, of no value.
+
+"Is that all the loot you secured during the infamous scene on Piegan
+Pass?" Tish demanded, "You need not hide anything from us. We know the
+facts, and the whole story will soon be public."
+
+"That's all, lady," whined one of the men. "Except a few boxes of lunch,
+and that's gone. Lady, lemme take my hands down. I've got a stiff
+shoulder, and I--"
+
+"Keep them up," Tish snapped. "Aggie, see that they keep them up."
+
+Until that time we had been too occupied to observe the girl, who merely
+stood and watched in a disdainful sort of way. But now Tish turned and
+eyed her sternly.
+
+"Search her, Lizzie," she commanded.
+
+"Search me!" the girl exclaimed indignantly. "Certainly not!"
+
+"Lizzie," said Tish in her sternest manner, "go over that girl. Look in
+her riding-boots. I haven't come across Mrs. Ostermaier's earrings yet."
+
+At that the girl changed color and backed off.
+
+"It's an outrage," she said. "Surely I have suffered enough."
+
+"Not as much," Tish observed, "as you are going to suffer. Go over her,
+Lizzie."
+
+While I searched her, Tish was lecturing her.
+
+"You come from a good home, I understand," she said, "and you ought
+to know better. Not content with breaking an honest heart, you join a
+moving-picture outfit and frighten a prominent divine--for Mr. Ostermaier
+is well known--into what may be an illness. You cannot deny," she
+accused her, "that it was you who coaxed them to the pass. At least you
+needn't. We heard you."
+
+"How was I to know--" the girl began sullenly.
+
+But at that moment I found Mrs. Ostermaier' chamois bag thrust into her
+riding-boot, and she suddenly went pale.
+
+Tish held it up before her accusingly. "I dare say you will not deny
+this," she exclaimed, and took Mrs. Ostermaier's earrings out of it.
+
+The men muttered, but Aggie was equal to the occasion. "Silence!" she
+said, and pointed the revolver at each in turn.
+
+The girl started to speak. Then she shrugged her shoulders. "I could
+explain," she said, "but I won't. If you think I stole those hideous
+earrings you're welcome to."
+
+"Of course not," said Tish sarcastically. "No doubt she gave them to
+you--although I never knew her to give anything away before."
+
+The girl stood still, thinking. Suddenly she said "There's another one,
+you know. Another man."
+
+"We have him. He will give no further trouble," Tish observed grimly. "I
+think we have you all, except your Mr. Oliver."
+
+"He is not my Mr. Oliver," said the girl. "I never want to see him
+again. I--I hate him."
+
+"You haven't got much mind or you couldn't change it so quickly."
+
+She looked sulky again, and said she'd thank us for the ring, which was
+hers and she could prove it.
+
+But Tish sternly refused. "It's my private opinion," she observed, "that
+it is Mrs. Ostermaier's, and she has not worn it openly because of the
+congregation talking quite considerably about her earrings, and not
+caring for jewelry on the minister's wife. That's what I think."
+
+Shortly after that we heard a horse loping along the road. It came
+nearer, and then left the trail and came toward the fire. Tish picked up
+one of the extra revolvers and pointed it. It was Mr. Oliver!
+
+"Throw up your hands!" Tish called. And he did it. He turned a sort of
+blue color, too, when he saw us, and all the men with their hands up.
+But he looked relieved when he saw the girl.
+
+"Thank Heaven!" he said. "The way I've been riding this country--"
+
+"You rode hard enough away from the pass," she replied coldly.
+
+We took a revolver away from him and lined him up with the others. All
+the time he was paying little attention to us and none at all to the
+other men. But he was pleading with the girl.
+
+"Honestly," he said, "I thought I could do better for everybody by doing
+what I did. How did I know," he pleaded, "that you were going to do such
+a crazy thing as this?"
+
+But she only stared at him as if she hated the very ground he stood on.
+
+"It's a pity," Tish observed, "that you haven't got your camera along.
+This would make a very nice picture. But I dare say you could hardly
+turn the crank with your hands in the air."
+
+We searched him carefully, but he had only a gold watch and some money.
+On the chance, however, that the watch was Mr. Ostermaier's, although
+unlikely, we took it.
+
+I must say he was very disagreeable, referring to us as highwaymen and
+using uncomplimentary language. But, as Tish observed, we might as well
+be thorough while we were about it.
+
+For the nonce we had forgotten the other man. But now I noticed that the
+pseudo-bandits wore a watchful and not unhopeful air. And suddenly one
+of them whistled--a thin, shrill note that had, as Tish later remarked,
+great penetrative power without being noisy.
+
+"That's enough of that," she said. "Aggie, take another of these guns
+and point them both at these gentlemen. If they whistle again, shoot.
+As to the other man, he will not reply, nor will he come to your
+assistance. He is gagged and tied, and into the bargain may become at
+any time the victim of wild beasts."
+
+The moment she had said it, Tish realized that it was but too true, and
+she grew thoughtful. Aggie, too, was far from comfortable. She said
+later that she was uncertain what to do. Tish had said to fire if they
+whistled again. The question in her mind was, had it been said purely
+for effect or did Tish mean it? After all, the men were not real
+bandits, she reflected, although guilty of theft, even if only for
+advertising purposes. She was greatly disturbed, and as agitation always
+causes a return of her hay fever, she began to sneeze violently.
+
+Until then the men had been quiet, if furious. But now they fell into
+abject terror, imploring Tish, whom they easily recognized as the
+leader, to take the revolvers from her.
+
+But Tish only said: "No fatalities, Aggie, please. Point at an arm or a
+leg until the spasm subsides."
+
+Her tone was quite gentle.
+
+Heretofore this has been a plain narrative, dull, I fear, in many
+places. But I come now to a not unexciting incident--which for a time
+placed Tish and myself in an unpleasant position.
+
+I refer to the escape of the man we had tied.
+
+We held a brief discussion as to what to do with our prisoners until
+morning, a discussion which Tish solved with her usual celerity by
+cutting from the saddles which lay round the fire a number of those
+leather thongs with which such saddles are adorned and which are used in
+case of necessity to strap various articles to the aforesaid saddles.
+
+With these thongs we tied them, not uncomfortably, but firmly, their
+hands behind them and their feet fastened together. Then, as the night
+grew cold, Tish suggested that we shove them near the fire, which we
+did.
+
+The young lady, however, offered a more difficult problem. We
+compromised by giving her her freedom, but arranging for one of our
+number to keep her covered with a revolver.
+
+"You needn't be so thoughtful," she said angrily, and with a total lack
+of appreciation of Tish's considerate attitude. "I'd rather be tied,
+especially if the Moslem with the hay fever is going to hold the gun."
+
+It was at that moment that we heard a whistle from across the stream,
+and each of the prostrate men raised his head eagerly. Before Tish could
+interfere one of them had whistled three times sharply, probably a
+danger signal.
+
+Without a word Tish turned and ran toward the stream, calling to me to
+follow her.
+
+"Tish!" I heard Aggie's agonized tone. "Lizzie! Come back. Don't leave
+me here alone. I--"
+
+Here she evidently clutched the revolver involuntarily, for there was a
+sharp report, and a bullet struck a tree near us.
+
+Tish paused and turned. "Point that thing up into the air, Aggie," she
+called back. "And stay there. I hold you responsible."
+
+I heard Aggie give a low moan, but she said nothing, and we kept on.
+
+The moon had now come up, flooding the valley with silver radiance. We
+found our horses at once, and Tish leaped into the saddle. Being heavier
+and also out of breath from having stumbled over a log, I was somewhat
+slower.
+
+Tish was therefore in advance of me when we started, and it was she who
+caught sight of him first.
+
+"He's got a horse, Lizzie," she called back to me. "We can get him, I
+think. Remember, he is unarmed."
+
+Fortunately he had made for the trail, which was here wider than
+ordinary and gleamed white in the moonlight. We had, however, lost some
+time in fording the stream, and we had but the one glimpse of him as the
+trail curved.
+
+Tish lashed her horse to a lope, and mine followed without urging.
+I had, unfortunately, lost a stirrup early in the chase, and was
+compelled, being unable to recover it, to drop the lines and clutch
+the saddle.
+
+Twice Tish fired into the air. She explained afterward that she did this
+for the moral effect on the fugitive, but as each time it caused my
+horse to jump and almost unseat me, at last I begged her to desist.
+
+We struck at last into a straight piece of trail, ending in a wall of
+granite, and up this the trail climbed in a switchback. Tish turned to
+me.
+
+"We have him now," she said. "When he starts up there he is as much gone
+as a fly on the wall. As a matter of fact," she said as calmly as though
+we had been taking an afternoon stroll, "his taking this trail shows
+that he is a novice and no real highwayman. Otherwise he would have
+turned off into the woods."
+
+At that moment the fugitive's horse emerged into the moonlight and Tish
+smiled grimly.
+
+"I see why now," she exclaimed. "The idiot has happened on Mona Lisa,
+who must have returned and followed us. And no pack-horse can be made to
+leave the trail unless by means of a hornet. Look, he's trying to pull
+her off and she won't go."
+
+It was true, as we now perceived. He saw his danger, but too late. Mona
+Lisa, probably still disagreeable after her experience with the hornets,
+held straight for the cliff.
+
+The moon shone full on it, and when he was only thirty feet up its face
+Tish fired again, and the fugitive stopped.
+
+"Come down," said Tish quietly.
+
+He said a great many things which, like his earlier language, I do not
+care to repeat. But after a second shot he began to descend slowly.
+
+Tish, however, approached him warily, having given her revolver to me.
+
+"He might try to get it from me, Lizzie," she observed. "Keep it pointed
+in our direction, but not at us. I'm going to tie him again."
+
+This she proceeded to do, tying his hands behind him and fastening his
+belt also to the horn of the saddle, but leaving his feet free. All this
+was done to the accompaniment of bitter vituperation. She pretended to
+ignore this, but it made an impression evidently, for at last she
+replied.
+
+"You have no one to blame but yourself," she said. "You deserve your
+present humiliating position, and you know it. I've made up my mind to
+take you all in and expose your cruel scheme, and I intend to do it. I'm
+nothing if I am not thorough," she finished.
+
+He made no reply to this, and, in fact, he made only one speech on the
+way back, and that, I am happy to say, was without profanity.
+
+"It isn't being taken in that I mind so much," he said pathetically.
+"It's all in the game, and I can stand up as well under trouble as any
+one. It's being led in by a crowd of women that makes it painful."
+
+I have neglected to say that Tish was leading Mona Lisa, while I
+followed with the revolver.
+
+It was not far from dawn when we reached the camp again. Aggie was as we
+had left her, but in the light of the dying fire she looked older and
+much worn. As a matter of fact, it was some weeks before she looked like
+her old self.
+
+The girl was sitting where we had left her, and sulkier than ever. She
+had turned her back to Mr. Oliver, and Aggie said afterward that the way
+they had quarreled had been something terrible.
+
+Aggie said she had tried to make conversation with the girl, and had,
+indeed, told her of Mr. Wiggins and her own blasted life. But she had
+remained singularly unresponsive.
+
+The return of our new prisoner was greeted by the other men with brutal
+rage, except Mr. Oliver, who merely glanced at him and then went back to
+his staring at the fire. It appeared that they had been counting on him
+to get assistance, and his capture destroyed their last hope. Indeed,
+their language grew so unpleasant that at last Tish hammered sharply on
+a rock with the handle of her revolver.
+
+"Please remember," she said, "that you are in the presence of ladies!"
+
+They jeered at her, but she handled the situation with her usual
+generalship.
+
+"Lizzie," she said calmly, "get the tin basin that is hanging to my
+saddle, and fill it with the water from that snowbank. On the occasion
+of any more unseemly language, pour it over the offender without mercy."
+
+It became necessary to do it, I regret to state. They had not yet
+learned that Tish always carries out her threats. It was the one who we
+felt was the leader who offended, and I did as I had been requested to.
+But Aggie, ever tender-hearted, feared that it would give the man a
+severe cold, and got Tish's permission to pour a little blackberry
+cordial down his throat.
+
+Far from this kindness having a salubrious effect, it had the contrary.
+They all fell to bad language again, and, realizing that they wished the
+cordial, and our supply being limited, we were compelled to abandon the
+treatment.
+
+It had been an uncomfortable night, and I confess to a feeling of relief
+when "the rift of dawn" broke the early skies.
+
+We were, Tish calculated, some forty miles from breakfast, and Aggie's
+diet for some days had been light at the best, even the mountain-lion
+broth having been more stimulating than staying. We therefore
+investigated the camp, and found behind a large stone some flour,
+baking-powder, and bacon. With this equipment and a frying-pan or two we
+were able to make some very fair pancakes--or flapjacks, as they are
+called in the West.
+
+Tish civilly invited the girl to eat with us, but she refused curtly,
+although, on turning once, I saw her eyeing us with famished eyes. I
+think, however, that on seeing us going about the homely task of getting
+breakfast, she realized that we were not the desperate creatures she had
+fancied during the night, but three gentlewomen on a holiday--simple
+tourists, indeed.
+
+"I wish," she said at last almost wistfully--"I wish that I could
+understand it all. I seem to be all mixed up. You don't suppose I want
+to be here, do you?"
+
+But Tish was not in a mood to make concessions. "As for what you want,"
+she said, "how are we to know that? You are here, aren't you?--here as
+a result of your own cold-heartedness. Had you remained true to the very
+estimable young man you jilted you would not now be in this position."
+
+"Of course he would talk about it!" said the girl darkly.
+
+"I am convinced," Tish went on, dexterously turning a pancake by a swift
+movement of the pan, "that sensational movies are responsible for much
+that is wrong with the country to-day. They set false standards.
+Perfectly pure-minded people see them and are filled with thoughts of
+crime."
+
+Although she had ignored him steadily, the girl turned now to Mr.
+Oliver.
+
+"They don't believe anything I tell them. Why don't you explain?" she
+demanded.
+
+"Explain!" he said in a furious voice. "Explain to three lunatics?
+What's the use?"
+
+"You got me into this, you know."
+
+"I did! I like that! What in the name of Heaven induced you to ride off
+the way you did?"
+
+Tish paused, with the frying-pan in the air. "Silence!" she commanded.
+"You are both only reaping what you have sowed. As far as quarreling
+goes, you can keep that until you are married, if you intend to be. I
+don't know but I'd advise it. It's a pity to spoil two houses."
+
+But the girl said that she wouldn't marry him if he was the last man on
+earth, and he fell back to sulking again.
+
+As Aggie observed later, he acted as if he had never cared for her,
+while Mr. Bell, on the contrary, could not help his face changing when
+he so much as mentioned her name.
+
+We made some tea and ate a hearty breakfast, while the men watched us.
+And as we ate, Tish held the moving-picture business up to contumely and
+scorn.
+
+"Lady," said one of the prostrate men, "aren't you going to give us
+anything to eat?"
+
+"People," Tish said, ignoring him, "who would ordinarily cringe at the
+sight of a wounded beetle sit through bloody murders and go home with
+the obsession of crime."
+
+"I hope you won't take it amiss," said the man again, "if I say that,
+seeing it's our flour and bacon, you either ought to feed us or take it
+away and eat it where we can't see you."
+
+"I take it," said Tish to the girl, pouring in more batter, "that you
+yourself would never have thought of highway robbery had you not been
+led to it by an overstimulated imagination."
+
+"I wish," said the girl rudely, "that you wouldn't talk so much. I've
+got a headache."
+
+When we had finished Tish indicated the frying-pan and the batter.
+"Perhaps," she said, "you would like to bake some cakes for these
+friends of yours. We have a long trip ahead of us."
+
+But the girl replied heartlessly that she hoped they would starve to
+death, ignoring their pitiful glances. In the end it was our own
+tender-hearted Aggie who baked pancakes for them and, loosening their
+hands while I stood guard, saw that they had not only food but the
+gentle refreshment of fresh tea. Tish it was, however, who, not to be
+outdone in magnanimity, permitted them to go, one by one, to the stream
+to wash. Escape, without horses or weapons, was impossible, and they
+realized it.
+
+By nine o'clock we were ready to return. And here a difficulty presented
+itself. There were six prisoners and only three of us. The men, fed now,
+were looking less subdued, although they pretended to obey Tish's
+commands with alacrity.
+
+Aggie overheard a scrap of conversation, too, which seemed to indicate
+that they had not given up hope. Had Tish not set her heart on leading
+them into the great hotel at Many Glaciers, and there exposing them to
+the taunts of angry tourists, it would have been simpler for one of us
+to ride for assistance, leaving the others there.
+
+In this emergency Tish, putting her hand into her pocket for her
+scissors to trim a hangnail, happened to come across the policeman's
+whistle.
+
+"My gracious!" she said. "I forgot my promise to that young man!"
+
+She immediately put it to her lips and blew three shrill blasts. To our
+surprise they were answered by a halloo, and a moment later the young
+gentleman himself appeared on the trail. He was no longer afoot, but was
+mounted on a pinto pony, which we knew at once for Bill's.
+
+He sat on his horse, staring as if he could not believe his eyes. Then
+he made his way across the stream toward us.
+
+"Good Heavens!" he said. "What in the name of--" Here his eyes fell on
+the girl, and he stiffened.
+
+"Jim!" cried the girl, and looked at him with what Aggie afterward
+characterized as a most touching expression.
+
+But he ignored her. "Looks as though you folks have been pretty busy,"
+he observed, glancing at our scowling captives. "I'm a trifle surprised.
+You don't mind my being rather breathless, do you?"
+
+"My only regret," Tish said loftily, "is that we have not secured the
+Indians. They too should be taught a lesson. I am sure that the red man
+is noble until led away by civilized people who might know better."
+
+It was at this point that Mr. Bell's eyes fell on Mr. Oliver, who with
+his hands tied behind him was crouching over the fire.
+
+"Well!" he said. "So you're here too! But of course you would be." This
+he said bitterly.
+
+"For the love of Heaven, Bell," Mr. Oliver said, "tell those mad women
+that I'm not a bandit."
+
+"We know that already," Tish observed.
+
+"And untie my hands. My shoulders are about broken."
+
+But Mr. Bell only looked at him coldly. "I can't interfere with these
+ladies," he said. "They're friends of mine. If they think you are better
+tied, it's their business. They did it."
+
+"At least," Mr. Oliver said savagely, "you can tell them who I am, can't
+you?"
+
+"As to that," Mr. Bell returned, "I can only tell them what you say you
+are. You must remember that I know nothing about you. Helen knows much
+more than I do."
+
+"Jim," cried the girl, "surely you are going to tell these women that we
+are not highway robbers. Tell them the truth. Tell them I am not a
+highway robber. Tell them that these men are not my accomplices, that I
+never saw them before."
+
+"You must remember," he replied in an icy tone, "that I no longer know
+your friends. It is some days since you and I parted company. And you
+must admit that one of them is a friend of yours--as well as I can
+judge, a very close friend."
+
+She was almost in tears, but she persisted. "At least," she said, "you
+can tell them that I did not rob that woman on the pass. They are going
+to lead us in to Many Glaciers, and--Jim, you won't let them, will you?
+I'll die of shame."
+
+But he was totally unmoved. As Aggie said afterward, no one would have
+thought that, but a day or two before, he had been heartbroken because
+she was in love with someone else.
+
+"As to that," he said, "it is questionable, according to Mrs.
+Ostermaier, that nothing was taken from you, and that as soon as the
+attack was over you basely deserted her and followed the bandits. A full
+description of you, which I was able to correct in one or two trifling
+details, is now in the hands of the park police."
+
+She stared at him with fury in her eyes. "I hope you will never speak to
+me again," she cried.
+
+"You said that the last time I saw you, Helen. If you will think, you
+will remember that you addressed me first just now."
+
+She stamped her foot.
+
+"Of course," he said politely, "you can see my position. You maintain
+and possibly believe that these--er--acquaintances of yours"--he
+indicated the men--"are not members of the moving-picture outfit. Also
+that your being with them is of an accidental nature. But, on the other
+hand--"
+
+She put her fingers in her ears and turned her back on him.
+
+"On the other hand," he went on calmly, "I have the word of these three
+respectable ladies that they are the outfit, or part of it, that they
+have just concluded a cruel hoax on unsuspecting tourists, and that they
+justly deserve to be led in as captives and exposed to the full ignominy
+of their position."
+
+Here she faced him again, and this time she was quite pale. "Ask
+those--those women where they found my engagement ring," she said. "One
+of those wretches took it from me. That ought to be proof enough that
+they are not from the moving-picture outfit."
+
+Tish at once produced the ring and held it out to him. But he merely
+glanced at it and shook his head.
+
+"All engagement rings look alike," he observed. "I cannot possibly say,
+Helen, but I think it is unlikely that it is the one I gave you, as you
+told me, you may recall, that you had thrown it into a crack in a
+glacier. It may, of course, be one you have recently acquired."
+
+He glanced at Mr. Oliver, but the latter only shrugged his shoulders.
+
+Well, she shed a few tears, but he was adamant, and helped us saddle the
+horses, ignoring her utterly. It was our opinion that he no longer cared
+for her, and that, having lost him, she now regretted it. I know that
+she watched him steadily when he was not looking her way. But he went
+round quite happily, whistling a bit of tune, and not at all like the
+surly individual we had at first thought him.
+
+The ride back was without much incident. Our prisoners rode with their
+hands tied behind them, except the young lady.
+
+"We might as well leave her unfastened," the young man said casually.
+"While I dare say she would make her escape if possible, and
+particularly if there was any chance of getting filmed while doing it,
+I will make myself personally responsible."
+
+As a matter of fact she was exceedingly rude to all of us, and during
+our stop for luncheon, which was again bacon and pancakes, she made a
+dash for her horse. The young man saw her, however, in time, and brought
+her back. From that time on she was more civil, but I saw her looking at
+him now and then, and her eyes were positively terrified.
+
+It was Aggie, at last, who put in a plea for her with him, drawing him
+aside to do so. "I am sure," she said, "that she is really a nice girl,
+and has merely been led astray by the search for adventure. Naturally my
+friends, especially Miss Tish, have small sympathy with such a state of
+mind. But you are younger--and remember, you loved her once."
+
+"Loved her once!" he replied. "Dear lady, I'm so crazy about her at this
+minute that I can hardly hold myself in."
+
+"You are not acting much like it."
+
+"The fact is," he replied, "I'm afraid to let myself go. And if she's
+learned a lesson, I have too. I've been her doormat long enough. I tried
+it and it didn't work. She's caring more for me now, at this minute,
+than she has in eleven months. She needs a strong hand, and, by George!
+I've got it--two of them, in fact."
+
+We reached Many Glaciers late that afternoon, and Tish rode right up to
+the hotel. Our arrival created the most intense excitement, and Tish,
+although pleased, was rather surprised. It was not, however, until a
+large man elbowed his way through the crowd and took possession of the
+prisoners that we understood.
+
+"I'll take them now," he said. "Well, George, how are you?"
+
+This was to the leader, who merely muttered in reply.
+
+"I'd like to leave them here for a short time," Tish stated. "They
+should be taught a severe lesson and nothing stings like ridicule. After
+that you can turn them free, but I think they ought to be discharged."
+
+"Turn them free!" he said in a tone of amazement. "Discharged! My dear
+madam, they will get fifteen years' hard labor, I hope. And that's too
+good for them."
+
+Then suddenly the crowd began to cheer. It was some time before Tish
+realized that they were cheering us. And even then, I shall have to
+confess, we did not understand until the young man explained to me.
+
+"You see," he said, "I didn't like to say anything sooner, for fear of
+making you nervous. You'd done it all so well that I wanted you to
+finish it. You're been in the right church all along, but the wrong
+pew. Those fellows aren't movie actors, except Oliver, who will be
+freed now, and come after me with a gun, as like as not! They're real
+dyed-in-the-wool desperadoes and there's a reward of five thousand
+dollars for capturing them."
+
+Tish went rather white, but said nothing. Aggie, however, went into a
+paroxysm of sneezing, and did not revive until given aromatic ammonia
+to inhale.
+
+"I was fooled at first too," the young man said. "We'd been expecting a
+holdup and when it came we thought it was the faked one. But the
+person"--he paused and looked round--"the person who had the real jolt
+was Helen. She followed them, since they didn't take her for ransom, as
+had been agreed in the plot.
+
+"Then, when she found her mistake, they took her along, for fear she'd
+ride off and raise the alarm. All in all," he said reflectively, "it has
+been worth about a million dollars to me."
+
+We went into the hotel, with the crowd following us, and the first thing
+we saw was Mrs. Ostermaier, sitting dejectedly by the fire. When she saw
+us, she sprang to her feet and came to meet us.
+
+"Oh, Miss Tish, Miss Tish!" she said. "What I have been through!
+Attacked on a lonely mountain-top and robbed of everything. My reason is
+almost gone. And my earrings, my beautiful earrings!"
+
+Tish said nothing, but, reaching into her reticule, which she had taken
+from the horn of her saddle, she drew out a number of things.
+
+"Here," she said. "Are your earrings. Here also is Mr. Ostermaier's
+cigar-case, but empty. Here is some money too. I'll keep that, however,
+until I know how much you lost."
+
+"Tish!" screeched Mrs. Ostermaier. "You found them!"
+
+"Yes," Tish said somewhat wearily, "we found them. We found a number of
+things, Mrs. Ostermaier,--four bandits, and two lovers, or rather three,
+but so no longer, and your things, and a reward of five thousand
+dollars, and an engagement ring. I think," she said, "that I'd like a
+hot bath and something to eat."
+
+Mrs. Ostermaier was gloating over her earrings, but she looked up at
+Tish's tired and grimy face, at the mud encrusted on me from my accident
+the day before, at Aggie in her turban.
+
+"Go and wash, all of you," she said kindly, "and I'll order some hot
+tea."
+
+But Tish shook her head. "Tea nothing!" she said firmly. "I want a
+broiled sirloin steak and potatoes. And"--she looked Mrs. Ostermaier
+full in the eye--"I am going to have a cocktail. I need it."
+
+Late that evening Aggie came to Tish's room, where I was sitting with
+her. Tish was feeling entirely well, and more talkative than I can
+remember her in years. But the cocktail, which she felt, she said, in no
+other way, had gone to her legs.
+
+"It is not," she observed, "that I cannot walk. I can, perfectly well.
+But I am obliged to keep my eyes on my feet, and it might be noticed."
+
+"I just came in," Aggie said, "to say that Helen and her lover have made
+it up. They are down by the lake now, and if you will look out you can
+see them."
+
+I gave Tish an arm to the window, and the three of us stood and looked
+out. The moon was rising over the snow-capped peaks across the lake, and
+against its silver pathway the young people stood outlined. As we looked
+he stooped and kissed her. But it was a brief caress, as if he had just
+remembered the strong hand and being a doormat long enough.
+
+Tish drew a long breath.
+
+"What," she said, "is more beautiful than young love? It will be a
+comfort to remember that we brought them together. Let go of me now,
+Lizzie. If I keep my eye on the bedpost I think I can get back."
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Tish, The Chronicle of Her Escapades
+and Excursions, by Mary Roberts Rinehart
+
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diff --git a/old/3464.zip b/old/3464.zip
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+The Project Gutenberg Etext of Tish, by Mary Roberts Rinehart
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+Title: Tish, The Chronicle of Her Escapades and Excursions
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+Produced for Project Gutenberg by Lynn Hill
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+
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+
+
+
+TISH
+The Chronicle of Her Escapades and Excursions
+
+By MARY ROBERTS RINEHART
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+MIND OVER MOTOR
+
+LIKE A WOLF ON THE FOLD
+
+THE SIMPLE LIFERS
+
+TISH'S SPY
+
+MY COUNTRY TISH OF THEE
+
+
+
+TISH
+
+Mind Over Motor
+
+How Tish Broke The Law And Some Records
+
+I
+
+So many unkind things have been said of the affair at Morris
+Valley that I think it best to publish a straightforward account
+of everything. The ill nature of the cartoon, for instance,
+which showed Tish in a pair of khaki trousers on her back under
+a racing-car was quite uncalled for. Tish did not wear the khaki
+trousers; she merely took them along in case of emergency. Nor
+was it true that Tish took Aggie along as a mechanician and
+brutally pushed her off the car because she was not pumping
+enough oil. The fact was that Aggie sneezed on a curve and fell
+out of the car, and would no doubt have been killed had she not
+been thrown into a pile of sand.
+
+It was in early September that Eliza Bailey, my cousin, decided
+to go to London, ostensibly for a rest, but really to get some
+cretonne at Liberty's. Eliza wrote me at Lake Penzance asking me
+to go to Morris Valley and look after Bettina.
+
+I must confess that I was eager to do it. We three were very
+comfortable at Mat Cottage, "Mat" being the name Charlie Sands,
+Tish's nephew, had given it, being the initials of "Middle-Aged
+Trio." Not that I regard the late forties as middle-aged. But
+Tish, of course, is fifty. Charlie Sands, who is on a newspaper,
+calls us either the "M.A.T." or the "B.A.'s," for "Beloved
+Aunts," although Aggie and I are not related to him.
+
+Bettina's mother's note:--
+
+ Not that she will allow you to do it, or because she
+ isn't entirely able to take care of herself; but because
+ the people here are a talky lot. Bettina will probably
+ look after you. She has come from college with a feeling
+ that I am old and decrepit and must be cared for. She
+ maddens me with pillows and cups of tea and woolen
+ shawls. She thinks Morris Valley selfish and idle, and
+ is disappointed in the church, preferring her
+ Presbyterianism pure. She is desirous now of learning
+ how to cook. If you decide to come I'll be grateful if
+ you can keep her out of the kitchen.
+
+ Devotedly, ELIZA.
+
+ P.S. If you can keep Bettina from getting married while
+ I'm away I'll be very glad. She believes a woman should
+ marry and rear a large family! E.
+
+We were sitting on the porch of the cottage at Lake Penzance
+when I received the letter, and I read it aloud. "Humph!" said
+Tish, putting down the stocking she was knitting and looking
+over her spectacles at me--"Likes her Presbyterianism pure and
+believes in a large family! How old is she? Forty?"
+
+"Eighteen or twenty," I replied, looking at the letter. "I'm not
+anxious to go. She'll probably find me frivolous."
+
+Tish put on her spectacles and took the letter. "I think it's
+your duty, Lizzie," she said when she'd read it through. "But
+that young woman needs handling. We'd better all go. We can
+motor over in half a day."
+
+That was how it happened that Bettina Bailey, sitting on Eliza
+Bailey's front piazza, decked out in chintz cushions,--the
+piazza, of course,--saw a dusty machine come up the drive and
+stop with a flourish at the steps. And from it alight, not one
+chaperon, but three.
+
+After her first gasp Bettina was game. She was a pretty girl in
+a white dress and bore no traces in her face of any stern
+religious proclivities.
+
+"I didn't know--" she said, staring from one to the other of
+us. "Mother said--that is--won't you go right upstairs and have
+some tea and lie down?" She had hardly taken her eyes from Tish,
+who had lifted the engine hood and was poking at the carbureter
+with a hairpin.
+
+"No, thanks," said Tish briskly. "I'll just go around to the
+garage and oil up while I'm dirty. I've got a short circuit
+somewhere. Aggie, you and Lizzie get the trunk off."
+
+Bettina stood by while we unbuckled and lifted down our
+traveling trunk. She did not speak a word, beyond asking if we
+wouldn't wait until the gardener came. On Tish's saying she had
+no time to wait, because she wanted to put kerosene in the
+cylinders before the engine cooled, Bettina lapsed into silence
+and stood by watching us.
+
+Bettina took us upstairs. She had put Drummond's "Natural Law in
+the Spiritual World" on my table and a couch was ready with
+pillows and a knitted slumber robe. Very gently she helped us
+out of our veils and dusters and closed the windows for fear of
+drafts.
+
+"Dear mother is so reckless of drafts," she remarked. "Are you
+sure you won't have tea?"
+
+"We had some blackberry cordial with us," Aggie said, "and we
+all had a little on the way. We had to change a tire and it made
+us thirsty."
+
+"Change a tire!"
+
+Aggie had taken off her bonnet and was pinning on the small lace
+cap she wears, away from home, to hide where her hair is growing
+thin. In her cap Aggie is a sweet-faced woman of almost fifty,
+rather ethereal. She pinned on her cap and pulled her crimps
+down over her forehead.
+
+"Yes," she observed. "A bridge went down with us and one of the
+nails spoiled a new tire. I told Miss Carberry the bridge was
+unsafe, but she thought, by taking it very fast--"
+
+Bettina went over to Aggie and clutched her arm. "Do you mean to
+say," she quavered, "that you three women went through a
+bridge--"
+
+"It was a small bridge," I put in, to relieve her mind; "and
+only a foot or two of water below. If only the man had not been
+so disagreeable--"
+
+"Oh," she said, relieved, "you had a man with you!"
+
+"We never take a man with us," Aggie said with dignity. "This
+one was fishing under the bridge and he was most ungentlemanly.
+Quite refused to help, and tried to get the license number so he
+could sue us."
+
+"Sue you!"
+
+"He claimed his arm was broken, but I distinctly saw him move
+it." Aggie, having adjusted her cap, was looking at it in the
+mirror. "But dear Tish thinks of everything. She had taken off
+the license plates."
+
+Bettina had gone really pale. She seemed at a loss, and
+impatient at herself for being so. "You--you won't have tea?"
+she asked.
+
+"No, thank you."
+
+"Would you--perhaps you would prefer whiskey and soda."
+
+Aggie turned on her a reproachful eye. "My dear girl," she said,
+"with the exception of a little home-made wine used medicinally
+we drink nothing. I am the secretary of the Woman's Prohibition
+Party."
+
+Bettina left us shortly after that to arrange for putting up
+Letitia and Aggie. She gave them her mother's room, and whatever
+impulse she may have had to put the Presbyterian Psalter by the
+bed, she restrained it. By midnight Drummond's "Natural Law" had
+disappeared from my table and a novel had taken its place. But
+Bettina had not lost her air of bewilderment.
+
+That first evening was very quiet. A young man in white flannels
+called, and he and Letitia spent a delightful evening on the
+porch talking spark-plugs and carbureters. Bettina sat in a
+corner and looked at the moon. Spoken to, she replied in
+monosyllables in a carefully sweet tone. The young man's name
+was Jasper McCutcheon.
+
+It developed that Jasper owned an old racing-car which he kept
+in the Bailey garage, and he and Tish went out to look it over.
+They very politely asked us all to go along, but Bettina
+refusing, Aggie and I sat with her and looked at the moon.
+
+Aggie in her capacity as chaperon, or as one of an association
+of chaperons, used the opportunity to examine Bettina on the
+subject of Jasper.
+
+"He seems a nice boy," she remarked. Aggie's idea of a nice boy
+is one who in summer wears fresh flannels outside, in winter
+less conspicuously. "Does he live near?"
+
+"Next door," sweetly but coolly.
+
+"He is very good-looking."
+
+"Ears spoil him--too large."
+
+"Does he come around--er--often?"
+
+"Only two or three times a day. On Sunday, of course, we see
+more of him."
+
+Aggie looked at me in the moonlight. Clearly the young man from
+the next door needed watching. It was well we had come.
+
+"I suppose you like the same things?" she suggested. "Similar
+tastes and--er--all that?"
+
+Bettina stretched her arms over her head and yawned.
+
+"Not so you could notice it," she said coolly. "I can't thick of
+anything we agree on. He is an Episcopalian; I'm a Presbyterian.
+He approves of suffrage for women; I do not. He is a Republican;
+I'm a Progressive. He disapproves of large families; I approve
+of them, if people can afford them."
+
+Aggie sat straight up. "I hope you don't discuss that!" she
+exclaimed.
+
+Bettina smiled. "How nice to find that you are really just nice
+elderly ladies after all!" she said. "Of course we discuss it.
+Is it anything to be ashamed of?"
+
+"When I was a girl," I said tartly, "we married first and
+discussed those things afterward."
+
+"Of course you did, Aunt Lizzie," she said, smiling alluringly.
+She was the prettiest girl I think I have ever seen, and that
+night she was beautiful. "And you raised enormous families who
+religiously walked to church in their bare feet to save their
+shoes!"
+
+"I did nothing of the sort," I snapped.
+
+"It seems to me," Aggie put in gently, "that you make very
+little of love." Aggie was once engaged to be married to a young
+man named Wiggins, a roofer by trade, who was killed in the act
+of inspecting a tin gutter, on a rainy day. He slipped and fell
+over, breaking his neck as a result.
+
+Bettina smiled at Aggie. "Not at all," she said. "The day of
+blind love is gone, that's all--gone like the day of the
+chaperon."
+
+Neither of us cared to pursue this, and Tish at that moment
+appearing with Jasper, Aggie and I made a move toward bed. But
+Jasper not going, and none of us caring to leave him alone with
+Bettina, we sat down again.
+
+We sat until one o'clock.
+
+At the end of that time Jasper rose, and saying something about
+its being almost bedtime strolled off next door. Aggie was sound
+asleep in her chair and Tish was dozing. As for Bettina, she had
+said hardly a word after eleven o'clock.
+
+Aggie and Tish, as I have said, were occupying the same room. I
+went to sleep the moment I got into bed, and must have slept
+three or four hours when I was awakened by a shot. A moment
+later a dozen or more shots were fired in rapid succession and I
+sat bolt upright in bed. Across the street some one was raising
+a window, and a man called "What's the matter?" twice.
+
+There was no response and no further sound. Shaking in every
+limb, I found the light switch and looked at the time. It was
+four o'clock in the morning and quite dark.
+
+Some one was moving in the hall outside and whimpering. I opened
+the door hurriedly and Aggie half fell into the room.
+
+"Tish is murdered, Lizzie!" she said, and collapsed on the floor
+in a heap.
+
+"Nonsense!"
+
+"She's not in her room or in the house, and I heard shots!"
+
+Well, Aggie was right. Tish was not in her room. There was a
+sort of horrible stillness everywhere as we stood there
+clutching at each other and listening.
+
+"She's heard burglars downstairs and has gone down after them,
+and this is what has happened! Oh, Tish! brave Tish!" Aggie
+cried hysterically.
+
+And at that Bettina came in with her hair over her shoulders and
+asked us if we had heard anything. When we told her about Tish,
+she insisted on going downstairs, and with Aggie carrying her
+first-aid box and I carrying the blackberry cordial, we went
+down.
+
+The lower floor was quiet and empty. The man across the street
+had put down his window and gone back to bed, and everything was
+still. Bettina in her dressing-gown went out on the porch and
+turned on the light. Tish was not there, nor was there a body
+lying on the lawn.
+
+"It was back of the house by the garage," Bettina said. "If only
+Jasper--"
+
+And at that moment Jasper came into the circle of light. He had
+a Norfolk coat on over his pajamas and a pair of slippers, and
+he was running, calling over his shoulder to some one behind as
+he ran.
+
+"Watch the drive!" he yelled. "I saw him duck round the corner."
+
+We could hear other footsteps now and somebody panting near us.
+Aggie was sitting huddled in a porch chair, crying, and Bettina,
+in the hall, was trying to get down from the wall a Moorish
+knife that Eliza Bailey had picked up somewhere.
+
+"John!" we heard Jasper calling. "John! Quick! I've got him!"
+
+He was just at the corner of the porch. My heart stopped and
+then rushed on a thousand a minute. Then:--
+
+"Take your hands off me!" said Tish's voice.
+
+The next moment Tish came majestically into the circle of light
+and mounted the steps. Jasper, with his mouth open, stood below
+looking up, and a hired man in what looked like a bed quilt was
+behind in the shadow.
+
+Tish was completely dressed in her motoring clothes, even to her
+goggles. She looked neither to the right nor left, but stalked
+across the porch into the house and up the stairway. None of us
+moved until we heard the door of her room slam above.
+
+"Poor old dear!" said Bettina. "She's been walking in her
+sleep!"
+
+"But the shots!" gasped Aggie. "Some one was shooting at her!"
+
+Conscious now of his costume, Jasper had edged close to the
+veranda and stood in its shadow.
+
+"Walking in her sleep, of course!" he said heartily. "The trip
+today was too much for her. But think of her getting into that
+burglar-proof garage with her eyes shut--or do sleep-walkers
+have their eyes shut?--and actually cranking up my racer!"
+
+Aggie looked at me and I looked at Aggie.
+
+"Of course," Jasper went on, "there being no muffler on it, the
+racket wakened her as well as the neighborhood. And then the way
+we chased her!"
+
+"Poor old dear!" said Bettina again. "I'm going in to make her
+some tea."
+
+"I think," said Jasper, "that I need a bit of tea too. If you
+will put out the porch lights I'll come up and have some."
+
+But Aggie and I said nothing. We knew Tish never walked in her
+sleep. She had meant to try out Jasper's racing-car at dawn,
+forgetting that racers have no mufflers, and she had been, as
+one may say, hoist with her own petard--although I do not know
+what a petard is and have never been able to find out.
+
+We drank our tea, but Tish refused to have any or to reply to
+our knocks, preserving a sulky silence. Also she had locked
+Aggie out and I was compelled to let her sleep in my room.
+
+I was almost asleep when Aggie spoke:--
+
+"Did you think there was anything queer about the way that
+Jasper boy said good-night to Bettina?" she asked drowsily.
+
+"I didn't hear him say good-night."
+
+"That was it. He didn't. I think"--she yawned--"I think he
+kissed her."
+
+II
+
+Tish was down early to breakfast that morning and her manner
+forbade any mention of the night before. Aggie, however, noticed
+that she ate her cereal with her left hand and used her right
+arm only when absolutely necessary. Once before Tish had almost
+broken an arm cranking a car and had been driven to arnica
+compresses for a week; but this time we dared not suggest
+anything.
+
+Shortly after breakfast she came down to the porch where Aggie
+and I were knitting.
+
+"I've hurt my arm, Lizzie," she said. "I wish you'd come out and
+crank the car."
+
+"You'd better stay at home with an arm like that," I replied
+stiffly.
+
+"Very well, I'll crank it myself."
+
+"Where are you going?"
+
+"To the drug store for arnica."
+
+Bettina was not there, so I turned on Tish sharply. "I'll go, of
+course," I said; "but I'll not go without speaking my mind,
+Letitia Carberry. By and large, I've stood by you for twenty-
+five years, and now in the weakness of your age I'm not going to
+leave you. But I warn you, Tish, if you touch that racing-car
+again, I'll send for Charlie Sands."
+
+"I haven't any intention of touching it again," said Tish,
+meekly enough. "But I wish I could buy a second-hand racer
+cheap."
+
+"What for?" Aggie demanded.
+
+Tish looked at her with scorn. "To hold flowers on the dining-
+table," she snapped.
+
+It being necessary, of course, to leave a chaperon with Bettina,
+because of the Jasper person's habit of coming over at any hour
+of the day, we left Aggie with instructions to watch them both.
+
+Tish and I drove to the drug store together, and from there to a
+garage for gasoline. I have never learned to say "gas" for
+gasoline. It seems to me as absurd as if I were to say "but" for
+butter. Considering that Aggie was quite sulky at being left, it
+is absurd for her to assume an air of virtue over what followed
+that day. Aggie was only like a lot of people--good because she
+was not tempted; for it was at the garage that we met Mr. Ellis.
+
+We had stopped the engine and Tish was quarreling with the man
+about the price of gasoline when I saw him--a nice-looking young
+man in a black-and- white checked suit and a Panama hat. He came
+over and stood looking at Tish's machine.
+
+"Nice lines to that car," he said. "Built for speed, isn't she?
+What do you get out of her?"
+
+Tish heard him and turned. "Get out of her?" she said. "Bills
+mostly."
+
+"Well, that's the way with most of them," he remarked, looking
+steadily at Tish. "A machine's a rich man's toy. The only way to
+own one is to have it endowed like a university. But I meant
+speed. What can you make?"
+
+"Never had a chance to find out," Tish said grimly. "Between
+nervous women in the machine and constables outside I have the
+twelve-miles-an-hour habit. I'm going to exchange the
+speedometer for a vacuum bottle."
+
+He smiled. "I don't think you're fair to yourself. Mostly--if
+you'll forgive me--I can tell a woman's driving as far off as I
+can see the machine; but you are a very fine driver. The way you
+brought that car in here impressed me considerably."
+
+"She need not pretend she crawls along the road," I said with
+some sarcasm. "The bills she complains of are mostly fines for
+speeding."
+
+"No!" said the young man, delighted. "Good! I'm glad to hear it.
+So are mine!"
+
+After that we got along famously. He had his car there--a low
+gray thing that looked like an armored cruiser.
+
+"I'd like you ladies to try her," he said. "She can move, but
+she is as gentle as a lamb. A lady friend of mine once threaded
+a needle as an experiment while going sixty-five miles an hour."
+
+"In this car?"
+
+"In this car."
+
+Looking back, I do not recall just how the thing started. I
+believe Tish expressed a desire to see the car go, and Mr. Ellis
+said he couldn't let her out on the roads, but that the race-
+track at the fair-ground was open and if we cared to drive down
+there in Tish's car he would show us her paces, as he called it.
+
+>From that to going to the race-track, and from that to Tish's
+getting in beside him on the mechanician's seat and going round
+once or twice, was natural. I refused; I didn't like the look of
+the thing.
+
+Tish came back with a cinder in her eye and full of enthusiasm.
+"It was magnificent, Lizzie," she said. "The only word for it is
+sublime. You see nothing. There is just the rush of the wind and
+the roar of the engine and a wonderful feeling of flying. Here!
+See if you can find this cinder."
+
+"Won't you try it, Miss--er--Lizzie?"
+
+"No, thanks," I replied. "I can get all the roar and rush of
+wind I want in front of an electric fan, and no danger."
+
+He stood by, looking out over the oval track while I took three
+cinders from Tish's eye.
+
+"Great track!" he said. "It's a horse-track, of course, but it's
+in bully shape--the county fair is held there and these fellows
+make a big feature of their horse-races. I came up here to
+persuade them to hold an automobile meet, but they've got cold
+feet an the proposition."
+
+"What was the proposition?" asked Tish.
+
+"Well," he said, "it was something like this. I've been turning
+the trick all over the country and it works like a charm. The
+town's ahead in money and business, for an automobile race
+always brings a big crowd; the track owners make the gate money
+and the racing-cars get the prizes. Everybody's ahead. It's a
+clean sport too."
+
+"I don't approve of racing for money," Tish said decidedly.
+
+But Mr. Ellis shrugged his shoulders. "It's really hardly racing
+for money," he explained. "The prizes cover the expenses of the
+racing-cars, which are heavy naturally. The cars alone cost a
+young fortune."
+
+"I see," said Tish. "I hadn't thought of it in that light. Well,
+why didn't Morris Valley jump at the chance?"
+
+He hesitated a moment before he answered. "It was my fault
+really," he said. "They were willing enough to have the races,
+but it was a matter of money. I made them a proposition to
+duplicate whatever prize money they offered, and in return I was
+to have half the gate receipts and the betting privileges."
+
+Tish quite stiffened. "Clean sport!" she said sarcastically.
+"With betting privileges!"
+
+"You don't quite understand, dear lady," he explained. "Even in
+the cleanest sport we cannot prevent, a man's having an opinion
+and backing it with his own money. What I intended to do was to
+regulate it. Regulate it."
+
+Tish was quite mollified. "Well, of course," she said, "I
+suppose since it must be, it is better--er,--regulated. But why
+haven't you succeeded?"
+
+"An unfortunate thing happened just as I had the deal about to
+close," he replied, and drew a long breath. "The town had raised
+twenty-five hundred. I was to duplicate the amount. But just at
+that time a--a young brother of mine in the West got into
+difficulties, and I--but why go into family matters? It would
+have been easy enough for me to pay my part of the purse out of
+my share of the gate money; but the committee demands cash on
+the table. I haven't got it."
+
+Tish stood up in her car and looked out over the track.
+
+"Twenty-five hundred dollars is a lot of money, young man."
+
+"Not so much when you realize that the gate money will probably
+amount to twelve thousand."
+
+Tish turned and surveyed the grandstand.
+
+"That thing doesn't seat twelve hundred."
+
+"Two thousand people in the grandstand--that's four thousand
+dollars. Four thousand standing inside the ropes at a dollar
+each, four thousand more. And say eight hundred machines parked
+in the oval there at five dollars a car, four thousand more.
+That's twelve thousand for the gate money alone. Then there are
+the concessions to sell peanuts, toy balloons, lemonade and palm-
+leaf fans, the lunch-stands, merry-go-round and moving-picture
+permits. It's a bonanza! Fourteen thousand anyhow."
+
+"Half of fourteen thousand is seven," said Tish dreamily. "Seven
+thousand less twenty-five hundred is thirty-five hundred dollars
+profit."
+
+"Forty-five hundred, dear lady," corrected Mr. Ellis, watching
+her. "Forty-five hundred dollars profit to be made in two weeks,
+and nothing to do to get it but sit still and watch it coming!"
+
+I can read Tish like a book and I saw what was in her mind.
+"Letitia Carberry!" I said sternly. "You take my warning and
+keep clear of this foolishness. If money comes as easy as that
+it ain't honest."
+
+"Why not?" demanded Mr. Ellis. "We give them their money's
+worth, don't we? They'd pay two dollars for a theater seat
+without half the thrills--no chances of seeing a car turn turtle
+or break its steering-knuckle and dash into the side-lines. Two
+dollars' worth? It's twenty!"
+
+But Tish had had a moment to consider, and the turning-turtle
+business settled it. She shook her head. "I'm not interested,
+Mr. Ellis," she said coldly. "I couldn't sleep at night if I
+thought I'd been the cause of anything turning turtle or dashing
+into the side-lines."
+
+"Dear lady!" he said, shocked; "I had no idea of asking you to
+help me out of my difficulties. Anyhow, while matters are at a
+standstill probably some shrewd money-maker here will come
+forward before long and make a nice profit on a small
+investment."
+
+As we drove away from the fair grounds Tish was very silent; but
+just as we reached the Bailey place, with Bettina and young
+Jasper McCutcheon batting a ball about on the tennis court, Tish
+turned to me.
+
+"You needn't look like that, Lizzie," she said. "I'm not even
+thinking of backing an automobile race--although I don't see why
+I shouldn't, so far as that goes. But it's curious, isn't it,
+that I've got twenty-five hundred dollars from Cousin Angeline's
+estate not even earning four per cent?"
+
+I got out grimly and jerked at my bonnet-strings.
+
+"You put it in a mortgage, Tish," I advised her with severity in
+every tone. "It may not be so fast as an automobile race or so
+likely to turn turtle or break its steering-knuckle, but it's
+safe."
+
+"Huh!" said Tish, reaching for the gear lever. "And about as
+exciting as a cold pork chop."
+
+"And furthermore," I interjected, "if you go into this thing now
+that your eyes are open, I'll send for Charlie Sands!"
+
+"You and Charlie Sands," said Tish viciously, jamming at her
+gears, "ought to go and live in an old ladies' home away from
+this cruel world."
+
+Aggie was sitting under a sunshade in the broiling sun at the
+tennis court. She said she had not left Bettina and Jasper for a
+moment, and that they had evidently quarreled, although she did
+not know when, having listened to every word they said. For the
+last half-hour, she said, they had not spoken at all.
+
+"Young people in love are very foolish," she said, rising
+stiffly. "They should be happy in the present. Who knows what
+the future may hold?"
+
+I knew she was thinking of Mr. Wiggins and the icy roof, so I
+patted her shoulder and sent her up to put cold cloths on her
+head for fear of sunstroke. Then I sat down in the broiling sun
+and chaperoned Bettina until luncheon.
+
+III
+
+Jasper took dinner with us that night. He came across the lawn,
+freshly shaved and in clean white flannels, just as dinner was
+announced, and said he had seen a chocolate cake cooling on the
+kitchen porch and that it was a sort of unwritten social law
+that when the Baileys happened to have a chocolate cake at
+dinner they had him also.
+
+There seemed to be nothing to object to in this. Evidently he
+was right, for we found his place laid at the table. The meal
+was quite cheerful, although Jasper ate the way some people play
+the piano, by touch, with his eyes on Bettina. And he gave no
+evidence at dessert of a fondness for chocolate cake sufficient
+to justify a standing invitation.
+
+After dinner we went out on the veranda, and under cover of
+showing me a sunset Jasper took me round the corner of the
+house. Once there, he entirely forgot the sunset.
+
+"Miss Lizzie," he began at once, "what have I done to you to
+have you treat me like this?"
+
+"I?" I asked, amazed.
+
+"All three of you. Did--did Bettina's mother warn you against
+me?"
+
+"The girl has to be chaperoned."
+
+"But not jailed, Miss Lizzie, not jailed! Do you know that I
+haven't had a word with Bettina alone since you came?"
+
+"Why should you want to say anything we cannot hear?"
+
+"Miss Lizzie," he said desperately, "do you want to hear me
+propose to her? For I've reached the point where if I don't
+propose to Bettina soon, I'll--I'll propose to somebody. You'd
+better be warned in time. It might be you or Miss Aggie."
+
+I weakened at that. The Lord never saw fit to send me a man I
+could care enough about to marry, or one who cared enough about
+me, but I couldn't look at the boy's face and not be sorry for
+him.
+
+"What do you want me to do?" I asked.
+
+"Come for a walk with us," he begged. "Then sprain your ankle or
+get tired, I don't care which. Tell us to go on and come back
+for you later. Do you see? You can sit down by the road
+somewhere."
+
+"I won't lie," I said firmly. "If I really get tired I'll say
+so. If I don't--"
+
+"You will." He was gleeful. "We'll walk until you do! You see
+it's like this, Miss Lizzie. Bettina was all for me, in spite of
+our differing on religion and politics and--"
+
+"I know all about your differences," I put in hastily.
+
+"Until a new chap came to town--a fellow named Ellis. Runs a
+sporty car and has every girl in the town lashed to the mast.
+He's a novelty and I'm not. So far I have kept him away from
+Bettina, but at any time they may meet, and it will be
+one-two-three with me."
+
+I am not defending my conduct; I am only explaining. Eliza
+Bailey herself would have done what I did under the
+circumstances. I went for a walk with Bettina and Jasper shortly
+after my talk with Jasper, leaving Tish with the evening paper
+and Aggie inhaling a cubeb cigarette, her hay fever having
+threatened a return. And what is more, I tired within three
+blocks of the house, where I saw a grassy bank beside the road.
+
+Bettina wished to stay with me, but I said, in obedience to
+Jasper's eyes, that I liked to sit alone and listen to the
+crickets, and for them to go on. The last I saw of them Jasper
+had drawn Bettina's arm through his and was walking beside her
+with his head bent, talking. I sat for perhaps fifteen minutes
+and was growing uneasy about dew and my rheumatism when I heard
+footsteps and, looking up, I saw Aggie coming toward me. She was
+not surprised to see me and addressed me coldly.
+
+"I thought as much!" she said. "I expected better of you,
+Lizzie. That boy asked me and I refused. I dare say he asked
+Tish also. For you, who pride yourself on your strength of mind--
+ "
+
+"I was tired," I said. "I was to sprain my ankle," she observed
+sarcastically. "I just thought as I was sitting there alone--"
+
+"Where's Tish?"
+
+"A young man named Ellis came and took her out for a ride," said
+Aggie. "He couldn't take us both, as the car holds only two."
+
+I got up and stared at Aggie in the twilight. "You come straight
+home with me, Aggie Pilkington," I said sternly.
+
+"But what about Bettina and Jasper?"
+
+"Let 'em alone," I said; "they're safe enough. What we need to
+keep an eye on is Letitia Carberry and her Cousin Angeline's
+legacy."
+
+But I was too late. Tish and Mr. Ellis whirled up to the door at
+half-past eight and Tish did not even notice that Bettina was
+absent. She took off her veil and said something about Mr.
+Ellis's having heard a grinding in the differential of her car
+that afternoon and that he suspected a chip of steel in the
+gears. They went out together to the garage, leaving Aggie and
+me staring at each other. Mr. Ellis was carrying a box of tools.
+
+Jasper and Bettina returned shortly after, and even in the dusk
+I knew things had gone badly for him. He sat on the steps,
+looking out across the dark lawn, and spoke in monosyllables.
+Bettina, however, was very gay.
+
+It was evident that Bettina had decided not to take her
+Presbyterianism into the Episcopal fold. And although I am a
+Presbyterian myself I felt sorry.
+
+Tish and Mr. Ellis came round to the porch about ten o'clock and
+he was presented to Bettina. From that moment there was no
+question in my mind as to how affairs were going, or in Jasper's
+either. He refused to move and sat doggedly on the steps, but he
+took little part in the conversation.
+
+Mr. Ellis was a good talker, especially about himself.
+
+"You'll be glad to know," he said to me, "that I've got this
+race matter fixed up finally. In two weeks from now we'll have a
+little excitement here."
+
+I looked toward Tish, but she said nothing.
+
+"Excitement is where I live," said Mr. Ellis. "If I don't find
+any waiting I make it."
+
+"If you are looking for excitement, we'll have to find you
+some," Jasper said pointedly.
+
+Mr. Ellis only laughed. "Don't put yourself out, dear boy," he
+said. "I have enough for present necessities. If you think an
+automobile race is an easy thing to manage, try it. Every man
+who drives a racing-car has a coloratura soprano beaten to death
+for temperament. Then every racing-car has quirky spells;
+there's the local committee to propitiate; the track to look
+after; and if that isn't enough, there's the promotion itself,
+the advertising. That's my stunt--the advertising."
+
+"It's a wonderful business, isn't it?" asked Bettina. "To take a
+mile or so of dirt track and turn it into a sort of stage, with
+drama every minute and sometimes tragedy!"
+
+"Wait a moment," said Mr. Ellis; "I want to put that down. I'll
+use it somewhere in the advertising." He wrote by the light of a
+match, while we all sat rather stunned by both his personality
+and his alertness. "Everything's grist that comes to my mill. I
+suppose you all remember when I completed the speedway at
+Indianapolis and had the Governor of Indiana lay a gold brick at
+the entrance? Great stunt that! But the best part of that story
+never reached the public."
+
+Bettina was leaning forward, all ears and thrills. "What was
+that?" she asked.
+
+"I had the gold brick stolen that night--did it myself and
+carried the brick away in my pocket--only gold-plated, you know.
+Cost eight or nine dollars, all told, and brought a million
+dollars in advertising. But the papers were sore about some
+passes and wouldn't use the story. Too bad we can't use the
+brick here. Still have it kicking about somewhere."
+
+It was then, I think, that Jasper yawned loudly, apologized,
+said good-night and lounged away across the lawn. Bettina hardly
+knew he was going. She was bending forward, her chin in her
+palms, listening to Mr. Ellis tell about a driver in a motor
+race breaking his wrist cranking a car, and how he--Ellis--had
+jumped into the car and driven it to victory. Even Aggie was
+enthralled. It seemed as if, in the last hour, the great world
+of stress and keen wits and endeavor and mad speed had sat down
+on our door-step.
+
+As Tish said when we were going up to bed, why shouldn't Mr.
+Ellis brag? He had something to brag about.
+
+IV
+
+Although I felt quite sure that Tish had put up the prize money
+for Mr. Ellis, I could not be certain. And Tish's attitude at
+that time did not invite inquiry. She took long rides daily with
+the Ellis man in his gray car, and I have reason to believe that
+their objective point was always the same--the race-track.
+
+Mr. Ellis was the busiest man in Morris Valley. In the daytime
+he was superintending putting the track in condition, writing
+what he called "promotion stuff," securing entries and forming
+the center of excited groups at the drug store and one or other
+of the two public garages. In the evenings he was generally to
+be found at Bettina's feet.
+
+Jasper did not come over any more. He sauntered past, evening
+after evening, very much white-flanneled and carrying a tennis
+racket. And once or twice he took out his old racing-car, and
+later shot by the house with a flutter of veils and a motor coat
+beside him.
+
+Aggie was exceedingly sorry for him, and even went the length of
+having the cook bake a chocolate cake and put it on the window
+sill to cool. It had, however, no perceptible effect, except to
+draw from Mr. Ellis, who had been round at the garage looking at
+Jasper's old racer, a remark that he was exceedingly fond of
+cake, and if he were urged--
+
+That was, I believe, a week before the race. The big city papers
+had taken it up, according to Mr. Ellis, and entries were
+pouring in.
+
+"That's the trouble on a small track," he said--"we can't crowd
+'em. A dozen cars will be about the limit. Even with using the
+cattle pens for repair pits we can't look after more than a
+dozen. Did I tell you Heckert had entered his Bonor?"
+
+"No!" we exclaimed. As far as Aggie and I were concerned, the
+Bonor might have been a new sort of dog.
+
+"Yes, and Johnson his Sampler. It's going to be some race--eh,
+what!"
+
+Jasper sauntered over that evening, possibly a late result of
+the cake, after all. He greeted us affably, as if his defection
+of the past week had been merely incidental, and sat down on the
+steps.
+
+"I've been thinking, Ellis," he said, "that I'd like to enter my
+car."
+
+"What!" said Ellis. "Not that--"
+
+"My racer. I'm not much for speed, but there's a sort of feeling
+in the town that the locality ought to be represented. As I'm
+the only owner of a speed car--"
+
+"Speed car!" said Ellis, and chuckled. "My dear boy, we've got
+Heckert with his ninety-horse-power Bonor!"
+
+"Never heard of him." Jasper lighted a cigarette. "Anyhow,
+what's that to me? I don't like to race. I've got less speed
+mania than any owner of a race car you ever met. But the honor
+of the town seems to demand a sacrifice, and I'm it."
+
+"You can try out for it anyhow," said Ellis. "I don't think
+you'll make it; but, if you qualify, all right. But don't let
+any other town people, from a sense of mistaken local pride,
+enter a street roller or a traction engine."
+
+Jasper colored, but kept his temper.
+
+Aggie, however, spoke up indignantly. "Mr. McCutcheon's car was
+a very fine racer when it was built."
+
+"De mortuis nil nisi bonum," remarked Mr. Ellis, and getting up
+said good-night.
+
+Jasper sat on the steps and watched him disappear. Then he
+turned to Tish.
+
+"Miss Letitia," he said, "do you think you are wise to drive
+that racer of his the way you have been doing?"
+
+Aggie gave a little gasp and promptly sneezed, as she does when
+she is excited.
+
+"I?" said Tish.
+
+"You!" he smiled. "Not that I don't admire your courage. I do.
+But the other day, now, when you lost a tire and went into the
+ditch--"
+
+"Tish!" from Aggie.
+
+"--you were fortunate. But when a racer turns over the results
+are not pleasant."
+
+"As a matter of fact," said Tish coldly, "it was a wheat-field,
+not a ditch."
+
+Jasper got up and threw away his cigarette. "Well, our departing
+friend is not the only one who can quote Latin," he said.
+"Verbum sap., Miss Tish. Good-night, everybody. Good-night,
+Bettina."
+
+Bettina's good-night was very cool. As I went up to bed that
+night, I thought Jasper's chances poor indeed. As for Tish, I
+endeavored to speak a few word of remonstrance to her, but she
+opened her Bible and began to read the lesson for the day and I
+was obliged to beat a retreat.
+
+
+It was that night that Aggie and I, having decided the situation
+was beyond us, wrote a letter to Charlie Sands asking him to
+come up. Just as I was sealing it Bettina knocked and came in.
+She closed the door behind her and stood looking at us both.
+
+"Where is Miss Tish?" she asked.
+
+"Reading her Bible," I said tartly. "When Tish is up to some
+mischief, she generally reads an extra chapter or two as
+atonement."
+
+"Is she--is she always like this?"
+
+"The trouble is," explained Aggie gently, "Miss Letitia is an
+enthusiast. Whatever she does, she does with all her heart."
+
+"I feel so responsible," said Bettina. "I try to look after her,
+but what can I do?"
+
+"There is only one thing to do," I assured her--"let her alone.
+If she wants to fly, let her fly; if she wants to race, let her
+race--and trust in Providence."
+
+"I'm afraid Providence has its hands full!" said Bettina, and
+went to bed.
+
+For the remainder of that week nothing was talked of in Morris
+Valley but the approaching race. Some of Eliza Bailey's friends
+gave fancy-work parties for us, which Aggie and I attended. Tish
+refused, being now openly at the race-track most of the day.
+Morris Valley was much excited. Should it wear motor clothes, or
+should it follow the example of the English Derby and the French
+races and wear its afternoon reception dress with white kid
+gloves? Or--it being warm--wouldn't lingerie clothes and
+sunshades be most suitable?
+
+Some of the gossip I retailed to Jasper, oil-streaked and
+greasy, in the Baileys' garage where he was working over his
+car.
+
+"Tell 'em to wear mourning," he said pessimistically. "There's
+always a fatality or two. If there wasn't a fair chance of it
+nothing would make 'em sit for hours watching dusty streaks
+going by."
+
+The face was scheduled for Wednesday. On Sunday night the cars
+began to come in. On Monday Tish took us all, including Bettina,
+to the track. There were half a dozen tents in the oval, one of
+them marked with a huge red cross.
+
+"Hospital tent," said Tish calmly. We even, on permission from
+Mr. Ellis, went round the track. At one spot Tish stopped the
+car and got out.
+
+"Nail," she said briefly. "It's been a horse-racing track for
+years, and we've gathered a bushel of horse-shoe nails."
+
+Aggie and I said nothing, but we looked at each other. Tish had
+said "we." Evidently Cousin Angeline's legacy was not going into
+a mortgage.
+
+The fair-grounds were almost ready. Peanut and lunch stands had
+sprung up everywhere. The oval, save by the tents and the repair
+pits, was marked off into parking-spaces numbered on tall
+banners. Groups of dirty men in overalls, carrying machine
+wrenches, small boys with buckets of water, onlookers round the
+tents and track-rollers made the place look busy and
+interesting. Some of the excitement, I confess, got into my
+blood. Tish, on the contrary, was calm and businesslike. We were
+sorry we had sent for Charlie Sands. She no longer went out in
+Mr. Ellis's car, and that evening she went back to the kitchen
+and made a boiled salad dressing.
+
+We were all deceived.
+
+Charlie Sands came the next morning. He was on the veranda
+reading a paper when we got down to breakfast. Tish's face was a
+study.
+
+"Who sent for you?" she demanded.
+
+"Sent for me! Why, who would send for me? I'm here to write up
+the race. I thought, if you haven't been out to the track, we'd
+go out this morning."
+
+"We've been out," said Tish shortly, and we went in to
+breakfast. Once or twice during the meal I caught her eye on me
+and on Aggie and she was short with us both. While she was
+upstairs I had a word with Charlie Sands.
+
+"Well," he said, "what is it this time? Is she racing?"
+
+"Worse than that," I replied. "I think she's backing the thing!"
+
+"No!"
+
+"With her cousin Angeline's legacy." With that I told him about
+our meeting Mr. Ellis and the whole story. He listened without a
+word.
+
+"So that's the situation," I finished. "He has her hypnotized,
+Charlie. What's more, I shouldn't be surprised to see her enter
+the race under an assumed name."
+
+Charlie Sands looked at the racing list in the Morris Valley
+Sun.
+
+"Good cars all of them," he said. "She's not here among the
+drivers, unless she's--Who are these drivers anyhow? I never
+heard of any of them."
+
+"It's a small race," I suggested. "I dare say the big men--"
+
+"Perhaps." He put away his paper and got up. "I'll just wander
+round the town for an hour or two, Aunt Lizzie," he said. "I
+believe there's a nigger in this woodpile and I'm a right nifty
+little nigger-chaser."
+
+When he came back about noon, however, he looked puzzled. I drew
+him aside.
+
+"It seems on the level," he said. "It's so darned open it makes
+me suspicious. But she's back of it all right. I got her bank on
+the long-distance 'phone."
+
+We spent that afternoon at the track, with the different cars
+doing what I think they called "trying out heats." It appeared
+that a car, to qualify, must do a certain distance in a certain
+time. It grew monotonous after a while. All but one entry
+qualified and Jasper just made it. The best showing was made by
+the Bonor car, according to Charlie Sands.
+
+Jasper came to our machine when it was over, smiling without any
+particular good cheer.
+
+"I've made it and that's all," he said. "I've got about as much
+chance as a watermelon at a colored picnic. I'm being
+slaughtered to make a Roman holiday."
+
+"If you feel that way why do you do it?" demanded Bettina
+coldly. "If you go in expecting to slaughtered--"
+
+He was leaning on the side of the car and looked up at her with
+eyes that made my heart ache, they were so wretched.
+
+"What does it matter?" he said. "I'll probably trail in at the
+last, sound in wind and limb. If I don't, what does it matter?"
+
+He turned and left us at that, and I looked at Bettina. She had
+her lips shut tight and was blinking hard. I wished that Jasper
+had looked back.
+
+V
+
+Charlie Sands announced at dinner that he intended to spend the
+night at the track.
+
+Tish put down her fork and looked at him. "Why?" she demanded.
+
+"I'm going to help the boy next door watch his car," he said
+calmly. "Nothing against your friend Mr. Ellis, Aunt Tish, but
+some enemy of true sport might take a notion in the night to
+slip a dope pill into the mouth of friend Jasper's car and have
+her go to sleep on the track to-morrow."
+
+We spent a quiet evening. Mr. Ellis was busy, of course, and so
+was Jasper. The boy came to the house to get Charlie Sands and,
+I suppose, for a word with Bettina, for when he saw us all on
+the porch he looked, as you may say, thwarted.
+
+When Charlie Sands had gone up for his pajamas and dressing-
+gown, Jasper stood looking up at us.
+
+"Oh, Association of Chaperons!" he said, "is it permitted that
+my lady walk to the gate with me--alone?"
+
+"I am not your lady," flashed Bettina.
+
+"You've nothing to say about that," he said recklessly. "I've
+selected you; you can't help it. I haven't claimed that you have
+selected me."
+
+"Anyhow, I don't wish to go to the gate," said Bettina.
+
+He went rather white at that, and Charlie Sands coming down at
+that moment with a pair of red-and-white pajamas under his arm
+and a toothbrush sticking out of his breast pocket, romance, as
+Jasper said later in referring to it, "was buried in Sands."
+
+Jasper went up to Bettina and held out his hand. "You'll wish me
+luck, won't you?"
+
+"Of course." She took his hand. "But I think you're a bit of a
+coward, Jasper!"
+
+He eyed her. "Coward!" he said. "I'm the bravest man you know.
+I'm doing a thing I'm scared to death to do!"
+
+The race was to begin at two o'clock in the afternoon. There
+were small races to be run first, but the real event was due at
+three.
+
+>From early in the morning a procession of cars from out of town
+poured in past Eliza Bailey's front porch, and by noon her
+cretonne cushions were thick with dust. And not only automobiles
+came, but hay-wagons, side-bar buggies, delivery carts--anything
+and everything that could transport the crowd.
+
+At noon Mr. Ellis telephoned Tish that the grand-stand was sold
+out and that almost all the parking-places that had been
+reserved were taken. Charlie Sands came home to luncheon with a
+curious smile on his face.
+
+"How are you betting, Aunt Tish?" he asked.
+
+"Betting!"
+
+"Yes. Has Ellis let you in on the betting?"
+
+"I don't know what you are talking about," Tish said sourly.
+"Mr. Ellis controls the betting so that it may be done in an
+orderly manner. I am sure I have nothing to do with it."
+
+"I'd like to bet a little, Charlie," Aggie put in with an eye on
+Tish. "I'd put all I win on the collection plate on Sunday."
+
+"Very well." Charlie Sands took out his notebook. "On what car
+and how much?"
+
+"Ten dollars on the Fein. It made the best time at the trial
+heats."
+
+"I wouldn't if I were you," said Charlie Sands. "Suppose we put
+it on our young friend next door."
+
+Bettina rather sniffed. "On Jasper!" she exclaimed.
+
+"On Jasper," said Charlie Sands gravely.
+
+Tish, who had hardly heard us, looked up from her plate.
+
+"Bettina is betting," she snapped. "Putting it on the collection
+plate doesn't help any." But with that she caught Charlie Sands'
+eye and he winked at her. Tish colored. "Gambling is one thing,
+clean sport is another," she said hotly.
+
+I believe, however, that whatever Charlie Sands may have
+suspected, he really knew nothing until the race had started. By
+that time it was too late to prevent it, and the only way he
+could think of to avoid getting Tish involved in a scandal was
+to let it go on.
+
+We went to the track in Tish's car and parked in the oval. Not
+near the grandstand, however. Tish had picked out for herself a
+curve at one end of the track which Mr. Ellis had said was the
+worst bit on the course. "He says," said Tish, as we put the top
+down and got out the vacuum bottle--oh, yes, Mr. Ellis had sent
+Tish one as a present--"that if there are any smashups they'll
+occur here."
+
+Aggie is not a bloodthirsty woman ordinarily, but her face quite
+lit up.
+
+"Not really!" she said.
+
+"They'll probably turn turtle," said Tish. "There is never a
+race without a fatality or two. No racer can get any life
+insurance. Mr. Ellis says four men were killed at the last race
+he promoted."
+
+"Then I think Mr. Ellis is a murderer," Bettina cried. We all
+looked at her. She was limp and white and was leaning back among
+the cushions with her eyes shut. "Why didn't you tell Jasper
+about this curve?" she demanded of Tish.
+
+But at that moment a pistol shot rang out and the races were on.
+
+The Fein won two of the three small races. Jasper was entered
+only for the big race. In the interval before the race was on,
+Jasper went round the track slowly, looking for Bettina. When he
+saw us he waved, but did not stop. He was number thirteen.
+
+I shall not describe the race. After the first round or two,
+what with dust in my eyes and my neck aching from turning my
+head so rapidly, I just sat back and let them spin in front of
+me.
+
+It was after a dozen laps or so, with number thirteen doing as
+well as any of them, that Tish was arrested.
+
+Charlie Sands came up beside the car with a gentleman named
+Atkins, who turned out to be a county detective. Charlie Sands
+was looking stern and severe, but the detective was rather
+apologetic.
+
+"This is Miss Carberry," said Charlie Sands. "Aunt Tish, this
+gentleman wishes to speak to you."
+
+"Come around after the race," Tish observed calmly.
+
+"Miss Carberry," said the detective gently, "I believe you are
+back of this race, aren't you?"
+
+"What if I am?" demanded Tish.
+
+Charlie Sands put a hand on the detective's arm. "It's like
+this, Aunt Tish," he said; "you are accused of practicing a
+short- change game, that's all. This race is sewed up. You
+employ those racing-cars with drivers at an average of fifty
+dollars a week. They are hardly worth it, Aunt Tish. I could
+have got you a better string for twenty-five."
+
+Tish opened her mouth and shut it again without speaking.
+
+"You also control the betting privileges. As you own all the
+racers you have probably known for a couple of weeks who will
+win the race. Having made the Fein favorite, you can bet on a
+Brand or a Bonor, or whatever one you chance to like, and win
+out. Only I take it rather hard of you, Aunt Tish, not to have
+let the family in. I'm hard up as the dickens."
+
+"Charlie Sands!" said Tish impressively. "If you are joking--"
+
+"Joking! Did you ever know a county detective to arrest a
+prominent woman at a race-track as a little jest between
+friends? There's no joke, Aunt Tish. You've financed a phony
+race. The permit is taken in your name--L. L. Carberry. Whatever
+car wins, you and Ellis take the prize money, half the gate
+receipts, and what you have made out of the betting--"
+
+Tish rose in the machine and held out both her hands to Mr.
+Atkins.
+
+"Officer, perform your duty," she said solemnly. "Ignorance is
+no defense and I know it. Where are the handcuffs?"
+
+"We'll not bother about them, Miss Carberry", he said. "If you
+like I'll get into the car and you can tell me all about it
+while we watch the race. Which car is to win?"
+
+"I may have been a fool, Mr. County Detective," she said coldly;
+"but I'm not a knave. I have not bet a dollar on the race."
+
+We were very silent for a time. The detective seemed to enjoy
+the race very much and ate peanuts out of his pocket. He even
+bought a red-and-black pennant, with "Morris Valley Races" on
+it, and fastened it to the car. Charlie Sands, however, sat with
+his arms folded, stiff and severe.
+
+Once Tish bent forward and touched his arm.
+
+"You--you don't think it will get in the papers, do you?" she
+quavered.
+
+Charlie Sands looked at her with gloom. "I shall have to send it
+myself, Aunt Tish," he said; "it is my duty to my paper. Even my
+family pride, hurt to the quick and quivering as it is, must not
+interfere with my duty."
+
+It was Bettina who suggested a way out--Bettina, who had sat
+back as pale as Tish and heard that her Mr. Ellis was, as
+Charlie Sands said later, as crooked as a pretzel.
+
+"But Jasper was not--not subsidized," she said. "if he wins,
+it's all right, isn't it?"
+
+The county detective turned to her.
+
+"Jasper?" he said.
+
+"A young man who lives here." Bettina colored.
+
+"He is--not to be suspected?"
+
+"Certainly not," said Bettina haughtily; "he is above suspicion.
+Besides, he--he and Mr. Ellis are not friends."
+
+Well, the county detective was no fool. He saw the situation
+that minute, and smiled when he offered Bettina a peanut. "Of
+course," he said cheerfully, "if the race is won by a Morris
+Valley man, and not by one of the Ellis cars, I don't suppose
+the district attorney would care to do anything about it. In
+fact," he said, smiling at Bettina, "I don't know that I'd put
+it up to the district attorney at all. A warning to Ellis would
+get him out of the State."
+
+It was just at that moment that car number thirteen, coming
+round the curve, skidded into the field, threw out both Jasper
+McCutcheon and his mechanician, and after standing on two wheels
+for an appreciable moment of time, righted herself, panting,
+with her nose against a post.
+
+Jasper sat up almost immediately and caught at his shoulder. The
+mechanician was stunned. He got up, took a step or two and fell
+down, weak with fright.
+
+I do not recall very distinctly what happened next. We got out
+of the machine, I remember, and Bettina was cutting off Jasper's
+sweater with Charlie Sands' penknife, and crying as she did it.
+And Charlie Sands was trying to prevent Jasper from getting back
+into his car, while Jasper was protesting that he could win in
+two or more laps and that he could drive with one hand--he'd
+only broken his arm.
+
+The crowd had gathered round us, thick. Suddenly they drew back,
+and in a sort of haze I saw Tish in Jasper's car, with Aggie, as
+white as death, holding to Tish's sleeve and begging her not to
+get in. The next moment Tish let in the clutch of the racer and
+Aggie took a sort of flying leap and landed beside her in the
+mechanician's seat.
+
+Charlie Sands saw it when I did, but we were both too late. Tish
+was crossing the ditch into the track again, and the moment she
+struck level ground she put up the gasoline.
+
+It was just then that Aggie fell out, landing, as I have said
+before, in a pile of sand. Tish said afterward that she never
+missed her. She had just discovered that this was not Jasper's
+old car, which she knew something about, but a new racer with
+the old hood and seat put on in order to fool Mr. Ellis. She
+didn't know a thing about it.
+
+Well, you know the rest--how Tish, trying to find how the gears
+worked, side-swiped the Bonor car and threw it off the field and
+out of the race; how, with the grandstand going crazy, she
+skidded off the track into the field, turned completely round
+twice, and found herself on the track again facing the way she
+wanted to go; how, at the last lap, she threw a tire and,
+without cutting down her speed, bumped home the winner, with the
+end of her tongue nearly bitten off and her spine fairly driven
+up into her skull.
+
+All this is well known now, as is also the fact that Mr. Ellis
+disappeared from the judges' stand after a word or two with Mr.
+Atkins, and was never seen at Morris Valley again.
+
+Tish came out of the race ahead by half the gate money--six
+thousand dollars--by a thousand dollars from concessions, and a
+lame back that she kept all winter. Even deducting the twenty-
+five hundred she had put up, she was forty-five hundred dollars
+ahead, not counting the prize money. Charlie Sand brought the
+money from the track that night, after having paid off Mr.
+Ellis's racing- string and given Mr. Atkins a small present. He
+took over the prize money to Jasper and came back with it,
+Jasper maintaining that it belonged to Tish, and that he had
+only raced for the honor of Morris Valley. For some tine the
+money went begging, but it settled itself naturally enough, Tish
+giving it to Jasper in the event of--but that came later.
+
+On the following evening--Bettina, in the pursuit of learning to
+cook, having baked a chocolate cake--we saw Jasper, with his arm
+in a sling, crossing the side lawn.
+
+Jasper stopped at the foot of the steps. "I see a chocolate cake
+cooling on the kitchen porch," he said. "Did you order it, Miss
+Lizzie?"
+
+I shook my head.
+
+"Miss Tish? Miss Aggie?"
+
+"I ordered it," said Bettina defiantly--"or rather I baked it."
+
+"And you did that, knowing what it entailed? He was coming up
+the steps slowly and with care.
+
+"What does it entail?" demanded Bettina.
+
+"Me."
+
+"Oh, that!" said Bettina. "I knew that."
+
+Jasper threw his head back and laughed. Then:--
+
+"Will the Associated Chaperons," he said, "turn their backs?"
+
+"Not at all," I began stiffly. "If I--"
+
+"She baked it herself!" said Jasper exultantly. "One--two. When
+I say three I shall kiss Bettina."
+
+And I have every reason to believe he carried out his threat.
+
+
+Eliza Bailey forwarded me this letter from London where Bettina
+had sent it to her:--
+
+ Dearest Mother: I hope you are coming home soon. I
+ really think you should. Aunt Lizzie is here and she
+ brought two friends, and, mother, I feel so responsible
+ for them! Aunt Lizzie is sane enough, if somewhat
+ cranky; but Miss Tish is almost more than I can manage--
+ I never know what she is going to do next--and I am worn
+ out with chaperoning her. And Miss Aggie, although she
+ is very sweet, is always smoking cubeb cigarettes for
+ hay fever, and it looks terrible! The neighbors do not
+ know they are cubeb, and, anyhow, that's a habit,
+ mother. And yesterday Miss Tish was arrested, and ran a
+ motor race and won it, and to-day she is knitting a
+ stocking and reciting the Twenty-third Psalm. Please,
+ mother, I think you should come home.
+
+ Lovingly, BETTINA.
+
+ P.S. I think I shall marry Jasper after all. He says he
+ likes the Presbyterian service.
+
+I looked up from reading Eliza's letter. Tish was knitting
+quietly and planning to give the money back to the town in the
+shape of a library, and Aggie was holding a cubeb cigarette to
+her nose. Down on the tennis court Jasper and Bettina were idly
+batting a ball round.
+
+"I'm glad the Ellis man did not get her," said Aggie. And then,
+after a sneeze, "How Jasper reminds me of Mr. Wiggins."
+
+The library did not get the money after all. Tish sent it, as a
+wedding present, to Bettina.
+
+
+
+
+Like A Wolf On The Fold
+
+I
+
+Aggie has always been in the habit of observing the anniversary
+of Mr. Wiggins's death. Aggie has the anniversary habit, anyhow,
+and her life is a succession: of small feast-days, on which she
+wears mental crape or wedding garments--depending on the
+occasion. Tish and I always remember these occasions
+appropriately, sending flowers on the anniversaries of the
+passing away of Aggie's parents; grandparents; a niece who died
+in birth; her cousin, Sarah Webb, who married a missionary and
+was swallowed whole by a large snake,--except her shoes, which
+the reptile refused and of which Aggie possesses the right,
+given her by the stricken husband; and, of course, Mr. Wiggins.
+
+For Mr. Wiggins Tish and I generally send the same things each
+year--Tish a wreath of autumn foliage and I a sheaf of wheat
+tied with a lavender ribbon. The program seldom varies. We drive
+to the cemetery in the afternoon and Aggie places the sheaf and
+the wreath on Mr. Wiggins's last resting-place, after first
+removing the lavender ribbon, of which she makes cap bows
+through the year and an occasional pin-cushion or fancy-work
+bag; then home to chicken and waffles, which had been Mr.
+Wiggins's favorite meal. In the evening Charlie Sands generally
+comes in and we play a rubber or two of bridge.
+
+On the thirtieth anniversary of Mr. Wiggins's falling off a roof
+and breaking his neck, Tish was late in arriving, and I found
+Aggie sitting alone, dressed in black, with a tissue-paper
+bundle in her lap. I put my sheaf on the table and untied my
+bonnet-strings.
+
+"Where's Tish?" I asked.
+
+"Not here yet."
+
+Something in Aggie's tone made me look at her. She was eyeing
+the bundle in her lap.
+
+"I got a paler shade of ribbon this time," I said, seeing she
+made no comment on the sheaf. "It's a better color for me if
+you're going to make my Christmas present out of it this year
+again. Where's Tish's wreath?"
+
+"Here." Aggie pointed dispiritedly to the bundle in her lap and
+went on rocking.
+
+"That! That's no wreath."
+
+In reply Aggie lifted the tissue paper and shook out, with hands
+that trembled with indignation, a lace-and-linen centerpiece.
+She held it up before me and we eyed each other over it. Both of
+us understood.
+
+"Tish is changed, Lizzie," Aggie said hollowly. "Ask her for
+bread these days and she gives you a Cluny-lace fandangle. On
+mother's anniversary she sent me a set of doilies; and when
+Charlie Sands was in the hospital with appendicitis she took him
+a pair of pillow shams. It's that Syrian!"
+
+Both of us knew. We had seen Tish's apartment change from a
+sedate and spinsterly retreat to a riot of lace covers on the
+mantel, on the backs of chairs, on the stands, on the pillows--
+everywhere. We had watched her Marseilles bedspreads give way to
+hem-stitched covers, with bolsters to match. We had seen Tish go
+through a cold winter clad in a succession of sleazy silk
+kimonos instead of her flannel dressing-gown; terrible kimonos--
+green and yellow and red and pink, that looked like fruit salads
+and were just as heating.
+
+"It's that dratted Syrian!" cried Aggie--and at that Tish came
+in. She stood inside the door and eyed us.
+
+"What about him?" she demanded. "If I choose to take a poor
+starving Christian youth and assist him by buying from him what
+I need--what I need!--that's my affair, isn't it? Tufik was
+starving and I took him in."
+
+"He took you in, all right!" Aggie sniffed. "A great, mustached,
+dirty, palavering foreigner, who's probably got a harem at home
+and no respect for women!"
+
+Tish glanced at my sheaf and at the centerpiece. She was dressed
+as she always dressed on Mr. Wiggins's day--in black; but she
+had a new lace collar with a jabot, and we knew where she had
+got it. She saw our eyes on it and she had the grace to flush.
+
+"Once for all," she snapped, "I intend to look after this
+unfortunate Syrian! If my friends object, I shall be deeply
+sorry; but, so far as I care, they may object until they are
+purple in the face and their tongues hang out. I've been sending
+my money to foreign missions long enough; I'm doing my
+missionary work at home now."
+
+"He'll marry you!" This from Aggie.
+
+Tish ignored her. "His father is an honored citizen of Beirut,
+of the nobility. The family is impoverished, being Christian,
+and grossly imposed on by the Turks. Tufik speaks French and
+English as well as Mohammedan. They offered him a high
+government position if he would desert the Christian faith; but
+he refused firmly. He came to this country for religious
+freedom; at any moment they may come after him and take him
+back."
+
+A glint of hope came to me. I made a mental note to write to the
+mayor, or whatever they call him over there, and tell him where
+he could locate his wandering boy.
+
+"He loves the God of America," said Tish.
+
+"Money!" Aggie jeered.
+
+"And he is so pathetic, so grateful! I told Hannah at noon
+today--that's what delayed me--to give him his lunch. He was
+starving; I thought we'd never fill him. And when it was over,
+he stooped in the sweetest way, while she was gathering up the
+empty dishes, and kissed her hand. It was touching!"
+
+"Very!" I said dryly. "What did Hannah do?"
+
+"She's a fool! She broke a cup on his head."
+
+Mr. Wiggins's anniversary was not a success. Part of this was
+due to Tish, who talked of Tufik steadily--of his youth; of the
+wonderful bargains she secured from him; of his belief that this
+was the land of opportunity--Aggie sniffed; of his familiarity
+with the Bible and Biblical places; of the search the Turks
+were making for him. The atmosphere was not cleared by Aggie's
+taking the Cluny-lace centerpiece to the cemetery and placing
+it, with my sheaf, on Mr. Wiggins's grave.
+
+As we got into Tish's machine to go back, Aggie was undeniably
+peevish. She caught cold, too, and was sneezing--as she always
+does when she is irritated or excited.
+
+"Where to?" asked Tish from the driving-seat, looking straight
+ahead and pulling on her gloves. From where we sat we could
+still see the dot of white on the grass that was the
+centerpiece.
+
+"Back to the house," Aggie snapped, "to have some chicken and
+waffles and Tufik for dinner!"
+
+Tish drove home in cold silence. As well as we could tell from
+her back, she was not so much indignant as she was determined.
+Thus we do not believe that she willfully drove over every rut
+and thank-you-ma'am on the road, scattering us generously over
+the tonneau, and finally, when Aggie, who was the lighter, was
+tossed against the top and sprained her neck, eliciting a
+protest from us. She replied in an abstracted tone, which showed
+where her mind was.
+
+"It would be rougher on a camel," she said absently. "Tufik was
+telling me the other day--"
+
+Aggie had got her head straight by that time and was holding it
+with both hands to avoid jarring. She looked goaded and
+desperate; and, as she said afterward, the thing slipped out
+before she knew she was more than thinking it.
+
+"Oh, damn Tufik!" she said.
+
+Fortunately at that moment we blew out a tire and apparently
+Tish did not hear her. While I was jacking up the car and Tish
+was getting the key of the toolbox out of her stocking, Aggie
+sat sullenly in her place and watched us.
+
+"I suppose," she gibed, "a camel never blows out a tire!"
+
+"It might," Tish said grimly, "if it heard an oath from the lips
+of a middle-aged Sunday-school teacher!"
+
+We ate Mr. Wiggins's anniversary dinner without any great
+hilarity. Aggie's neck was very stiff and she had turned in the
+collar of her dress and wrapped flannels wrung out of lamp oil
+round it. When she wished to address either Tish or myself she
+held her head rigid and turned her whole body in her chair; and
+when she felt a sneeze coming on she clutched wildly at her head
+with both hands as if she expected it to fly off.
+
+Tufik was not mentioned, though twice Tish got as far as Tu- and
+then thought better of it; but her mind was on him and we knew
+it. She worked the conversation round to Bible history and
+triumphantly demanded whether we knew that Sodom and Gomorrah
+are towns today, and that a street-car line is contemplated to
+them from some place or other--it developed later that she meant
+Tyre and Sidon. Once she suggested that Aggie's sideboard needed
+new linens, but after a look at Aggie's rigid head she let it go
+at that.
+
+No one was sorry when, with dinner almost over, and Aggie
+lifting her ice-cream spoon straight up in front of her and
+opening her mouth with a sort of lockjaw movement, the bell
+rang. We thought it was Charlie Sands. It was not. Aggie faced
+the doorway and I saw her eyes widen. Tish and I turned.
+
+A boy stood in the doorway--a shrinking, timid, brown-eyed young
+Oriental, very dark of skin, very white of teeth, very black of
+hair--a slim youth of eighteen, possibly twenty, in a shabby
+blue suit, broken shoes, and a celluloid collar. Twisting
+between nervous brown fingers, not as clean as they might have
+been, was a tissue-paper package.
+
+"My friends!" he said, and smiled.
+
+Tish is an extraordinary woman. She did not say a word. She sat
+still and let the smile get in its work. Its first effect was on
+Aggie's neck, which she forgot. Tufik's timid eyes rested for a
+moment on Tish and brightened. Then like a benediction they
+turned to mine, and came to a stop on Aggie. He took a step
+farther into the room.
+
+"My friend's friend are my friend," he said. "America is my
+friend--this so great God's country!"
+
+Aggie put down her ice-cream spoon and closed her mouth, which
+had been open.
+
+"Come in, Tufik," said Tish; "and I am sure Miss Pilkington
+would like you to sit down."
+
+Tufik still stood with his eyes fixed on Aggie, twisting his
+package.
+
+"My friend has said," he observed--he was quite calm and
+divinely trustful--"My friend has said that this is for Miss
+Pilk a sad day. My friend is my mother; I have but her and God.
+Unless--but perhaps I have two new friend also--no?"
+
+"Of course we are your friends," said Aggie, feeling for the
+table-bell with her foot. "We are--aren't we, Lizzie?"
+
+Tufik turned and looked at me wistfully. It came over me then
+what an awful thing it must be to be so far from home and
+knowing nobody, and having to wear trousers and celluloid
+collars instead of robes and turbans, and eat potatoes and fried
+things instead of olives and figs and dates, and to be in danger
+of being taken back and made into a Mohammedan and having to
+keep a harem.
+
+"Certainly," I assented. "If you are good we will be your
+friends."
+
+He flashed a boyish smile at me.
+
+"I am good," he said calmly--"as the angels I am good. I have
+here a letter from a priest. I give it to you. Read!"
+
+He got a very dirty envelope from his pocket and brought it
+round the table to me. "See!" he said. "The priest says: 'Of all
+my children Tufik lies next my heart.'"
+
+He held the letter out to me; but it looked as if it had been
+copied from an Egyptian monument and was about as legible as an
+outbreak of measles.
+
+"This," he said gently, pointing, "is the priest's blessing. I
+carry it ever. It brings me friends." He put the paper away and
+drew a long breath; then surveyed us all with shining eyes. "It
+has brought me you."
+
+We were rather overwhelmed. Aggie's maid having responded to the
+bell, Aggie ordered ice cream for Tufik and a chair drawn to the
+table; but the char Tufik refused with a little, smiling bow.
+
+"It is not right that I sit," he said. "I stand in the presence
+of my three mothers. But first--I forget--my gift! For the
+sadness, Miss Pilk!"
+
+He held out the tissue- paper package and Aggie opened it.
+Tufik's gift proved to be a small linen doily, with a Cluny-lace
+border!
+
+We were gone from that moment--I know it now, looking back.
+Gone! We were lost the moment Tufik stood in the doorway,
+smiling and bowing. Tish saw us going; and with the calmness of
+the lost sat there nibbling cake and watching us through her
+spectacles--and raised not a hand.
+
+Aggie looked at the doily and Tufik looked at her.
+
+"That's--that's really very nice of you," said Aggie. "I thank
+you."
+
+Tufik came over and stood beside her.
+
+"I give with my heart," he said shyly. "I have had nobody--in
+all so large this country--nobody! And now--I have you!" Aggie
+saw-- but too late. He bent over and touched his lips to her
+hands. "The Bible says: 'To him that overcometh I will give the
+morning star!' I have overcometh--ah, so much!--the sea; the
+cold, wet England; the Ellis Island; the hunger; the aching of
+one who has no love, no money! And now--I have the morning
+star!"
+
+He looked at us all three at once--Charlie Sands said this was
+impossible, until he met Tufik. Aggie was fairly palpitant and
+Tish was smug, positively smug. As for me, I roused with a start
+to find myself sugaring my ice cream.
+
+Charlie Sands was delayed that night. He came in about nine
+o'clock and found Tufik telling us about his home and his people
+and the shepherds on the hills about Damascus and the olive
+trees in sunlight. We half-expected Tufik to adopt Charlie Sands
+as a father; but he contented himself with a low Oriental
+salute, and shortly after he bowed himself away.
+
+Charlie Sands stood looking after him and smiling to himself.
+"Pretty smooth boy, that!" he said.
+
+"Smooth nothing!" Tish snapped, getting the bridge score. "He's
+a sad-hearted and lonely boy; and we are going to do the kindest
+thing--we are going to help him to help himself."
+
+"Oh, he'll help himself all right!" observed Charlie Sands.
+"But, since his people are Christians, I wish you'd tell me how
+he knows so much about the inside of a harem!"
+
+Seeing that comment annoyed us, he ceased, and we fell to our
+bridge game; but more than once his eye fell on Aggie's doily,
+and he muttered something about the Assyrian coming down like a
+wolf on the fold.
+
+II
+
+The problem of Tufik's future was a pressing one. Tish called a
+meeting of the three of us next morning, and we met at her
+house. We found her reading about Syria in the encyclopedia,
+while spread round her on chairs and tables were numbers of silk
+kimonos, rolls of crocheted lace, shirt-waist patterns, and
+embroidered linens.
+
+Hannah let us in. She looked surly and had a bandage round her
+head, a sure sign of trouble--Hannah always referring a pain in
+her temper to her ear or her head or her teeth. She clutched my
+arm in the hall and held me back.
+
+"I'm going to poison him!" she said. "Miss Lizzie, that little
+snake goes or I go!"
+
+"I'm ashamed of you, Hannah!" I replied sternly. "If out of the
+breadth of her charity Miss Tish wishes to assist a fellow man--"
+
+Hannah reeled back and freed my arm.
+
+"My God!" she whispered. "You too!"
+
+I am very fond of Hannah, who has lived with Tish for many
+years; but I had small patience with her that morning.
+
+"I cannot see how it concerns you, anyhow, Hannah," I observed
+severely.
+
+Hannah put her apron to her eyes and sniffled into it.
+
+"Oh, you can't, can't you!" she wailed. "Don't I give him half
+his meals, with him soft-soapin' Miss Tish till she can't see
+for suds? Ain't I fallin' over him mornin', noon, and night, and
+the postman telling all over the block he's my steady company--
+that snip that's not eighteen yet? And don't I do the washin'?
+And will you look round the place and count the things I've got
+to do up every week? And don't he talk to me in that lingo of
+his, so I don't know whether he's askin' for a cup of coffee or
+insultin' me?"
+
+I patted Hannah on the arm. After all, none of the exaltation of
+a good deed upheld Hannah as it sustained us.
+
+"We are going to help him help himself, Hannah," I said kindly.
+"He hasn't found himself. Be gentle with him. Remember he comes
+from the land of the Bible."
+
+"Humph!" said Hannah, who reads the newspapers. "So does the
+plague!"
+
+The problem we had set ourselves we worked out that morning. As
+Tish said, the boy ought to have light work, for the Syrians are
+not a laboring people.
+
+"Their occupation is--er--mainly pastoral," she said, with the
+authority of the encyclopedia. "Grazing their herds and
+gathering figs and olives. If we knew some one who needed a
+shepherd--"
+
+Aggie opposed the shepherd idea, however. As she said, and with
+reason, the climate is too rigorous. "It's all well enough in
+Syria," she said, "where they have no cold weather; but he'd
+take his death of pneumonia here."
+
+We put the shepherd idea reluctantly aside. My own notion of
+finding a camel for him to look after was negatived by Tish at
+once, and properly enough I realized.
+
+"The only camels are in circuses," she said, "and our duty to
+the boy is moral as well as physical. Circuses are dens of
+immorality. Of course the Syrians are merchants, and we might
+get him work in a store. But then again--what chance has he of
+rising? Once a clerk, always a clerk." She looked round at the
+chairs and tables, littered with the contents of Tufik's
+pasteboard suitcase, which lay empty at her feet. "And there is
+nothing to canvassing from door to door. Look at these exquisite
+things!--and he cannot sell them. Nobody buys. He says he never
+gets inside a house door. If you had seen his face when I bought
+a kimono from him!"
+
+At eleven o'clock, having found nothing in the "Help Wanted"
+column to fit Tufik's case, Tish called up Charlie Sands and
+offered Tufik as a reporter, pro- vided he was given no
+nightwork. But Charlie Sands said it was impossible--that the
+editors and owners of the paper were always putting on their
+sons and relatives, and that when there was a vacancy the big
+advertisers got it. Tish insisted--she suggested that Tufik
+could run an Arabian column, like the German one, and bring in a
+lot of new subscribers. But Charlie Sands stood firm.
+
+At noon Tufik came. We heard a skirmish at the door and Hannah
+talking between her teeth.
+
+"She's out," she said.
+
+"Well, I think she is not out," in Tufik's soft tones.
+
+"You'll not get in."
+
+"Ah, but my toes are in. See, my foot wishes to enter!" Then
+something soft, coaxing, infinitely wistful, in Arabian followed
+by a slap. The next moment Hannah, in tears, rushed back to the
+kitchen. There was no sound from the hallway. No smiling Tufik
+presented himself in the doorway.
+
+Tish rose in the majesty of wrath. "I could strangle that
+woman!" she said, and we followed her into the hall.
+
+Tufik was standing inside the door with his arms folded, staring
+ahead. He took no notice of us.
+
+"Tufik!" Aggie cried, running to him. "Did she-- did she dare--
+Tish, look at his cheek!"
+
+"She is a bad woman!" Tufik said somberly. "I make my little
+prayer to see Miss Tish, my mother, and she--I kill her!"
+
+We had a hard time apologizing to him for Hanna. Tish got a
+basin of cold water so he might bathe his face; and Aggie
+brought a tablespoonful of blackberry cordial, which is
+soothing. When the poor boy was calmer we met in Tish's bedroom
+and Tish was quite firm on one point--Hannah must leave!
+
+Now, this I must say in my own defense--I was sorry for Tufik;
+and it is quite true I bought him a suit and winter flannels and
+a pair of yellow shoes--he asked for yellow. He said he was
+homesick for a bit of sunshine, and our so somber garb made him
+heart-sad. But I would never have dismissed a cook like Hannah
+for him.
+
+"I shall have to let her go," Tish said. "He is Oriental and
+passionate. He has said he will kill her--and he'll do it. They
+hold life very lightly."
+
+"Humph!" I said. "Very well, Tish, that holding life lightly
+isn't a Christian trait. It's Mohammedan--every Mohammedan wants
+to die and go to his heaven, which is a sort of sublimated
+harem. The boy's probably a Christian by training, but he's a
+Mohammedan by blood."
+
+Aggie thought my remark immoral and said so. And just then
+Hannah solved her own problem by stalking into the room with her
+things on and a suitcase in her hand.
+
+"I'm leaving, Miss Tish!" she said with her eye-rims red. "God
+knows I never expected to be put out of this place by a dirty
+dago! You'll find your woolen stockings on the stretchers, and
+you've got an appointment with the dentist tomorrow morning at
+ten. And when that little blackguard has sucked you dry, and you
+want him killed to get rid of him, you'll find me at my
+sister's."
+
+She picked up her suitcase and Tish flung open the door. "You're
+a hard-hearted woman, Hannah Mackintyre!" Tish snapped. "Your
+sister can't keep you. You'll have to work."
+
+Hannah turned in the doorway and sneered at the three of us.
+
+"Oh, no!" she said. "I'm going to hunt up three soft-headed old
+maids and learn to kiss their hands and tell 'em I have nobody
+but them and God!"
+
+She slammed out at that, leaving us in a state of natural
+irritation. But our rage soon faded. Tufik was not in the
+parlor; and Tish, tiptoeing back, reported that he was in the
+kitchen and was mixing up something in a bowl.
+
+"He's a dear boy!" she said. "He feels responsible for Hannah's
+leaving and he's getting luncheon! Hannah is a wicked and
+uncharitable woman!"
+
+"Man's inhumanity to man, Makes countless thousands mourn!"
+quoted Aggie softly. From the kitchen came the rhythmic beating
+of a wooden spoon against the side of a bowl; a melancholy
+chant--quite archaic, as Tish said--kept time with the spoon, and
+later a smell of baking flour and the clatter of dishes told us
+that our meal was progressing.
+
+"'The Syrians,'" read Tish out of her book, "'are a peaceful and
+pastoral people. They have not changed materially in nineteen
+centuries, and the traveler in their country finds still the
+life of Biblical times.' Something's burning!"
+
+Shortly after, Tufik, beaming with happiness and Hannah clearly
+forgotten, summoned us to the dining-room. Tufik was not a cook.
+We realized that at once. He had made coffee in the Oriental
+way--strong enough to float an egg, very sweet and full of
+grounds; and after a bite of the cakes he had made, Tish
+remembered the dentist the next day and refused solid food on
+account of a bad tooth. The cakes were made of lard and flour,
+without any baking-powder or flavoring, and the tops were
+sprinkled thick with granulated sugar. Little circles of grease
+melted out of them on to the plate, and Tufik, wide-eyed with
+triumph, sweetly wistful over Tish's tooth, humble and joyous in
+one minute, stood by the cake plate and fed them to us!
+
+I caught Aggie's agonized eye, but there was nothing else to do.
+Were we not his friends? And had he not made this delicacy for
+us? On her third cake, however, Aggie luckily turned blue round
+the mouth and had to go and lie down. This broke up the meal and
+probably saved my life, though my stomach has never been the
+same since. Tish says the cakes are probably all right in the
+Orient, where it is hot and the grease does not get a chance to
+solidify. She thinks that Tufik is probably a good cook in his
+own country. But Aggie says that a good many things in the Bible
+that she never understood are made plain to her if that is what
+they ate in Biblical times--some of the things they saw in
+visions, and all that. She dropped asleep on Tish's lounge and
+distinctly saw Tufik murdering Hannah by forcing one of his
+cakes down her throat.
+
+The next month was one of real effort. We had planned to go to
+Panama, and had our passage engaged; but when we broke the news
+to Tufik he turned quite pale.
+
+"You go--away?" he said wistfully.
+
+"Only for a month," Tish hastened to apologize. "You see, we--we
+are all very tired, and the Panama Canal--"
+
+"Canal? I know not a canal."
+
+"It is for ships--"
+
+"You go there in a ship?"
+
+"Yes. A canal is a--"
+
+"You go far--in a ship--and I--I stay here?"
+
+"Only for a month," Aggie broke in. "We will leave you enough
+money to live on; and perhaps when we come back you will have
+found something to do--"
+
+"For a month," he said brokenly. "I have no friends, no Miss
+Tish, no Miss Liz, no Miss Pilk. I die!"
+
+He got up and walked to the window. It was Aggie who realized
+the awful truth. The poor lonely boy was weeping--and Charlie
+Sands may say what he likes! He was really crying--when he
+turned, there were large tears on his cheeks. What made it worse
+was that he was trying to smile.
+
+"I wish you much happiness on the canal," he said. "I am wicked;
+but my sad heart--it ache that my friends leave me. I am sad! If
+only my seester--"
+
+That was the first we had known of Tufik's sister, back in
+Beirut, wearing a veil over her face and making lace for the
+bazaars. We were to know move.
+
+Well, between getting ready to go to Panama and trying to find
+something Tufik could do, we were very busy for the next month.
+Tufik grew reconciled to our going, but he was never cheerful
+about it; and finding that it pained him we never spoke about it
+in his presence.
+
+He was with us a great deal. In the morning he would go to Tish,
+who would give him a list of her friends to see. Then Tish would
+telephone and make appointments for him, and he would start off
+hopefully, with his pasteboard suitcase. But he never sold
+anything--except a shirt-waist pattern to Mrs. Ostermaier, the
+minister's wife. We took day about giving him his carfare, but
+this was pauperizing and we knew it. Besides, he was very
+sensitive and insisted on putting down everything we gave him in
+a book, to be repaid later when he had made a success.
+
+The allowance idea was mine and it worked well. We figured that,
+allowing for his washing,--which was not much, as he seemed to
+prefer the celluloid collar,--he could live in a sort of way on
+nine dollars a week. We subscribed equally to this; and to save
+his pride we mailed it to him weekly by check.
+
+His failure to sell his things hurt him to the soul. More than
+once we caught tears in his eyes. And he was not well--he could
+not walk any distance at all and he coughed. At last Tish got
+Charlie Sands to take him to a lung specialist, a stupid person,
+who said it was a cigarette cough. This was absurd, as Tufik did
+not smoke.
+
+At last the time came for the Panama trip. Tish called me up the
+day she packed and asked me to come over.
+
+"I can't. I'm busy, Tish," I said.
+
+She was quite disagreeable. "This is your burden as well as
+mine," she snapped. "Come over and talk to that wretched boy
+while I pack my trunk. He stands and watches everything I put in,
+and I haven't been able to pack a lot of things I need."
+
+I went over that afternoon and found Tufik huddled on the top
+step of the stairs outside Tish's apartment, with his head in his
+hands.
+
+"She has put me out!" he said, looking up at me with tragic eyes.
+"My mother has put me out! She does not love Tufik! No one loves
+Tufik! I am no good. I am a dirty dago!"
+
+I was really shocked. I rang the bell and Tish let me in. She had
+had no maid since Hannah's departure and was taking her meals
+out. She saw Tufik and stiffened.
+
+"I thought I sent you away!" she said, glaring at him.
+
+He looked at her pitifully.
+
+"Where must I--go?" he asked, and coughed.
+
+Tish sighed and flung the door wide open. "Bring him in," she
+said with resignation, "but for Heaven's sake lock him in a
+closet until I get my underwear packed. And if he weeps--slap
+him."
+
+The poor boy was very repentant, and seeing that his cough
+worried us he fought it back bravely. I mixed the white of an
+egg with lemon juice and sugar, and gave it to him. He was
+pathetically grateful and kissed my hand. At five o'clock we
+sent him away firmly, having given him thirty-six dollars. He
+presented each of us with a roll of crocheted lace to take with
+us and turned in the doorway to wave a wistful final good-bye.
+
+We met at Tish's that night so that we might all go together to
+the train. Charlie Sands had agreed to see us off and to keep an
+eye on Tufik during our absence. Aggie was in a palpitating
+travel ecstasy, clutching a patent seasick remedy and a map of
+the Canal Zone; Tish was seeing that the janitor shut off the
+gas and water in the apartment; and Charlie Sands was jumping on
+top of a steamer trunk to close it. The taxicab was at the door
+and we had just time to make the night train. The steamer sailed
+early the next morning.
+
+"All ready!" cried Charlie Sands, getting the lid down finally.
+"All off for the Big Ditch!"
+
+We all heard a noise in the hall--a sort of scuffling, with an
+occasional groan. Tish rushed over and threw open the door. On
+the top step, huddled and shivering, with streams of water
+running off his hair down over his celluloid collar, pouring out
+of his sleeves and cascading down the stairs from his trousers
+legs, was Tufik. The policeman on the beat was prodding at him
+with his foot, trying to make him get up. When he saw us the
+officer touched his hat.
+
+"Evening, Miss Tish," he said, grinning. "This here boy of yours
+has been committing suicide. Just fished him out of the lake in
+the park!"
+
+"Get up!" snapped Charlie Sands. "You infernal young idiot! Get
+up and stop sniveling!"
+
+He stooped and took the poor boy by the collar. His brutality
+roused us all out of our stupor. Tish and I rushed forward and
+commanded him to stand back; and Aggie, with more presence of
+mind than we had given her credit for, brought a glass
+containing a tablespoonful of blackberry cordial into which she
+had pored ten drops of seasickness remedy. Tufik was white and
+groaning, but he revived enough to sit up and stare at us with
+his sad brown eyes.
+
+"I wish to die!" he said brokenly. "Why you do not let me die?
+My friends go on the canal! I am alone! My heart is empty!"
+
+Tish wished to roll him on a barrel, but we had no barrel; so,
+with Charlie Sands standing by with his watch in his hand,
+refusing to assist and making unkind remarks, we got him to
+Tish's room and laid out on her mackintosh on the bed. He did
+not want to live. We could hardly force him to drink the hot
+coffee Tish made for him. He kept muttering things about his
+loneliness and being only a dirty dago; and then he turned
+bitter and said hard things about this great America, where he
+could find no work and must be a burden on his three mothers,
+and could not bring his dear sister to be company for him. Aggie
+quite broke down and had to lie down on the sofa in the parlor
+and have a cracker and a cup of tea.
+
+When Tish and I had succeeded in making Tufik promise to live,
+and had given him one of his own silk kimonos to put on until
+his clothing could be dried--Charlie Sands having disagreeably
+refused to lend his overcoat--and when we had given the officer
+five dollars not to arrest the boy for attempting suicide, we
+met in the parlor to talk things over.
+
+Charlie Sands was sitting by the lamp in his overcoat. He had
+put our railway and steamer tickets on the table, and was
+holding his cigarette so that Aggie could inhale the fumes, she
+having hay fever and her cubebs being on their way to Panama.
+
+"I suppose you know," he said nastily, "that your train has gone
+and that you cannot get the boat tomorrow?"
+
+Tish was in an exalted mood--and she took off her things and
+flung them on a chair.
+
+"What is Panama," she demanded, "to saving a life? Charlie, we
+must plan something for this boy. If you will take off your
+overcoat--"
+
+"And see you put it on that little parasite? Not if I melt! Do
+you know how deep the lake is? Three feet!"
+
+"One can drown in three feet of water," said Aggie sadly, "if
+one is very tired of life. People drown themselves in bathtubs."
+
+Tish's furious retort to this was lost, Tufik choosing that
+moment to appear in the doorway. He wore a purple-and-gold
+kimono that had given Tish bronchitis early in the winter, and
+he had twisted a bath towel round the waist. He looked very
+young, very sad, very Oriental. He ignored Charlie Sands, but
+made at once for Tish and dropped on one knee beside her.
+
+"Miss Tish!" he begged. "Forgive, Miss Tish! Tufik is wicked. He
+has the bad heart. He has spoil the going on the canal. No?"
+
+"Get up!" said Tish. "Don't be a silly child. Go and take your
+shoes out of the oven. We are not going to Panama. When you are
+better, I am going to give you a good scolding."
+
+Charlie Sands put the cigarette on a book under Aggie's nose and
+stood up.
+
+"I guess I'll go," he said. "My nerves are not what they used to
+be and my disposition feels the change."
+
+Tufik had risen and the two looked at each other. I could not
+quite make out Tufik's expression; had I not known his
+gentleness I would have thought his expression a mixture of
+triumph and disdain.
+
+"'The Assyrian came down like a wolf on the fold, and his
+cohorts were gleaming in purple and gold!'" said Charlie Sands,
+and went out, slamming the door.
+
+
+III
+
+The next day was rainy and cold. Aggie sneezed all day and Tish
+had neuralgia. Being unable to go out for anything to eat and
+the exaltation of the night before having passed, she was in a
+bad humor. When I got there she was sitting in her room holding
+a hot-water bottle to her face, and staring bitterly at the
+plate containing a piece of burned toast and Tufik's specialty--
+a Syrian cake crusted with sugar.
+
+"I wish he had drowned!" she said. "My stomach's gone, Lizzie! I
+ate one of those cakes for breakfast. You've got to eat this
+one."
+
+"I'll do nothing of the sort! This is your doing, Tish Carberry.
+If it hadn't been for you and your habit of picking up stray
+cats and dogs and Orientals and imposing them on your friends
+we'd be on the ocean today, on our way to a decent climate. The
+next time your duty to your brother man overwhelms you, you'd
+better lock yourself in your room and throw the key out the
+window."
+
+Tish was not listening, however. Her eye and her mind both were
+on the cake.
+
+"If you would eat it and then take some essence of pepsin--" she
+hazarded. But I looked her full it the eye and she had the grace
+to color. "He loves to make them," she said--"he positively
+beamed when he brought it. He has another kind he is making
+now--of pounded beans, or something like that. Listen!" I
+listened.
+
+>From back in the kitchen came a sound of hammering and Tufik's
+voice lifted in a low, plaintive chant. "He says that song is
+about the valleys of Lebanon," said Tish miserably. "Lizzie, if
+you'll eat half of it, I'll eat the rest."
+
+My answer was to pick up the plate and carry it into the
+bathroom. Heroic measures were necessary: Tish was not her
+resolute self; and, indeed, through all the episode of Tufik,
+and the shocking denouement that followed, Tish was a spineless
+individual who swayed to and fro with every breeze.
+
+She divined my purpose and followed me to the bathroom door.
+
+"Leave some crumbs on the plate!" she whispered. "It will look
+more natural. Get rid of the toast too."
+
+I turned and faced her, the empty plate in my hands.
+
+"Tish," I said sternly, "this is hypocrisy, which is just next
+door to lying. It's the first step downward. I have a feeling
+that this boy is demoralizing us! We shall have to get rid of
+him."
+
+"As for instance?" she sarcastically asked.
+
+"Send him back home," I said with firmness. "He doesn't belong
+here; he isn't accustomed to anything faster than a camel. He
+doesn't know how to work--none of them do. He comes from a
+country where they can eat food like this because digestion is
+one of their occupations."
+
+I was right and Tish knew it. Even Tufik was satisfied when we
+put it up to him. He spread his hands in his Oriental way and
+shrugged his shoulders.
+
+"If my mothers think best," he said softly. "In my own land
+Tufik is known--I sell in the bazaar the so fine lace my sister
+make. I drink wine, not water. My stomach--I cannot eat in this
+America. But--I have no money."
+
+"We will furnish the money," Tish said gently. "But you must
+promise one thing, Tufik. You must not become a Mohammedan."
+
+"Before that I die!" he said proudly.
+
+"And--there is something else, Tufik,--something rather
+personal. But I want you to promise. You are only a boy; but
+when you are a man--" Tish stopped and looked to me for help.
+
+"Miss Tish means this," I put in, "you are to have only one
+wife, Tufik. We are not sending you back to start a harem. We--
+we disapprove strongly of--er--anything like that."
+
+"Tufik takes but one wife," he said. "Our people--we have but
+one wife. My first child--it is called Tish; my next, Lizzie;
+and my next, Aggie Pilk. All for my so kind friends. And one I
+call Charlie Sands; and one shall be Hannah. So that Tufik never
+forget America."
+
+Aggie was rather put out when we told her what we had done; but
+after eating one of the cakes made of pounded beans and sugar,
+under Tufik's triumphant eyes, she admitted that it was probably
+for the best. That evening, while Tufik took his shrunken and
+wrinkled clothing to be pressed by a little tailor in the
+neighborhood who did Tish's repairing, the three of us went back
+to the kitchen and tried to put it in order. It was frightful--
+flour and burned grease over everything, every pan dirty, dishes
+all over the place and a half-burned cigarette in the sugar bin.
+But--it touched us all deeply--he had found an old photograph of
+the three of us and had made a sort of shrine of the
+clock-shelf--the picture in front of the clock and in front of
+the picture a bunch of red geraniums.
+
+While we were looking at the picture and Aggie was at the sink
+putting water in the glass that held the geraniums, Tufik having
+forgotten to do so, Tish's neighbor from the apartment below, an
+elderly bachelor, came up the service staircase and knocked at
+the door. Tish opened it.
+
+"Humph!" said the gentleman from below. "Gone is he?"
+
+"Is who gone?"
+
+"Your thieving Syrian, madam!"
+
+Tish stiffened.
+
+"Perhaps," she said, "if you will explain--"
+
+"Perhaps," snarled the visitor, "you will explain what you have
+done with my geraniums! Why don't you raise your own flowers?"
+
+Tish was quite stunned and so was I. After all, it was Aggie who
+came to the rescue. She slammed the lid on to the teakettle and
+set it on the stove with a bang.
+
+"If you mean," she said indignantly, "that you think we have any
+geraniums of yours--"
+
+"Think! Didn't my cook see your thieving servant steal 'em off
+the box on the fire-escape?"
+
+"Then, perhaps," Aggie suggested, "you will look through the
+apartment and see if they are here. You will please look
+everywhere!"
+
+Tish and I gasped. It was not until the visitor had made the
+rounds of the apartment, and had taken an apologetic departure,
+that Tish and I understood. The teakettle was boiling and from
+its spout coming a spicy and familiar odor. Aggie took it off
+the stove and removed the lid. The geraniums, boiled to a pulp,
+were inside.
+
+"Back to Syria that boy goes!" said Tish, viewing the floral
+remains. "He did it out of love and we must not chide him. But
+we have our own immortal souls to think of."
+
+The next morning two things happened. We gave Tufik one hundred
+and twenty dollars to buy a ticket back to Syria and to keep him
+in funds on the way. and Tish got a note from Hannah:--
+
+ Dear Miss Tish: I here you still have the dago--or, as
+ my sister's husband says, he still has you. I am redy to
+ live up to my bargen if you are. HANNAH.
+
+ P.S. I have lerned a new salud--very rich, but
+ delissious. H.
+
+In spite of herself, Tish looked haunted. It was the salad, no
+doubt. She said nothing, but she looked round the untidy rooms,
+where everything that would hold it had a linen cover with a
+Cluny-lace edge--all of them soiled and wrinkled. She watched
+Tufik, chanting about the plains of Lebanon and shoving the
+carpet-sweeper with a bang against her best furniture; and, with
+Hannah's salad in mind, she sniffed a warning odor from the
+kitchen that told of more Syrian experiments with her digestion.
+Tish surrendered: that morning she wrote to Hannah that Tufik
+was going back to Syria, and to come and brink the salad recipe
+with her.
+
+That was, I think, on a Monday. Tufik's steamer sailed on
+Thursday. On Tuesday Aggie and I went shopping; and in a spirit
+of repentance--for we felt we were not solving Tufik's question
+but getting rid of him--we bought him a complete new outfit. He
+almost disgraced us by kissing our hands in the store, and while
+we were buying him some ties he disappeared--to come back later
+with the rims of his eyes red from weeping. His gentle soul was
+touched with gratitude. Aggie had to tell him firmly that if he
+kissed any more hands he would get his ears boxed.
+
+The clerks in the store were all interested, and two or three
+cash- boys followed us round and stood, open-mouthed, staring at
+us. Neither Aggie nor I knew anything about masculine attire,
+and Tufik's idea was a suit, with nothing underneath, a shirt-
+front and collar of celluloid, and a green necktie already tied
+and hooking on to his collar-button. He was dazed when we bought
+him a steamer trunk and a rug, and disappeared again, returning
+in a few moments with a small paper bag full of gumdrops. We
+were quite touched.
+
+That, as I say, was on Tuesday. Tufik had been sleeping in
+Tish's guest-room since his desperate attempt at suicide, and we
+sent his things to Tish's apartment. That evening Tufik asked
+permission to spend the night with a friend in the restaurant
+business--a Damascan. Tish let him go against my advice.
+
+"He'll eat a lot of that Syrian food," I objected, "and get sick
+and miss his boat, and we'll have the whole thing over again!"
+
+But Tish was adamant. "It's his last night," she said, "and he
+has promised not to smoke any cigarettes and I've given him two
+pepsin tablets. This is the land of the free, Lizzie."
+
+We were to meet Tufik at the station next morning and we
+arranged a lunch for him to eat on the train, Aggie bringing
+fried chicken and I sandwiches and cake. Tish's domestic
+arrangements being upset, she supplied fruit, figs and dates
+mostly, to make him think of home.
+
+The train left early, and none of us felt very cheerful at
+having to be about. Aggie sat in the station and sneezed; Tish
+had a pain above her eye and sat by a heater. We had the
+luncheon in a large shoebox, wrapped in oiled paper to keep it
+moist.
+
+He never appeared! The train was called, filled up, and left.
+People took to staring at us as we sat there. Aggie sneezed and
+Tish held her eye. And no Tufik! In a sort of helpless,
+breakfastless rage we called a taxicab and went to Tish's. No
+one said much. We were all thinking.
+
+We were hungry; so we spread out the shoebox lunch on one of the
+Cluny-lace covers and ate it, mostly in silence. The steamer
+trunk and the rug had gone. We let them go. They might go to
+Jerusalem, as far as we were concerned! After we had eaten,--
+about eleven o'clock, I think,--Tish got up and surveyed the
+apartment. Then, with a savage gleam in her eye, she whisked off
+all the fancy linens, the Cluny laces, the hemstitched
+bedspreads, and piled them in a heap on the floor. Aggie and I
+watched her in silence. She said nothing, but kicked the whole
+lot into the bottom of a cupboard. When she had slammed the
+door, she turned and faced us grimly.
+
+"That roll of fiddle-de-dees has cost me about five hundred
+dollars," she said. "It's been worth it if it teaches me that
+I'm an old fool and that you are two others! If that boy shows
+his face here again, I'll hand him over to the police."
+
+However, as it happened, she did nothing of the sort. At four
+o'clock that afternoon there was a timid ring at the doorbell
+and I answered it. Outside was Tufik, forlorn and drooping, and
+held up by main force by a tall, dark-skinned man with a heavy
+mustache.
+
+"I bring your boy!" said the mustached person, smiling. "He has
+great trouble--sorrow; he faint with grief."
+
+I took a good look at Tufik then. He was pale and shaky, and his
+new suit looked as if he had slept in it. His collar was bent
+and wilted, and the green necktie had been taken off and
+exchanged for a ragged black one.
+
+"Miss Liz!" he said huskily. "I die; the heart is gone! My
+parent--"
+
+He broke down again; and leaning against the door jamb he buried
+his face in a handkerchief that I could not believe was one of
+the lot we had bought only yesterday. I hardly knew what to do.
+Tish had said she was through with the boy. I decided to close
+them out in the hallway until we had held a council; but Tufik's
+foot was on the sill, and the more I asked him to move it, the
+harder he wept.
+
+The mustached person said it was quite true. Tufik's father had
+died of the plague; the letter had come early that morning.
+Beirut was full of the plague. He waved the letter at me; but I
+ordered him to burn it immediately--on account of germs. I
+brought him a shovel to burn it on; and when that was over Tufik
+had worked out his own salvation. He was at the door of Tish's
+room, pouring out to Aggie and Tish his grief, and offering the
+black necktie as proof.
+
+We were just where we had started, but minus one hundred and
+twenty dollars; for, the black-mustached gentleman having gone
+after trying to sell Tish another silk kimono, I demanded
+Tufik's ticket--to be redeemed--and was met with two empty
+hands, outstretched.
+
+"Oh, my friends,--my Miss Tish, my Miss Liz, my Miss Ag,--what
+must I say? I have not the ticket! I have been wikkid--but for
+my sister--only for my sister! She must not die--she so young,
+so little girl!"
+
+"Tufik," said Tish sternly, "I want you to tell us everything
+this minute, and get it over."
+
+"She ees so little!" he said wistfully. "And the body of my
+parent--could I let it lie and rot in the so hot sun? Ah, no;
+Miss Tish, Miss Liz, Miss Ag,-- not so. To-day I take back my
+ticket, get the money, and send it to my sister. She will bury
+my parent, and then--she comes to this so great America, the
+land of my good friends!"
+
+There was a moment's silence. Then Aggie sneezed!
+
+
+IV
+
+I shall pass over the next month, with its unpleasantnesses;
+over Charlie Sands's coming one evening with a black tie and, on
+the strength of having killed a dog with his machine, asking for
+money to bury it, and bring another one from Syria! I shall not
+more than mention Hannah, who kept Tish physically comfortable
+and well fed and mentally wretched, having a teakettle of
+boiling water always ready if Tufik came to the apartment; I
+shall say nothing of our success in getting him employment in
+the foreign department of a bank, and his ending up by washing
+its windows; or of the position Tish got him as elevator boy in
+her hospital, where he jammed the car in some way and held up
+four surgeons and three nurses and a patient on his way to the
+operating-room--until the patient changed his mind and refused
+to be operated on.
+
+Aggie had a brilliant idea about the census-- that he could make
+the census reports in the Syrian district. To this end she
+worked for some time, coaching Tufik for the examination, only
+to have him fail--fail absolutely and without hope. He was
+staying in the Syrian quarter at that time, on account of
+Hannah; and he brought us various tempting offers now and then--
+a fruit stand that could be bought for a hundred dollars; a
+restaurant for fifty; a tailor's shop for twenty-five. But, as
+he knew nothing of fruits or restaurants or tailoring, we
+refused to invest. Tish said that we had been a good while
+getting to it, but that we were being businesslike at last. We
+gave the boy nine dollars a week and not a penny more; and we
+refused to buy any more of his silly linens and crocheted laces.
+We were quite firm with him.
+
+And now I come to the arriving of Tufik's little sister--not
+that she was really little. But that comes later.
+
+Tufik had decided at last on what he would be in our so great
+America. Once or twice, when he was tired or discouraged, Tish
+had taken him out in her machine, and he had been thrilled--
+really thrilled. He did not seem able to learn how to crank it--
+Tish's car is hard to crank--but he learned how to light the
+lamps and to spot a policeman two blocks away. Several times,
+when we were going into the country, Tish took him because it
+gave her a sense of security to have a man along.
+
+Having come from a country where the general travel is by camel,
+however, he had not the first idea of machinery. He thought Tish
+made the engine go by pressing on the clutch with her foot, like
+a sewing machine, and he regarded her strength with awe. And
+once, when we were filling a tire from an air bottle and the
+tube burst and struck him, he declared there was a demon in the
+air bottle and said a prayer in the middle of the road. About
+that time Tish learned of a school for chauffeurs, and the three
+of us decided to divide the expense and send him.
+
+"In three months," Tish explained, "we can get him a state
+license and he can drive a taxicab. It will suit him, because he
+can sit to do it."
+
+So Tufik went to an automobile school and stood by while some
+one drew pictures of parts of the engine on a blackboard, and
+took home lists of words that he translated into Arabic at the
+library, and learned everything but why and how the engine of an
+automobile goes. He still thought--at the end of two months--
+that the driver did it with his foot! But we were ignorant of
+all that. He would drop round in the evenings, when Hannah was
+out or in bed, and tell us what "magneto" was in Arabic, and how
+he would soon be able to care for Tish's car and would not take
+a cent for it, doing it at night when the taxi-cab was resting.
+
+At the end of six weeks we bought him a chauffeur's outfit. The
+next day the sister arrived and Tufik brought her to Aggie's,
+where we were waiting. We had not told Hannah about the sister;
+she would not have understood.
+
+Charlie Sands telephoned while we were waiting and asked if he
+might come over and help receive the girl. We were to greet her
+and welcome her to America; then she was to go to the home of
+the Syrian with the large mustache. Charlie Sands came in and
+shook hands all round, surveying each of us carefully.
+
+"Strange!" he muttered. "Curious is no name for it! What do we
+know of the vagaries of the human mind? Three minds and one
+obsession!" he said with the utmost gentleness. "Three maiden
+ladies who have lived impeccable lives for far be it from me to
+say how many years; and now--this! Oh, Aunt Tish! Dear Aunt
+Tish!"
+
+He got out his handkerchief and wiped his eyes. Tish was
+speechless with rage, but I rose to our defense.
+
+"We don't want to do it and you know it!" I said tartly. "But
+when the Lord sends want and suffering to one's very door--"
+
+"Want, with large brown eyes and a gentle voice!" he retorted.
+"My dear ladies, it's your money; and I dare say it costs you
+less than bridge at five cents a point, or the Gay White Way.
+But, for Heaven's sake, my respected but foolish virgins, why
+not an American that wants a real job? Why let a sticky Oriental
+pull your legs--"
+
+"Charlie Sands!" cried Tish, rising in her wrath. "I will not
+endure such vulgarity. And when Tufik takes you out in a
+taxicab--"
+
+"God forbid!" said Charlie Sands, and sat down to wait for
+Tufik's sister.
+
+She did not look like Tufik and she was tired and dirty from the
+journey; but she had big brown eyes and masses of dark hair and
+she spoke not a single word of English. Tufik's joy was
+boundless; his soft eyes were snapping with excitement; and
+Aggie, who is sentimental, was obliged to go out and swallow
+half a glass of water without breathing to keep from crying.
+Charlie Sands said nothing, but sat back in a corner and watched
+us all; and once he took out his notebook and made a memorandum
+of something. He showed it to us later.
+
+Tufik's sister was the calmest of us all, I believe. She sat on
+a stiff chair near the door and turned her brown eyes from one
+to the other. Tish said that proper clothing would make her
+beautiful; and Aggie, disappearing for a few minutes, came back
+with her last summer's foulard and a jet bonnet. When the poor
+thing understood they were for her, she looked almost
+frightened, the thing being unexpected; and Tufik, in a paroxysm
+of delight, kissed all our hands and the girl on each cheek.
+
+Tish says our vulgar lip-osculation is unknown in the Orient and
+that they rub noses by way of greeting. I think, however, that
+she is mistaken in this and that the Australians are the nose-
+rubbers. I recall a returned missionary's telling this, but I
+cannot remember just where he had been stationed.
+
+Things were very quiet for a couple of weeks. Tufik came round
+only once--to tell us that, having to pay car fare to get to the
+automobile school, his nine dollars were not enough. We added a
+dollar a week under protest; and Tish suggested with some
+asperity that as he was only busy four hours a day he might find
+some light employment for the balance of the day. He spread out
+his hands and drew up his shoulders.
+
+"My friends are angry," he said sadly. "It is not enough that I
+study? I must also work? Ver' well, I labor. I sell the
+newspaper. But, to buy newspapers, one must have money--a
+dollar; two dollars. Ver' leetle; only--I have it not."
+
+We gave him another dollar and he went out smiling and hopeful.
+It seemed that at last we had solved his problem. Tish recalled
+one of her Sunday-school scholars who sold papers and saved
+enough to buy a second-hand automobile and rear a family. But
+our and hopes were dashed to the ground when, the next morning,
+Hannah, opening the door at Tish's to bring in the milk bottles,
+found a huge stack of the night-before's newspapers and a note
+on top addressed to Tish, which said:-
+
+ Deer Mother Tish : You see now that I am no good. I wish
+ to die! I hav one papier sold, and newsboys kell me on
+ sight. I hav but you and God--and God has forget!
+
+ TUFIK.
+
+We were discouraged and so, clearly, was Tufik. For ten days we
+did not hear from him, except that a flirty little Syrian boy
+called for the ten dollars on Saturday and brought a pair of
+Tufik's shoes for us to have resoled. But one day Tish
+telephoned in some excitement and said that Tufik was there and
+wanted us to go to a wedding.
+
+"His little sister's wedding!" she explained. "The dear child is
+all excited. He says it has been going on for two days and this
+is the day of the ceremony."
+
+Aggie was spending the afternoon with me, and spoke up hastily.
+
+"Ask her if I have time to go home and put on my broadcloth,"
+she said. "I'm not fixed for a wedding."
+
+Tish said there was no time. She would come round with the
+machine and we were to be ready in fifteen minutes. Aggie
+hesitated on account of intending to wash her hair that night
+and so not having put up her crimps; but she finally agreed to
+go and Tish came for us. Tufik was in the machine. He looked
+very tidy and wore the shoes we had had repaired, a pink
+carnation in his buttonhole, and an air of suppressed
+excitement.
+
+"At last," he said joyously while Tish cranked the car--"at last
+my friends see my three mothers! They think Tufik only talks--
+now they see! And the priest will bless my mothers on this so
+happy day."
+
+Tish having crawled panting from her exertion into the driver's
+seat and taken the wheel, in sheer excess of boyish excitement
+he leaned over and kissed the hand nearest him.
+
+The janitor's small boy was on the curb watching, and at that he
+set up a yell of joy. We left him calling awful things after us
+and Tish's face was a study; but soon the care of the machine
+made her forget everything else.
+
+The Syrian quarter was not impressive. It was on a hillside
+above the Russian Jewish colony, and consisted of a network of
+cobble-paved alleys, indescribably dirty and incredibly steep.
+In one or two of these alleys Tish was obliged to turn the car
+and go up backward, her machine climbing much better on tire
+reverse gear. Crowds of children followed us; dogs got under the
+wheels and apparently died, judging by the yelps--only to follow
+us with undiminished energy after they had picked themselves up.
+We fought and won a battle with a barrel of ashes and came out
+victorious but dusty; and at last, as Tufik made a lordly
+gesture, we stopped at an angle of forty-five degrees and Tufik
+bowed us out of the car. He stood by visibly glowing with
+happiness, while Tish got a cobblestone and placed it under a
+wheel, and Aggie and I took in our surroundings.
+
+We were in an alley ten feet wide and paved indiscriminately
+with stones and tin cans, babies and broken bottles. Before us
+was a two-story brick house with broken windows and a high,
+railed wooden stoop, minus two steps. Under the stoop was a door
+leading into a cellar, and from this cellar was coming a curious
+stamping noise and a sound as of an animal in its death throes.
+
+Aggie caught my arm. "What's that?" she quavered.
+
+I had no time to reply. Tufik had thrown open the door and stood
+aside to let us pass.
+
+"They dance," he said gravely. "There is always much dancing
+before a wedding. The music one hears is of Damascus and he who
+dances now is a sheik among his people."
+
+Reassured as to the sounds, we stepped down into the basement.
+That was at four o'clock in the afternoon.
+
+I have never been fairly clear as to what followed and Aggie's
+memory is a complete blank. I remember a long, boarded-in and
+floored cellar, smelling very damp and lighted by flaring gas
+jets. The center was empty save for a swarthy gentleman in a fez
+and his shirt-sleeves, wearing a pair of green suspenders and
+dancing alone--a curious stamping dance that kept time to a
+drum. I remember the musicians too--three of them in a corner:
+one playing on a sort of pipes-of-Pan affair of reeds, one on a
+long- necked instrument that looked like a guitar with zither
+ambitions, and a drummer who chanted with his eyes shut and kept
+time to his chants by beating on a sheepskin tied over the mouth
+of a brass bowl. Round three sides of the room were long, oil
+cloth-covered tables; and in preparation for the ceremony a
+little Syrian girl was sweeping up peanut shells, ashes, and
+beer bottles, with absolute disregard of the guests.
+
+All round the wall, behind rows of beer bottles, dishes of
+bananas, and plates of raw liver, were men,--soft-eyed Syrians
+with white teeth gleaming and black hair plastered close and
+celluloid collars,--gentle-voiced, urbane-mannered Orientals,
+who came up gravely one by one and shook hands with us; who
+pressed on us beer and peanuts and raw liver.
+
+Aggie, speaking between sneezes and over the chanting and the
+drum, bent toward me. "It's a breath of the Orient!" she said
+ecstatically. "Oh, Lizzie, do you think I could buy that drum
+for my tabouret?"
+
+"Orient!" observed Tish, coughing. "I'm going out and take the
+switch-key out of that car. And I wish I'd brought Charlie
+Sands!"
+
+It was in vain we reminded her that the Syrians are a pastoral
+people and that they come from the land of the Bible. She looked
+round her grimly.
+
+"They look like a lot of bandits to me," she sniffed. "And
+there's always a murder at a wedding of this sort. There isn't a
+woman here but ourselves!"
+
+She was exceedingly disagreeable and Aggie and I began to get
+uncomfortable. But when Tufik brought us little thimble-sized
+glasses filled with a milky stuff and assured us that the women
+had only gone to prepare the bride, we felt reassured. He said
+that etiquette demanded that we drink the milky white stuff.
+
+Tish was inclined to demur. "Has it any alcohol in it?" she
+demanded. Tufik did not understand, but he said it was harmless
+and given to all the Syrian babies; and while we were still
+undecided Aggie sniffed it.
+
+"It smells like paregoric, Tish," she said. "I'm sure it's
+harmless."
+
+We took it then. It tasted sweet and rather spicy, and Aggie
+said it stopped her sneezing at once. It was very mild and
+pleasant, and rather medicinal in its flavor. We each had two
+little glasses--and Tish said she would not bother about the
+switch-key. The car was insured against theft.
+
+A little later Aggie said she used to do a little jig step when
+she was a girl, and if they would play slower she would like to
+see if she had forgotten it. Tish did not hear this--she was
+talking to Tufik, and a moment later she got up and went out.
+
+Aggie had decided to ask the musicians to play a little slower
+and I had my hands full with her; so it was with horror that,
+shortly after, I heard the whirring of the engine and through
+the cellar window caught a glimpse of Tish's machine starting
+off up the hill. I rose excitedly, but Tufik was before me,
+smiling and bowing.
+
+"Miss Tish has gone for the bride," he said softly. "The taxicab
+hav' not come. Soon the priest arrive, and so great shame--the
+bride is not here! Miss Tish is my mother, my heart's delight!"
+
+When Aggie realized that Tish had gone, she was rather upset--
+she depends a great deal on Tish--and she took another of the
+little glasses of milky stuff to revive her.
+
+I was a little bit nervous with Tish gone and the sun setting
+and another tub of beer bottles brought in--though the people
+were orderly enough and Tufik stood and near. But Aggie began to
+feel very strange, and declared that the man with the sheepskin
+drum was winking at her and that her head was twitching round on
+her shoulders. And when a dozen or so young Syrians formed a
+circle, their hands on each other's shoulders, and sang a
+melancholy chant, stamping to beat time, she wept with sheer
+sentiment.
+
+"Ha! Hoo! Ta, Ta, Ta!" they chanted in unison; and Tufik bent
+over us, his soft eyes beaming.
+
+"They are shepherds and the sons of shepherds from Palestine,"
+he whispered. "That is the shepherd's call to his sheep. In my
+country many are shepherds. Perhaps some day you go with me back
+to my country, and we hear the shepherd call his sheep--'Ha!
+Hoo! Ta, Ta, Ta!'--and we hear the sleepy sheep reply: 'Maaaa!'"
+
+"It is too beautiful!" murmured Aggie. "It is the Holy Land all
+over again! And we should never have known this but for you,
+Tufik!"
+
+Just then some one near the door clapped his hands and all the
+noise ceased. Those who were standing sat down. The little girl
+with the broom swept the accumulations of the room under a chair
+and put the broom in a corner. The music became loud and
+stirring.
+
+Aggie swayed toward me. "I'm sick, Lizzie!" she gasped. "That
+paregoric stuff has poisoned me. Air!"
+
+I took one arm and Tufik the other, and we got her out and
+seated on one of the wooden steps. She was a blue-green color
+and the whites of her eyes were yellow. But I had little time
+for Aggie. Tufik caught my hand and pointed.
+
+Tish's machine was coming down the alley. Beside her sat Tufik's
+sister, sobbing at the top of her voice and wearing Aggie's
+foulard, a pair of cotton gloves, and a lace curtain over her
+head. Behind in the tonneau were her maid of honor, a young
+Syrian woman with a baby in her arms and four other black-eyed
+children about her. But that was not all. In front of the
+machine, marching slowly and with dignity, were three bearded
+gentlemen, two in coats and one in a striped vest, blowing on
+curious double flutes and making a shrill wailing noise. And all
+round were crowds of women and children, carrying tin pans and
+paper bags full of parched peas, which they were flinging with
+all their might.
+
+I caught Tish's eye as the procession stopped, and she looked
+subdued--almost stunned. The pipers still piped. But the bride
+refused to move. Instead, her wails rose higher; and Aggie, who
+had paid no attention so far, but was sitting back with her eyes
+shut, looked up.
+
+"Lizzhie," she said thickly, "Tish looks about the way I feel."
+And with that she fell to laughing awful laughter that mingled
+with the bride's cries and the wail of the pipes.
+
+The bride, after a struggle, was taken by force from the machine
+and placed on a chair against the wall. Her veil was torn and
+her wreath crooked, and she observed a sulky silence. To our
+amazement, Tufik was still smiling, urbane and cheerful.
+
+"It is the custom of my country, my mothers," he said. "The
+bride leave with tears the home of her good parents or of her
+friends; and she speak no word--only weep--until she is
+marriaged. Ah--the priest!"
+
+The rest of the story is short and somewhat blurred. Tish
+having broken her glasses, Aggie being, as one may say, hors de
+combat, and I having developed a frightful headache in the dust
+and bad air, the real meaning of what was occurring did not
+penetrate to any of us. The priest officiated from a table in
+the center of the room, on which he placed two candles, an
+Arabic Bible, and a sacred picture, all of which he took out of
+a brown valise. He himself wore a long black robe and a beard,
+and looked, as Tish observed, for all the world as if he had
+stepped from an Egyptian painting. Before him stood Tufik's
+sister, the maid of honor with her baby, the black-mustached
+friend who had brought Tufik to us after his tragic attempt at
+suicide, and Tufik himself.
+
+Everybody held lighted candles, and the heat was frightful. The
+music ceased, there was much exhorting in Arabic, much reading
+from the book, many soft replies indiscriminately from the four
+principals--and then suddenly Tish turned and gripped my arm.
+
+"Lizzie," she said hoarsely, "that little thief and liar has
+done us again! That isn't his sister at all. He's marrying her--
+for us to keep!"
+
+Luckily Aggie grew faint again at that moment, and we led her
+out into the open air. Behind us the ceremony seemed to be over;
+the drum was beating, the pipes screaming, the lute thrumming.
+
+Tish let in the clutch with a vicious jerk, and the whir of the
+engine drowned out the beating of the drum and the clapping of
+the hands. Twilight hid the tin cans and ash-barrels, and the
+dogs slept on the cool pavements. In the doorways soft-eyed
+Syrian women rocked their babies to drowsy chants. The air
+revived Aggie. She leaned forward and touched Tish on the
+shoulder.
+
+"After all," she said softly, "if he loves her very much, and
+there was no other way--Do you remember that night she arrived--
+how he looked at her?"
+
+"Yes," Tish snapped. "And I remember the way he looked at us
+every time he wanted money. We've been a lot of sheep and we've
+been sheared good and proper! But we needn't bleat with joy
+about it!"
+
+As we drew up at my door, Tish pulled out her watch.
+
+"It's seven o'clock," she said brusquely. "I am going to New
+York on the nine-forty train and I shall take the first steamer
+outward bound--I need a rest! I'll go anywhere but to the Holy
+Land!"
+
+We went to Panama.
+
+
+Two months afterward, in the dusk of a late spring evening,
+Charlie Sands met us at the station and took us to Tish's in a
+taxicab. We were homesick, tired, and dirty; and Aggie, who had
+been frightfully seasick, was clamoring for tea.
+
+As the taxicab drew up at the curb, Tish clutched my arm and
+Aggie uttered a muffled cry and promptly sneezed. Seated on the
+doorstep, celluloid collar shining, the brown pasteboard
+suitcase at his feet, was Tufik. He sat calmly smoking a
+cigarette, his eyes upturned in placid and Oriental
+contemplation of the heavens.
+
+"Drive on!" said Tish desperately. "If he sees us we are lost!"
+
+"Drive where?" demanded Charlie.
+
+Tufik's gaze had dropped gradually--another moment and his brown
+eyes would rest on us. But just then a diversion occurred. A
+window overhead opened with a slam and a stream of hot water
+descended. It had been carefully aimed--as if with long
+practice. Tufik was apparently not surprised. He side-stepped it
+with a boredom as of many repetitions, and, picking up his
+suitcase, stood at a safe distance looking up. First, in his
+gentle voice he addressed the window in Arabic; then from a
+safer distance in English.
+
+"You ugly old she-wolf!" he said softly. "When my three old
+women come back I eat you, skin and bones,--and they shall say
+nothing! They love me--Tufik! I am their child. Aye! And my
+child--which comes--will be their grandchild!"
+
+He kissed his fingers to the upper window which closed with a
+slam. Tufik stooped, picked up his suitcase, and saw the taxi
+for the first time. Even in the twilight we saw his face change,
+his brown eyes brighten, his teeth show in his boyish smile. The
+taxicab driver had stalled his engine and was cranking it.
+
+"Sh!" I said desperately, and we all cowered back into the
+shadows.
+
+Tufik approached, uncertainty changing to certainty. The engine
+was started now. Oh, for a second of time! He was at the window
+now, peering into the darkness.
+
+"Miss Tish!" he said breathlessly. No one answered. We hardly
+breathed. And then suddenly Aggie sneezed! "Miss Pilk!" he
+shouted in delight. "My mothers! My so dear friends--"
+
+The machine jerked, started, moved slowly off. He ran beside it,
+a hand on the door. Tish bent forward to speak, but Charlie
+Sands put his hand over her mouth.
+
+And so we left him, standing in the street undecided, staring
+after us wistfully, uncertainly--the suitcase, full of Cluny-
+lace centerpieces, crocheted lace, silk kimonos, and embroidered
+bedspreads, in his hand.
+
+That night we hid in a hotel and the next day we started for
+Europe. We heard nothing from Tufik; but on the anniversary of
+Mr. Wiggins's death, while we were in Berlin, Aggie received a
+small package forwarded from home. It was a small lace doily,
+and pinned to it was a card. It read:--
+
+ For the sadness, Miss Pilk! TUFIK.
+
+Aggie cried over it.
+
+
+
+
+The Simple Lifers
+
+I
+
+
+I suppose there is something in all of us that harks back to the
+soil. When you come to think of it, what are picnics but
+outcroppings of instinct? No one really enjoys them or expects
+to enjoy them, but with the first warm days some prehistoric
+instinct takes us out into the woods, to fry potatoes over a
+strangling wood fire and spend the next week getting grass
+stains out of our clothes. It must be instinct; every atom of
+intelligence warns us to stay at home near the refrigerator.
+
+Tish is really a child of instinct. She is intelligent enough,
+but in a contest between instinct and brains, she always follows
+her instinct. Aggie under the same circumstances follows her
+heart. As for me, I generally follow Tish and Aggie, and they've
+led me into some curious places.
+
+This is really a sort of apology, because, whereas usually Tish
+leads off and we follow her, in the adventure of the Simple Life
+we were all equally guilty. Tish made the suggestion, but we
+needed no urging. As you know, this summer two years ago was a
+fairly good one, as summers go,--plenty of fair weather, only
+two or three really hot spells, and not a great deal of rain.
+Charlie Sands, Tish's nephew, went over to England in June to
+report the visit of the French President to London for his
+newspaper, and Tish's automobile had been sent to the factory to
+be gone over. She had been teaching Aggie to drive it, and owing
+to Aggie's thinking she had her foot on the brake when it was
+really on the gas, they had leaped a four-foot ditch and gone
+down into a deep ravine, from which both Tish and Aggie had had
+to be pulled up with ropes.
+
+Well, with no machine and Charlie Sands away, we hardly knew how
+to plan the summer. Tish thought at first she would stay at home
+and learn to ride. She thought her liver needed stirring up. She
+used to ride, she said, and it was like sitting in a rocking-
+chair, only perhaps more so. Aggie and I went out to her first
+lesson; but when I found she had bought a divided skirt and was
+going to try a man's saddle, I could not restrain my indignation.
+
+"I'm going, Tish," I said firmly, when she had come out of the
+dressing-room and I realized the situation. "I shan't attempt to
+restrain you, but I shall not remain to witness your shame."
+
+Tish eyed me coldly. "When you wish to lecture me," she snapped,
+"about revealing to the public that I have two legs, if I do
+wear a skirt, don't stand in a sunny doorway in that linen dress
+of yours. I am going to ride; every woman should ride. It's good
+for the liver."
+
+I think she rather wavered when they brought the horse, which
+looked larger than usual and had a Roman nose. The instructor
+handed Tish four lines and she grabbed them nervously in a
+bunch.
+
+"Just a moment!" said the instructor, and slipped a line between
+each two of her fingers.
+
+Tish looked rather startled. "When I used to ride--" she began
+with dignity.
+
+But the instructor only smiled. "These two are for the curb," he
+said--"if he bolts or anything like that, you know. Whoa, Viper!
+Still, old man!"
+
+"Viper!" Tish repeated, clutching at the lines. "Is--is he--er--
+nasty?"
+
+"Not a bit of it," said the instructor, while he prepared to
+hoist her up. "He's as gentle as a woman to the people he likes.
+His only fault is that he's apt to take a little nip out of the
+stablemen now and then. He's very fond of ladies."
+
+"Humph!" said Tish. "He's looking at me rather strangely, don't
+you think? Has he been fed lately?"
+
+"Perhaps he sees that divided skirt," I suggested.
+
+Tish gave me one look and got on the horse. They walked round
+the ring at first and Tish seemed to like it. Then a stableman
+put a nickel into a player-piano and that seemed to be a signal
+for the thing to trot. Tish said afterward that she never hit
+the horse's back twice in the same place. Once, she says, she
+came down on his neck, and several times she was back somewhere
+about his tail. Every time she landed, wherever it might be, he
+gave a heave and sent her up again. She tried to say "Whoa," but
+it came out in pieces, so to speak, and the creature seemed to
+be encouraged by it and took to going faster. By that time, she
+said, she wasn't coming down at all, but was in the air all the
+time, with the horse coming up at the rate of fifty revolutions
+a second. She had presence of mind enough to keep her mouth shut
+so she wouldn't bite her tongue off.
+
+After four times round the music stopped and the horse did also.
+They were just in front of us, and Tish looked rather dazed.
+
+"You did splendidly!" said Aggie. "Honestly, Tish, I was
+frightened at first, but you and that dear horse seemed one
+piece. Didn't they, Lizzie?"
+
+Tish straightened out the fingers of her left hand with her
+right and extricated the lines. Then she turned her head slowly
+from right to left to see if she could.
+
+"Help me down, somebody," she said in a thin voice, "and call an
+osteopath. There is something wrong with my spine!"
+
+She was in bed three days, having massage and a vibrator and
+being rubbed with chloroform liniment. At the end of that time
+she offered me her divided skirt, but I refused.
+
+"Riding would be good for your liver, Lizzie," she said, sitting
+up in bed with pillows all about her.
+
+"I don't intend to detach it to do it good," I retorted. "What
+your liver and mine and most of the other livers need these days
+isn't to be sent out in a divided skirt and beaten to a jelly:
+they need rest--less food and simpler food. If instead of taking
+your liver on a horse you'd put it in a tent and feed it nuts
+and berries, you wouldn't be the color you are to-day, Tish
+Carberry."
+
+That really started the whole thing, although at the time Tish
+said nothing. She has a way of getting an idea and letting it
+simmer on the back of her brain, as you may say, when nobody
+knows it's been cooking at all, and then suddenly bringing it
+out cooked and seasoned and ready to serve.
+
+On the day Tish sat up for the first time, Aggie and I went over
+to see her. Hannah, the maid, had got her out of bed to a
+window, and Tish was sitting there with books all about her. It
+is in times of enforced physical idleness that most of Tish's
+ideas come to her, and Aggie had reminded me of that fact on the
+way over.
+
+"You remember, Lizzie," she said, "how last winter when she was
+getting over the grippe she took up that correspondence-school
+course in swimming. She's reading, watch her books. It'll
+probably be suffrage or airships."
+
+Tish always believes anything she reads. She had been quite sure
+she could swim after six correspondence lessons. She had all the
+movements exactly, and had worried her trained nurse almost into
+hysteria for a week by turning on her face in bed every now and
+then and trying the overhand stroke. She got very expert, and
+had decided she'd swim regularly, and even had Charlie Sands
+show her the Australian crawl business so she could go over some
+time and swim the Channel. It was a matter of breathing and of
+changing positions, she said, and was up to intelligence rather
+than muscle.
+
+Then when she was quite strong, she had gone to the natatorium.
+Aggie and I went along, not that we were any good in emergency,
+but because Tish had convinced us there would be no emergency.
+And Tish went in at the deep end of the pool, head first,
+according to diagram, and did not come up.
+
+Well, there seemed to be nothing threatening in what Tish was
+reading this time. She had ordered some books for Maria Lee's
+children and was looking them over before she sent them. The
+"Young Woods-man" was one and "Camper Craft" was another. How I
+shudder when I recall those names!
+
+Aggie had baked an angel cake and I had brought over a jar of
+cookies. But Tish only thanked us and asked Hannah to take them
+out. Even then we were not suspicious. Tish sat back among her
+pillows and said very little. The conversation was something
+like this:--
+
+ Aggie: Well, you're up again: I hope to goodness it will
+ be a lesson to you. If you don't mind, I'd like Hannah
+ to cut that cake. It fell in the middle.
+
+ Tish: Do you know that the Indians never sweetened their
+ food and that they developed absolutely perfect teeth?
+
+ Aggie: Well, they never had any automobiles either, but
+ they didn't develop wings.
+
+ Lizzie: Don't you want that window closed? I'm in a
+ draft.
+
+ Tish: Air in motion never gave any one a cold. We do not
+ catch cold; we catch heat. It's ridiculous the way we
+ shut ourselves up in houses and expect to remain well.
+
+ Aggie: Well, I'b catchig sobethig.
+
+ Lizzie (changing the subject): Would you like me to help
+ you dress? It might rest your back to have your corset
+ on.
+
+ Tish (firmly): I shall never wear a corset again.
+
+ Aggie (sneezing): Why? Didn't the Iddiads wear theb?
+
+Tish is very sensitive to lack of sympathy and she shut up like
+a clam. She was coldly polite to us for the remainder of our
+visit, but she did not again refer to the Indians, which in
+itself was suspicious.
+
+Fortunately for us, or unfortunately, Tish's new scheme was one
+she could not very well carry out alone. I believe she tried to
+induce Hannah to go with her, and only when Hannah failed her
+did she turn to us. Hannah was frightened and came to warn us.
+
+I remember the occasion very well. It was Mr. Wiggins's birthday
+anniversary, and we usually dine at Aggie's and have a cake with
+thirty candles on it. Tish was not yet able to be about, so
+Aggie and I ate together. She always likes to sit until the last
+candle is burned out, which is rather dispiriting and always
+leaves me low in my mind.
+
+Just as it flickered and went out, Hannah came in.
+
+"Miss Tish sent over Mr. Charlie's letter from London," said
+Hannah, and put it in front of Aggie. Then she sat down on a
+chair and commenced to cry.
+
+"Why, Hannah!" said Aggie. "What in the world has happened?"
+
+She's off again!" sniveled Hannah; "and she's worse this time
+than she's ever been. No sugar, no tea, only nuts and fruit, and
+her windows open all night, with the curtains getting black. I
+wisht I had Mr. Charlie by the neck."
+
+I suppose it came over both of us at the same time- the "Young
+Woodsman," and the "Camper Craft," and no stays, and all that. I
+reached for Charlie Sands's letter, which was always sent to
+Tish and meant for all of us. He wrote:--
+
+ Dear Three of a Kind: Well, the French President has
+ came and went, and London has taken down all the
+ brilliant flags which greeted him, such tactful bits as
+ bore Cressy and Agincourt, and the pretty little
+ smallpox and "plague here" banners, and has gone back to
+ such innocent diversions as baiting cabinet ministers,
+ blowing up public buildings, or going out into the woods
+ seeking the Simple Life.
+
+ The Simple Lifers travel in bands--and little else. They
+ go barefooted, barearmed, bareheaded and barenecked.
+ They wear one garment, I believe, let their hair hang
+ and their beards grow, eat only what Nature provides,
+ such as nuts and fruits, sleep under the stars, and
+ drink from Nature's pools. Rather bully, isn't it?
+ They're a handsome lot generally, brown as nuts. And I
+ saw a girl yesterday--well, if you do not hear from me
+ for a time it will be because I have discarded the
+ pockets in which I carry my fountain pen and my stamps
+ and am wandering bare- foot through the Elysian fields.
+
+ Yours for the Simple Life,
+
+ CHARLIE SANDS.
+
+As I finished reading the letter aloud, I looked at Aggie in
+dismay. "That settles it," I said hopelessly. "She had some such
+idea before, and now this young idiot--" I stopped and stared
+across the table at Aggie. She was sitting rapt, her eyes fixed
+on the smouldering wicks of Mr. Wiggins's candles.
+
+"Barefoot through the Elysian fields!" she said.
+
+
+II
+
+I am not trying to defend myself. I never had the enthusiasm of
+the other two, but I rather liked the idea. And I did restrain
+them. It was my suggestion, for instance, that we wear sandals
+without stockings, instead of going in our bare feet, which was
+a good thing, for the first day out Aggie stepped into a
+hornet's nest. And I made out the lists.
+
+The idea, of course, is not how much one can carry, but how
+little. The "Young Woodsman" told exactly how to manage in the
+woods if one were lost there and had nothing in the world but a
+bootlace and a wire hairpin.
+
+With the hairpin one could easily make a fair fish-hook--and
+with a bootlace or a good hemp cord one could make a rabbit
+snare.
+
+"So you see," Tish explained, "there's fish and meat with no
+trouble at all. And there will be berries and nuts. That's a
+diet for a king."
+
+I was making a list of the necessaries at the time and under
+bootlaces and hairpins I put down "spade."
+
+"What in Heaven's name is the spade for?" Tish demanded.
+
+"You've got to dig bait, haven't you?"
+
+Tish eyed me with disgust.
+
+"Grasshoppers!" she said tersely.
+
+There was really nothing Tish was not prepared for. I should
+never have thought of grasshoppers.
+
+"The idea is simply this," observed Tish: "We have surrounded
+ourselves with a thousand and one things we do not need and
+would be better without--houses, foolish clothing, electric
+light, idiotic servants--Hannah, get away from that door!--rich
+foods, furniture and crowds of people. We've developed and cared
+for our bodies instead of our souls. What we want is to get out
+into the woods and think; to forget those pampered bodies of
+ours and to let our souls grow and assert themselves."
+
+We decided finally to take a blanket apiece, rolled on our
+shoulders, and Tish and I each took a strong knife. Aggie,
+instead of the knife, took a pair of scissors. We took a small
+bottle of blackberry cordial for emergencies, a cake of soap, a
+salt-cellar for seasoning the fish and rabbits, two towels, a
+package of court-plaster, Aggie's hay-fever remedy, a bottle of
+oil of pennyroyal to use against mosquitoes, and a large piece
+of canvas, light but strong, cut like the diagram.
+
+Tish said it was the regulation Indian tepee, and that a squaw
+could set one up in an hour and have dinner cooked inside it in
+thirty minutes after. She said she guessed we could do it if an
+Indian squaw could, and that after we'd cut the poles once, we
+could carry them with us if we wished to move. She said the tent
+ought to be ornamented, but she had had no time, and we could
+paint designs on it with colored clay in the woods when we had
+nothing more important to do!
+
+It made a largish bundle, but we did not intend to travel much.
+We thought we could find a good place by a lake somewhere and
+put up the tent, and set a few snares, and locate the nearest
+berry-bushes and mushroom-patches, and then, while the rabbits
+were catching themselves, we should have time to get acquainted
+with our souls again.
+
+Tish put it in her terse manner most intelligently. "We intend
+to prove," she stated to Mrs. Ostermaier, the minister's wife,
+who came to call and found us all sitting on the floor trying to
+get used to it, for of course there would be no chairs, "we
+shall prove that the trappings of civilization are a delusion
+and a snare. We shall bring back 'Mens sana in corpore sano'."
+
+The minister's wife thought this was a disease, for she said, "I
+hope not, I'm sure," very hastily.
+
+"We shall make our own fire and our own shelter," said Tish from
+the floor. "We shall wear one garment, loose enough to allow
+entire freedom of movement. We shall bathe in Nature's pools and
+come out cleansed. On the Sabbath we shall attend divine service
+under the Gothic arches of the trees, read sermons in stones,
+and instead of that whining tenor in the choir we shall listen
+to the birds singing praise, overhead."
+
+Mrs. Ostermaier looked rather bewildered. "I'm sure I hope so,"
+she said vaguely. "I don't like camping myself. There are so
+many bugs."
+
+As Tish said, some ideas are so large that the average person
+cannot see them at all.
+
+We had fixed on Maine. It seemed to combine all the necessary
+qualities: woods and lakes, rabbits, game and fish, and--
+solitude. Besides, Aggie's hay fever is better the farther north
+she gets. On the day we were leaving, Mr. Ostermaier came to see
+us.
+
+"I--I really must protest, ladies," he said. "That sort of thing
+may be all right for savages, but--"
+
+"Are we not as intelligent as savages?" Tish demanded.
+
+"Primitive people are inured to hardships, and besides, they
+have methods of their own. They can make fire--" "So can I,"
+retorted Tish. "Any fool can make a fire with a rubbing-stick.
+It's been done in thirty-one seconds."
+
+"If you would only take some matches," he wailed, "and a good
+revolver, Miss Letitia. And--you must pardon this, but I have
+your well--being at heart--if I could persuade you to take along
+some--er--flannels and warm clothing!"
+
+"Clothing," said Tish loftily, "is a matter of habit, Mr.
+Ostermaier."
+
+I think he got the idea from this that we intended to discard
+clothing altogether, for he went away almost immediately,
+looking rather upset, and he preached on the following Sunday
+from "Consider the lilies of the field . . . . Even Solomon in
+all his glory was not arrayed like one of these."
+
+We left on Monday evening, and by Tuesday at noon we were at our
+destination, as far as the railroad was concerned. Tish had a
+map with the lake we'd picked out, and we had figured that we'd
+drive out to within ten miles or so of it and then send the
+driver back. The lake was in an uninhabited neighborhood, with
+the nearest town twenty-five miles away. We had one suitcase
+containing our blankets, sandals, short dresses, soap, hairpins,
+salt-box, knives, scissors, and a compass, and the leather
+thongs for rabbit snares that we had had cut at a harness shop.
+In the other suitcase was the tepee.
+
+We ate a substantial breakfast at Tish's suggestion, because we
+expected to be fairly busy the first day, and there would be no
+time for hunting. We had to walk ten miles, set up the tent,
+make a fire and gather nuts and berries. It was about that time,
+I think, that I happened to recall that it was early for nuts.
+Still there would be berries, and Tish had added mushrooms to
+our menu.
+
+We found a man with a spring wagon to drive us out and Tish
+showed him the map.
+
+"I guess I can get you out that way," he said, "but I ain't
+heard of no camp up that direction."
+
+"Who said anything about a camp?" snapped Tish. "How much to
+drive us fifteen miles in that direction?"
+
+"Fifteen miles! Well, about five dollars, but I think--"
+
+"How much to drive us fifteen miles without thinking?"
+
+"Ten dollars," said the man; and as he had the only wagon in the
+town we had to pay it.
+
+It was a lovely day, although very warm. The morning sun turned
+the woods to fairylike glades. Tish sat on the front seat, erect
+and staring ahead.
+
+Aggie bent over and touched my arm lightly. "Isn't she
+wonderful!" she whispered; "like some adventurer of old--Balboa
+discovering the Pacific Ocean, or Joan of Arc leading the what-
+you-call-'ems."
+
+But somehow my enthusiasm was dying. The sun was hot and there
+were no berry-bushes to be seen. Aggie's fairy glades in the
+woods were filled, not with dancing sprites, but with gnats. I
+wanted a glass of iced tea, and some chicken salad, and talcum
+powder down my neck. The road was bad, and the driver seemed to
+have a joke to himself, for every now and then he chuckled, and
+kept his eyes on the woods on each side, as if he expected to
+see something. His manner puzzled us all.
+
+"You can trust me not to say anything, ladies," he said at last,
+"but don't you think you're playing it a bit low down? This
+ain't quite up to contract, is it?"
+
+"You've been drinking!" said Tish shortly.
+
+After that he let her alone, but soon after he turned round to
+me and made another venture.
+
+"In case you need grub, lady," he said,"--and them two suitcases
+don't hold a lot,--I'll bring out anything you say: eggs and
+butter and garden truck at market prices. I'm no
+phylanthropist," he said, glaring at Tish, "but I'd be glad to
+help the girl, and that's the truth. I been married to this here
+wife o' mine quite a spell, and to my first one for twenty
+years, and I'm a believer in married life."
+
+"What girl?" I asked.
+
+He turned right round in the seat and winked at me.
+
+"All right," he said. "I'll not butt in unless you need me. But
+I'd like to know one thing: He hasn't got a mother, he says, so
+I take it you're his aunts. Am I on, ladies?"
+
+We didn't know what he was talking about, and we said so. But he
+only smiled. A mile or so from our destination the horse scared
+up a rabbit, and Tish could hardly be restrained from running
+after it with a leather thong. Aggie, however, turned a little
+pale.
+
+"I'll never be able to eat one, never!" she confided to me. "Did
+you see its eyes? Lizzie, do you remember Mr. Wiggins's eyes?
+and the way he used to move his nose, just like that?"
+
+At the end of fifteen miles the driver drew up his horses and
+took a fresh chew of tobacco.
+
+"I guess this is about right," he said. "That trail there'll
+take you to the lake. How long do you reckon it'll be before
+you'll need some fresh eggs?"
+
+"We are quite able to look after ourselves," said Tish with
+hauteur, and got out of the wagon. She paid him off at once and
+sat down on her suitcase until he had driven out of sight. He
+drove slowly, looking back every now and then, and his last view
+of us must have been impressive--three middle-aged and
+determined women ready to conquer the wilderness, as Tish put
+it, and two suitcases.
+
+It was as solitary a place as we could have wished. We had not
+seen a house in ten miles, and when the last creak of the wagon
+had died away there was a silence that made our city-broke ears
+fairly ache. Tish waited until the wagon was out of sight; then
+she stood up and threw out her arms.
+
+"At last!" she said. "Free to have a lodge in some vast
+wilderness--to think, to breathe, to expand! Lizzie, do you
+suppose if we go back we can get that rabbit?"
+
+I looked at my watch. It was one o'clock and there was not a
+berry-bush in sight. The drive had made me hungry, and I'd have
+eaten a rabbit that looked like Mr. Wiggins and called me by
+name if I'd had it. But there was absolutely no use going back
+for the one we'd seen on our drive.
+
+Aggie was opening her suitcase and getting out her costume,
+which was a blue calico with short sleeves and a shoe-top skirt.
+
+"Where'll I put it on?" she asked, looking about her.
+
+"Right here!" Tish replied. "For goodness sake, Aggie, try to
+discard false modesty and false shame. We're here to get close
+to the great beating heart of Nature. Take off your switch
+before you do another thing."
+
+None of us looked particularly well, I admit; but it was
+wonderful how much more comfortable we were. Aggie, who is very
+thin, discarded a part of her figure, and each of us parted with
+some pet hypocrisy. But I don't know that I have ever felt
+better. Only, of course we were hungry.
+
+We packed our things in the suitcases and hid them in a hollow
+tree, and Tish suggested looking for a spring. She said water
+was always the first requisite and fire the second.
+
+"Fire!" said Aggie. "What for? We've nothing to cook."
+
+Well, that was true enough, so we sent Aggie to look for water
+and Tish and I made a rabbit snare. We made a good many snares
+and got to be rather quick at it. They were all made like this
+illustration.
+
+First Tish, with her book open in front of her, made a running
+noose out of one of the buckskin thongs. Next we bent down a
+sapling and tied the noose to it, and last of all we bound the
+free part of the thong round a snag and thus held the sapling
+down. The idea is that a rabbit, bounding along, presumably with
+his eyes shut, will stick his head through the noose, kick the
+line clear of the snag and be drawn violently into the air. Tish
+figured that by putting tip half a dozen snares we'd have three
+or four rabbits at least each day.
+
+It was about three when we finished, and we drew off to a safe
+distance to watch the rabbit bound to his doom. But no rabbits
+came along.
+
+I was very empty and rather faint, but Tish said she had never
+been able to think so clearly, and that we were all overfed and
+stodgy and would be better for fasting.
+
+Aggie came in at three-thirty with a hornet sting and no water.
+She said there were no springs, but that she had found a place
+where a spring had existed before the dry spell, and there was a
+naked footprint in the mud, quite fresh! We all went to look at
+it, and Tish was quite positive it was not a man's footprint at
+all, but only a bear's.
+
+"A bear!" said Aggie.
+
+"What of it?" Tish demanded. "The 'Young Woodsman' says that no
+bear attacks a human unless he is hungry, and at this time of
+the year with the woods full of food--"
+
+"Humph!"--I could not restrain myself--"I wish you would show me
+a little of it. If no rabbit with acute melancholia comes along
+to commit suicide by hanging on that gallows of yours, I think
+we'll starve to death."
+
+"There will be a rabbit," Tish said tersely; and we started back
+to the snare.
+
+I was never so astonished in my life. There was a rabbit! It
+seems we had struck a runway without knowing it, although Tish
+said afterward that she had recognized it at once from the
+rabbit tracks. Anyhow, whether it died of design or curiosity,
+our supper was kicking at the top of the sapling, and Tish
+pretended to be calm and to have known all along that we'd get
+one. But it was not dead.
+
+We got it down somehow or other and I held it by the ears while
+it kicked and scratched. I was hungry enough to have eaten it
+alive, but Aggie began to cry.
+
+"You'll be murderers, nothing else," she wailed. "Look at his
+little white tail and pitiful baby eyes!"
+
+"Good gracious, Aggie," Tish snapped, "get a knife and cut its
+throat while I make a fire. If it's any help to you, we're not
+going to eat either its little white tail or its pitiful baby
+eyes."
+
+As a matter of fact Aggie wouldn't touch the rabbit and I did
+not care much about it myself. I do not like to kill things. My
+Aunt Sarah Mackintosh once killed a white hen that lived twenty
+minutes without its head; two weeks later she dreamed that that
+same hen, without a head, was sitting on the footboard of the
+bed, and the next day she got word that her cousin's husband in
+Sacramento had died of the hiccoughs.
+
+It ended with Tish giving me the fire-making materials and
+stalking off into the woods with the rabbit in one hand and the
+knife in the other.
+
+Tish is nothing if not thorough, but she seemed to me
+inconsistent. She brought blankets and a canvas tepee and
+sandals and an aluminum kettle, but she disdained matches. I
+rubbed with that silly drill and a sort of bow arrangement until
+my wrists ached, hut I did not get even a spark of fire. When
+Tish came back with the rabbit there was no fire, and Aggie had
+taken out her watch crystal and was holding it in the sun over a
+pile of leaves.
+
+Tish got out the "Young Woodsman" from the suitcase. It seems I
+had followed cuts I and II, but had neglected cut III, which is:
+Hold the left wrist against the left shin, and the left foot on
+the fireblock. I had got my feet mixed and was trying to hold my
+left wrist against my right shin, which is exceedingly difficult.
+Tish got a fire in fourteen minutes and thirty-one seconds by
+Aggie's watch, and had to wear a bandage on her hand for a week.
+
+But we had a fire. We cooked the rabbit, which proved to be much
+older than Aggie had thought, and ate what we could. Personally
+I am not fond of rabbit, and our enjoyment was rather chastened
+by the fear that some mushrooms Tish had collected and added to
+the stew were toadstools incognito. To make things worse, Aggie
+saw some goldenrod nearby and began to sneeze.
+
+It was after five o'clock, but it seemed wisest to move on toward
+the lake.
+
+"Even if we don't make it," said Tish, "we'll be on our way, and
+while that bear is likely harmless we needn't thrust temptation
+in his way."
+
+We carried the fire with us in the kettle and we took turns with
+the tepee, which was heavy. Our suitcases with our city clothes
+in them we hid in a hollow tree, and one after the other, with
+Aggie last, we started on.
+
+The trail, which was a sort of wide wagon road at first, became
+a footpath; as we went on even that disappeared at times under
+fallen leaves. Once we lost it entirely, and Aggie, falling over
+a hidden root, stilled the fire. She became exceedingly
+disagreeable at about that time, said she was sure Tish's
+mushrooms were toadstools because she felt very queer, and
+suddenly gave a yell and said she had seen something moving in
+the bushes.
+
+We all looked, and the bushes were moving.
+
+
+III
+
+It was dusk by that time and the path was only a thread between
+masses of undergrowth. Tish said if it was the bear he would be
+afraid of the fire, so we put dry leaves in the kettle and made
+quite a blaze. By its light Tish read that bears in the summer
+are full fed and really frolicsome and that they are awful
+cowards. We felt quite cheered and brave, and Tish said if he
+came near to throw the fire kettle at him and he'd probably die
+of fright.
+
+It was too late to put up the tepee, so we found a clearing near
+the path and decided to spend the night there. Aggie still
+watched the bushes and wanted to spend the night in a tree; but
+Tish's calmness was a reproach to us both, and after we had
+emptied the kettle and made quite a fire to keep off animals, we
+unrolled our blankets and prepared for sleep. I could have slept
+anywhere, although I was still rather hungry. My last view was
+of Tish in the firelight grimly bending down a sapling and
+fastening a rabbit snare to it.
+
+During the night I was wakened by somebody clutching my arm. It
+was Aggie who lay next to me. When I raised my head she pointed
+off into the woods to our left. At a height of perhaps four feet
+from the ground a ghastly red glow was moving rapidly away from
+us. It was not a torch; it was more a radiance, and it moved not
+evenly, but jerkily. I could feel the very hair rising on my
+head and it was all I could do to call Tish. When we had roused
+her, however, the glow had faded entirely and she said we had
+had a nightmare.
+
+The snare the next morning contained a skunk, and we moved on as
+quickly as possible, without attempting to secure the thong, of
+which we had several. We gathered some puffballs to soak for
+breakfast and in a clearing I found some blackberry bushes. We
+were very cheerful that morning, for if we could capture rabbits
+and skunks, we were sure of other things, also, and soon we
+would be able to add fish to our menu. True, we had not had much
+time to commune with our souls, and Aggie's arms were so
+sunburned that she could not bend them at the elbows. But, as
+Tish said, we had already proved our contention that we could
+get along without men or houses or things. Things, she said,
+were the curse of modern life; we filled our lives with things
+instead of thoughts.
+
+It was when we were ready to cook the puffballs that we missed
+the kettle! Tish was very angry; she said it was evident that
+the bear was mischievous and that all bears were thieves. (See
+the "Young Woodsman.") But I recalled the glow of the night
+before, and more than once I caught Aggie's eyes on me, filled
+with consternation. For we had seen that kettle leaving the camp
+with some of our fire in it, and bears are afraid of fire!
+
+We reached the lake at noon and it seemed as if we might soon
+have time to sit down and rest. But there was a great deal to
+do. Aggie was of no assistance on account of her arms, so Tish
+and I put up the tent. The "Young Woodsman" said it was easy.
+First you tied three long poles together near the top and stood
+them up so they made a sort of triangle. Then you cut about a
+dozen and filled in between the three. That looked easy, but it
+took an afternoon, and our first three looked like this first
+cut.
+
+AS THE FIRST THREE LOOKED
+
+AS THEY SHOULD HAVE LOOKED
+
+We had caught a rabbit by noon, and Aggie being unfit for other
+work, and the kettle being gone, Tish set her to roasting it. It
+was not very good, but we ate some, being ravenous. The method
+was simplicity itself--two forked sticks in the ground, one
+across to hang the rabbit to and a fire beneath. It tasted rather
+smoky.
+
+In the afternoon we finished putting up the tepee, and Tish made
+a fishhook out of a hairpin and tied it to a strong creeper I
+had found. But we caught no fish. We had more rabbit for supper,
+with some puffballs smoked and a few huckleberries. But by that
+time the very sight of a rabbit sickened me, and Aggie began to
+talk about broiled beefsteak and fried spring chicken.
+
+We had seen no sign of the bear, or whatever it was, all day, and
+it seemed likely we were not to be again disturbed. But a most
+mysterious thing occurred that very night.
+
+As I have said, we had caught no fish. The lake was full of them.
+We sat on a bank that evening and watched them playing leapfrog,
+and talked about frying them on red-hot stones, but nothing came
+near the hairpin. At last Tish made a suggestion.
+
+"We need worms," she said. "A grasshopper loses all his spirit
+after he's been immersed for an hour, but a worm will keep on
+wriggling and attracting attention for half a day."
+
+"I wanted to bring a spade," said I.
+
+But Tish had read of a scheme for getting worms that she said the
+game warden of some place or other had guaranteed officially.
+
+"You stick a piece of wood about two feet into the ground in a
+likely spot," she said, "and rub a rough piece of bark or plank
+across the top. This man claims, and it sounds reasonable, that
+the worms think it is raining and come up for water. All you have
+to do is to gather them up."
+
+Tish found a pole for the purpose on the beach and set to work,
+while Aggie and I prepared several hooks and lines. The fish
+were jumping busily, and it seemed likely we should have more
+than we could do to haul them in.
+
+The experiment, however, failed entirely, for not a single worm
+appeared. Tish laid it to the fact that it was very late and
+that the worms were probably settled down for the night. It may
+have been that, or it may have been the wrong kind of wood.
+
+The mysterious happening was this: We rose quite early because
+the tepee did not seem to be well anchored and fell down on us at
+daybreak. Tish went down to the beach to examine the lines that
+had been out all night, and found nothing. She was returning
+rather dispirited to tell us that it would be rabbit again for
+breakfast, when she saw lying on a flat stone half a dozen
+beautiful fish, one or two still gasping, in our lost kettle!
+
+Tish said she stood there, opening and shutting her mouth like
+the fish. Then she gave a whoop and we came running. At first we
+thought they might have been jumping and leaped out on to the
+beach by accident, but, as Tish said, they would hardly have
+landed all together and into a kettle that had been lost for two
+nights and a day. The queer thing was that they had not been
+caught with a hook at all. They hadn't a mark on them.
+
+We were so hungry that we ate every one of then for breakfast.
+It was only when we had eaten, and were sitting gorged and not
+caring whether the tent was set up again or not, that we fell to
+wondering about the fish. Tish fancied it might have been the
+driver of the spring wagon, but decided he'd have sold us the
+fish at thirty cents a pound live weight.
+
+All day long we watched for a sign of our benefactor, but we saw
+nothing. Tish set up more rabbit snares; not that she wanted
+rabbits, but it had become a mania with her, and there were so
+many of them that as they grew accustomed to us they sat round
+our camp in a ring and criticized our housekeeping. She thought
+if she got a good many skins she could have a fur robe made for
+her automobile. As a matter of fact she found another use for
+them.
+
+It was that night, then, that we were sitting round the camp-
+fire on stones that we had brought up from the beach. We had
+seen nothing more of the bear, and if we had been asked we
+should have said that the nearest human being was twenty-five
+miles away.
+
+Suddenly a voice came out of the woods just behind us, a man's
+voice.
+
+"Please don't be alarmed," said the voice. "But may I have a
+little of your fire? Mine has gone out again."
+
+"G-g-g-good gracious!" said Aggie. "T-Tish, get your revolver!"
+
+This was for effect. Tish had no revolver.
+
+All of us had turned and were staring into the woods behind, but
+we could see no one. After Aggie's speech about the revolver it
+was some time before the voice spoke again.
+
+"Never mind, Aggie," Tish observed, very loud. "The revolver is
+here and loaded--as nice a little thirty-six as any one needs
+here in the woods."
+
+She said afterward that she knew all the time there was no
+thirty-
+six caliber revolver, but in the excitement she got it mixed with
+her bust measure. Having replied to Aggie, Tish then turned in
+the direction of the voice.
+
+"Don't skulk back there," she called. "Come out, where we can see
+you. If you look reliable, we'll give you some fire, of course."
+
+There was another pause, as if the stranger were hesitating.
+Then:--
+
+"I think I'd better not," he said with reluctance in his voice.
+"Can't you toss a brand this way?"
+
+By that time we had grown accustomed to the darkness, and I
+thought I could see in the shadow of a tree a lightish figure.
+Aggie saw it at the same instant and clutched my arm.
+
+"Lizzie!" she gasped.
+
+It was at that moment that Tish tossed the brand. It fell far
+short, but her movement caught the stranger unawares. He ducked
+behind the tree, but the flare of light had caught him. With the
+exception of what looked like a pair of bathing-trunks he was as
+bare as my hand!
+
+There was a sort of astonished silence. Then the voice called
+out:--"Why in the world didn't you warn me?" it said, aggrieved.
+"I didn't know you were going to throw the blamed thing."
+
+We had all turned our backs at once and Tish's face was awful.
+
+"Take it and go," she said, without turning. "Take it and go."
+
+>From the crackling of leaves and twigs we judged that he had
+come out and got the brand, and when he spoke again it was from
+farther back in the woods.
+
+"You know," he said, "I don't like this any more than you do.
+I've got forty-two mosquito bites on my left arm."
+
+He waited, as if for a reply; but getting none he evidently
+retreated. The sound of rustling leaves and crackling twigs grew
+fainter, fainter still, died away altogether. We turned then
+with one accord and gazed through the dark arches of the forest.
+A glowing star was retreating there--a smouldering fire, that
+seemed to move slowly and with an appearance of dejection.
+
+It was the second time Aggie and I had seen fire thus carried
+through the wood; but whereas about the kettle there had been a
+glow and radiance that was almost triumphant, the brand we now
+watched seemed smouldering, dejected, ashamed. Even Tish felt
+it.
+
+"The wretch!" she exclaimed. "Daring to come here like that! No
+wonder he's ashamed."
+
+But Aggie, who is very romantic, sat staring after the distant
+torch.
+
+"Mr. Wiggins suffered so from mosquitoes," she said softly.
+
+
+IV
+
+The next morning we found more fish awaiting us, and on the
+smooth sand of the beach was a message written with a stick:--
+
+ If you will leave a wire hairpin or two on this stone I
+ can get bigger fish. What do you mean to do with all
+ those rabbit skins? (Signed) P.
+
+Tish was touched by the fish, I think. She smoothed off the sand
+carefully and wrote a reply:--
+
+ Here are the hairpins. Thank you. Do you want the rabbit
+ skins? L. C.
+
+All day we were in a state of expectancy. The mosquitoes were
+very bad, and had it not been for the excitement of the P--
+person I should have given up and gone home. I wanted mashed
+potatoes and lima beans with butter dressing, and a cup of hot
+tea, and muffins, and ice--in fact, I cannot think of anything I
+did not want, except rabbits and fish and puffballs and such
+blackberries as the birds did not fancy. Although we were well
+enough--almost too well--the better I felt the hungrier I got.
+
+Tish thought the time had now come to rest and invite our souls.
+She set the example that day by going out on a flat rock in the
+lake and preparing to think all the things she'd been waiting
+most of her life to consider.
+
+"I am ready to form my own opinions about some things," she said.
+"I realize now that all my life the newspapers and stupid people
+and books have formed my opinions. Now I'm going to think along
+my own lines. Is there another life after this? Do I really
+desire the suffrage? Why am I a Baptist?"
+
+Aggie said she would like to invite her soul that day also, not
+to form any opinions,--Tish always does that for her,--but she
+had to get some clothes in September and she might as well think
+them out.
+
+So it happened that I was alone when I met the P-- person's
+young woman.
+
+I had intended to wander only a short way along the trail, but
+after I had gone a mile or two it occurred to me as likely that
+the spring-wagon driver would come back that way before long out
+of curiosity, and I thought I might leave a message for him to
+bring out some fresh eggs and leave them there. I could tell
+Tish I had found a nest, or perhaps, since that would be lying,
+I could put them in a nest and let her find them. I'd have
+ordered tea, too, if I could have thought of any way to account
+for it.
+
+"I'm going to do some meditating myself to-day," I remarked,
+"but I think better when I'm moving. If I don't come back in an
+hour or so don't imagine I've been kidnaped."
+
+Tish turned on her stone and looked at me.
+
+"You will not be kidnaped," she said shortly. "I cannot imagine
+any one safer than you are in that costume."
+
+Well, I made my way along the trail as rapidly as I could. It
+was twenty miles there and back and I've seen the day when two
+city blocks would send me home to soak my feet in hot water. But
+the sandals were easy to walk in and my calico skirt was short
+and light.
+
+I had no paper to write my message on, of course, but on the way
+I gathered a large white fungus and I scraped a note on it with
+a pin. With the fungus under mp arm I walked briskly along,
+planning an omelet with the eggs, if we got any, and gathering
+mushrooms here and there. It was the mushrooms that led me to
+the discovery of a camping-place that was prehistoric in its
+primitiveness--a clearing, surrounded by low bushes, and in the
+center a fireplace of stones with a fire smouldering. At one
+side a heap of leaves and small twigs for a bed, a stump for a
+seat, and lying on top of it a sort of stone axe, made by
+inserting a sharp stone into the cleft of a sapling and tying it
+into place with a wild-grape tendril. Pegged out on the ground
+to cure was a rabbit skin, indifferently scraped. It made our
+aluminum kettle and canvas tepee look like a marble-vestibuled
+apartment on Riverside Drive.
+
+The whole thing looked pitiful, hungry. I thought of Tish sitting
+on a stone inviting her soul, while rabbits came from miles round
+to stick their heads through our nooses and hang themselves for
+our dinner; and it seemed to me that we should share our plenty.
+I thought it probable that the gentleman of the woods lived here,
+and from the appearance of the place he carried all his
+possessions with him when he wore his bathing-trunks. If I had
+been in any doubt, the sight of Aggie's wire hairpin, sharpened
+and bent into a serviceable fishhook, decided me. I scratched a
+message for him on another fungus and left it:--
+
+ If you need anything come to the Indian tepee at the
+ lake. We have no clothing to spare, but are always glad
+ to help in time of trouble.
+
+ (Signed) ONE OF THE SIMPLE LIFERS.
+
+I went on after that and about noon reached our point of exodus
+from the wagon. I was tired and hot and I kept thinking of my
+little dining-room at home, with the electric fan going, and
+iced cantaloupe, and nobody worrying about her soul or thinking
+her own thoughts, and no rabbits.
+
+Our suitcases were safe enough in the hollow tree, and I thought
+the spring wagon had been back already, for there were fresh
+tracks. This discouraged me and I sat down on a log to rest. It
+was then that I heard the girl crying.
+
+She was crying softly, but in the woods sounds travel. I found
+her on her face on the pine needles about twenty yards away,
+wailing her heart out into a pink automobile veil, and she was
+so absorbed in her misery that I had to stoop and touch her
+before she looked up.
+
+"Don't cry," I said. "If you are lost, I can direct you to a
+settlement."
+
+She looked up at me, and from being very red and suffused she
+went quite pale. It seems that with my bare legs and sandals and
+my hair down, which was Tish's idea for making it come in thick
+and not gray, and what with my being sunburned and stained with
+berries, she thought I was a wild woman. I realized what was
+wrong.
+
+"Don't be alarmed," I said somewhat grimly. "I'm rational
+enough; if I hop about instead of walking, it's because I'm the
+tomb of more rabbits than I care to remember, but aside from
+that I'm all right. Are you lost?"
+
+She sat up, still staring, and wiped her eyes.
+
+"No. I have a machine over there among the trees. Are there--are
+there plenty of rabbits in the woods? "
+
+"Thousands." She was a pretty little thing, very young, and
+dressed in a white motor coat with white shoes and hat.
+
+"And--and berries?"
+
+"There aren't many berries," I admitted. "The birds eat 'em. We
+get the ones they don't fancy."
+
+Now I didn't think for a moment that she was worried about my
+diet, but she was worried about the food supply in the woods,
+that was sure. So I sat down on a stump and told her about
+puffballs, and what Tish had read about ants being edible but
+acid, and that wood mice, roasted and not cooked too dry, were
+good food, but that Aggie had made us liberate the only ones we
+had caught, because a man she was once engaged to used to carry
+a pet mouse in his pocket.
+
+Nothing had really appealed to her until I mentioned Mr.
+Wiggins. Then unexpectedly she began to cry again. And after
+that I got the whole story.
+
+It seems she was in love with a young man who was everything a
+young man ought to be and had money as well. But the money was
+the barrier really, for the girl's father wouldn't believe that
+a youth who played polo, and did not have to work for a living,
+and led cotillons, and paid calls in the afternoon could have
+really good red blood in him. He had a man in view for her, she
+said, one who had made his money himself, and had to have his
+valet lay out his clothes for fear he'd make a mistake. Once the
+valet had to go to have a tooth pulled and the man had to
+decline a dinner.
+
+"Father said," finished the little girl tearfully, "that if
+Percy--that's his name, and it counted against him too--that if
+Percy was a real man he'd do something. And then he hap-happened
+on a book of my small brother's, telling how people used to live
+in the woods, and kill their own food and make their own fire--"
+
+"The 'Young Woodsman,' of course," I put in.
+
+"And how the strong survived, but the weak succumbed, and he
+said if Percy was a man, and not a t-tailor's dummy, he'd go out
+in the woods, j-just primitive man, without anything but a pair
+of bathing trunks, and keep himself alive for a month. If he s-
+stood the test father was willing to forget the 'Percy.' He said
+that he knew Mr. Willoughby could do it--that's the other man--
+and that he'd come in at the end of the time with a deed for the
+forest and mortgages on all the surrounding camps."
+
+"And Percy agreed?"
+
+"He didn't want to. He said it took mentality and physical
+endurance as well as some courage to play polo. Father said it
+did--on the part of the pony. Then s-some of the men heard of
+it, and there were bets on it--ten to one he wouldn't do it and
+twenty to one he couldn't do it. So Percy decided to try. Father
+was so afraid that some of the campers and guides would help him
+that he had notices sent out at Mr. Willoughby's suggestion
+offering a reward if Percy could be shown to have asked any
+assistance. Oh, I know he's sick in there somewhere, or starving
+or--dead!"
+
+I had had a great light break over me, and now I stooped and
+patted the girl on the shoulder.
+
+"Dead! Certainly not," I said. "I saw him last night."
+
+"Saw him!"
+
+"Well, not exactly saw him--there wasn't much light. But he's
+alive and well, and--do you really want him to win?"
+
+"Do I?" She sat up with shining eyes. "I don't care whether he
+owns anything in the world but the trunks. If I didn't think I'd
+add to his troubles I'd go into the woods this minute and find
+him and suffer with him."
+
+"You'd have to be married to him first," I objected, rather
+startled.
+
+But she looked at me with her cheeks as red strawberries. "Why?"
+she demanded. "Father's crazy about primitive man--did primitive
+man take his woman to church to be married, with eight brides
+maids and a reception after the ceremony? Of course not. He
+grabbed her and carried her off."
+
+"Good Heavens! You're not in earnest?" "I think I am," she said
+slowly. "I'd rather live in the woods with Percy and no ceremony
+than live without him anywhere in the world. And I'll bet
+primitive man would have been wiped off the earth if he hadn't
+had primitive woman to add her wits to his strength. If Percy
+only had a woman to help him!"
+
+"My dear," I said solemnly, "he has! He has, not one, but
+three!"
+
+It took me some time to explain that Percy was not supporting a
+harem in the Maine woods; but when at last she got my idea and
+that the other two classed with me in beauty and attractiveness,
+she was overjoyed.
+
+"But Percy promised not to ask for help," she said suddenly.
+
+"He needn't. My dear, go away and stop worrying about Percy--
+he's all right. When is the time up?"
+
+"In three weeks."
+
+"I suppose father and the Willoughby person will come to meet
+him?"
+
+"Yes, and all the fellows from the club who have put money up on
+him. We're going to motor over and father's bringing the
+physical director of the athletic club. He's not only got to
+survive, but he's got to be in good condition."
+
+"He'll be in good condition," I said grimly. "Does he drink and
+smoke?"
+
+"A little, not too much. Oh, yes, I had forgotten!" She opened
+up a little gold cigarette case, which she took from her pocket,
+and extracted a handful of cigarettes.
+
+"If you are going to see him," she said, "you might put them
+where he'll find them?"
+
+"Certainly not."
+
+"But that's not giving them to him."
+
+"My dear child," I said sternly, "Percy is going to come out of
+these woods so well and strong that he may not have to work, but
+he'll want to. And he'll not smoke anything stronger than corn-
+silk, if we're to take charge of this thing."
+
+She understood quickly enough and I must say she was grateful.
+She was almost radiant with joy when I told her how capable Tish
+was, and that she was sure to be interested, and about Aggie's
+hay fever and Mr. Wiggins and the rabbit snares. She leaned over
+and kissed me impulsively.
+
+"You dear old thing!" she cried. "I know you'll look after him
+and make him comfortable and--how old is Miss Letitia?"
+
+"Something over fifty and Aggie Pilkington's about the same,
+although she won't admit it."
+
+She kissed me again at that, and after looking at her wrist
+watch she jumped to her feet.
+
+"Heavens!" she said. "It's four o'clock and my engine has been
+running all this time!"
+
+She got a smart little car from somewhere up the road, and the
+last I saw of her she was smiling back over her shoulder and the
+car running on the edge of a ditch.
+
+"You are three darlings!" she called back. "And tell Percy I
+love him--love him--love him!"
+
+I thought I'd never get back to the lake. I was tired to begin
+with, and after I'd gone about four miles and was limping with a
+splinter in my heel and no needle to get it out with, I found I
+still had the fungus message to the spring-wagon person under my
+arm.
+
+It was dark when I got back and my nerves were rather unstrung,
+what with wandering from the path here and there, with nothing
+to eat since morning, and running into a tree and taking the
+skin off my nose. When I limped into camp at last, I didn't care
+whether Percy lived or died, and the thought, of rabbit stew
+made my mouth water.
+
+It was not rabbit, however. Aggie was sitting alone by the fire,
+waving a brand round her head to keep off mosquitoes, and in
+front of her, dangling from the spit, were a dozen pairs of
+frogs' legs in a row.
+
+I ate six pairs without a question and then I asked for Tish.
+
+"Catching frogs," said Aggie laconically, and flourished the
+brand.
+
+"Where?"
+
+"Pulling them off the trees. Where do you think she gets them?"
+she demanded.
+
+A large mosquito broke through her guard at that moment and she
+flung the torch angrily at the fire.
+
+"I'm eaten alive!" she snapped. "I wish to Heaven I had smallpox
+or something they could all take and go away and die."
+
+The frogs' legs were heavenly, although in a restaurant I loathe
+the things. I left Aggie wondering if her hay fever wasn't
+contagious through the blood and hoping the mosquitoes would get
+it and sneeze themselves to death, and went to find Tish.
+
+She was standing in the margin of the lake up to her knees in
+water, with a blazing torch in one hand and one of our tent
+poles in the other. Tied to the end the pole was a grapevine
+line, and a fishing-hook made of a hairpin was attached to it.
+
+Her method, which it seems she'd heard from Charlie Sands and
+which was not in the "Young Woodsman," was simple and effectual.
+
+"Don't move," she said tensely when she heard me on the bank.
+"There's one here as big as a chicken!"
+
+She struck the flare forward, and I could see the frog looking
+at it and not blinking. He sat in a sort of heavenly ecstasy,
+like a dog about to bay at the moon, while the hook dangled just
+at his throat.
+
+"I'm half-ashamed to do it, Lizzie, it's so easy," she said
+calmly, still tickling the thing's throat with the hook. "Grab
+him as I throw him at you. They slip off sometimes."
+
+The next instant she jerked the hook up and caught the creature
+by the lower jaw. It was the neatest thing I have ever seen.
+Tish came wading over to where I stood and examined the frog.
+
+"If we only had some Tartare sauce!" she said regretfully. "I
+wish you'd look at my ankle, Lizzie. There's something stuck to
+it."
+
+The something was a leech. It refused to come off, and so she
+carried both frog and leech back to the camp. Aggie said on no
+account to pull a leech off, it left its teeth in and the teeth
+went on burrowing, or laid eggs or something. One must leave it
+on until it was full and round and couldn't hold any more, and
+then it dropped off.
+
+So all night Tish kept getting up and going to the fire to see
+if it was swelling. But toward morning she fell asleep and it
+dropped off, and we had a terrible feeling that it was somewhere
+in our blankets.
+
+But the leech caused less excitement that evening than my story
+of Percy and the little girl in the white coat. Aggie was
+entranced, and Tish had made Percy a suit of rabbit skin with a
+cap to match and outlined a set of exercises to increase his
+chest measure before I was half through with my story.
+
+But Percy did not appear, although we had an idea teat he was
+not far off in the woods. We could hear a crackling in the
+undergrowth, but when we called mere was no reply. Tish was
+eating a frog's leg when the idea came to her.
+
+"He'll never come out under ordinary circumstances in that--er--
+costume," she said. "Suppose we call for help. He'll probably
+come bounding. Help!" she yelled, between bites, as one may say.
+
+"Help! Fire! Police!"
+
+"Help!" cried Aggie. "Percy, help!" It sounded like "Mercy,
+help!"
+
+It worked like a charm. The faint cracking became louder,
+nearer, turned from a suspicion to a certainty and from a
+certainty to a fact. The bushes parted and Percy stood before
+us. All he saw was three elderly women eating frogs' legs round
+a fire under a cloud of mosquitoes. He stopped, dum-founded, and
+in that instant we saw that he didn't need the physical
+exercises, but that, of course, he did need the rabbit-skin
+suit.
+
+"Great Scott!" he panted. "I thought I heard you calling for
+help."
+
+"So we did," said Tish, "but we didn't need it. Won't you sit
+down?"
+
+He looked dazed and backed toward the bushes.
+
+"I--I think," he said, "if there's nothing wrong I'd better not--
+ "
+
+"Fiddlesticks!" Tish snapped. "Are you ashamed of the body the
+Lord gave you? Don't you suppose we've all got skins? And didn't
+I thrash my nephew, Charlie Sands, when he was almost as big as
+you and had less on, for bathing in the river? Sit down, man,
+and don't be a fool."
+
+He edged toward the fire, looking rather silly, and Aggie passed
+him a frog's leg on a piece of bark.
+
+"Try this, Percy," she said, smiling.
+
+At the name he looked ready to run. "I guess you've seen the
+notices," he said, "so you'll understand I cannot accept any
+food or assistance. I'm very grateful to you, anyhow."
+
+"You may take what food you find, surely," said Aggie. "If you
+find a roasted frog's leg on the ground--so--there's nothing to
+prevent you eating it, is there?"
+
+"Nothing at all," said Percy, and picked it up. "Unless, of
+course--"
+
+"It's not a trap, young man," said Tish. "Eat it and enjoy it.
+There are lots more where it carne from."
+
+He relaxed at that, and on Tish's bringing out a blanket from
+the tent to throw over his shoulders he became almost easy. He
+was much surprised to learn that we knew his story, and when I
+repeated the "love him" message, he seemed to grow a foot taller
+and his eyes glowed.
+
+"I'm holding out all right," he said. "I'm fit physically. But
+the thing that gets my goat is that I'm to come out clothed.
+Dorothea's father says that primitive man, with nothing but his
+hands and perhaps a stone club, fed himself, made himself a
+shelter, and clothed himself in skins. Skins! I'm so big that
+two or three bears would hardly be enough. I did find a hole
+that I thought a bear or two might fall into, and got almost
+stung to death robbing a bee tree to bait the thing with honey.
+But there aren't any bears, and if there were how'd I kill 'em?
+Wait until they starve to death?"
+
+"Rabbits!" said Tish.
+
+He looked down at himself and he seemed very large in the
+firelight. "Dear lady," he said, "there aren't enough rabbits in
+the county to cover me, and how'd I put 'em together? I was a
+fool to undertake the thing, that's all."
+
+"But aren't you in love with her?" asked Aggie.
+
+"Well, I guess I am. It isn't that, you know. I'm a good bit
+worse than crazy about her. A man might be crazy about a mint
+julep or a power boat, but--he'd hardly go into the woods in his
+skin and live on fish until he's scaly for either of them. If I
+don't get her, I don't want to live. That's all."
+
+He looked so gloomy and savage that we saw he meant it, and
+Aggie was perceptibly thrilled. Trish, however, was thinking
+hard, her eyes on the leech. "Was there anything in the
+agreement to prevent your accepting any suggestions?"
+
+He pondered. "No, I was to be given no food, drink, shelter, or
+any weapon. The old man forgot fire--that's how I came to beg
+some."
+
+"Fire and brains," reflected Tish. "We've given you the first
+and we've plenty of the second to offer. Now, young man, this is
+my plan. We'll give you nothing but suggestions. If now and then
+you find a cooked meal under that tree, that's accident, not
+design, and you'd better eat it. Can you sew?"
+
+"I'm like the Irishman and the fiddle--I never tried, but I
+guess I can." He was much more cheerful.
+
+"Do you have to be alone?"
+
+"I believe he took that for granted, in this costume."
+
+"Will it take you long to move over here?"
+
+"I think I can move without a van," he said, grinning. "My sole
+worldly possessions are a stone hatchet and a hairpin fishhook."
+
+"Get them and come over," commanded Tish. "When you leave this
+forest at the end of the time you are going to be fed and
+clothed and carry a tent; you will have with you smoked meat and
+fish; you will carry under your arm an Indian clock or sundial;
+you will have a lamp--if we can find a clamshell or a broken
+bottle-- and you will have a fire-making outfit with your
+monogram on it."
+
+"But, my dear friend," he said, "I am not supposed to have any
+assistance and--"
+
+"Assistance!" Tish snapped. "Who said assistance? I'm providing
+the brains, but you'll do it all yourself."
+
+He moved over an hour or so later and Tish and I went into the
+tent to bed. Somewhat later, when she limped to the fire to see
+how the leech was filling up, he and Aggie were sitting together
+talking, he of Dorothea and Aggie of Mr. Wiggins. Tish said they
+were both talking at the same time, neither one listening to the
+other, and that it sounded like this:--"She's so sweet and
+trusting and honest--well, I'd believe what she said if she--"
+
+"--fell off a roof on a rainy day and was picked up by a man
+with a horse and buggy quite unconscious."
+
+V
+
+The next three weeks were busy times for Percy. He wore Tish's
+blanket for two days, and then, finding it in the way, he
+discarded it altogether. Seen in daylight it was easy to
+understand why little Dorothea was in love with him. He was a
+handsome young giant, although much bitten by mosquitoes and
+scratched with briers.
+
+The arrangement was a good one all round. He knew of things in
+the wood we'd never heard of--wild onions and artichokes, and he
+had found a clump of wild cherry trees. He made snares of the
+fibers of tree bark, and he brought in turtles and made plates
+out of the shells. And all the time he was working on his
+outfit, curing rabbit skins and sewing them together with fibers
+under my direction.
+
+When he'd made one sleeve of his coat we had a sort of
+celebration. He'd found an empty bottle somewhere in the woods,
+and he had made a wild-cherry decoction that he declared was
+cherry brandy, keeping it in the sun to ferment. Well, he
+insisted on opening the brandy that day and passing it round. We
+had cups made of leaves and we drank to his sleeve, although the
+stuff was villainous. He had put the sleeve on, and it looked
+rather inadequate. "Here's fun," he said joyously. "If my
+English tailor could see this sleeve he'd die of envy. A
+sleeve's not all of a coat, but what's a coat without a sleeve?
+Look at it-- grace, ease of line, and beauty of material."
+
+Aggie lifted her leaf.
+
+"To Dorothea!" she said. "And may the sleeve soon be about her."
+
+Tish thought this toast was not delicate, but Percy was
+enchanted with it.
+
+It was on the evening of the fourth day of Percy's joining our
+camp that the Willoughby person appeared. It happened at a most
+inauspicious tune. We had eaten supper and were gathered round
+the camp-fire and Tish had put wet leaves on the blaze to make a
+smudge that would drive the mosquitoes away. We were sitting
+there, Tish and I coughing and Aggie sneezing in the smoke, when
+Percy came running through the woods and stopped at the foot of
+a tree near by.
+
+"Bring a club, somebody," he yelled. "I've treed the back of my
+coat."
+
+Tish ran with one of the tent poles. A tepee is inconvenient for
+that reason. Every time any one wants a fishing-pole or a
+weapon, the tent loses part of its bony structure and sags like
+the face of a stout woman who has reduced. And it turned out
+that Percy had treed a coon. He climbed up after it, taking
+Tish's pole with him to dislodge it, and it was at that moment
+that a man rode into the clearing and practically fell off his
+horse. He was dirty and scratched with brambles, and his once
+immaculate riding- clothes were torn. He was about to take off
+his hat when he got a good look at us and changed his mind.
+
+"Have you got anything to eat?" he asked. "I've been lost since
+noon yesterday and I'm about all in."
+
+The leaves caught fire suddenly and sent a glow into Percy's
+tree. I shall never forget Aggie's agonized look or the way Tish
+flung on more wet leaves in a hurry.
+
+"I'm sorry," she said, "but supper's over."
+
+"But surely a starving man--"
+
+"You won't starve inside of a week," Tish snapped. "You've got
+enough flesh on you for a month."
+
+He stared at her incredulously.
+
+"But, my good woman," he said, "I can pay for my food. Even you
+itinerant folk need money now and then, don't you? Come, now,
+cook me a fish; I'll pay for it. My name is Willoughby--J. K.
+Willoughby. Perhaps you've heard of me."
+
+Tish cast a swift glance into the tree. It was in shadow again
+and she drew a long breath. She said afterward that the whole
+plan came to her in the instant of that breath.
+
+"We can give you something," she said indifferently. "We have a
+stewed rabbit, if you care for it."
+
+There was a wild scramble in the tree at that moment, and we
+thought all was over. We learned later that Percy had made a
+move to climb higher, out of the firelight, and the coon bad
+been so startled that he almost fell out. But instead of looking
+up to investigate, the stranger backed toward the fire.
+
+"Only a wildcat," said Tish. "They'll not come near the fire."
+
+"Near!" exclaimed Mr. Willoughby. "If they came any nearer,
+they'd have to get into it!"
+
+"I think," said Tish, "that if you are afraid or them--although
+you are safe enough if you don't get under the trees; they jump
+down, you know--that you would better stay by the fire to-night.
+In the morning we'll start you toward a road."
+
+All night with Percy in the tree! I gave her a savage glance,
+but she ignored me.
+
+The Willoughby looked up nervously, and of course there were
+trees all about.
+
+"I guess I'll stay," he agreed. "What about that rabbit?"
+
+I did not know Tish's plan at that time, and while Aggie was
+feeding the Willoughby person and he was grumbling over his
+food, I took Tish aside.
+
+"Are you crazy?" I demanded. "Just through your idiocy Percy
+will have to stay in that tree all night--and he'll go to sleep,
+likely, and fall out."
+
+Tish eyed me coldly.
+
+"You are a good soul, Lizzie," she observed, "but don't overwork
+your mind. Go back and do something easy--let the Willoughby
+cross your palm with silver, and tell his fortune. If he asks
+any questions I'm queen of the gypsies, and give him to
+understand that we're in temporary hiding from the law. The
+worse he thinks of us the better. Remember, we haven't seen
+Percy."
+
+"I'm not going to lie," I said sternly.
+
+"Pooh!" Tish sneered. "That wretch came into the woods to gloat
+over his rival's misery. The truth's too good for him."
+
+I did my best, and I still have the silver dollar he gave me. I
+told him I saw a small girl, who loved him but didn't realize it
+yet, and there was another man.
+
+"Good gracious," I said, "there must be something wrong with
+your palm. I see the other man, but he seems to be in trouble.
+His clothing has been stolen, for he has none, and he is hungry,
+very hungry."
+
+"Ha!" said Mr. Willoughby, looking startled. "You old gypsies
+beat the devil! Hungry, eh? Is that all?"
+
+The light flared up again and I could see clearly the pale spot
+in the tree, which was Percy. But Mr. Willoughby's eyes were on
+his palm.
+
+"He has about decided to give up something--I cannot see just
+what," I said loudly. "He seems to be in the air, in a tree,
+perhaps. If he wishes to be safe he should go higher."
+
+Percy took the hint and moved up, and I said that was all there
+was in the palm. Soon after that Mr. Willoughby stretched out on
+the ground by the fire, and before long he was asleep.
+
+During the night I heard Tish moving stealthily about in the
+tepee and she stepped on my ankle as she went out. I fell asleep
+again as soon as it stopped aching. Just at dawn Tish came back
+and touched me on the shoulder.
+
+"Where's the blackberry cordial?" she whispered I sat up
+instantly.
+
+"Has Percy fallen out of the tree?"
+
+"No. Don't ask any questions, Lizzie. I want it for myself. That
+dratted horse fell on me."
+
+She refused to say any more and lay down groaning. But I was too
+worried to sleep again. In the morning Percy was gone from the
+tree. Mr. Willoughby had more rabbit and prepared to leave the
+forest. He offered Tish a dollar for the two meals and a bed,
+and Tish, who was moving about stiffly, said that she and her
+people took no money for their Hospitality. Telling fortunes was
+one thing, bread and salt was another. She looked quite haughty,
+and the Willoughby person apologized and went into the woods to
+get his horse.
+
+The horse was gone!
+
+It was rather disagreeable for a time. He plainly thought we'd
+taken it, although Tish showed him that the end of the strap had
+been chewed partly through and then jerked free.
+
+"If the creature smelled a wildcat," she said, "nothing would
+hold it. None of my people ever bring a horse into this part of
+the country."
+
+"Humph!" said Mr. Willoughby. "Well, I'll bet they take a few
+out!"
+
+He departed on foot shortly after, very disgusted and
+suspicious. We showed him the trail, and the last we saw of him
+he was striding along, looking up now and then for wildcats.
+
+When he was well on his way, Percy emerged from the bushes. I
+had thought that he had helped Tish to take the Willoughby
+horse, but it seems he had not, and he was much amazed when Tish
+came through the wood leading the creature by the broken strap.
+
+"I'll turn it loose," she said to Percy, "and you can capture
+it. It will make a good effect for you to emerge from the forest
+on horseback, and anyhow, what with the rabbit skin, the tent,
+and the sundial and the other things, you have a lot to carry.
+You can say you found it straying in the woods and captured it."
+
+Percy looked at her with admiration not unmixed with reverence.
+"Miss Letitia," he said solemnly, "if it were not for Dorothea,
+I should ask you to marry me. I'd like to have you in my
+family."
+
+
+I am very nearly to the end of my narrative.
+
+Toward the last Percy was obliged to work far into the night,
+for of course we could not assist him. He made a full suit of
+rabbit skins sewed with fibers, and a cap and shoes of coonskin
+to match. The shoes were cut from a bedroom-slipper pattern that
+Tish traced in the sand on the beach, and the cap had an eagle
+feather in it. He made a birch-bark knapsack to hold the fish he
+smoked and a bow and arrow that looked well but would not shoot.
+When he had the outfit completed, he put it on, with the stone
+hatchet stuck into a grapevine belt and the bow and arrow over
+his shoulder, and he looked superb.
+
+"The question is," he reflected, trying to view himself in the
+edge of the lake: "Will Dorothea like it? She's very keen about
+clothes. And gee, how she hates a beard!"
+
+"You could shave as the Indians do," Tish said.
+
+"How?"
+
+"With a clamshell."
+
+He looked dubious, but Tish assured him it was feasible. So he
+hunted a clamshell, a double one, Tish requested, and brought it
+into camp.
+
+"I'd better do it for you," said Tish. "It's likely to be slow,
+but it is sure."
+
+He was eyeing the clamshell and looking more and snore uneasy.
+
+"You're not going to scrape it off?" he asked anxiously. "You
+know, pumice would be better for that, but somehow I don't like
+the idea."
+
+"Nothing of the sort," said Tish. "The double clamshell merely
+forms a pair of Indian nippers. I'm going to pull it out."
+
+But he made quite a fuss about it, and said he didn't care
+whether the Indians did it or not, he wouldn't. I think he saw
+how disappointed Tish was and was afraid she would attempt it
+while he slept, for he threw the Indian nippers into the lake
+and then went over and kissed her hand.
+
+"Dear Miss Tish," he said; "no one realizes more than I your
+inherent nobility of soul and steadfastness of purpose. I admire
+them both. But if you attempt the Indian nipper business, or to
+singe me like a chicken while I sleep, I shall be--forgive me,
+but I know my impulsiveness of disposition--I shall be really
+vexed with you."
+
+Toward the last we all became uneasy for fear hard work was
+telling on him physically. He used to sit cross- legged on the
+ground, sewing for dear life and singing Hood's "Song of the
+Shirt" in a doleful tenor.
+
+"You know," he said, "I've thought once or twice I'd like to do
+something--have a business like other fellows. But somehow
+dressmaking never occurred to me. Don't you think the expression
+of this right pant is good? And shall I make this gore bias or
+on the selvage?"
+
+He wanted to slash one trouser leg.
+
+"Why not?" he demanded when Tish frowned him down. "It's awfully
+fetching, and beauty half-revealed, you know. Do you suppose my
+breastbone will ever straighten out again? It's concave from
+stooping."
+
+It was after this that Tish made him exercise morning and
+evening and then take a swim in the lake. By the time he was to
+start back, he was in wonderful condition, and even the horse
+looked saucy and shiny, owing to our rubbing him down each day
+with dried grasses.
+
+The actual leave-taking was rather sad. We'd grown to think a
+lot of the boy and I believe he liked us. He kissed each one of
+us twice, once for himself and once for Dorothea, and flushed a
+little over doing it, and Aggie's eyes were full of tears.
+
+He rode away down the trail like a mixture of Robinson Crusoe
+and Indian brave, his rubbing-fire stick, his sundial with
+burned figures, and his bow and arrow jingling, his eagle
+feather blowing back in the wind, and his moccasined feet thrust
+into Mr. Willoughby's stirrups, and left us desolate. Tish
+watched him out of sight with set lips and Aggie was whimpering
+on a bank.
+
+"Tish," she said brokenly, "does he recall anything to you?"
+
+"Only my age," said Tish rather wearily, "and that I'm an
+elderly spinster teaching children to defy their parents and
+committing larceny to help them."
+
+"To me," said Aggie softly, "he is young love going out to seek
+his mate. Oh, Tish, do you remember how Mr. Wiggins used to ride
+by taking his work horses to be shod!"
+
+
+We went home the following day, which was the time the spring-
+wagon man was to meet us. We started very early and were
+properly clothed and hatted when we saw him down the road.
+
+The spring- wagon person came on without hurry and surveyed us
+as he came.
+
+"Well, ladies," he said, stopping before us, "I see you pulled
+it off all right."
+
+"We've had a very nice time, thank you," said Tish, drawing on
+her gloves. "It's been rather lonely, of course."
+
+The spring-wagon person did not speak again until he had reached
+the open road. Then he turned round.
+
+"The horse business was pretty good," he said. "You ought to hev
+seen them folks when he rode out of the wood. Flabbergasted
+ain't the word. The was ding-busted."
+
+Tish whispered to us to show moderate interest and to say as
+little as possible, except to protest our ignorance. And we got
+the story at last like this:--
+
+It seems the newspapers had been full of the attempt Percy was
+to make, and so on the day before quite a crowd had gathered to
+see him come out of the wood.
+
+"Ten of these here automobiles," said the spring-wagon person,
+"and a hay-wagon full of newspaper fellows from the city with
+cameras, and about half the village back home walked out or druv
+and brought their lunches--sort of a picnic. I kep' my eye on
+the girl and on a Mr. Willoughby.
+
+"The story is that Willoughby who was the father's choice--
+Willoughby was pale and twitching and kep' moving about all the
+time. But the girl, she just kep' her eyes on the trail and
+waited. Noon was the time set, or as near it as possible.
+
+"The father talked to the newspaper men mostly. 'I don't think
+he'll do it, boys!' he said. 'He's as soft as milk and he's
+surprised me by sticking it out as long as he has. But mark my
+words, boys,' he said, 'he's been living on berries and things
+he could pick up off the ground, and if his physical condition's
+bad he loses all bets!"
+
+"It seems that, just as he said it, somebody pulled out a watch
+and announced "noon." And on the instant Percy was seen riding
+down the trail and whistling. At first they did not know it was
+he, as they lead expected him to arrive on foot, staggering with
+fatigue probably. He rode out into the sunlight, still
+whistling, and threw an unconcerned glance over the crowd.
+
+He looked at the trees, and located north by the moss on the
+trunks, the S.-W. P. said, and unslinging his Indian clock he
+held it in front of him, pointing north and south. It showed
+exactly noon. It was then, and not until then, that Percy
+addressed the astonished crowd.
+
+"Twelve o'clock, gentlemen," he said. "My watch is quite
+accurate."
+
+Nobody said anything, being, as the S.-W. P. remarked, struck
+dumb. But a moment afterward the hay-wagon started a cheer and
+the machines took it up. Even the father "let loose," as we
+learned, and the little girl sat back in her motor car and
+smiled through her tears.
+
+But Willoughby was furious. It seems he had recognized the
+horse. "That's my horse," he snarled. "You stole it from me."
+
+"As a matter of fact," Percy retorted, "I found the beast
+wandering loose among the trees and I'm perfectly willing to
+return him to you. I brought him out for a purpose."
+
+"To make a Garrison finish!"
+
+"Not entirely. To prove that you violated the contract by going
+into the forest to see if you could find me and gloat over my
+misery. Instead you found--By the way, Willoughby, did you see
+any wild-cats?"
+
+"Those three hags are in this!" said Willoughby furiously. "Are
+you willing to swear you made that silly outfit?"
+
+"I am, but not to you."
+
+"And at that minute, if you'll believe me," said the S.-W. P.,
+"the girl got out of her machine and walked right up to the
+Percy fellow. I was standing right by and I heard what she said.
+It was, curious, seeing he'd had no help and had gone in naked,
+as you may say, and came out clothed head to foot, with a horse
+and weapons and a watch, and able to make fire in thirty-one
+seconds, and a tent made of about a thousand rabbit skins."
+
+Tish eyed him coldly.
+
+"What did she say?" she demanded severely. "She said: 'Those
+three dear old things!'" replied the S.-W. P. "And she said: 'I
+hope you kissed them for me.'"
+
+"He did indeed," said Aggie dreamily, and only roused when Tish
+nudged her in a rage.
+
+
+Charlie Sands came to have tea with us yesterday at Tish's. He
+is just back from England and full of the subject.
+
+"But after all," he said, "the Simple Lifers take the palm.
+Think of it, my three revered and dearly beloved spinster
+friends; think of the peace, the holy calm of it! Now, if you
+three would only drink less tea and once in a while would get
+back to Nature a bit, it would be good for you. You're all too
+civilized."
+
+"Probably," said Tish, pulling down her sleeves to hide her
+sunburned hands. "But do you think people have so much time in
+the--er--woods?"
+
+"Time!" he repeated. "Why, what is there to do?"
+
+Just then the doorbell rang and a huge box was carried in. Tish
+had a warning and did not wish to open it, but Charlie Sands
+insisted and cut the string. Inside were three sets of sable
+furs, handsomer than any in the church, Tish says, and I know
+I've never seen any like them.
+
+Tish and I hid the cards, but Aggie dropped her, and Charlie
+Sands pounced on it.
+
+"'The sleeve is now about Dorothea,'" he read aloud, and then,
+turning, eyed us all sternly.
+
+"Now, then," said Charlie Sands, "out with it! What have you
+been up to this time?"
+
+Tish returned his gaze calmly. "We have been in the Maine woods
+in the holy calm," she said. "As for those furs, I suppose a
+body may buy a set of furs if she likes." This, of course, was
+not a lie. "As for that card, it's a mistake." Which it was
+indeed.
+
+"But--Dorothea!" persisted Charlie Sands.
+
+"Never in my life knew anybody named Dorothea. Did you, Aggie?"
+
+"Never," said Aggie firmly.
+
+Charlie Sands apologized and looked thoughtful. On Tish's
+remaining rather injured, he asked us all out to dinner that
+night, and almost the first thing he ordered was frogs' legs.
+Aggie got rather white about the lips.
+
+"I--I think I'll not take any," she said feebly. "I--I keep
+thinking of Tish tickling their throats with the hairpin, and
+how Percy--"
+
+We glared at her, but it was too late. Charlie Sands drew up his
+chair and rested his elbows on the table.
+
+"So there was a Percy as well as a Dorothea!" he said
+cheerfully. "I might have known it. Now we'll have the story!"
+
+
+
+TISH'S SPY
+
+The Adventure of the Red-Headed Detective, the Lady Chauffeur,
+and the Man Who Could Not Tell the Truth
+
+I
+
+It is easy enough, of course, to look back on our Canadian
+experience and see where we went wrong. What I particularly
+resent is the attitude of Charlie Sands.
+
+I am writing this for his benefit. It seems to me that a clean
+statement of the case is due to Tish, and, in less degree, to
+Aggie and myself.
+
+It goes back long before the mysterious cipher. Even the
+incident of our abducting the girl in the pink tam-o'-shanter
+was, after all, the inevitable result of the series of
+occurrences that preceded it.
+
+It is my intention to give this series of occurrences in their
+proper order and without bias. Herbert Spencer says that every
+act of one's life is the unavoidable result of every act that
+has preceded it.
+
+Naturally, therefore, I begin with the engagement by Tish of a
+girl as chauffeur; but even before that there were contributing
+causes. There was the faulty rearing of the McDonald youth, for
+instance, and Tish's aesthetic dancing. And afterward there was
+Aggie's hay fever, which made her sneeze and let go of a rope at
+a critical moment. Indeed, Aggie's hay fever may be said to be
+one of the fundamental causes, being the reason we went to
+Canada.
+
+It was like this: Along in June of the year before last, Aggie
+suddenly announced that she was going to spend the summer in
+Canada.
+
+"It's the best thing in the world for hay fever," she said,
+avoiding Tish's eye. "Mrs. Ostermaier says she never sneezed
+once last year. The Northern Lights fill the air with ozone, or
+something like that."
+
+"Fill the air with ozone!" Tish scoffed. "Fill Mrs. Ostermaier's
+skull with ozone, instead of brains, more likely!"
+
+Tish is a good woman--a sweet woman, indeed; but she has a vein
+of gentle irony, which she inherited from her maternal
+grandfather, who was on the Supreme Bench of his country.
+However, that spring she was inclined to be irritable. She could
+not drive her car, and that was where the trouble really
+started.
+
+Tish had taken up aesthetic dancing in Mareb, wearing no stays
+and a middy blouse and short skirt; and during a fairy dance,
+where she was to twirl on her right toes, keeping the three
+other limbs horizontal, she twisted her right lower limb
+severely. Though not incapacitated, she could not use it
+properly; and, failing one day to put on the brake quickly, she
+drove into an open-front butter-and-egg shop.
+
+[This was the time one of the newspapers headed the article:
+"Even the Eggs Scrambled."]
+
+When Tish decided to have a chauffeur for a time she advertised.
+There were plenty of replies, but all of the applicants smoked
+cigarettes--a habit Tish very properly deplores. The idea of
+securing a young woman was, I must confess, mine.
+
+"Plenty of young women drive cars," I said, "and drive well.
+And, at least, they don't light a cigarette every time one stops
+to let a train go by."
+
+"Huh!" Tish commented. "And have a raft of men about all the
+time!"
+
+Nevertheless, she acted on the suggestion, advertising for a
+young woman who could drive a car and had no followers. Hutchins
+answered.
+
+She was very pretty and not over twenty; but, asked about men,
+her face underwent a change, almost a hardening. "You'll not be
+bothered with men," she said briefly. "I detest them!"
+
+And this seemed to be the truth. Charlie Sands, for instance,
+for whose benefit this is being written, absolutely failed to
+make any impression on her. She met his overtures with cold
+disdain. She was also adamant to the men at the garage,
+succeeding in having the gasoline filtered through a chamois
+skim to take out the water, where Tish had for years begged for
+the same thing without success.
+
+Though a dashing driver, Hutchins was careful. She sat on the
+small of her back and hurled us past the traffic policemen with
+a smile.
+
+[Her name was really Hutchinson; but it took so long to say it
+at the rate she ran the car that Tish changed it to Hutchins.]
+
+Really the whole experiment seemed to be an undoubted success,
+when Aggie got the notion of Canada into her head. Now, as it
+happened, owing to Tish's disapproval, Aggie gave up the Canada
+idea in favor of Nantucket, some time in June; but she had not
+reckoned with Tish's subconscious self. Tish was interested that
+spring in the subconscious self.
+
+You may remember that, only a year or so before, it had been the
+fourth dimension.
+
+[She became convinced that if one were sufficiently earnest one
+could go through closed doors and see into solids. In the former
+ambition she was unsuccessful, obtaining only bruises and
+disappointment; but she did develop the latter to a certain
+extent, for she met the laundress going out one day and, without
+a conscious effort, she knew that she had the best table napkins
+pinned to her petticoat. She accused the woman sternly--and she
+had six!]
+
+"Nantucket!" said Tish. "Why Nantucket?"
+
+"I have a niece there, and you said you hated Canada."
+
+"On the contrary," Tish replied, with her eyes partly shut, "I
+find that my subconscious self has adopted and been working on
+the Canadian suggestion. What a wonderful thing is this buried
+and greater ego! Worms, rifles, fishing-rods, 'The Complete
+Angler,' mosquito netting, canned goods, and sleeping-bags, all
+in my mind and in orderly array!"
+
+"Worms!" I said, with, I confess, a touch of scorn in my voice.
+"If you will tell me, Tish Carberry--"
+
+"Life preservers," chanted Tish's subconscious self, "rubber
+blankets, small tent, folding camp-beds, a camp-stove, a meat-
+saw, a wood-saw, and some beads and gewgaws for placating the
+Indians." Then she opened her eyes and took up her knitting.
+"There are no worms in Canada, Lizzie, just as there are no
+snakes in Ireland. They were all destroyed during the glacial
+period."
+
+"There are plenty of worms in the United States," I said with
+spirit. "I dare say they could crawl over the border--unless, of
+course, they object to being British subjects."
+
+She ignored me, however, and, getting up, went to one of her
+bureau drawers. We saw then that her subconscious self had
+written down lists of various things for the Canadian excursion.
+There was one headed Foodstuffs. Others were: Necessary
+Clothing: Camp Outfit; Fishing-Tackle; Weapons of Defense: and
+Diversions. Under this last heading it had placed binoculars,
+yarn and needles, life preservers, a prayer-book, and a cribbage-
+ board.
+
+"Boats," she said, "we can secure from the Indians, who make
+them, I believe, of hollow logs. And I shall rent a motor boat.
+Hutchins says she can manage one. When she's not doing that she
+can wash dishes."
+
+[We had been rather chary of motor boats, you may remember,
+since the time on Lake Penzance, when something jammed on our
+engine, and we had gone madly round the lake a number of times,
+with people on various docks trying to lasso us with ropes.]
+
+Considering that it was she who had started the whole thing, and
+got Tish's subconscious mind to working, Aggie was rather
+pettish.
+
+"Huh!" she said. "I can't swim, and you know it, Tish. Those
+canoe things turn over if you so much as sneeze in them."
+
+"You'll not sneeze," said Tish. "The Northern Lights fill the
+air with ozone."
+
+Aggie looked at me helplessly; but I could do nothing. Only the
+year before, Tish, as you may recall, had taken us out into the
+Maine woods without any outfit at all, and we had lived on
+snared rabbits, and things that no Christian woman ought to put
+into her stomach. This time we were at least to go provisioned
+and equipped.
+
+"Where are we going?" Aggie asked.
+
+"Far from a white man," said Tish. "Away from milk wagons and
+children on velocipedes and the grocer calling up every morning
+for an order. We'll go to the Far North, Aggie, where the red
+man still treads his native forests; we'll make our camp by some
+lake, where the deer come at early morning to drink and fish
+leap to see the sunset."
+
+Well, it sounded rather refreshing, though I confess that, until
+Tish mentioned it, I had always thought that fish leaped in the
+evening to catch mosquitoes.
+
+We sent for Hutchins at once. She was always respectful, but
+never subservient. She stood in the doorway while Tish
+explained.
+
+"How far north?" she said crisply. Tish told her. "We'll have no
+cut-and-dried destination," she said. "There's a little steamer
+goes up the river I have in mind. We'll get off when we see a
+likely place."
+
+"Are you going for trout or bass?"
+
+Tish was rather uncertain, but she said bass on a chance, and
+Hutchins nodded her approval.
+
+"If it's bass, I'll go," she said. "I'm not fond of trout-
+fishing."
+
+"We shall have a motor boat. Of course I shall not take the
+car."
+
+Hutchins agreed indifferently. "Don't you worry about the motor
+boat," she said. "Sometimes they go, and sometimes they don't.
+And I'll help round the camp; but I'll not wash dishes."
+
+"Why not?" Tish demanded.
+
+"The reason doesn't really matter, does it? What really concerns
+you is the fact."
+
+Tish stared at her; but instead of quailing before Tish's
+majestic eye she laughed a little.
+
+"I've camped before," she said. "I'm very useful about a camp. I
+like to cook; but I won't wash dishes. I'd like, if you don't
+mind, to see the grocery order before it goes."
+
+Well, Aggie likes to wash dishes if there is plenty of hot
+water; and Hannah, Tish's maid, refusing to go with us on
+account of Indians, it seemed wisest to accept Hutchins's
+services.
+
+Hannah's defection was most unexpected. As soon as we reached
+our decision, Tish ordered beads for the Indians; and in the
+evenings we strung necklaces, and so on, while one of us read
+aloud from the works of Cooper. On the second evening thus
+occupied, Hannah, who is allowed to come into Tish's sitting-
+room in the evening and knit, suddenly burst into tears and
+refused to go.
+
+"My scalp's as good to me as it is to anybody, Miss Tish," she
+said hysterically; and nothing would move her.
+
+She said she would run no risk of being cooked over her own camp-
+ fire; and from that time on she would gaze at Tish for long
+periods mournfully, as though she wanted to remember how she
+looked when she was gone forever.
+
+Except for Hannah, everything moved smoothly. Tish told Charlie
+Sands about the plan, and he was quite enthusiastic.
+
+"Great scheme!" he said. "Eat a broiled black bass for me. And
+take the advice of one who knows: don't skimp on your fishing-
+tackle. Get the best. Go light on the canned goods, if
+necessary; but get the best reels and lines on the market.
+Nothing in life hurts so much," he said impressively, "as to get
+a three-pound bass to the top of the water and have your line
+break. I've had a big fellow get away like that and chase me a
+mile with its thumb on its nose." This last, of course, was
+purely figurative.
+
+He went away whistling. I wish he had been less optimistic. When
+we came back and told him the whole story, and he sat with his
+mouth open and his hair, as he said, crackling at the roots, I
+reminded him with some bitterness that he had encouraged us. His
+only retort was to say that the excursion itself had been
+harmless enough; but that if three elderly ladies, church
+members in good standing, chose to become freebooters and
+pirates the moment they got away from a corner policeman, they
+need not blame him.
+
+The last thing he said that day in June was about fishing-worms.
+
+"Take 'em with you," he said. "They charge a cent apiece for
+them up there, assorted colors, and there's something stolid and
+British about a Canadian worm. The fish aren't crazy about 'em.
+On the other hand, our worms here are--er--vivacious, animated.
+I've seen a really brisk and on-to-its-job United States worm
+reach out and clutch a bass by the gills."
+
+I believe it was the next day that Tish went to the library and
+read about worms. Aggie and I had spent the day buying tackle,
+according to Charlie Sands's advice. We got some very good rods
+with nickel-plated reels for two dollars and a quarter, a dozen
+assorted hooks for each person, and a dozen sinkers. The man
+wanted to sell us what he called a "landing net," but I took a
+good look at it and pinched Aggie.
+
+"I can make one out of a barrel hoop and mosquito netting," I
+whispered; so we did not buy it.
+
+Perhaps he thought we were novices, for he insisted on showing
+us all sorts of absurd things--trolling- hooks, he called them;
+gaff hooks for landing big fish and a spoon that was certainly
+no spoon and did not fool us for a minute, being only a few
+hooks and a red feather. He asked a dollar and a quarter for it!
+
+[I made one that night at home, using a bit of red feather from
+a duster. It cost me just three cents. Of that, as of Hutchins,
+more later.]
+
+Aggie, whose idea of Canada had been the Hotel Frontenac, had
+grown rather depressed as our preparations proceeded. She
+insisted that night on recalling the fact that Mr. Wiggins had
+been almost drowned in Canada.
+
+"He went with the Roof and Gutter Club, Lizzie," she said, "and
+he was a beautiful swimmer; but the water comes from the North
+Pole, freezing cold, and the first thing he knew--"
+
+The telephone bell rang just then. It was Tish.
+
+"I've just come from the library, Lizzie," she said. "We'd
+better raise the worms. We've got a month to do it in. Hutchins
+and I will be round with the car at eight o'clock to-night.
+Night is the time to get them."
+
+She refused to go into details, but asked us to have an electric
+flash or two ready and a couple of wooden pails. Also she said
+to wear mackintoshes and rubbers. Just before she rang off, she
+asked me to see that there was a package of oatmeal on hand, but
+did not explain. When I told Aggie she eyed me miserably.
+
+"I wish she'd be either more explicit or less," she said. "We'll
+be arrested again. I know it!"
+
+[Now and then Tish's enthusiasms have brought us into collision
+with the law--not that Tish has not every respect for law and
+order, but that she is apt to be hasty and at times almost
+unconventional.]
+
+"You remember," said Aggie, "that time she tried to shoot the
+sheriff, thinking he was a train robber? She started just like
+this--reading up about walking-tours, and all that. I--I'm
+nervous, Lizzie."
+
+I was staying with Aggie for a few days while my apartment was
+being papered. To soothe Aggie's nerves I read aloud from
+Gibbon's "Rome" until dinner-time, and she grew gradually
+calmer.
+
+"After all, Lizzie," she said, "she can't get us into mischief
+with two wooden pails and a package of oatmeal."
+
+Tish and Hutchins came promptly at eight and we got into the
+car. Tish wore the intent and dreamy look that always preceded
+her enterprises. There was a tin sprinkling-can, quite new, in
+the tonneau, and we placed our wooden pails beside it and the
+oatmeal in it. I confess I was curious, but to my inquiries Tish
+made only one reply:--
+
+"Worms!"
+
+Now I do not like worms. I do not like to touch them. I do not
+even like to look at them. As the machine went along I began to
+have a creepy loathing of them. Aggie must have been feeling the
+same way, for when my hand touched hers she squealed.
+
+Over her shoulder Tish told her plan. She said it was easy to
+get fishing-worms at night and that Hutchins knew of a place a
+few miles out of town where the family was away and where there
+would be plenty.
+
+"We'll put them in boxes of earth," she said, "and feed them
+coffee or tea grounds one day and oatmeal water the next. They
+propagate rapidly. We'll have a million to take with us. If we
+only have a hundred thousand at a cent apiece, that's a clear
+saving of a thousand dollars."
+
+"We could sell some," I suggested sarcastically; for Tish's
+enthusiasms have a way of going wrong.
+
+But she took me seriously. "If there are any fishing clubs
+about," she said, "I dare say they'll buy them; and we can turn
+the money over to Mr. Ostermaier for the new organ."
+
+Tish had bought the organ and had an evening concert with it
+before we turned off the main road into a private drive.
+
+"This is the place," Hutchins said laconically.
+
+Tish got out and took a survey. There was shrubbery all round
+and a very large house, quite dark, in the foreground.
+
+"Drive onto the lawn, Hutchins," she said. "When the worms come
+up, the lamps will dazzle them and they'll be easy to capture."
+
+We bumped over a gutter and came to a stop in the middle of the
+lawn.
+
+"It would be better if it was raining," Tish said. "You know,
+yourself, Lizzie, how they come up during a gentle rain. Give me
+the sprinkling-can."
+
+I do not wish to lay undue blame on Hutchins, who was young; but
+it was she who suggested that there would probably be a garden
+hose somewhere and that it would save time. I know she went with
+Tish round the corner of the house, and that they returned in
+ten minutes or so, dragging a hose.
+
+"I broke a tool-house window," Tish observed, "but I left fifty
+cents on the sill to replace it. It's attached at the other end.
+Run back, Hutchins, and turn on the water; but not too much. We
+needn't drown the little creatures."
+
+Well, I have never seen anything work better. Aggie, who had
+refused to put a foot out of the car, stood up in it and held
+the hose. As fast as she wet a bit of lawn, we followed with the
+pails. I spread my mackintosh out and knelt on it.
+
+The thing took skill. The worms had a way of snapping back into
+their holes like lightning.
+
+Tish got about three to my one, and talked about packing them in
+moss and ice, and feeding them every other day. Hutchins,
+however, stood on the lawn, with her hands in her pockets, and
+watched the house.
+
+Suddenly, without warning, Aggie turned the hose directly on my
+left ear and held it there.
+
+"There's somebody coming!" she cried. "Merciful Heavens, what'll
+I do with the hose?"
+
+"You can turn it away from me!" I snapped.
+
+So she did, and at that instant a young man emerged from the
+shrubbery.
+
+He did not speak at once. Probably he could not. I happened to
+look at Hutchins, and, for all her usual savoir-faire, as
+Charlie Sands called it, she was clearly uncomfortable.
+
+Tish, engaged in a struggle at that moment and sitting back like
+a robin, did not see him at once.
+
+"Well!" said the young man; and again: "Well, upon my word!"
+
+He seemed out of breath with surprise; and he took off his hat
+and mopped his head with a handkerchief. And, of course, as
+though things were not already bad enough, Aggie sneezed at that
+instant, as she always does when she is excited; and for just a
+second the hose was on him.
+
+It was unexpected and he almost staggered. He looked at all of
+us, including Hutchins, and ran his handkerchief round inside
+his collar. Then he found his voice.
+
+"Really," he said, "this is awfully good of you. We do need rain-
+ - don't we?"
+
+Tish was on her feet by that time, but she could not think of
+anything to say.
+
+"I'm sorry if I startled you," said the young man. "I--I'm a bit
+startled myself."
+
+"There is nothing to make a fuss about!" said Hutchins crisply.
+"We are getting worms to go fishing."
+
+"I see," said the young man. "Quite natural, I'm sure. And where
+are you going fishing?"
+
+Hutchins surprised us all by rudely turning her back on him.
+Considering we were on his property and had turned his own hose
+on him, a little tact would have been better.
+
+Tish had found her voice by that time. "We broke a window in the
+tool- house," she said; "but I put fifty cents on the sill."
+
+"Thank you," said the young man.
+
+Hutchins wheeled at that and stared at him in the most
+disagreeable fashion; but he ignored her.
+
+"We are trespassing," said Tish; "but I hope you understand. We
+thought the family was away."
+
+"I just happened to be passing through," he explained. "I'm
+awfully attached to the place--for various reasons. Whenever I'm
+in town I spend my evenings wandering through the shrubbery and
+remembering--er--happier days."
+
+"I think the lamps are going out," said Hutchins sharply. "If
+we're to get back to town--"
+
+"Ah!" he broke in. "So you have come out from the city?"
+
+"Surely," said Hutchins to Tish, "it is unnecessary to give this
+gentleman any information about ourselves! We have done no
+damage- -"
+
+"Except the window," he said.
+
+"We've paid for that," she said in a nasty tone; and to Tish:
+"How do we know this place is his? He's probably some newspaper
+man, and if you tell him who you are this whole thing will be in
+the morning paper, like the eggs."
+
+"I give you my word of honor," he said, "that I am nothing of
+the sort; in fact, if you will give me a little time I'd--I'd
+like to tell all about myself. I've got a lot to say that's
+highly interesting, if you'll only listen."
+
+Hutchins, however, only gave him a cold glance of suspicion and
+put the pails in the car. Then she got in and sat down.
+
+"I take it," he said to her, "that you decline either to give or
+to receive any information."
+
+"Absolutely!"
+
+He sighed then, Aggie declares.
+
+"Of course," he said, "though I haven't really the slightest
+curiosity, I could easily find out, you know. Your license
+plates- -"
+
+"Are under the cushion I'm sitting on," said Hutchins, and
+started the engine.
+
+"Really, Hutchins," said Tish, "I don't see any reason for being
+so suspicious. I have always believed in human nature and seldom
+have I been disappointed. The young man has done nothing to
+justify rudeness. And since we are trespassing on his place--"
+
+"Huh!" was all Hutchins said.
+
+The young man sauntered over to the car, with his hands thrust
+into this coat pockets. He was nice-looking, especially then,
+when he was smiling.
+
+"Hutchins!" he said. "Well, that's a clue anyhow. It--it's an
+uncommon name. You didn't happen to notice a large 'No-
+Trespassing!' sign by the gate, did you?"
+
+Hutchins only looked ahead and ignored him. As Tish said
+afterward, we had a good many worms, anyhow; and, as the young
+man and Hutchins had clearly taken an awful dislike to each
+other at first sight, the best way to avoid trouble was to go
+home. So she got into the car. The young man helped her and took
+off his hat.
+
+"Come out any time you like," he said affably. "I'm not here at
+all in the daytime, and the grounds are really rather nice. Come
+out and get some roses. We've some pretty good ones--English
+importations. If you care to bring some children from the
+tenements out for a picnic, please feel free to do it. We're not
+selfish."
+
+Hutchins rudely started the car before he had finished; but he
+ignored her and waved a cordial farewell to the rest of us.
+
+"Bring as many as you like," he called. "Sunday is a good day.
+Ask Miss--Miss Hutchins to come out and bring some friends
+along."
+
+We drove back at the most furious rate. Tish was at last
+compelled to remonstrate with Hutchins.
+
+"Not only are we going too fast," she said, "but you were really
+rude to that nice young man."
+
+"I wish I had turned the hose on him and drowned him!" said
+Hutchins between her teeth.
+
+
+II
+
+Hutchins brought a newspaper to Tish the next morning at
+breakfast, and Tish afterwards said her expression was
+positively malevolent in such a young and pretty woman.
+
+The newspaper said that an attempt had beer made to rob the
+Newcomb place the night before, but that the thieves had
+apparently secured nothing but a package of oatmeal and a tin
+sprinkling-can, which they had abandoned on the lawn. Some
+color, however, was lent to the fear that they had secured an
+amount of money, from the fact that a silver half-dollar had
+been found on the window sill of a tool-house. The Newcomb
+family was at its summer home on the Maine coast.
+
+"You see," Hutchins said to Tish, "that man didn't belong there
+at all. He was just impertinent and--laughing in his sleeve."
+
+Tish was really awfully put out, having planned to take the
+Sunday school there for a picnic. She was much pleased, however,
+at Hutchins's astuteness.
+
+"I shall take her along to Canada," she said to me. "The girl
+has instinct, which is better than reason. Her subconsciousness
+is unusually active."
+
+Looking back, as I must, and knowing now all that was in her
+small head while she whistled about the car, or all that was
+behind her smile, one wonders if women really should have the
+vote. So many of them are creatures of sex and guile. A word
+from her would have cleared up so much, and she never spoke it!
+
+Well, we spent most of July in getting ready to go. Charlie
+Sands said the mosquitoes and black flies would be gone by
+August, and we were in no hurry.
+
+We bought a good tent, with a diagram of how to put it up, some
+folding camp-beds, and a stove. The day we bought the tent we
+had rather a shock, for as we left the shop the suburban youth
+passed us. We ignored him completely, but he lifted his hat.
+Hutchins, who was waiting in Tish's car, saw him, too, and went
+quite white with fury.
+
+Shortly after that, Hannah came in one night and said that a man
+was watching Tish's windows. We thought it was imagination, and
+Tish gave her a dose of sulphur and molasses--her liver being
+sluggish.
+
+"Probably an Indian, I dare say," was Tish's caustic comment.
+
+In view of later developments, however, it is a pity we did not
+investigate Hannah's story; for Aggie, going home from Tish's
+late one night in Tish's car, had a similar experience,
+declaring that a small machine had followed them, driven by a
+heavy-set man with a mustache. She said, too, that Hutchins,
+swerving sharply, had struck the smaller machine a glancing blow
+and almost upset it.
+
+It was about the middle of July, I believe, that Tish received
+the following letter:--
+
+ Madam: Learning that you have decided to take a fishing-
+ trip in Canada, I venture to offer my services as guide,
+ philosopher, and friend. I know Canada thoroughly; can
+ locate bass, as nearly as it lies in a mortal so to do;
+ can manage a motor launch; am thoroughly at home in a
+ canoe; can shoot, swim, and cook--the last indifferently
+ well; know the Indian mind and my own--and will carry
+ water and chop wood.
+
+ I do not drink, and such smoking as I do will, if I am
+ engaged, be done in the solitude of the woods.
+
+ I am young and of a cheerful disposition. My object is
+ not money, but only expenses paid and a chance to forget
+ a recent and still poignant grief. I hope you will see
+ the necessity for such an addition to your party, and
+ allow me to subscribe myself, madam,
+
+ Your most obedient servant,
+
+ J. UPDIKE.
+
+Tish was much impressed; but Hutchins, in whose judgment she
+began to have the greatest confidence, opposed the idea.
+
+"I wouldn't think of it," she said briefly.
+
+"Why? It's a frank, straightforward letter."
+
+"He likes himself too much. And you should always be suspicious
+of anything that's offered too cheap."
+
+So the Updike application was refused. I have often wondered
+since what would have been the result had we accepted it!
+
+The worms were doing well, though Tish found that Hannah
+neglected them, and was compelled to feed them herself. On the
+day before we started, we packed them carefully in ice and moss,
+and fed them. That was the day the European war was declared.
+
+"Canada is at war," Tish telephoned. "The papers say the whole
+country is full of spies, blowing up bridges and railroads."
+
+"We can still go to the seashore," I said. "The bead things will
+do for the missionary box to Africa."
+
+"Seashore nothing!" Tish retorted. "We're going, of course,--
+just as we planned. We'll keep our eyes open; that's all. I'm
+not for one side or the other, but a spy's a spy."
+
+Later that evening she called again to say there were rumors
+that the Canadian forests were bristling with German wireless
+outfits.
+
+"I've a notion to write J. Updike, Lizzie, and find out whether
+he knows anything about wireless telegraphy," she said, "only
+there's so little time. Perhaps I can find a book that gives the
+code."
+
+[This is only pertinent as showing Tish's state of mind. As a
+matter of fact, she did not write to Updike at all.]
+
+Well, we started at last, and I must say they let us over the
+border with a glance; but they asked us whether we had any
+firearms. Tish's trunk contained a shotgun and a revolver; but
+she had packed over the top her most intimate personal
+belongings, and they were not disturbed.
+
+"Have you any weapons?" asked the inspector.
+
+"Do we look like persons carrying weapons?" Tish demanded
+haughtily. And of course we did not. Still, there was an untruth
+of the spirit and none of us felt any too comfortable. Indeed,
+what followed may have been a punishment on us for deceit and
+conspiracy.
+
+Aggie had taken her cat along--because it was so fond of fish,
+she said. And, between Tish buying ice for the worms and Aggie
+getting milk for the cat, the journey was not monotonous; but on
+returning from one of her excursions to the baggage-car, Tish
+put a heavy hand on my shoulder.
+
+"That boy's on the train, Lizzie!" she said. "He had the
+impudence to ask me whether I still drive with the license
+plates under a cushion. English roses--importations!" said Tish,
+and sniffed. "You don't suppose he went into that tent shop and
+asked about us?"
+
+"He might," I retorted; "but, on the other hand, there's no
+reason why our going to Canada should keep the rest of the
+United States at home!"
+
+However, the thing did seem queer, somehow. Why had he told us
+things that were not so? Why had he been so anxious to know who
+we were? Why, had he asked us to take the Sunday-school picnic
+to a place that did not belong to him?
+
+"He may be going away to forget some trouble. You remember what
+he said about happier days," said Tish.
+
+"That was Updike's reason too," I relied. "Poignant grief!"
+
+For just a moment our eyes met. The same suspicion had occurred
+to us both. Well, we agreed to say nothing to Aggie or Hutchins,
+for fear of upsetting them, and the next hour or so was
+peaceful.
+
+Hutchins read and Aggie slept. Tish and I strung beads for the
+Indians, and watched the door into the next car. And, sure
+enough, about the middle of the afternoon he appeared and stared
+in at us. He watched us for quite a time, smoking a cigarette as
+he did so. Then he came in and bent down over Tish.
+
+"You didn't take the children out for the picnic, did you?" he
+said.
+
+"I did not!" Tish snapped.
+
+"I'm sorry. Never saw the place look so well!"
+
+"Look here," Tish said, putting down her beads; "what were you
+doing there that night anyhow? You don't belong to the family."
+
+He looked surprised and then grieved.
+
+"You've discovered that, have you?" he said. "I did, you know--
+word of honor! They've turned me off; but I love the old place
+still, and on summer nights I wander about it, recalling happier
+days."
+
+Hutchins closed her book with a snap, and he sighed.
+
+"I perceive that we are overheard," he said. "Some time I hope
+to tell you the whole story. It's extremely sad. I'll not spoil
+the beginning of your holiday with it."
+
+All the time he had been talking he held a piece of paper in his
+hand. When he left us Tish went back thoughtfully to her beads.
+
+"It just shows, Lizzie," she said, "how wrong we are to trust to
+appearances. That poor boy--"
+
+I had stooped into the aisle and was picking up the piece of
+paper which he had accidentally dropped as he passed Hutchins. I
+opened it and read aloud to Tish and Aggie, who had wakened:--
+
+"'Afraid you'll not get away with it! The red-haired man in the
+car behind is a plain-clothes man.'"
+
+Tish has a large fund of general knowledge, gained through
+Charlie Sands; so what Aggie and I failed to understand she
+interpreted at once.
+
+"A plain-clothes man," she explained, "is a detective dressed as
+a gentleman. It's as plain as pikestaff! The boy's received this
+warning and dropped it. He has done something he shouldn't and
+is escaping to Canada!"
+
+I do not believe, however, that we should have thought of his
+being a political spy but for the conductor of the train. He
+proved to be a very nice person, with eight children and a
+toupee; and he said that Canada was honeycombed with spies in
+the pay of the German Government.
+
+"They're sending wireless messages all the time, probably from
+remote places," he said. "And, of course, their play now is to
+blow up the transcontinental railroads. Of course the railroads
+have an army of detectives on the watch."
+
+"Good Heavens!" Aggie said, and turned pale.
+
+Well, our pleasure in the journey was ruined. Every time the
+whistle blew on the engine we quailed, and Tish wrote her will
+then and there on the back of an envelope. It was while she was
+writing that the truth came to her.
+
+"That boy!" she said. "Don't you see it all? That note was a
+warning to him. He's a spy and the red-haired man is after him."
+
+None of us slept that night though Tish did a very courageous
+thing about eleven o'clock, when she was ready for bed. I went
+with her. We had put our dressing-gowns over our nightrobes, and
+we went back to the car containing the spy.
+
+He had not retired, but was sitting alone, staring ahead
+moodily. The red-haired man was getting ready for bed, just
+opposite. Tish spoke loudly, so the detective should hear.
+
+"I have come back," Tish said, "to say that we know everything.
+A word to the wise, Mister Happier Days! Don't try any of your
+tricks!"
+
+He sat, with his mouth quite open, and stared at us: but the red-
+ haired man pretended to hear nothing and took off his other
+shoe.
+
+None of us slept at all except Hutchins. Though we had told her
+nothing, she seemed inherently to distrust the spy. When, on
+arriving at the town where we were to take the boat, he offered
+to help her off with Aggie's cat basket, which she was carrying,
+she snubbed him.
+
+"I can do it myself," she said coldly; "and if you know when
+you're well off you'll go back to where you came from. Something
+might happen to you here in the wilderness."
+
+"I wish it would," he replied in quite a tragic manner.
+
+[As Tish said then, a man is probably often forced by
+circumstances into hateful situations. No spy can really want to
+be a spy with every brick wall suggesting, as it must, a firing-
+squad.]
+
+Well, to make a long story short, we took the little steamer
+that goes up the river three times a week to take groceries and
+mail to the logging-camps, and the spy and the red-haired
+detective went along. The spy seemed to have quite a lot of
+luggage, but the detective had only a suitcase.
+
+Tish, watching the detective, said his expression grew more and
+more anxious as we proceeded up the river. Cottages gave place
+to logging-camps and these to rocky islands, with no sign of
+life; still, the spy stayed on the steamer, and so, of course,
+did the detective.
+
+Tish went down and examined the luggage. She reported that the
+spy was traveling under the name of McDonald and that the
+detective's suitcase was unmarked. Mr. McDonald had some boxes
+and a green canoe. The detective had nothing at all. There were
+no other passengers.
+
+We let Aggie's cat out on the boat and he caught a mouse almost
+immediately, and laid it in the most touching manner at the
+detective's feet; but he was in a very bad humor and flung it
+over the rail. Shortly after that he asked Tish whether she
+intended to go to the Arctic Circle.
+
+"I don't know that that's any concern of yours," Tish said.
+"You're not after me, you know."
+
+He looked startled and muttered something into his mustache.
+
+"It's perfectly clear what's wrong with him," Tish said. "He's
+got to stick to Mr. McDonald, and he hasn't got a tent in that
+suitcase, or even a blanket. I don't suppose he knows where his
+next meal's coming from."
+
+She was probably right, for I saw the crew of the boat packing a
+box or two of crackers and an old comfort into a box; and Aggie
+overheard the detective say to the captain that if he would sell
+him some fishhooks he would not starve anyhow.
+
+Tish found an island that suited her about three o'clock that
+afternoon, and we disembarked. Mr. McDonald insisted on helping
+the crew with our stuff, which they piled on a large flat rock;
+but the detective stood on the upper deck and scowled down at
+us. Tish suggested that he was a woman-hater.
+
+"They know so many lawbreaking women," she said, "it's quite
+natural."
+
+Having landed us, the boat went across to another island and
+deposited Mr. McDonald and the green canoe. Tish, who had talked
+about a lodge in some vast wilderness, complained at that; but
+when the detective got off on a little tongue of the mainland,
+in sight of both islands, she said the place was getting crowded
+and she had a notion to go farther.
+
+The first thing she did was to sit on a box and open a map. The
+Canadian Pacific was only a few miles away through the woods!
+
+Hutchins proved herself a treasure. She could work all round the
+three of us; she opened boxes and a can of beans for supper with
+the same hatchet, and had tea made and the beans heated while
+Tish was selecting a site for the tent.
+
+But--and I remembered this later--she watched the river at
+intervals, with her cheeks like roses from the exertion. She was
+really a pretty girl--only, when no one was looking, her mouth
+that day had a way of setting itself firmly, and she frowned at
+the water.
+
+We, Hutchins and I, set up the stove against a large rock, and
+when the teakettle started to boil it gave the river front a
+homy look. Sitting on my folding-chair beside the stove, with a
+cup of tea in my hand and a plate of beans on a doily on a
+packing-box beside me, I was entirely comfortable. Through the
+glasses I could see the red- haired man on the other shore
+sitting on a rock, with his head in his hands; but Mr. McDonald
+had clearly located on the other side of his island and was not
+in sight.
+
+Aggie and Tish were putting up the tent, and Hutchins was
+feeding the tea grounds to the worms, which had traveled
+comfortably, when I saw a canoe coming up the river. I called to
+Tish about it.
+
+"An Indian!" she said calmly. "Get the beads, Aggie; and put my
+shotgun on that rock, where he can see it." She stood and
+watched him. "Primitive man, every inch of him!" she went on.
+"Notice his uncovered head. Notice the freedom, almost the
+savagery, of the way he uses that paddle. I wish he would sing.
+You remember, in Hiawatha, how they sing as they paddle along?"
+
+She got the beads and went to the water's edge; but the Indian
+stooped just then and, picking up a Panama hat, put it on his
+head.
+
+"I have called," he said, "to see whether I can interest you in
+a set of books I am selling. I shall detain you only a moment.
+Sixty-three steel engravings by well-known artists; best hand-
+made paper; and the work itself is of high educational value."
+
+Tish suddenly put the beads behind her back and said we did not
+expect to have any time to read. We had come into the wilderness
+to rest our minds.
+
+"You are wrong, I fear," said the Indian. "Personally I find
+that I can read better in the wilds than anywhere else. Great
+thoughts in great surroundings! I take Nietzsche with me when I
+go fishing."
+
+Tish had the wretched beads behind her all the time; and, to
+make conversation, more than anything else, she asked about
+venison. He shrugged his shoulders. J. Fenimore Cooper had not
+prepared us for an Indian who shrugged his shoulders.
+
+"We Indians are allowed to kill deer," he said; "but I fear you
+are prohibited. I am not even permitted to sell it."
+
+"I should think," said Tish sharply, "that, since we are miles
+from a game warden, you could safely sell us a steak or two."
+
+He gazed at her disapprovingly. "I should not care to break the
+law, madam," he said.
+
+Then he picked up his paddle and took himself and his scruples
+and his hand-made paper and his sixty-three steel engravings
+down the river.
+
+"Primitive man!" I said to Tish, from my chair. "Notice the
+freedom, almost the savagery, with which he swings that paddle."
+
+We had brought a volume of Cooper along, not so much to read as
+to remind us how to address the Indians. Tish said nothing, but
+she got the book and flung it far out into the river.
+
+There were a number of small annoyances the first day or two.
+Hutchins was having trouble with the motor launch, which the
+steamer had towed up the day we came, and which she called the
+"Mebbe." And another civilized Indian, with a gold watch and a
+cigarette case, had rented us a leaky canoe for a dollar a day.
+
+[We patched the leak with chewing gum, which Aggie always
+carried for indigestion; and it did fairly well, so long as the
+gum lasted.]
+
+Then, on the second night, there was a little wind, and the tent
+collapsed on us, the ridgepole taking Aggie across the chest. It
+was that same night, I think, when Aggie's cat found a porcupine
+in the woods, and came in looking like a pincushion.
+
+What with chopping firewood for the stove, and carrying water,
+and baling out the canoe, and with the motor boat giving one
+gasp and then dying for every hundred times somebody turned over
+the engine, we had no time to fish for two days.
+
+The police agent fished all day from a rock, for, of course, he
+had no boat; but he seemed to catch nothing. At times we saw him
+digging frantically, as though for worms. What he dug with I do
+not know; but, of course, he got no worms. Tish said if he had
+been more civil she would have taken something to him and a can
+of worms; but he had been rude, especially to Aggie's cat, and
+probably the boat would bring him things.
+
+What with getting settled and everything, we had not much time
+to think about the spy. It was on the third day, I believe, that
+he brought his green canoe to the open water in front of us and
+anchored there, just beyond earshot.
+
+He put out a line and opened a book; and from that time on he
+was a part of the landscape every day from 10 A.M. to 4 P.M. At
+noon he would eat some sort of a lunch, reading as he ate.
+
+He apparently never looked toward us, but he was always there.
+It was the most extraordinary thing. At first we thought he had
+found a remarkable fishing-place; but he seemed to catch very
+few fish. It was Tish, I think, who found the best explanation.
+
+"He's providing himself with an alibi," she stated. "How can he
+be a spy when we see him all day long? Don't you see how clever
+it is?"
+
+It was the more annoying because we had arranged a small core
+for soap-and-water bathing, hanging up a rod for bath-towels and
+suspending a soap-dish and a sponge-holder from an overhanging
+branch. The cove was well shielded by brush and rocks from the
+island, but naturally was open to the river.
+
+It was directly opposite this cove that Mr. McDonald took up his
+position.
+
+This compelled us to bathe in the early morning, while the water
+was still cold, and resulted in causing Aggie a most
+uncomfortable half-hour on the fourth morning of our stay.
+
+She was the last one in the pool, and Tish absent-mindedly took
+her bathrobe and slippers back to the camp when she went. Tish
+went out in the canoe shortly after. She was learning to use
+one, with a life preserver on--Tish, of course, not the canoe.
+And Mr. McDonald arriving soon after, Aggie was compelled to sit
+in the water for two hours and twenty minutes. When Hutchins
+found her she was quite blue.
+
+This was the only disagreement we had all summer: Aggie's
+refusing to speak to Tish that entire day. She said Mr. McDonald
+had seen her head and thought it was some sort of swimming
+animal, and had shot at her.
+
+Mr. McDonald said afterward he knew her all the time, and was
+uncertain whether she was taking a cure for something or was
+trying to commit suicide. He said he spent a wretched morning.
+At five o'clock that evening we began to hear a curious tapping
+noise from the spy's island. It would last for a time, stop, and
+go on.
+
+Hutchins said it was woodpeckers; but Tish looked at me
+significantly.
+
+"Wireless!" she said. "What did I tell you?"
+
+That decided her next move, for that evening she put some tea
+and canned corn and a rubber blanket into the canoe; and in fear
+and trembling I went with her.
+
+"It's going to rain, Lizzie," she said, "and after all, that
+detective may be surly; but he's doing his duty by his country.
+It's just as heroic to follow a spy up here, and starve to death
+watching him, as it is to storm a trench--and less showy. And
+I've something to tell him."
+
+The canoe tilted just then, and only by heroic effort, were we
+able to calm it.
+
+"Then why not go comfortably in the motor boat?"
+
+Tish stopped, her paddle in the air. "Because I can't make that
+dratted engine go," she said, "and because I believe Hutchins
+would drown us all before she'd take any help to him. It's my
+belief that she's known him somewhere. I've seen her sit on a
+rock and look across at him with murder in her eyes."
+
+A little wind had come up, and the wretched canoe was leaking,
+the chewing gum having come out. Tish was paddling; so I was
+compelled to sit over the aperture, thus preventing water from
+coming in. Despite my best efforts, however, about three inches
+seeped in and washed about me. It was quite uncomfortable.
+
+The red-haired man was asleep when we landed. He had hung the
+comfort over a branch, like a tent, and built a fire at the end
+of it. He had his overcoat on, buttoned to the chin, and his
+head was on his suit-case. He sat up and looked at us, blinking.
+
+"We've brought you some tea and some canned corn," Tish said;
+"and a rubber blanket. It's going to rain."
+
+He slid out of the tent, feet first, and got up; but when he
+tried to speak he sneezed. He had a terrible cold.
+
+"I might as well say at once," Tish went on, "that we know why
+you are here--"
+
+"The deuce you do!" he said hoarsely.
+
+"We do not particularly care about you, especially since the way
+you acted to a friendly and innocent cat--one can always judge a
+man by the way he treats dumb animals; but we sympathize with
+your errand. We'll even help if we can."
+
+"Then the--the person in question has confided in you?"
+
+"Not at all," said Tish loftily. "I hope we can put two and two
+together. Have you got a revolver?"
+
+He looked startled at that. "I have one," he said; "but I guess
+I'll not need it. The first night or two a skunk hung round;
+two, in fact--mother and child--but I think they're gone."
+
+"Would you like some fish?"
+
+"My God, no!"
+
+This is a truthful narrative. That is exactly what he said.
+
+"I'll tell you what I do need, ladies," he went on: ""If you've
+got a spare suit of underwear over there, I could use it. It'd
+stretch, probably. And I'd like a pen and some ink. I must have
+lost my fountain pen out of my pocket stooping over the bank to
+wash my face."
+
+"Do you know the wireless code?" Tish asked suddenly.
+
+"Wireless?"
+
+"I have every reason to believe," she said impressively, "that
+one of the great trees on that island conceals a wireless
+outfit."
+
+"I see!" He edged back a little from us both.
+
+"I should think," Tish said, eyeing him, "that a knowledge of
+the wireless code would be essential to you in your occupation."
+
+"We--we get a smattering of all sorts of things," he said; but
+he was uneasy--you could see that with half an eye.
+
+He accompanied us down to the canoe; but once, when Tish turned
+suddenly, he ducked back as though he had been struck and
+changed color. He thanked us for the tea and corn, and said he
+wished we had a spare razor--but, of course, he supposed not.
+Then:--
+
+"I suppose the--the person in question will stay as long as you
+do?" he asked, rather nervously.
+
+"It looks like it," said Tish grimly. "I've no intention of
+being driven away, if that's what you mean. We'll stay as long
+as the fishing's good."
+
+He groaned under his breath. "The whole d--d river is full of
+fish," he said. "They crawled up the bank last night and ate all
+the crackers I'd saved for to-day. Oh, I'll pay somebody out for
+this, all right! Good gracious, ladies, your boat's full of
+water!"
+
+"It has a hole in it," Tish replied and upturned it to empty it.
+
+When he saw the hole his eyes stuck out. "You can't go out in
+that leaky canoe! It's suicidal!"
+
+"Not at all," Tish assured him. "My friend here will sit on the
+leak. Get in quick, Lizzie. It's filling."
+
+The last we saw of the detective that night he was standing on
+the bank, staring after us. Afterward, when a good many things
+were cleared up, he said he decided that he'd been asleep and
+dreamed the whole thing--the wireless, and my sitting on the
+hole in the canoe, and the wind tossing it about, and everything-
+ - only, of course, there was the tea and the canned corn!
+
+We did our first fishing the next day. Hutchins had got the
+motor boat going, and I put over the spoon I had made from the
+feather duster. After going a mile or so slowly I felt a tug,
+and on drawing my line in I found I had captured a large fish. I
+wrapped the line about a part of the engine and Tish put the
+barrel hoop with the netting underneath it. The fish was really
+quite large-- about four feet, I think--and it broke through the
+netting. I wished to hit it with the oar, but Hutchins said that
+might break the fin and free it. Unluckily we had not brought
+Tish's gun, or we might have shot it.
+
+At last we turned the boat round and went home, the fish
+swimming alongside, with its mouth open. And there Aggie, who is
+occasionally almost inspired, landed the fish by the simple
+expedient of getting out of the boat, taking the line up a bank
+and wrapping it round a tree. By all pulling together we landed
+the fish successfully. It was forty-nine inches by Tish's tape
+measure.
+
+Tish did not sleep well that night. She dreamed that the fish
+had a red mustache and was a spy in disguise. When she woke she
+declared there was somebody prowling round the tent.
+
+She got her shotgun and we all sat up in bed for an hour or so.
+
+Nothing happened, however, except that Aggie cried out that
+there was a small animal just inside the door of the tent. We
+could see it, too, though faintly. Tish turned the shotgun on it
+and it disappeared; but the next morning she found she had shot
+one of her shoes to pieces.
+
+III
+
+It was the day Tish began her diary that we discovered the red-
+haired man's signal. Tish was compelled to remain at home most
+of the day, breaking in another pair of shoes, and she amused
+herself by watching the river and writing down interesting
+things. She had read somewhere of the value of such records of
+impressions:--
+
+ 10 A.M. Gull on rock. Very pretty. Frightened away by
+ the McDonald person, who has just taken up his customary
+ position. Is he reading or watching this camp?
+
+ 10.22. Detective is breakfasting--through glasses, he
+ is eating canned corn. Aggie--pickerel, from bank.
+
+ 10.40. Aggie's cat, beside her, has caught a small
+ fish. Aggie declares that the cat stole one of her worms
+ and held it in the water. I think she is mistaken.
+
+ 11. Most extraordinary thing--Hutchins has asked
+ permission to take pen and ink across to the detective!
+ Have consented.
+
+ 11.20. Hutchins is still across the river. If I did not
+ know differently I should say she and the detective are
+ quarreling. He is whittling something. Through glasses,
+ she appears to stamp her foot.
+
+ 11.30. Aggie has captured a small sunfish. Hutchins is
+ still across the river. He seems to be appealing to her
+ for something--possibly the underwear. We have none to
+ spare.
+
+ 11.40. Hutchins is an extraordinary girl. She hates men,
+ evidently. She has had some sort of quarrel with the
+ detective and has returned flushed with battle. Mr.
+ McDonald called to her as she passed, but she ignored
+ him.
+
+ 12, noon. Really, there is something mysterious about
+ all this. The detective was evidently whittling a
+ flagpole. He has erected it now, with a red silk
+ handkerchief at end. It hangs out over the water. Aggie-
+ -bass, but under legal size.
+
+ 1.15 P.M. The flag puzzles Hutchins. She is covertly
+ watching it. It is evidently a signal-- but to whom? Are
+ the secret-service men closing in on McDonald?
+
+ 1. Aggie--pike!
+
+ 2. On consulting map find unnamed lake only a few miles
+ away. Shall investigate to-morrow.
+
+ 3. Steamer has just gone. Detective now has canoe, blue
+ in color. Also food. He sent off his letter.
+
+ 4. Fed worms. Lizzie thinks they know me. How kindness
+ is its own reward! Mr. McDonald is drawing in his
+ anchor, which is a large stone fastened to a rope. Shall
+ take bath.
+
+Tish's notes ended here. She did not take the bath after all,
+for Mr. McDonald made us a call that afternoon.
+
+He beached the green canoe and came up the rocks calmly and
+smilingly. Hutchins gave him a cold glance and went on with what
+she was doing, which was chopping a plank to cook the fish on.
+He bowed cheerfully to all of us and laid a string of fish on a
+rock.
+
+"I brought a little offering," he said, looking at Hutchins's
+back. "The fishing isn't what I expected but if the young lady
+with the hatchet will desist, so I can make myself heard, I've
+found a place where there are fish! This biggest fellow is three
+and a quarter pounds."
+
+Hutchins chopped harder than ever, and the plank flew up,
+striking her in the chest; but she refused all assistance,
+especially from Mr. McDonald, who was really concerned. He
+hurried to her and took the hatchet out of her hand, but in his
+excitement he was almost uncivil.
+
+"You obstinate little idiot!" he said. "You'll kill yourself
+yet."
+
+To my surprise, Hutchins, who had been entirely unemotional
+right along, suddenly burst into tears and went into the tent.
+Mr. McDonald took a hasty step or two after her, realizing, no
+doubt, that he had said more than he should to a complete
+stranger; but she closed the fly of the tent quite viciously and
+left him standing, with his arms folded, staring at it.
+
+It was at that moment he saw the large fish, hanging from a
+tree. He stood for a moment staring at it and we could see that
+he was quite surprised.
+
+"It is a fish, isn't it?" he said after a moment. "I-I thought
+for a moment it was painted on something."
+
+He sat down suddenly on one of our folding-chairs and looked at
+the fish, and then at each of us in turn.
+
+"You know," he said, "I didn't think there were such fish! I--
+you mustn't mind my surprise." He wiped his forehead with his
+handkerchief. "Just kick those things I brought into the river,
+will you? I apologize for them."
+
+"Forty-nine inches," Tish said. "We expect to do better when we
+really get started. This evening we shall go after its mate,
+which is probably hanging round."
+
+"Its mate?" he said, rather dazed. "Oh, I see. Of course!"
+
+He still seemed to doubt his senses, for he went over and
+touched it with his finger. "Ladies," he said, "I'm not going
+after the- the mate. I couldn't land it if I did get it. I am
+going to retire from the game--except for food; but I wish, for
+the sake of my reason, you'd tell me what you caught it with."
+
+Well, you may heartily distrust a person; but that is no reason
+why you should not answer a simple question. So I showed him the
+thing I had made--and he did not believe me!
+
+"You're perfectly right," he said. "Every game has its secrets.
+I had no business to ask. But you haven't caught me with that
+feather-duster thing any more than you caught that fish with it.
+I don't mind your not telling me. That's your privilege. But
+isn't it rather rubbing it in to make fun of me?"
+
+"Nothing of the sort!" Aggie said angrily. "If you had caught it-
+ -"
+
+"My dear lady," he said, "I couldn't have caught it. The mere
+shock of getting such a bite would have sent me out of my boat
+in a swoon." He turned to Tish. "I have only one
+disappointment," he said, "that it wasn't one of _our_ worms
+that did the work."
+
+Tish said afterward she was positively sorry for him, he looked
+so crestfallen. So, when he started for his canoe she followed
+him.
+
+"Look here," she said; "you're young, and I don't want to see
+you get into trouble. Go home, young man! There are plenty of
+others to take your place."
+
+He looked rather startled. "That's it exactly," he said, after a
+moment. "As well as I can make out there are about a hundred. If
+you think," he said fiercely, raising his voice, "that I'm going
+to back out and let somebody else in, I'm not. And that's flat."
+
+"It's a life-and-death matter," said Tish.
+
+"You bet it's a life-and-death matter."
+
+"And--what about the--the red-headed man over there?"
+
+His reply amazed us all. "He's harmless," he said. "I don't like
+him, naturally; but I admire the way he holds on. He's making
+the best of a bad business."
+
+"Do you know why he's here?"
+
+He looked uneasy for once.
+
+"Well, I've got a theory," he replied; but, though his voice was
+calm, he changed color.
+
+"Then perhaps you'll tell me what that signal means?"
+
+Tish gave him the glasses and he saw the red flag. I have never
+seen a man look so unhappy.
+
+"Holy cats!" he said, and almost dropped the glasses. " Why, he--
+ he must be expecting somebody!"
+
+"So I should imagine," Tish commented dryly. "He sent a letter
+by the boat to-day."
+
+"The h--l he did!" And then: "That's ridiculous! You're
+mistaken. As a--as a matter of fact, I went over there the other
+night and commandeered his fountain pen."
+
+So it had not fallen out of his pocket!
+
+"I'll be frank, ladies," he said. "It's my object just now to
+keep that chap from writing letters. It doesn't matter why, but
+it's vital."
+
+He was horribly cast down when we told him about Hutchins and
+the pen and ink.
+
+"So that's it!" he said gloomily. "And the flag's a signal, of
+course. Ladies, you have done it out of the kindness of your
+hearts, I know; but I think you have wrecked my life."
+
+He took a gloomy departure and left us all rather wrought up.
+Who were we, as Tish said, to imperil a fellow man? And another
+thing- -if there was a reward on him, why should we give it to a
+red- haired detective, who was rude to harmless animals and ate
+canned corn for breakfast?
+
+With her customary acumen Tish solved the difficulty that very
+evening.
+
+"The simplest thing," she said, "of course, would be to go over
+during the night and take the flag away; but he may have more
+red handkerchiefs. Then, too, he seems to be a light sleeper,
+and it would be awkward to have him shoot at us."
+
+She sat in thought for quite a while. Hutchins was watching the
+sunset, and seemed depressed and silent. Tish lowered her voice.
+
+"There's no reason why we shouldn't have a red flag, too," she
+said. "It gives us an even chance to get in on whatever is about
+to happen. We can warn Mr. McDonald, for one thing, if any one
+comes here. Personally I think he is unjustly suspected."
+
+[But Tish was to change her mind very soon.]
+
+We made the flag that night, by lantern light, out of Tish's red
+silk petticoat. Hutchins was curious, I am sure; but we
+explained nothing. And we fastened it obliquely over the river,
+like the one on the other side.
+
+Tish's change of heart, which occurred the newt morning, was due
+to a most unfortunate accident that happened to her at nine
+o'clock. Hutchins, who could swim like a duck, was teaching Tish
+to swim, and she was learning nicely. Tish had put a life-
+preserver on, with a clothes-line fastened to it, and Aggie was
+sitting on the bank holding the rope while she went through the
+various gestures.
+
+Having completed the lesson Hutchins went into the woods for red
+raspberries, leaving Tish still practicing in the water with
+Aggie holding the rope. Happening to sneeze, the line slipped
+out of her hand, and she had the agonizing experience of seeing
+Tish carried away by the current.
+
+I was washing some clothing in the river a few yards down the
+stream when Tish came floating past. I shall never forget her
+expression or my own sense of absolute helplessness.
+
+"Get the canoe," said Tish, "and follow. I'm heading for Island
+Eleven."
+
+She was quite calm, though pale; but, in her anxiety to keep
+well above the water, she did what was almost a fatal thing--she
+pushed the life-preserver lower down round her body. And having
+shifted the floating center, so to speak, without warning her
+head disappeared and her feet rose in the air.
+
+For a time it looked as though she would drown in that position;
+but Tish rarely loses her presence of mind. She said she knew at
+once what was wrong. So, though somewhat handicapped by the
+position, she replaced the cork belt under her arms and emerged
+at last.
+
+Aggie had started back into the woods for Hutchins; but, with
+one thing and another, it was almost ten before they returned
+together. Tish by that time was only a dot on the horizon
+through the binocular, having missed Island Eleven, as she
+explained later, by the rope being caught on a submerged log,
+which deflected her course.
+
+We got into the motor boat and followed her, and, except for a
+most unjust sense of irritation that I had not drowned myself by
+following her in the canoe, she was unharmed. We got her into
+the motor boat and into a blanket, and Aggie gave her some
+blackberry cordial at once. It was some time before her teeth
+ceased chattering so she could speak. When she did it was to
+announce that she had made a discovery.
+
+"He's a spy, all right!" she said. "And that Indian is another.
+Neither of them saw me as I floated past. They were on Island
+Eleven. Mr. McDonald wrote something and gave it to the Indian.
+It wasn't a letter or he'd have sent it by the boat. He didn't
+even put it in an envelope, so far as I could see. It's probably
+in cipher."
+
+Well, we took her home, and she had a boiled egg at dinner.
+
+The rest of us had fish. It is one of Tish's theories that fish
+should only be captured for food, and that all fish caught must
+be eaten. I do not know when I have seen fish come as easy.
+Perhaps it was the worms, which had grown both long and fat, so
+that one was too much for a hook; and we cut them with scissors,
+like tape or ribbon. Aggie and I finally got so sick of fish
+that while Tish's head was turned we dropped in our lines
+without bait. But, even at that, Aggie, reeling in her line to
+go home, caught a three- pound bass through the gills and could
+not shake it off.
+
+We tried to persuade Tish to lie down that afternoon, but she
+refused.
+
+"I'm not sick," she said, "even if you two idiots did try to
+drown me. And I'm on the track of something. If that was a
+letter, why didn't he send it by the boat?"
+
+Just then her eye fell on the flagpole, and we followed her
+horrified gaze. The flag had been neatly cut away!
+
+Tish's eyes narrowed. She looked positively dangerous; and
+within five minutes she had cut another flag out of the back
+breadth of the petticoat and flung it defiantly in the air. Who
+had cut away the signal--McDonald or the detective? We had
+planned to investigate the nameless lake that afternoon, Tish
+being like Colonel Roosevelt in her thirst for information, as
+well as in the grim pugnacity that is her dominant
+characteristic; but at the last minute she decided not to go.
+
+"You and Aggie go, Lizzie," she said. "I've got something on
+hand."
+
+"Tish!" Aggie wailed. "You'll drown yourself or something."
+
+"Don't be a fool!" Tish snapped. "There's a portage, but you and
+Lizzie can carry the canoe across on your heads. I've seen
+pictures of it. It's easy. And keep your eyes open for a
+wireless outfit. There's one about, that's sure!"
+
+"Lots of good it will do to keep our eyes open," I said with
+some bitterness, "with our heads inside the canoe!"
+
+We finally started and Hutchins went with us. It was Hutchins,
+too, who voiced the way we all felt when we had crossed the
+river and were preparing for what she called the portage.
+
+"She wants to get us out of the way, Miss Lizzie," she said.
+"Can you imagine what mischief she's up to?"
+
+"That is not a polite way to speak of Miss Tish, Hutchins," I
+said coldly. Nevertheless, my heart sank.
+
+Hutchins and I carried the canoe. It was a hot day and there was
+no path. Aggie, who likes a cup of hot tea at five o'clock, had
+brought along a bottle filled with tea, and a small basket
+containing sugar and cups.
+
+Personally I never had less curiosity about a lake. As a matter
+of fact I wished there was no lake. Twice--being obliged, as it
+were, to walk blindly and the canoe being excessively heavy--I,
+who led the way, ran the front end of the thing against the
+trunk of a tree, and both Hutchins and I sat down violently,
+under the canoe as a result of the impact.
+
+To add to the discomfort of the situation Aggie declared that we
+were being followed by a bear, and at the same instant stepped
+into a swamp up to her knees. She became calm at once, with the
+calmness of despair.
+
+"Go and leave me, Lizzie!" she said. "He is just behind those
+bushes. I may sink before he gets me--that's one comfort."
+
+Hutchins found a log and, standing on it, tried to pull her up;
+but she seemed firmly fastened. Aggie went quite white; and,
+almost beside myself, I poured her a cup of hot tea, which she
+drank. I remember she murmured Mr. Wiggins's name, and
+immediately after she yelled that the bear was coming.
+
+It was, however, the detective who emerged from the bushes. He
+got Aggie out with one good heave, leaving both her shoes gone
+forever; and while she collapsed, whimpering, he folded his arms
+and stared at all of us angrily.
+
+"What sort of damnable idiocy is this?" he demanded in a most
+unpleasant tone.
+
+Aggie revived and sat upright.
+
+"That's our affair, isn't it?" said Hutchins curtly.
+
+"Not by a blamed sight!" was his astonishing reply.
+
+"The next time I am sinking in a morass, let me sink," Aggie
+said, with simple dignity.
+
+He did not speak another word, but gave each of us a glance of
+the most deadly contempt, and finished up with Hutchins.
+
+"What I don't understand," he said furiously, "is why you have
+to lend yourself to this senile idiocy. Because some old women
+choose to sink themselves in a swamp is no reason why you should
+commit suicide!"
+
+Aggie said afterward only the recollection that he had saved her
+life prevented her emptying the tea on him. I should hardly have
+known Hutchins.
+
+"Naturally," she said in a voice thick with fury, "you are in a
+position to insult these ladies, and you do. But I warn you, if
+you intend to keep on, this swamp is nothing. We like it here.
+We may stay for months. I hope you have your life insured."
+
+Perhaps we should have understood it all then. Of course Charlie
+Sands, for whom I am writing this, will by this time, with his
+keen mind, comprehend it all; but I assure you we suspected
+nothing.
+
+How simple, when you line it up: The country house and the
+garden hose; the detective, with no camp equipment; Mr. McDonald
+and the green canoe; the letter on the train; the red flag; the
+girl in the pink tam-o'-shanter--who has not yet appeared, but
+will shortly; Mr. McDonald's incriminating list--also not yet,
+but soon.
+
+How inevitably they led to what Charlie Sands has called our
+crime!
+
+The detective, who was evidently very strong, only glared at
+her. Then he swung the canoe up on his head and, turning about,
+started back the way we had come. Though Hutchins and Aggie were
+raging, I was resigned. My neck was stiff and my shoulders
+ached. We finished our tea in silence and then made our way back
+to the river.
+
+I have now reached Tish's adventure. It is not my intention in
+this record to defend Tish. She thought her conclusions were
+correct. Charlie Sands says she is like Shaw--she has got a
+crooked point of view, but she believes she is seeing straight.
+And, after a while, if you look her way long enough you get a
+sort of mental astigmatism.
+
+So I shall confess at once that, at the time, I saw nothing
+immoral in what she did that afternoon while we were having our
+adventure in the swamp.
+
+I was putting cloths wrung out of arnica and hot water on my
+neck when she came home, and Hutchins was baking biscuit--she
+was a marvelous cook, though Aggie, who washed the dishes,
+objected to the number of pans she used.
+
+Tish ignored both my neck and the biscuits, and, marching up the
+bank, got her shotgun from the tent and loaded it.
+
+"We may be attacked at any time," she said briefly; and, getting
+the binocular, she searched the river with a splendid sweeping
+glance. "At any time. Hutchins, take these glasses, please, and
+watch that we are not disturbed."
+
+"I'm baking biscuit, Miss Letitia."
+
+"Biscuit!" said Tish scornfully. "Biscuit in times like these?"
+
+She walked up to the camp stove and threw the oven door open;
+but, though I believe she had meant to fling them into the
+river, she changed her mind when she saw them.
+
+"Open a jar of honey, Hutchins," she said, and closed the oven;
+but her voice was abstracted. "You can watch the river from the
+stove, Hutchins," she went on. "Miss Aggie and Miss Lizzie and I
+must confer together."
+
+So we went into the tent, and Tish closed and fastened it.
+
+"Now," she said, "I've got the papers."
+
+"Papers?"
+
+"The ones Mr. McDonald gave that Indian this morning. I had an
+idea he'd still have them. You can't hurry an Indian. I waited
+in the bushes until he went in swimming. Then I went through his
+pockets."
+
+"Tish Carberry!" cried Aggie.
+
+"These are not times to be squeamish," Tish said loftily. "I'm
+neutral; of course; but Great Britain has had this war forced on
+her and I'm going to see that she has a fair show. I've ordered
+all my stockings from the same shop in London, for twenty years,
+and squarer people never lived. Look at these--how innocent they
+look, until one knows!"
+
+She produced two papers from inside her waist. I must confess
+that, at first glance, I saw nothing remarkable.
+
+"The first one looks," said Tish, "like a grocery order. It's
+meant to look like that. It's relieved my mind of one thing--
+McDonald's got no wireless or he wouldn't be sending cipher
+messages by an Indian."
+
+It was written on a page torn out of a pocket notebook and the
+page was ruled with an inch margin at the left. This was the
+document: -
+
+ 1 Dozen eggs.
+
+ 20 Yards fishing-line.
+
+ 1 pkg. Needles--anything to sew a button on.
+
+ 1 doz. A B C bass hooks.
+
+ 3 lbs. Meat--anything so it isn't fish.
+
+ 1 bot. Ink for fountain pen.
+
+ 3 Tins sardines.
+
+ 1 Extractor.
+
+Well, I could not make anything of it; but, of course, I have
+not Tish's mind. Aggie was almost as bad.
+
+"What's an extractor?" she asked.
+
+"Exactly!" said Tish. "What is an extractor? Is the fellow going
+to pull teeth? No! He needed an _e_; so he made up a word."
+
+She ran her finger down the first letters of the second column.
+"D-y-n-a-m-i-t-e!" she said triumphantly. "Didn't I tell you?"
+
+IV
+
+Well, there it was--staring at us. I felt positively chilled. He
+looked so young and agreeable, and, as Aggie said, he had such
+nice teeth. And to know him for what he was--it was tragic! But
+that was not all.
+
+"Add the numbers!" said Tish. "Thirty-one tons, perhaps, of
+dynamite! And that's only part," said Tish. "Here's the most
+damning thing of all--a note to his accomplice!"
+
+"Damning" is here used in the sense of condemnatory. We are none
+of us addicted to profanity.
+
+We read the other paper, which had been in a sealed envelope,
+but without superscription. It is before me as I write, and I am
+copying it exactly:--
+
+ I shall have to see you. I'm going crazy! Don't you
+ realize that this is a matter of life and death to me?
+ Come to Island Eleven to-night, won't you? And give me a
+ chance to talk, anyhow. Something has got to be done and
+ done soon. I'm desperate!
+
+Aggie sneezed three times in sheer excitement; for anyone can
+see how absolutely incriminating the letter was. It was not
+signed, but it was in the same writing as the list.
+
+Tish, who knows something about everything, said the writing
+denoted an unscrupulous and violent nature.
+
+"The _y_ is especially vicious," she said. "I wouldn't trust a
+man who made a _y_ like that to carry a sick child to the
+doctor!"
+
+The thing, of course, was to decide at once what measures to
+take. The boat would not come again for two days, and to send a
+letter by it to the town marshal or sheriff, or whatever the
+official is in Canada who takes charge of spies, would be
+another loss of time.
+
+"Just one thing," said Tish. "I'll plan this out and find some
+way to deal with the wretch; but I wouldn't say anything to
+Hutchins. She's a nice little thing, though she is a fool about
+a motor boat. There's no case in scaring her."
+
+For some reason or other, however, Hutchins was out of spirits
+that night.
+
+"I hope you're not sick, Hutchins?" said Tish.
+
+"No, indeed, Miss Tish."
+
+"You're not eating your fish."
+
+"I'm sick of fish," she said calmly. "I've eaten so much fish
+that when I see a hook I have a mad desire to go and hang myself
+on it."
+
+"Fish," said Tish grimly, "is good for the brain. I do not care
+to boast, but never has my mind been so clear as it is to-
+night."
+
+Now certainly, though Tish's tone was severe, there was nothing
+in it to hurt the girl; but she got up from the cracker box on
+which she was sitting, with her eyes filled with tears.
+
+"Don't mind me. I'm a silly fool," she said; and went down to
+the river and stood looking out over it.
+
+It quite spoiled our evening. Aggie made her a hot lemonade and,
+I believe, talked to her about Mr. Wiggins, and how, when he was
+living, she had had fits of weeping without apparent cause. But
+if the girl was in love, as we surmised, she said nothing about
+it. She insisted that it was too much fish and nervous strain
+about the Mebbe.
+
+"I never know," she said, "when we start out whether we're going
+to get back or be marooned and starve to death on some island."
+
+Tish said afterward that her subconscious self must have taken
+the word "marooned" and played with it; for in ten minutes or so
+her plan popped into her head.
+
+"'Full-panoplied from the head of Jove,' Lizzie," she said.
+"Really, it is not necessary to think if one only has faith. The
+supermind does it all without effort. I do not dislike the young
+man; but I must do my duty."
+
+Tish's plan was simplicity itself. We were to steal his canoe.
+
+"Then we'll have him," she finished. "The current's too strong
+there for him to swim to the mainland."
+
+"He might try it and drown," Aggie objected. "Spy or no spy,
+he's somebody's son."
+
+"War is no time to be chicken-hearted," Tish replied.
+
+I confess I ate little all that day. At noon Mr. McDonald came
+and borrowed two eggs from us.
+
+"I've sent over to a store across country, by my Indian guide,
+philosopher, and friend," he said, "for some things I needed;
+but I dare say he's reading Byron somewhere and has forgotten
+it."
+
+"Guide, philosopher, and friend!" I caught Tish's eye. McDonald
+had written the Updike letter! McDonald had meant to use our
+respectability to take him across the border!
+
+We gave him the eggs, but Tish said afterward she was not
+deceived for a moment.
+
+"The Indian has told him," she said, "and he's allaying our
+suspicions. Oh, he's clever enough! "Know the Indian mind and my
+own!'" she quoted from the Updike letter. "'I know Canada
+thoroughly.' 'My object is not money.' I should think not!"
+
+Tish stole the green canoe that night. She put on the life
+preserver and we tied the end of the rope that Aggie had let
+slip to the canoe. The life- preserver made it difficult to
+paddle, Tish said, but she felt more secure. If she struck a
+rock and upset, at least she would not drown; and we could start
+after her at dawn with the Mebbe.
+
+"I'll be somewhere down the river," she said, "and safe enough,
+most likely, unless there are falls."
+
+Hutchins watched in a puzzled way, for Tish did not leave until
+dusk.
+
+"You'd better let me follow you with the launch, Miss Tish," she
+said. "Just remember that if the canoe sinks you're tied to it."
+
+"I'm on serious business to-night, Hutchins," Tish said
+ominously. "You are young, and I refuse to trouble your young
+mind; but your ears are sharp. If you hear any shooting, get the
+boat and follow me."
+
+The mention of shooting made me very nervous. We watched Tish as
+long as we could see her; then we returned to the tent, and
+Aggie and I crocheted by the hanging lantern. Two hours went by.
+At eleven o'clock Tish had not returned and Hutchins was in the
+motor boat, getting it ready to start.
+
+"I like courage, Miss Lizzie," she said to me; "but this thing
+of elderly women, with some sort of bug, starting out at night
+in canoes is too strong for me. Either she's going to stay in at
+night or I'm going home."
+
+"Elderly nothing!" I said, with some spirit. "She is in the
+prime of life. Please remember, Hutchins, that you are speaking
+of your employer. Miss Tish has no bug, as you call it."
+
+"Oh, she's rational enough," Hutchins retorted: "but she is a
+woman of one idea and that sort of person is dangerous."
+
+I was breathless at her audacity.
+
+"Come now, Miss Lizzie," she said, "how can I help when I don't
+know what is being done? I've done my best up here to keep you
+comfortable and restrain Miss Tish's recklessness; but I ought
+to know something."
+
+She was right; and, Tish or no Tish, then and there I told her.
+She was more than astonished. She sat in the motor boat, with a
+lantern at her feet, and listened.
+
+"I see," she said slowly. "So the--so Mr. McDonald is a spy and
+has sent for dynamite to destroy the railroad! And--and the red-
+haired man is a detective! How do you know he is a detective?"
+
+I told her then about the note we had picked up from beside her
+in the train, and because she was so much interested she really
+seemed quite thrilled. I brought the cipher grocery list and the
+other note down to her.
+
+"It's quite convincing, isn't it?" she said. "And--and exciting!
+I don't know when I've been so excited."
+
+She really was. Her cheeks were flushed. She looked exceedingly
+pretty.
+
+"The thing to do," she said, "is to teach him a lesson. He's
+young. He mayn't always have had to stoop to such--such
+criminality. If we can scare him thoroughly, it might do him a
+lot of good."
+
+I said I was afraid Tish took a more serious view of things and
+would notify the authorities. And at that moment there came two
+or three shots--then silence.
+
+I shall never forget the ride after Tish and how we felt when we
+failed to find her; for there was no sign of her. The wind had
+come up, and, what with seeing Tish tied to that wretched canoe
+and sinking with it or shot through the head and lying dead in
+the bottom of it, we were about crazy. As we passed Island
+Eleven we could see the spy's camp-fire and his tent, but no
+living person.
+
+At four in the morning we gave up and started back, heavy-
+hearted. What, therefore, was our surprise to find Tish sitting
+by the fire in her bathrobe, with a cup of tea in her lap and
+her feet in a foot-tub of hot water! Considering all we had gone
+through and that we had obeyed orders exactly, she was
+distinctly unjust. Indeed, at first she quite refused to speak
+to any of us.
+
+"I do think, Tish," Aggie said as she stood shivering by the
+fire, "that you might at least explain where you have been. We
+have been going up and down the river for hours, burying you
+over and over."
+
+Tish took a sip of tea, but said nothing.
+
+"You said," I reminded her, "that if there was shooting, we were
+to start after you at once. When we heard the shots, we went, of
+course."
+
+Tish leaned over and, taking the teakettle from the fire, poured
+more water into the foot-tub. Then at last she turned to speak.
+
+"Bring some absorbent cotton and some bandages, Hutchins," she
+said. "I am bleeding from a hundred wounds. As for you"--she
+turned fiercely on Aggie and me--"the least you could have done
+was to be here when I returned, exhausted, injured, and weary;
+but, of course, you were gallivanting round the lake in an
+upholstered motor boat."
+
+Here she poured more water into the foot-tub and made it much
+too hot. This thawed her rather, and she explained what was
+wrong. She was bruised, scratched to the knees, and with a bump
+the size of an egg on her forehead, where she had run into a
+tree.
+
+The whole story was very exciting. It seems she got the green
+canoe without any difficulty, the spy being sound asleep in his
+tent; but about that time the wind came up and Tish said she
+could not make an inch of progress toward our camp.
+
+The chewing gum with which we had repaired our canoe came out at
+that time and the boat began to fill, Tish being unable to sit
+over the leak and paddle at the same time. So, at last, she gave
+up and made for the mainland.
+
+"The shooting," Tish said with difficulty, "was by men from the
+Indian camp firing at me. I landed below the camp, and was
+making my way as best I could through the woods when they heard
+me moving. I believe they thought it was a bear."
+
+I think Tish was more afraid of the Indians, in spite of their
+sixty-three steel engravings and the rest of it, than she
+pretended, though she said she would have made herself known,
+but at that moment she fell over a fallen tree and for fifteen
+minutes was unable to speak a word. When at last she rose the
+excitement was over and they had gone back to their camp.
+
+"Anyhow," she finished, "the green canoe is hidden a couple of
+miles down the river, and I guess Mr. McDonald is safe for a
+time. Lizzie, you can take a bath to-morrow safely."
+
+Tish sat up most of the rest of the night composing a letter to
+the authorities of the town, telling them of Mr. McDonald and
+enclosing careful copies of the incriminating documents she had
+found.
+
+During the following morning the river was very quiet. Through
+the binocular we were able to see Mr. McDonald standing on the
+shore of his island and looking intently in our direction, but
+naturally we paid no attention to him.
+
+The red-haired man went in swimming that day and necessitated
+our retiring to the tent for an hour and a half; but at noon
+Aggie's naturally soft heart began to assert itself.
+
+"Spy or no spy," she said to Tish, "we ought to feed him."
+
+"Huh!" was Tish's rejoinder. "There is no sense is wasting good
+food on a man whose hours are numbered."
+
+We were surprised, however, to find that Hutchins, who had
+detested Mr. McDonald, was rather on Aggie's side.
+
+"The fact that he has but a few more hours," she said to Tish,
+"is an excellent reason for making those hours as little
+wretched as possible."
+
+It was really due to Hutchins, therefore, that Mr. McDonald had
+a luncheon. The problem of how to get it to him was a
+troublesome one, but Tish solved it with her customary sagacity.
+
+"We can make a raft," she said, "a small one, large enough to
+hold a tray. By stopping the launch some yards above the island
+we can float his luncheon to him quite safely."
+
+That was the method we ultimately pursued and it worked most
+satisfactorily.
+
+Hutchins baked hot biscuits; and, by putting a cover over the
+pan, we were enabled to get them to him before they cooled.
+
+We prepared a really appetizing luncheon of hot biscuits,
+broiled ham, marmalade, and tea, adding, at Aggie's
+instructions, a jar of preserved peaches, which she herself had
+put up.
+
+Tish made the raft while we prepared the food, and at exactly
+half-past twelve o'clock we left the house. Mr. McDonald saw us
+coming and was waiting smilingly at the upper end of the island.
+
+"Great Scott!" he said. "I thought you were never going to hear
+me. Another hour and I'd have made a swim for it, though it's
+suicidal with this current. I'll show you where you can come in
+so you won't hit a rock."
+
+Hutchins had stopped the engine of the motor boat and we threw
+out the anchor at a safe distance from the shore.
+
+"We are not going to land," said Tish, "and I think you know
+perfectly well the reason why."
+
+"Oh, now," he protested; "surely you are going to land! I've had
+an awfully uncomfortable accident--my canoe's gone."
+
+"We know that," Tish said calmly. "As a matter of fact, we took
+it."
+
+Mr. McDonald sat down suddenly on a log at the water's edge and
+looked at us.
+
+"Oh!" he said.
+
+"You may not believe it," Tish said, "but we know everything--
+your dastardly plot, who the red-haired man is, and all the
+destruction and wretchedness you are about to cause."
+
+"Oh, I say!" he said feebly. "I wouldn't go as far as that. I'm--
+ I'm not such a bad sort."
+
+"That depends on the point of view," said Tish grimly.
+
+Aggie touched her on the arm then and reminded her that the
+biscuits were getting cold; but Tish had a final word with him.
+
+"Your correspondence has fallen into my hands, young man," she
+said, "and will be turned over to the proper authorities."
+
+"It won't tell them anything they don't know," he said doggedly.
+"Look here, ladies: I am not ashamed of this thing. I--I am
+proud of it. I am perfectly willing to yell it out loud for
+everybody to hear. As a matter of fact, I think I will."
+
+Mr. McDonald stood up suddenly and threw his head back; but here
+Hutchins, who had been silent, spoke for the first time.
+
+"Don't be an idiot!" she said coldly. "We have something here
+for you to eat if you behave yourself."
+
+He seemed to see her then for the first time, for he favored her
+with a long stare.
+
+"Ah!" he said. "Then you are not entirely cold and heartless?"
+
+She made no reply to this, being busy in assisting Aggie to
+lower the raft over the side of the boat.
+
+"Broiled ham, tea, hot biscuits, and marmalade," said Aggie
+gently. "My poor fellow, we are doing what we consider our duty;
+but we want you to know that it is hard for us--very hard."
+
+When he saw our plan, Mr. McDonald's face fell; but he stepped
+out into the water up to his knees and caught the raft as it
+floated down.
+
+Before he said "Thank you" he lifted the cover of the pan and
+saw the hot biscuits underneath.
+
+"Really," he said, "it's very decent of you. I sent off a
+grocery order yesterday, but nothing has come."
+
+Tish had got Hutchins to start the engine by that time and we
+were moving away. He stood there, up to his knees in water,
+holding the tray and looking after us. He was really a pathetic
+figure, especially in view of the awful fate we felt was
+overtaking him.
+
+He called something after us. On account of the noise of the
+engine, we could not be certain, but we all heard it the same
+way.
+
+"Send for the whole d--d outfit!" was the way it sounded to us.
+"It won't make any difference to me."
+
+V
+
+The last thing I recall of Mr. McDonald that day is seeing him
+standing there in the water, holding the tray, with the teapot
+steaming under his nose, and gazing after us with an air of
+bewilderment that did not deceive us at all.
+
+As I look back, there is only one thing we might have noticed at
+the time. This was the fact that Hutchins, having started the
+engine, was sitting beside it on the floor of the boat and
+laughing in the cruelest possible manner. As I said to Aggie at
+the time: "A spy is a spy and entitled to punishment if
+discovered; but no young woman should laugh over so desperate a
+situation."
+
+I come now to the denouement of this exciting period. It had
+been Tish's theory that the red-haired man should not be taken
+into our confidence. If there was a reward for the capture of
+the spy, we ourselves intended to have it.
+
+The steamer was due the next day but one. Tish was in favor of
+not waiting, but of at once going in the motor boat to the town,
+some thirty miles away, and telling of our capture; but Hutchins
+claimed there was not sufficient gasoline for such an excursion.
+That afternoon we went in the motor launch to where Tish had
+hidden the green canoe and, with a hatchet, rendered it useless.
+
+The workings of the subconscious mind are marvelous. In the
+midst of chopping, Tish suddenly looked up.
+
+"Have you noticed," she said, "that the detective is always
+watching our camp?"
+
+"That's all he has to do," Aggie suggested.
+
+"Stuff and nonsense! Didn't he follow you into the swamp? Does
+Hutchins ever go out in the canoe that he doesn't go out also?
+I'll tell you what has happened: She's young and pretty, and
+he's fallen in love with her."
+
+I must say it sounded reasonable. He never bothered about the
+motor boat, but the instant she took the canoe and started out
+he was hovering somewhere near.
+
+"She's noticed it," Tish went on. "That's what she was
+quarreling about with him yesterday."
+
+"How are we to know," said Aggie, who was gathering up the
+scraps of the green canoe and building a fire under them--"how
+are we to know they are not old friends, meeting thus in the
+wilderness? Fate plays strange tricks, Tish. I lived in the same
+street with Mr. Wiggins for years, and never knew him until one
+day when my umbrella turned wrong side out in a gust of wind."
+
+"Fate fiddlesticks!" said Tish. "There's no such thing as fate
+in affairs of this sort. It's all instinct--the instinct of the
+race to continue itself."
+
+This Aggie regarded as indelicate and she was rather cool to
+Tish the balance of the day.
+
+Our prisoner spent most of the day at the end of the island
+toward us, sitting quietly, as we could sec through the glasses.
+We watched carefully, fearing at any time to see the Indian
+paddling toward him.
+
+[Tish was undecided what to do in such an emergency, except to
+intercept him and explain, threatening him also with having
+attempted to carry the incriminating papers. As it happened,
+however, the entire camp had gone for a two-days' deer hunt, and
+before they returned the whole thing had come to its surprising
+end.]
+
+Late in the afternoon Tish put her theory of the red-haired man
+to the test.
+
+"Hutchins," she said, "Miss Lizzie and I will cook the dinner if
+you want to go in the canoe to Harvey's Bay for water-lilies."
+
+Hutchins at once said she did not care a rap for water-lilies;
+but, seeing a determined glint in Tish's eye, she added that she
+would go for frogs if Tish wanted her out of the way.
+
+"Don't talk like a child!" Tish retorted. "Who said I wanted you
+out of the way?"
+
+It is absolutely true that the moment Hutchins put her foot into
+the canoe the red-haired man put down his fishing-rod and rose.
+And she had not taken three strokes with the paddle before he
+was in the blue canoe.
+
+Hutchins saw him just then and scowled. The last we saw of her
+she was moving rapidly up the river and the detective was
+dropping slowly behind. They both disappeared finally into the
+bay and Tish drew a long breath.
+
+"Typical!" she said curtly. "He's sent here to watch a dangerous
+man and spends his time pursuing the young woman who hates the
+sight of him. When women achieve the suffrage they will put none
+but married men in positions of trust."
+
+Hutchins and the detective were still out of sight when supper-
+time came. The spy's supper weighed on us, and at last Tish
+attempted to start the motor launch. We had placed the supper
+and the small raft aboard, and Aggie was leaning over the edge
+untying the painter,--not a man, but a rope,--when unexpectedly
+the engine started at the first revolution of the wheel.
+
+It darted out to the length of the rope, where it was checked
+abruptly, the shock throwing Aggie entirely out and into the
+stream. Tish caught the knife from the supper tray to cut us
+loose, and while Tish cut I pulled Aggie in, wet as she was. The
+boat was straining and panting, and, on being released, it
+sprang forward like a dog unleashed.
+
+Aggie had swallowed a great deal of water and was most
+disagreeable; but the Mebbe was going remarkably well, and there
+seemed to be every prospect that we should get back to the camp
+in good order. Alas, for human hopes! Mr. McDonald was not very
+agreeable.
+
+"You know," he said as he waited for his supper to float within
+reach, "you needn't be so blamed radical about everything you
+do! If you object to my hanging round, why not just say so? If
+I'm too obnoxious I'll clear out."
+
+"Obnoxious is hardly the word," said Tish. "How long am I to be
+a prisoner?"
+
+"I shall send letters off by the first boat."
+
+He caught the raft just then and examined the supper with
+interest.
+
+"Of course things might be worse," he said; "but it's dirty
+treatment, anyhow. And it's darned humiliating. Somebody I know
+is having a good time at my expense. It's heartless! That's what
+it is--heartless!"
+
+Well, we left him, the engine starting nicely and Aggie being
+wrapped in a tarpaulin; but about a hundred yards above the
+island it began to slow down, and shortly afterward it stopped
+altogether. As the current caught us, we luckily threw out the
+anchor, for the engine refused to start again. It was then we
+saw the other canoes.
+
+The girl in the pink tam-o'-shanter was in the first one.
+
+They glanced at us curiously as they passed, and the P.T.S.--
+that is the way we grew to speak of the pink tam-o'-shanter--
+raised one hand in the air, which is a form of canoe greeting,
+probably less upsetting to the equilibrium than a vigorous
+waving of the arm.
+
+It was just then, I believe, that they saw our camp and headed
+for it. The rest of what happened is most amazing. They stopped
+at our landing and unloaded their canoes. Though twilight was
+falling, we could see them distinctly. And what we saw was that
+they calmly calmly took possession of the camp.
+
+"Good gracious!" Tish cried. "The girls have gone into the tent!
+And somebody's working at the stove. The impertinence!"
+
+Our situation was acutely painful. We could do nothing but
+watch. We called, but our voices failed to reach them. And Aggie
+took a chill, partly cold and partly fury. We sat there while
+they ate the entire supper!
+
+They were having a very good time. Now and then somebody would
+go into the tent and bring something out, and there would be
+shrieks of laughter.
+
+[We learned afterward that part of the amusement was caused by
+Aggie's false front, which one of the wretches put on as a
+beard.]
+
+It was while thus distracted that Aggie suddenly screamed, and a
+moment later Mr. McDonald climbed over the side and into the
+boat, dripping.
+
+"Don't be alarmed!" he said. "I'll go back and be a prisoner
+again just as soon as I've fired the engine. I couldn't bear to
+think of the lady who fell in sitting here indefinitely and
+taking cold." He was examining the engine while he spoke. "Have
+visitors, I see," he observed, as calmly as though he were not
+dripping all over the place.
+
+"Intruders, not visitors!" Tish said angrily. "I never saw them
+before."
+
+"Rather pretty, the one with the pink cap. May I examine the
+gasoline supply?" There was no gasoline. He shrugged his
+shoulders. "I'm afraid no amount of mechanical genius I intended
+to offer you will start her," he said; "but the young lady--
+Hutchins is her name, I believe?--will see you here and come
+after you, of course."
+
+Well, there was no denying that, spy or no spy, his presence was
+a comfort. He offered to swim back to the island and be a
+prisoner again, but Tish said magnanimously that there was no
+hurry. On Aggie's offering half of her tarpaulin against the
+wind, which had risen, he accepted.
+
+"Your Miss Hutchins is reckless, isn't she?" he said when he was
+comfortably settled. "She's a strong swimmer; but a canoe is
+uncertain at the best."
+
+"She's in no danger," said Tish. "She has a devoted admirer
+watching out for her."
+
+"The deuce she has!" His voice was quite interested. "Why, who
+on earth--"
+
+"Your detective," said Aggie softly. "He's quite mad about her.
+The way he follows her and the way he looks at her--it's
+thrilling!"
+
+Mr. McDonald said nothing for quite a while. The canoe party had
+evidently eaten everything they could find, and somebody had
+brought out a banjo and was playing.
+
+Tish, unable to vent her anger, suddenly turned on Mr. McDonald.
+"If you think," she said, "that the grocery list fooled us, it
+didn't!"
+
+"Grocery list?"
+
+"That's what I said."
+
+"How did you get my grocery list?"
+
+So she told him, and how she had deciphered it, and how the word
+"dynamite" had only confirmed her early suspicions.
+
+His only comment was to say, "Good Heavens!" in a smothered
+voice.
+
+"It was the extractor that made me suspicious," she finished.
+"What were you going to extract? Teeth?"
+
+"And so, when my Indian was swimming, you went through his
+things! It's the most astounding thing I ever--My dear lady, an
+extractor is used to get the hooks out of fish. It was no
+cipher, I assure you. I needed an extractor and I ordered it.
+The cipher you speak of is only a remarkable coincidence."
+
+"Huh!" said Tish. "And the paper you dropped in the train--was
+that a coincidence?"
+
+"That's not my secret," he said, and turned sulky at once.
+
+"Don't tell me," Tish said triumphantly, "that any young man
+comes here absolutely alone without a purpose!"
+
+"I had a purpose, all right; but it was not to blow up a
+railroad train."
+
+Apparently he thought he had said too much, for he relapsed into
+silence after that, with an occasional muttering.
+
+It was eight o'clock when Hutchins's canoe came into sight. She
+was paddling easily, but the detective was far behind and moving
+slowly.
+
+She saw the camp with its uninvited guests, and then she saw us.
+The detective, however, showed no curiosity; and we could see
+that he made for his landing and stumbled exhaustedly up the
+bank. Hutchins drew up beside us. "He'll not try that again, I
+think," she said in her crisp voice. "He's out of training. He
+panted like a motor launch. Who are our visitors?"
+
+Here her eyes fell on Mr. McDonald and her face set in the dusk.
+
+"You'll have to go back and get some gasoline, Hutchins."
+
+"What made you start out without looking?"
+
+"And send the vandals away. If they wait until I arrive, I'll be
+likely to do them some harm. I have never been so outraged."
+
+"Let me go for gasoline in the canoe," said Mr. McDonald. He
+leaned over the thwart and addressed Hutchins. "You're worn
+out," he said. "I promise to come back and be a perfectly well-
+behaved prisoner again."
+
+"Thanks, no."
+
+"I'm wet. The exercise will warm me."
+
+"Is it possible," she said in a withering tone that was lost on
+us at the time, "that you brought no dumb-bells with you?"
+
+If we had had any doubts they should have been settled then; but
+we never suspected. It is incredible, looking back.
+
+The dusk was falling and I am not certain of what followed. It
+was, however, something like this: Mr. McDonald muttered
+something angrily and made a motion to get into the canoe.
+Hutchins replied that she would not have help from him if she
+died for it. The next thing we knew she was in the launch and
+the canoe was floating off on the current. Aggie squealed; and
+Mr. McDonald, instead of swimming after the thing, merely folded
+his arms and looked at it.
+
+"You know," he said to Hutchins, "you have so unpleasant a
+disposition that somebody we both know of is better off than he
+thinks he is!"
+
+Tish's fury knew no bounds, for there we were marooned and two
+of us wet to the skin. I must say for Hutchins, however, that
+when she learned about Aggie she was bitterly repentant, and
+insisted on putting her own sweater on her. But there we were
+and there we should likely stay.
+
+It was quite dark by that time, and we sat in the launch,
+rocking gently. The canoeing party had lighted a large fire on
+the beach, using the driftwood we had so painfully accumulated.
+
+We sat in silence, except that Tish, who was watching our camp,
+said once bitterly that she was glad there were three beds in
+the tent. The girls of the canoeing party would be comfortable.
+
+After a time Tish turned on Mr. McDonald sharply. "Since you
+claim to be no spy," she said, "perhaps you will tell us what
+brings you alone to this place? Don't tell me it's fish--I've
+seen you reading, with a line out. You're no fisherman."
+
+He hesitated. "No," he admitted. "I'll be frank, Miss Carberry.
+I did not come to fish."
+
+"What brought you?"
+
+"Love," he said, in a low tone. "I don't expect you to believe
+me, but it's the honest truth."
+
+"Love!" Tish scoffed.
+
+"Perhaps I'd better tell you the story," he said. "It's long and-
+ - and rather sad."
+
+"Love stories," Hutchins put in coldly, "are terribly stupid,
+except to those concerned."
+
+"That," he retorted, "is because you have never been in love.
+You are young and--you will pardon the liberty?--attractive; but
+you are totally prosaic and unromantic."
+
+"Indeed!" she said, and relapsed into silence.
+
+"These other ladies," Mr. McDonald went on, "will understand the
+strangeness of my situation when I explain that the--the young
+lady I care for is very near; is, in fact, within sight."
+
+"Good gracious!" said Aggie. "Where?"
+
+"It is a long story, but it may help to while away the long
+night hours; for I dare say we are here for the night. Did any
+one happen to notice the young lady in the first canoe, in the
+pink tam-o'-shanter?"
+
+We said we had--all except Hutchins, who, of coarse, had not
+seen her. Mr. McDonald got a wet cigarette from his pocket and,
+finding a box of matches on the seat, made an attempt to dry it
+over the flames; so his story was told in the flickering light
+of one match after another.
+
+VI
+
+"I am," Mr. McDonald said, as the cigarette steamed, "the son of
+poor but honest parents. All my life I have been obliged to
+labor. You may say that my English is surprisingly pure, under
+such conditions. As a matter of fact, I educated myself at
+night, using a lantern in the top of my father's stable."
+
+"I thought you said he was poor," Hutchins put in nastily. "How
+did he have a stable?"
+
+"He kept a livery stable. Any points that are not clear I will
+explain afterward. Once the thread of a narrative is broken, it
+is difficult to resume, Miss Hutchins. Near us, in a large
+house, lived the lady of my heart."
+
+"The pink tam-o'-shanter girl!" said Aggie. "I begin to
+understand."
+
+"But," he added, "near us also lived a red-headed boy. She liked
+him very much, and even in the long-ago days I was fiercely
+jealous of him. It may surprise you to know that in those days I
+longed--fairly longed--for red hair and a red mustache."
+
+"I hate to interrupt," said Hutchins; "but did he have a
+mustache as a boy?"
+
+He ignored her. "We three grew up together. The girl is
+beautiful- -you've probably noticed that--and amiable. The one
+thing I admire in a young woman is amiability. It would not, for
+instance, have occurred to her to isolate an entire party on the
+bosom of a northern and treacherous river out of pure temper."
+
+"To think," said Aggie softly, "that she is just over there by
+the camp-fire! Don't you suppose, if she loves you, she senses
+your nearness?"
+
+"That's it exactly," he replied in a gloomy voice, "if she loves
+me! But does she? In other words, has she come up the river to
+meet me or to meet my rival? She knows we are here. Both of us
+have written her. The presence of one or the other of us is the
+real reason for this excursion of hers. But again the question
+is- -which?"
+
+Here the match he was holding under the cigarette burned his
+fingers and he flung it overboard with a violent gesture.
+
+"The detective, of coarse," said Tish. "I knew it from the
+beginning of your story."
+
+"The detective," he assented. "You see his very profession
+attracts. There's an element of romance in it. I myself have
+kept on with my father and now run the--er--livery stable. My
+business is a handicap from a romantic point of view.
+
+"I am aware," Mr. McDonald went on, "that it is not customary to
+speak so frankly of affairs of this sort; but I have two
+reasons. It hurts me to rest under unjust suspicion. I am no
+spy, ladies. And the second reason is even stronger. Consider my
+desperate position: In the morning my rival will see her; he
+will paddle his canoe to the great rock below your camp and sing
+his love song from the water. In the morning I shall sit here
+helpless-- ill, possibly--and see all that I value in life slip
+out of my grasp. And all through no fault of my own! Things are
+so evenly balanced, so little will shift the weight of her
+favor, that frankly the first one to reach her will get her."
+
+I confess I was thrilled. And even Tish was touched; but she
+covered her emotion with hard common sense.
+
+"What's her name?" she demanded.
+
+"Considering my frankness I must withhold that. Why not simply
+refer to her as the pink tam-o'-shanter--or, better still and
+more briefly, the P.T.S.? That may stand for pink tam-o'-
+shanter, or the Person That Smiles,--she smiles a great deal,--
+or--or almost anything."
+
+"It also stands," said Hutchins, with a sniff, "for Pretty Tall
+Story."
+
+Tish considered her skepticism unworthy in one so young, and
+told her so; on which she relapsed into a sulky silence.
+
+In view of what we knew, the bonfire at our camp and the small
+figure across the river took on a new significance.
+
+As Aggie said, to think of the red-haired man sleeping calmly
+while his lady love was so near and his rival, so to speak,
+_hors de combat!_ Shortly after finishing his story, Mr.
+McDonald went to the stern of the boat and lifted the anchor
+rope.
+
+"It is possible," he said, "that the current will carry us to my
+island with a little judicious management. Even though we miss
+it, we'll hardly be worse off than we are."
+
+It was surprising we had not thought of it before, for the plan
+succeeded admirably. By moving a few feet at a time and then
+anchoring, we made slow but safe progress, and at last touched
+shore. We got out, and Mr. McDonald built a large fire, near
+which we put Aggie to steam. His supper, which he had not had
+time to eat, he generously divided, and we heated the tea.
+Hutchins, however, refused to eat.
+
+Warmth and food restored Tish's mind to its usual keenness. I
+recall now the admiration in Mr. McDonald's eyes when she
+suddenly put down the sandwich she was eating and exclaimed:--
+
+"The flags, of course! He told her to watch for a red flag as
+she came up the river; so when the party saw ours they landed.
+Perhaps they still think it is his camp and that he is away
+overnight."
+
+"That's it, exactly," he said. "Think of the poor wretch's
+excitement when he saw your flag!"
+
+Still, on looking back, it seems curious that we overlooked the
+way the red-headed man had followed Hutchins about. True, men
+are polygamous animals, Tish says, and are quite capable of
+following one woman about while they are sincerely in love with
+somebody else. But, when you think of it, the detective had
+apparently followed Hutchins from the start, and had gone into
+the wilderness to be near her, with only a suitcase and a
+mackintosh coat; which looked like a mad infatuation.
+
+[Tish says she thought of this at the time, and that; from what
+she had seen of the P.T.S., Hutchins was much prettier. But she
+says she decided that men often love one quality in one girl and
+another in another; that he probably loved Hutchins's beauty and
+the amiability of the P.T.S. Also, she says, she reflected that
+the polygamy of the Far East is probably due to this tendency in
+the male more than to a preponderance of women.]
+
+Tish called me aside while Mr. McDonald was gathering firewood.
+"I'm a fool and a guilty woman, Lizzie," she said. "Because of
+an unjust suspicion I have possibly wrecked this poor boy's
+life."
+
+I tried to soothe her. "They might have been wretchedly unhappy
+together, Tish," I said; "and, anyhow, I doubt whether he is
+able to support a wife. There's nothing much in keeping a livery
+stable nowadays."
+
+"There's only one thing that still puzzles me," Tish observed:
+"granting that the grocery order was a grocery order, what about
+the note?"
+
+We might have followed this line of thought, and saved what
+occurred later, but that a new idea suddenly struck Tish. She is
+curious in that way; her mind works very rapidly at times, and
+because I cannot take her mental hurdles, so to speak, she is
+often impatient.
+
+"Lizzie," she said suddenly, "did you notice that when the
+anchor was lifted, we drifted directly to this island? Don't
+stare at me like that. Use your wits."
+
+When I failed instantly to understand, however, she turned
+abruptly and left me, disappearing in the shadows.
+
+For the next hour nothing happened. Tish was not in sight and
+Aggie slept by the fire. Hutchins sat with her chin cupped in
+her hands, and Mr. McDonald gathered driftwood.
+
+Hutchins only spoke once. "I'm awfully sorry about the canoe,
+Miss Lizzie," she said; "it was silly and--and selfish. I don't
+always act like a bad child. The truth is, I'm rather upset and
+nervous. I hate to be thwarted--I'm sorry I can't explain any
+further."
+
+I was magnanimous. "I'm sure, until to-night, you've been
+perfectly satisfactory," I said; "but it seems extraordinary
+that you should dislike men the way you do."
+
+She only eyed me searchingly.
+
+It is my evening custom to prepare for the night by taking my
+switch off and combing and braiding my hair; so, as we seemed to
+be settled for the night, I asked Mr. McDonald whether the camp
+afforded an extra comb. He brought out a traveling-case at once
+from the tent and opened it.
+
+"Here's a comb," he said. "I never use one. I'm sorry this is
+all I can supply."
+
+My eyes were glued to the case. It was an English traveling-
+case, with gold-mounted fittings. He saw me staring at it and
+changed color.
+
+"Nice bag, isn't it?" he said. "It was a gift, of course. The--
+the livery stable doesn't run much to this sort of thing."
+
+But the fine edge of suspicion had crept into my mind again.
+
+
+Tish did not return to the fire for some time. Before she came
+back we were all thoroughly alarmed. The island was small, and a
+short search convinced us that she was not on it!
+
+We wakened Aggie and told her, and the situation was very
+painful. The launch was where we had left it. Mr. McDonald
+looked more and more uneasy.
+
+"My sane mind tells me she's perfectly safe," he said. "I don't
+know that I've ever met a person more able to take care of
+herself; but it's darned odd--that's all I can say."
+
+Just as he spoke a volley of shots sounded from up the river
+near our camp, two close together and then one; and somebody
+screamed.
+
+It was very dark. We could see lanterns flashing at our camp and
+somebody was yelling hoarsely. One lantern seemed to run up and
+down the beach in mad excitement, and then, out of the far-off
+din, Aggie, whose ears are sharp, suddenly heard the splash of a
+canoe paddle.
+
+I shall tell Tish's story of what happened as she told it to
+Charlie Sands two weeks or so later.
+
+"It is perfectly simple," she said, "and it's stupid to make
+such a fuss over it. Don't talk to me about breaking the law!
+The girl came; I didn't steal her."
+
+Charlie Sands, I remember, interrupted at that moment to remind
+her that she had shot a hole in the detective's canoe; but this
+only irritated her.
+
+"Certainly I did," she snapped; "but it's perfectly idiotic of
+him to say that it took off the heel of his shoe. In that stony
+country it's always easy to lose a heel."
+
+But to return to Tish's story:--
+
+"It occurred to me," she said, "that, if the launch had drifted
+to Mr. McDonald's island, the canoe might have done so too; so I
+took a look round. I'd been pretty much worried about having
+called the boy a spy when he wasn't, and it worried me to think
+that he couldn't get away from the place. I never liked the red-
+haired man. He was cruel to Aggie's cat--but we've told you
+that.
+
+"I knew that in the morning the detective would see the P.T.S.,
+as we called her, and he could get over and propose before
+breakfast. But when I found the canoe--yes, I found it-- I
+didn't intend to do anything more than steal the detective's
+boat."
+
+"Is that all?" said Charlie Sands sarcastically. "You disappoint
+me, Aunt Letitia! With all the chances you had--to burn his
+pitiful little tent, for instance, or steal his suitcase--"
+
+"But on my way," Tish went on with simple dignity, "it occurred
+to me that I could move things a step farther by taking the girl
+to Mr. McDonald and letting him have his chance right away.
+Things went well from the start, for she was standing alone,
+looking out over the river. It was dark, except for the
+starlight, and I didn't know it was she. I beached the canoe and
+she squealed a little when I spoke to her."
+
+"Just what," broke in Charlie Sands, "does one say under such
+circumstances? Sometime I may wish to abduct a young woman and
+it is well to be prepared."
+
+"I told her the young man she had expected was on Island Eleven
+and had sent me to get her. She was awfully excited. She said
+they'd seen his signal, but nothing of him. And when they'd
+found a number of feminine things round they all felt a little--
+well, you can understand. She went back to get a coat, and while
+she was gone I untied the canoes and pushed them out into the
+river. I'm thorough, and I wasn't going to have a lot of people
+interfering before we got things fixed."
+
+It was here, I think, that Charlie Sands gave a low moan and
+collapsed on the sofa. "Certainly!" he said in a stifled voice.
+"I believe in being thorough. And, of course, a few canoes more
+or less do not matter."
+
+"Later," Tish said, "I knew I'd been thoughtless about the
+canoes; but, of course, it was too late then."
+
+"And when was it that you assaulted the detective?"
+
+"He fired first," said Tish. "I never felt more peaceable in my
+life. It's absurd for him to say that he was watching our camp,
+as he had every night we'd been there. Who asked him to guard
+us? And the idea of his saying he thought we were Indians
+stealing things, and that he fired into the air! The bullets
+sang past me. I had hardly time to get my revolver out of my
+stocking."
+
+"And then?" asked Charlie Sands.
+
+"And then," said Tish, "we went calmly down the river to Island
+Eleven. We went rapidly, for at first the detective did not know
+I had shot a hole in his canoe, and he followed us. It stands to
+reason that if I'd shot his heel off he'd have known there was a
+hole in the boat. Luckily the girl was in the bottom of the
+canoe when she fainted or we might have been upset."
+
+It was at this point, I believe, that Charlie Sands got his hat
+and opened the door.
+
+"I find," he said, "that I cannot stand any more at present,
+Aunt Tish. I shall return when I am stronger."
+
+
+So I shall go back to my own narrative. Really my justification
+is almost complete. Any one reading to this point will realize
+the injustice of the things that have been said about us.
+
+We were despairing of Tish, as I have said, when we heard the
+shots and then the approach of a canoe. Then Tish hailed us.
+
+"Quick, somebody!" she said. "I have a cramp in my right leg."
+
+[The canoeing position, kneeling as one must, had been always
+very trying for her. She frequently developed cramps, which only
+a hot footbath relieved.]
+
+Mr. McDonald waded out into the water. Our beach fire
+illuminated the whole scene distinctly, and when he saw the
+P.T.S. huddled in the canoe he stopped as though he had been
+shot.
+
+"How interesting!" said Hutchins from the bank, in her cool
+voice.
+
+I remember yet Tish, stamping round on her cramped limb and
+smiling benevolently at all of us. The girl, however, looked
+startled and unhappy, and a little dizzy. Hutchins helped her to
+a fallen tree.
+
+"Where--where is he?" said the P.T.S.
+
+Tish stared at her. "Bless the girl!" she said. "Did you think I
+meant the other one?"
+
+"I--What other one?"
+
+Tish put her hand on Mr. McDonald's arm. "My dear girl," she
+said, "this young man adores you. He's all that a girl ought to
+want in the man she loves. I have done him a grave injustice and
+he has borne it nobly. Come now--let me put your hand in his and
+say you will marry him."
+
+"Marry him!" said the P.T.S. "Why, I never saw him in my life
+before!"
+
+We had been so occupied with this astounding scene that none of
+us had noticed the arrival of the detective. He limped rapidly
+up the bank--having lost his heel, as I have explained--and,
+dripping with water, confronted us. When a red-haired person is
+pale, he is very pale. And his teeth showed.
+
+He ignored all of us but the P.T.S., who turned and saw him, and
+went straight into his arms in the most unmaidenly fashion.
+
+"By Heaven," he said, "I thought that elderly lunatic had taken
+you off and killed you!"
+
+He kissed her quite frantically before all of us; and then, with
+one arm round her, he confronted Tish.
+
+"I'm through!" he said. "I'm done! There isn't a salary in the
+world that will make me stay within gunshot of you another day."
+He eyed her fiercely. "You are a dangerous woman, madam," he
+said. "I'm going to bring a charge against you for abduction and
+assault with intent to kill. And if there's any proof needed
+I'll show my canoe, full of water to the gunwale."
+
+Here he kissed the girl again.
+
+"You--you know her?" gasped Mr. McDonald, and dropped on a tree-
+trunk, as though he were too weak to stand.
+
+"It looks like it, doesn't it?"
+
+Here I happened to glance at Hutchins, and she was convulsed
+with mirth! Tish saw her, too, and glared at her; but she seemed
+to get worse. Then, without the slightest warning, she walked
+round the camp-fire and kissed Mr. McDonald solemnly on the top
+of his head.
+
+"I give it up!" she said. "Somebody will have to marry you and
+take care of you. I'd better be the person."
+
+
+"But why was the detective watching Hutchins? " said Charlie
+Sands. "Was it because he had heard of my Aunt Letitia's
+reckless nature? I am still bewildered."
+
+"You remember the night we got the worms?"
+
+"I see. The detective was watching all of you because you stole
+the worms."
+
+"Stole nothing!" Tish snapped. "That's the girl's house. She's
+the Miss Newcomb you read about in the papers. Now do you
+understand?"
+
+"Certainly I do. She was a fugitive from justice because the cat
+found dynamite in the woods. Or--perhaps I'm a trifle confused,
+but--Now I have it! She had stolen a gold-mounted traveling-bag
+and given it to McDonald. Lucky chap! I was crazy about Hutchins
+myself. You might tip her the word that I'm badly off for a
+traveling-case myself. But what about the P.T.S.? How did she
+happen on the scene?"
+
+"She was engaged to the detective, and she was camping down the
+river. He had sent her word where he was. The red flag was to
+help her find him."
+
+Tish knows Charlie Sands, so she let him talk. Then:--
+
+"Mr. McDonald was too wealthy, Charlie," she said; "so when she
+wanted him to work and be useful, and he refused, she ran off
+and got a situation herself to teach him a lesson. She could
+drive a car. But her people heard about it, and that wretched
+detective was responsible for her safety. That's why he followed
+her about."
+
+"I should like to follow her about myself," said Charlie Sands.
+"Do you think she's unalterably decided to take McDonald, money
+and all? He's still an idler. Lend me your car, Aunt Tish.
+There's a theory there; and--who knows?"
+
+"He is going to work for six months before she marries him,"
+Tish said. "He seems to like to work, now he has started."
+
+She rang the bell and Hannah came to the door.
+
+"Hannah," said Tish calmly, "call up the garage and tell
+McDonald to bring the car round. Mr. Sands is going out."
+
+
+
+MY COUNTRY TISH OF THEE--
+
+We had meant to go to Europe this last summer, and Tish would
+have gone anyhow, war or no war, if we had not switched her off
+onto something else. "Submarines fiddlesticks!" she said. "Give
+me a good life preserver, with a bottle of blackberry cordial
+fastened to it, and the sea has no terrors for me."
+
+She said the proper way to do, in case the ship was torpedoed,
+was to go up on an upper deck, and let the vessel sink under
+one.
+
+"Then without haste," she explained, "as the water rises about
+one, strike out calmly. The life-belt supports one, but swim
+gently for the exercise. It will prevent chilling. With a
+waterproof bag of crackers, and mild weather, one could go on
+comfortably for a day or two."
+
+I still remember the despairing face Aggie turned to me. It was
+December then, and very cold.
+
+However, she said nothing more until January. Early in that
+month Charlie Sands came to Tish's to Sunday dinner, and we were
+all there. The subject came up then.
+
+It was about the time Tish took up vegetarianism, I remember
+that, because the only way she could induce Charlie Sands to
+come to dinner was to promise to have two chops for him.
+Personally I am not a vegetarian. I am not and never will be. I
+took a firm stand except when at Tish's home. But Aggie followed
+Tish's lead, of course, and I believe lived up to it as far as
+possible, although it is quite true that, stopping in one day
+unexpectedly to secure a new crochet pattern, I smelled broiling
+steak. But Aggie explained that she merely intended to use the
+juice from a small portion, having had one of her weak spells,
+the balance to go to the janitor's dog.
+
+However, this is a digression.
+
+"Europe!" said Charlie Sands. "Forget it! What in the name of
+the gastric juice is this I'm eating?"
+
+It was a mixture of bran, raisins, and chopped nuts, as I recall
+it, moistened with water and pressed into a compact form. It was
+Tish's own invention. She called it "Bran-Nut," and was talking
+of making it in large quantities for sale.
+
+Charlie Sands gave it up with a feeble gesture. "I'm sorry, Aunt
+Letitia," he said at last; "I'm a strong man ordinarily, but by
+the time I've got it masticated I'm too weak to swallow it. If--
+if one could have a stream of water playing on it while working,
+it would facilitate things."
+
+"The Ostermaiers," said Aggie, "are going West."
+
+"Good for the Ostermaiers," said Charlie Sands. "Great idea. See
+America first. 'My Country Tish of Thee,' etc. Why don't you
+three try it?"
+
+Tish relinquished Europe slowly.
+
+"One would think," Charlie Sands said, "that you were a German
+being asked to give up Belgium."
+
+"What part of the West?" she demanded. "It's all civilized,
+isn't it?"
+
+"The Rocky Mountains," said Charlie Sands, "will never be
+civilized."
+
+Tish broke off a piece of Bran-Nut, and when she thought no one
+was looking poured a little tea over it. There was a gleam in
+her eye that Aggie and I have learned to know.
+
+"Mountains!" she said. "That ought to be good for Aggie's hay
+fever."
+
+"I'd rather live with hay fever," Aggie put in sharply, "than
+cure it by falling over a precipice."
+
+"You'll have to take a chance on that, of course," Charlie Sands
+said. "I'm not sure it will be safe, but I am sure it will be
+interesting."
+
+Oh, he knew Tish well enough. Tell her a thing was dangerous,
+and no power could restrain her.
+
+I do not mind saying that I was not keen about the thing. I had
+my fortune told years ago, and the palmist said that if a
+certain line had had a bend in it I should have been hanged. But
+since it did not, to be careful of high places.
+
+"It's a sporting chance," said Charlie Sands, although I was
+prodding him under the table. "With some good horses and a bag
+of this--er--concentrated food, you would have the time of your
+young lives."
+
+This was figurative. We are all of us round fifty.
+
+"The--the Bran-Nut," he said, "would serve for both food and
+ammunition. I can see you riding along, now and then dropping a
+piece of it on the head of some unlucky mountain goat, and
+watching it topple over into eternity. I can see--"
+
+"Riding!" said Aggie. "Then I'm not going. I leave never been on
+a horse and I never intend to be."
+
+"Don't be a fool," Tish snapped. "If you've never been on a
+horse, it's time and to spare you got on one."
+
+Hannah had been clearing the table with her lips shut tight.
+Hannah is an old and privileged servant and has a most
+unfortunate habit of speaking her mind. So now she stopped
+beside Tish.
+
+"You take my advice and go, Miss Tish," she said. "If you ride a
+horse round some and get an appetite, you'll go down on your
+knees and apologize to your Maker for the stuff we've been
+eating the last four weeks." She turned to Charlie Sands, and
+positively her chin was quivering. "I'm a healthy woman," she
+said, "and I work hard and need good nourishing food. When it's
+come to a point where I eat the cat's meat and let it go
+hungry," she said, "it's time either I lost my appetite or Miss
+Tish went away."
+
+Well, Tish dismissed Hannah haughtily from the room, and the
+conversation went on. None of us had been far West, although
+Tish has a sister-in-law in, Toledo, Ohio. But owing to a
+quarrel over a pair of andirons that had been in the family for
+a time, she had never visited her.
+
+"You'll like it, all of you," Charlie Sands said as we waited
+for the baked apples. "Once get started with a good horse
+between your knees, and--"
+
+"I hope," Tish interrupted him, "that you do not think we are
+going to ride astride!"
+
+"I'm darned sure of it."
+
+That was Charlie Sands's way of talking. He does not mean to be
+rude, and he is really a young man of splendid character. But,
+as Tish says, contact with the world, although it has not
+spoiled him, has roughened his speech.
+
+"You see," he explained, "there are places our there where the
+horses have to climb like goats. It's only fair to them to
+distribute your weight equally. A side saddle is likely to turn
+and drop you a mile or two down a crack."
+
+Aggie went rather white and sneezed violently.
+
+But Tish looked thoughtful. "It sounds reasonable," she said.
+"I've felt for along time that I'd be glad to discard skirts.
+Skirts," she said, "are badge of servitude, survivals of the
+harem, reminders of a time when nothing was expected of women
+but parasitic leisure."
+
+I tried to tell her that she was wrong about the skirts. Miss
+MacGillicuddy, our missionary in India, had certainly said that
+the women in harems wore bloomers. But Tish left the room
+abruptly, returning shortly after with a volume of the
+encyclopedia, and looked up the Rocky Mountains.
+
+I remember it said that the highest ranges were, as compared
+with the size and shape of the earth, only as the corrugations
+on the skin of an orange. Either the man who wrote that had
+never seen an orange or he had never seen the Rocky Mountains.
+Orange, indeed! If he had said the upper end of a pineapple it
+would have been more like it. I wish the man who wrote it would
+go to Glacier Park. I am not a vindictive woman, but I know one
+or two places where I would like to place him and make him
+swallow that orange. I'd like to see him on a horse, on the
+brink of a canon a mile deep, and have his horse reach over the
+edge for a stray plant or two, or standing in a cloud up to his
+waist, so that, as Aggie so plaintively observed, "The lower
+half of one is in a snowstorm while the upper part is getting
+sunburned."
+
+For we went. Oh, yes, we went. It is not the encyclopaedia's
+fault that we came back. But now that we are home, and nothing
+wrong except a touch of lumbago that Tish got from sleeping on
+the ground, and, of course, Aggie's unfortunate experience with
+her teeth, I look back on our various adventures with pleasure.
+I even contemplate a return next year, although Aggie says she
+will die first. But even that is not to be taken as final. The
+last time I went to see her, she had bought a revolver from the
+janitor and was taking lessons in loading it.
+
+The Ostermaiers went also. Not with us, however. The
+congregation made up a purse for the purpose, and Tish and Aggie
+and I went further, and purchased a cigar-case for Mr.
+Ostermaier and a quantity of cigars. Smoking is the good man's
+only weakness.
+
+I must say, however, that it is absurd to hear Mrs. Ostermaier
+boasting of the trip. To hear her talk, one would think they had
+done the whole thing, instead of sitting in an automobile and
+looking up at the mountains. I shall never forget the day they
+were in a car passing along a road, and we crossed unexpectedly
+ahead of them and went on straight up the side of a mountain.
+
+Tish had a sombrero on the side of her head, and was resting
+herself in the saddle by having her right leg thrown negligently
+over the horse's neck. With the left foot she was kicking our
+pack-horse, a creature so scarred with brands that Tish had
+named her Jane, after a cousin of hers who had had so many
+operations that Tish says she is now entirely unfurnished.
+
+Mr. Ostermaier's face was terrible, and only two days ago Mrs.
+Ostermaier came over to ask about putting an extra width in the
+skirt to her last winter's suit. But it is my belief that she
+came to save Tish's soul, and nothing else.
+
+"I'm so glad wide skirts have come in," she said. "They're so
+modest, aren't they, Miss Tish?"
+
+"Not in a wind," Tish said, eying her coldly.
+
+"I do think, dear Miss Tish," she went on with her eyes down,
+"that to--to go about in riding-breeches before a young man is--
+well, it is hardly discreet, is it?"
+
+I saw Tish glancing about the room. She was pretty angry, and I
+knew perfectly well what she wanted. I put my knitting-bag over
+Charlie Sands's tobacco-pouch.
+
+Tish had learned to roll cigarettes out in Glacier Park. Not
+that she smoked them, of course, but she said she might as well
+know how. There was no knowing when it would come in handy. And
+when she wishes to calm herself she reaches instinctively for
+what Bill used to call, strangely, "the makings."
+
+"If," she said, her eye still roving,--"if it was any treat to a
+twenty-four-year-old cowpuncher to see three elderly women in
+riding-breeches, Mrs. Ostermaier,--and it's kind of you to think
+so,--why, I'm not selfish."
+
+Mrs. Ostermaier's face was terrible. She gathered up her skirt
+and rose. "I shall not tell Mr. Ostermaier what you have just
+said," she observed with her mouth set hard. "We owe you a great
+deal, especially the return of my earrings. But I must request,
+Miss Tish, that you do not voice such sentiments in the Sunday
+school."
+
+Tish watched her out. Then she sat down and rolled eleven
+cigarettes for Charlie Sands, one after the other. At last she
+spoke.
+
+"I'm not sure," she said tartly, "that if I had it to do over
+again I'd do it. That woman's not a Christian. I was thinking,"
+she went on, "of giving them a part of the reward to go to
+Asbury Park with. But she'd have to wear blinders on the bathing-
+ beach, so I'll not do it."
+
+However, I am ahead of my recital.
+
+For a few days Tish said nothing more, but one Sunday morning,
+walking home from church, she turned to me suddenly and said:--
+
+"Lizzie, you're fat."
+
+"I'm as the Lord made me," I replied with some spirit.
+
+"Fiddlesticks!" said Tish. "You're as your own sloth and
+overindulgence has made you. Don't blame the Good Man for it."
+
+Now, I am a peaceful woman, and Tish is as my own sister, and
+indeed even more so. But I was roused to anger by her speech.
+
+"I've been fleshy all my life," I said. "I'm no lazier than
+most, and I'm a dratted sight more agreeable than some I know,
+on account of having the ends of my nerves padded."
+
+But she switched to another subject in her characteristic
+manner.
+
+"Have you ever reflected, either of you," she observed, "that we
+know nothing of this great land of ours? That we sing of loving
+'thy rocks and rills, thy woods and templed hills'--although the
+word 'templed' savors of paganism and does not belong in a
+national hymn? And that it is all balderdash?"
+
+Aggie took exception to this and said that she loved her native
+land, and had been south to Pinehurst and west to see her niece
+in Minneapolis, on account of the baby having been named for
+her.
+
+But Tish merely listened with a grim smile. "Travel from a car
+window," she observed, "is no better than travel in a
+nickelodeon. I have done all of that I am going to. I intend to
+become acquainted with my native land, closely acquainted. State
+by State I shall wander over it, refreshing soul and body and
+using muscles too long unused."
+
+"Tish!" Aggie quavered. "You are not going on another walking-
+tour?"
+
+Only a year or two before Tish had read Stevenson's "Travels
+with a Donkey," and had been possessed to follow his example. I
+have elsewhere recorded the details of that terrible trip. Even
+I turned pale, I fear, and cast a nervous eye toward the table
+where Tish keeps her reading-matter.
+
+Tish is imaginative, and is always influenced by the latest book
+she has read. For instance, a volume on "Nursing at the Front"
+almost sent her across to France, although she cannot make a bed
+and never could, and turns pale at the sight of blood; and
+another time a book on flying machines sent her up into the air,
+mentally if not literally. I shall never forgo the time she
+secured some literature on the Mormon Church, and the difficulty
+I had in smuggling it out under my coat.
+
+Tish did not refute the walking-tour at once, bud fell into a
+deep reverie.
+
+It is not her custom to confide her plans to us until they are
+fully shaped and too far on to be interfered with, which
+accounts for our nervousness.
+
+On arriving at her apartment, however, we found a map laid out
+on the table and the Rocky Mountains marked with pins. We
+noticed that whenever she straightened from the table she
+grunted.
+
+"What we want," Tish said, "is isolation. No people. No crowds.
+No servants. If I don't get away from Hannah soon I'll murder
+her."
+
+"It wouldn't hurt to see somebody now and then, Tish," Aggie
+objected.
+
+"Nobody," Tish said firmly. "A good horse is companion enough."
+She forgot herself and straightened completely, and she groaned.
+
+"We might meet some desirable people, Tish," I put in firmly.
+"If we do, I don't intend to run like rabbit."
+
+"Desirable people!" Tish scoffed. "In the Rocky Mountains! My
+dear Lizzie, every desperado in the country takes refuge in the
+Rockies. Of course, if you want to take up with that class--"
+
+Aggie sneezed and looked wretched. As for me, I made up my mind
+then and there that if Letitia Carberry was going to such a
+neighborhood, she was not going alone. I am not much with a
+revolver, but mighty handy with a pair of lungs.
+
+Well, Tish had it all worked out. "I've found the very place,"
+she said. "In the first place, it's Government property. When
+our country puts aside a part of itself as a public domain we
+should show our appreciation. In the second place, it's wild.
+I'd as soon spend a vacation in Central Park near the Zoo as in
+the Yellowstone. In the third place, with an Indian reservation
+on one side and a national forest on the other, it's bound to be
+lonely. Any tourist," she said scornfully, "can go to the
+Yosemite and be photographed under a redwood tree."
+
+"Do the Indians stay on the reservation?" Aggie asked feebly.
+
+"Probably not," Tish observed coldly. "Once for all, Aggie--if
+you are going to run like a scared deer every time you see an
+Indian or a bear, I wish you would go to Asbury Park."
+
+She forgot herself then and sat down quickly, an action which
+was followed by an agonized expression.
+
+"Tish," I said sharply, "you have been riding a horse!
+
+"Only in a cinder ring," she replied with unwonted docility.
+"The teacher said I would be a trifle stiff."
+
+"How long did you ride?"
+
+"Not more than twenty minutes," she said. "The lesson was to be
+an hour, but somebody put a nickel in a mechanical piano, and
+the creature I was on started going sideways."
+
+Well, she had fallen off and had to be taken home in a taxicab.
+When Aggie heard it she simply took the pins out of the map and
+stuck them in Tish's cushion. Her mouth was set tight.
+
+"I didn't really fall," Tish said. "I sat down, and it was
+cinders, and not hard. It has made my neck stiff, that's all."
+
+"That's enough," said Aggie. "If I've got to seek pleasure by
+ramming my spinal column up into my skull and crowding my
+brains, I'll stay at home."
+
+"You can't fall out of a Western saddle," Tish protested rather
+bitterly. "And if I were you, Aggie, I wouldn't worry about
+crowding my brains."
+
+However, she probably regretted this speech, for she added more
+gently: "A high altitude will help your hay fever, Aggie."
+
+Aggie said with some bitterness that her hay fever did not need
+to be helped. That, as far as she could see, it was strong and
+flourishing. At that matters rested, except for a bit of
+conversation just before we left. Aggie had put on her sweater
+vest and her muffler and the jacket of her winter suit and was
+getting into her fur coat, when Tish said: "Soft as mush, both
+of you!"
+
+"If you think, Tish Carberry," I began, "that I--"
+
+"Apple dumplings!" said Tish. "Sofa pillows! Jellyfish! Not a
+muscle to divide between you!"
+
+I drew on my woolen tights angrily.
+
+"Elevators!" Tish went on scornfully. "Street cars and taxicabs!
+No wonder your bodies are mere masses of protoplasm, or
+cellulose, or whatever it is."
+
+"Since when," said Aggie, "have you been walking to develop
+yourself, Tish? I must say--"
+
+Here anger brought on one of her sneezing attacks, and she was
+unable to finish.
+
+Tish stood before us oracularly. "After next September," she
+said, "you will both scorn the sloth of civilization. You will
+move about for the joy of moving about. You will have cast off
+the shackles of the flesh and be born anew. That is, if a plan
+of mine goes through. Lizzie, you will lose fifty pounds!"
+
+Well, I didn't want to lose fifty pounds. After our summer in
+the Maine woods I had gone back to find that my new tailor-made
+coat, which had fitted me exactly, and being stiffened with
+haircloth kept its shape off and looked as if I myself were
+hanging to the hook, had caved in on me in several places. Just
+as I had gone to the expense of having it taken in I began to
+put on flesh again, and had to have it let out. Besides, no
+woman over forty should ever reduce, at least not violently. She
+wrinkles. My face that summer had fallen into accordion plaits,
+and I had the curious feeling of having enough skin for two.
+
+Aggie had suggested at that time that I have my cheeks filled
+out with paraffin, which I believe cakes and gives the
+appearance of youth. But Mrs. Ostermaier knew a woman who had
+done so, and being hit on one side by a snowball, the padding
+broke in half, one part moving up under her eye and the second
+lodging at the angle of her jaw. She tried lying on a hot-water
+bottle to melt the pieces and bring them together again, but
+they did not remain fixed, having developed a wandering habit
+and slipping unexpectedly now and then. Mrs. Ostermaier says it
+is painful to watch her holding them in place when she yawns.
+
+Strangely enough, however, a few weeks later Tish's enthusiasm
+for the West had apparently vanished. When several weeks went by
+and the atlas had disappeared from her table, and she had given
+up vegetarianism for Swedish movements, we felt that we were to
+have a quiet summer after all, and Aggie wrote to a hotel in
+Asbury Park about rooms for July and August.
+
+There was a real change in Tish. She stopped knitting abdominal
+bands for the soldiers in Europe, for one thing, although she
+had sent over almost a dozen very tasty ones. In the evenings,
+when we dropped in to chat with her, she said very little and
+invariably dozed in her chair.
+
+On one such occasion, Aggie having inadvertently stepped on the
+rocker of her chair while endeavoring by laying a hand on Tish's
+brow to discover if she was feverish, the chair tilted back and
+Tish wakened with a jerk.
+
+She immediately fell to groaning and clasped her hands to the
+small of her back, quite ignoring poor Aggie, whom the chair had
+caught in the epigastric region, and who was compelled for some
+time to struggle for breath.
+
+"Jumping Jehoshaphat!" said Tish in an angry tone. It is rare
+for Tish to use the name of a Biblical character in this way,
+but she was clearly suffering. "What in the world are you doing,
+Aggie?"
+
+"T-t-trying to breathe," poor Aggie replied.
+
+"Then I wish," Tish said coldly, "that you would make the effort
+some place else than on the rocker of my chair. You jarred me,
+and I am in no state to be jarred."
+
+But she refused to explain further, beyond saying, in reply to a
+question of mine, that she was not feverish and that she had not
+been asleep, having merely closed her eyes to rest them. Also
+she affirmed that she was not taking riding-lessons. We both
+noticed however, that she did not leave her chair during the
+time we were there, and that she was sitting on the sofa cushion
+I had made her for the previous Christmas, and on which I had
+embroidered the poet Moore's beautiful words: "Come, rest in
+this bosom."
+
+As Aggie was still feeling faint, I advised her to take a
+mouthful of blackberry cordial, which Tish keeps for emergencies
+in her bathroom closet. Immediately following her departure the
+calm of the evening was broken by a loud shriek.
+
+It appeared, on my rushing to the bathroom, while Tish sat
+heartlessly still, that Aggie, not seeing a glass, had placed
+the bottle to her lips and taken quite a large mouthful of
+liniment, which in color resembled the cordial. I found her
+sitting on the edge of the bathtub in a state of collapse.
+
+"I'm poisoned!" she groaned. "Oh, Lizzie, I am not fit to die!"
+
+I flew with the bottle to Tish, who was very calm and stealthily
+rubbing one of her ankles.
+
+"Do her good," Tish said. "Take some of the stiffness out of her
+liver, for one thing. But you might keep an eye on her. It's
+full of alcohol."
+
+"What's the antidote?" I asked, hearing Aggie's low groans.
+
+"The gold cure is the only thing I can think of at the moment,"
+said Tish coldly, and started on the other ankle.
+
+I merely record this incident to show the change in Tish. Aggie
+was not seriously upset, although dizzy for an hour or so and
+very talkative, especially about Mr. Wiggins.
+
+Tish was changed. Her life, which mostly had been an open book
+to us, became filled with mystery. There were whole days when
+she was not to be located anywhere, and evenings, as I have
+stated, when she dozed in her chair.
+
+As usual when we are worried about Tish, we consulted her
+nephew, Charlie Sands. But like all members of the masculine sex
+he refused to be worried.
+
+"She'll be all right," he observed. "She takes these spells. But
+trust the old lady to come up smiling."
+
+"It's either Christian Science or osteopathy," Aggie said
+dolefully. "She's not herself. The fruit cake she sent me the
+other day tasted very queer, and Hannah thinks she put ointment
+in instead of butter."
+
+"Ointments!" observed Charlie thoughtfully. "And salves! By
+George, I wonder--I'll tell you," he said: "I'll keep an eye
+open for a few days. The symptoms sound like--But never mind.
+I'll let you know."
+
+We were compelled to be satisfied with this, but for several
+days we lingered in anxiety. During that painful interval
+nothing occurred to enlighten us, except one conversation with
+Tish.
+
+We had taken dinner with her, and she seemed to be all right
+again and more than usually active. She had given up the Bran-
+Nut after breaking a tooth on it, and was eating rare beef,
+which she had heard was digested in the spleen or some such
+place, thus resting the stomach for a time. She left us,
+however, immediately after the meal, and Hannah, her maid,
+tiptoed into the room.
+
+"I'm that nervous I could scream," she said. "Do you know what
+she's doing now?
+
+"No, Hannah," I said with bitter sarcasm. "Long ago I learned
+never to surmise what Miss Tish is doing."
+
+"She's in the bathroom, standing on one foot and waving the
+other in the air. She's been doing it," Hannah said, "for weeks.
+First one foot, then the other. And that ain't all."
+
+"You've been spying on Miss Tish," Aggie said. "Shame on you,
+Hannah!"
+
+"I have, Miss Aggie. Spy I have and spy I will, while there's
+breath in my body. Twenty years have I--Do you know what she
+does when she come home from these sneakin' trips of hers? She
+sits in a hot bath until the wonder is that her blood ain't
+turned to water. And after that she uses liniment. Her
+underclothes is that stained up with it that I'm ashamed to hang
+'em out."
+
+Here Tish returned and, after a suspicious glance at Hannah, sat
+down. Aggie and I glanced at each other. She did not, as she had
+for some time past, line the chair with pillows, and there was
+an air about her almost of triumph.
+
+She did not, however, volunteer any explanation. Aggie and I
+were driven to speculation, in which we indulged on our way
+home, Aggie being my guest at the time, on account of her
+janitor's children having measles, and Aggie never having had
+them, although recalling a severe rash as a child, with other
+measly symptoms.
+
+"She has something in mind for next summer," said Aggie
+apprehensively, "and she is preparing her strength for it. Tish
+is forehanded if nothing else."
+
+"Well," I remarked with some bitterness, "if we are going along
+it might be well to prepare us too."
+
+"Something," Aggie continued, "that requires landing on one foot
+with the other in the air."
+
+"Don't drivel," said I. "She's not likely going into the Russian
+ballet. She's training her muscles, that's all."
+
+But the mystery was solved the following morning when Charlie
+Sands called me up.
+
+"I've got it, beloved aunt," he said.
+
+"Got what?" said I.
+
+
+"What the old lady is up to. She's a wonder, and no mistake.
+Only I think it was stingy of her not to let you and Aunt Aggie
+in."
+
+He asked me to get Aggie and meet him at the office as soon as
+possible, but he refused to explain further. And he continued to
+refuse until we had arrived at our destination, a large brick
+building in the center of the city.
+
+"Now," he said, "take a long breath and go in. And mind--no
+excitement."
+
+We went in. There was a band playing and people circling at a
+mile a minute. In the center there was a cleared place, and Tish
+was there on ice skates. An instructor had her by the arm, and
+as we looked she waved him off, gave herself a shove forward
+with one foot, and then, with her arms waving, she made a double
+curve, first on one foot and then on the other.
+
+"The outside edge, by George!" said Charlie Sands. "The old
+sport!"
+
+Unluckily at that moment Tish saw us, and sat down violently on
+the ice. And a quite nice-looking young man fell over her and
+lay stunned for several seconds. We rushed round the arena,
+expecting to see them both carried out, but Tish was uninjured,
+and came skating toward us with her hands in her pockets. It was
+the young man who had to be assisted out.
+
+"Well," she said, fetching up against the railing with a bang,
+"of course you had to come before I was ready for you! In a week
+I'll really be skating."
+
+We said nothing, but looked at her, and I am afraid our glances
+showed disapproval, for she straightened her hat with a jerk.
+
+"Well?" she said. "You're not tongue-tied all of a sudden, are
+you? Can't a woman take a little exercise without her family and
+friends coming snooping round and acting as if she'd broken the
+Ten Commandments?"
+
+"Breaking the Ten Commandments!" I said witheringly. "Breaking a
+leg more likely. If you could have seen yourself, Tish Carberry,
+sprawled on the at your age, and both your arteries and your
+bones brittle, as the specialist told you,--and I heard him
+myself,--you'd take those things off your feet and go home and
+hide your head."
+
+"I wish I had your breath, Lizzie," Tish said. "I'd be a
+submarine diver."
+
+Saying which she skated off, and did not come near us again. A
+young gentleman went up to her and asked her to skate, though I
+doubt if she had ever seen him before. And as we left the
+building in disapproval they were doing fancy turns in the
+middle of the place, and a crowd was gathering round them.
+
+Owing to considerable feeling being roused by the foregoing
+incident, we did not see much of Tish for a week. If a middle-
+aged woman wants to make a spectacle of herself, both Aggie and
+I felt that she needed to be taught a lesson. Besides, we knew
+Tish. With her, to conquer a thing is to lose interest.
+
+On the anniversary of the day Aggie became engaged to Mr.
+Wiggins, Tish asked us both to dinner, and we buried the
+hatchet, or rather the skates. It was when dessert came that we
+realized how everything that had occurred had been preparation
+for the summer, and that we were not going to Asbury Park, after
+all.
+
+"It's like this," said Tish. "Hannah, go out and close the door,
+and don't stand listening. I have figured it all out," she said,
+when Hannah had slammed out. "The muscles used in skating are
+the ones used in mountain-climbing. Besides, there may be times
+when a pair of skates would be handy going over the glaciers.
+It's not called Glacier Park for nothing, I dare say. When we
+went into the Maine woods we went unprepared. This time I intend
+to be ready for any emergency."
+
+But we gave her little encouragement. We would go along, and
+told her so. But further than that I refused to prepare. I would
+not skate, and said so.
+
+"Very well, Lizzie," she said. "Don't blame me if you find
+yourself unable to cope with mountain hardships. I merely felt
+this way: if each of us could do one thing well it might be
+helpful. There's always snow, and if Aggie would learn to use
+snowshoes it might be valuable."
+
+"Where could I practice?" Aggie demanded.
+
+But Tish went on, ignoring Aggie's sarcastic tone. "And if you,
+Lizzie, would learn to throw a lasso, or lariat,--I believe both
+terms are correct,--it would be a great advantage, especially in
+case of meeting ferocious animals. The park laws will not allow
+us to kill them, and it would be mighty convenient, Lizzie. Not
+to mention that it would be an accomplishment few women
+possess."
+
+I refused to make the attempt, although Tish sent for the
+clothesline, and with the aid of the encyclopoedia made a loop
+in the end of it. Finally she became interested herself, and
+when we left rather downhearted at ten o'clock she had caught
+the rocking- chair three times and broken the clock.
+
+Aggie and I prepared with little enthusiasm, I must confess. We
+had as much love for the rocks and rills of our great country as
+Tish, but, as Aggie ob- served, there were rocks and rocks, and
+one could love them without climbing up them or falling off
+them.
+
+The only comfort we had was that Charlie Sands said that we
+should ride ponies, and not horses. My niece's children have a
+pony which is very gentle and not much larger than a dog, which
+comes up on the porch for lumps of sugar. We were lured to a
+false sense of security, I must say.
+
+As far as we could see, Tish was making few preparations for the
+trip. She said we could get everything we needed at the park
+entrance, and that the riding was merely sitting in a saddle and
+letting the pony do the rest. But on the 2lst of June, the
+anniversary of the day Aggie was to have been married, we went
+out to decorate Mr. Wiggins's last resting-place, and coming out
+of the cemetery we met Tish.
+
+She was on a horse, astride!
+
+She was not alone. A gentleman was riding beside her, and he had
+her horse by a long leather strap.
+
+She pretended not to see us, and Aggie unfortunately waved her
+red parasol at her. The result was most amazing. The beast she
+was on jerked itself free in an instant, and with the same
+movement, apparently, leaped the hedge beside the road. One
+moment there was Tish, in a derby hat and breeches, and the next
+moment there was only the gentleman, with his mouth open.
+
+Aggie collapsed, moaning, in the road, and beyond the hedge we
+could hear the horse leaping tombstones in the cemetery.
+
+"Oh, Tish!" Aggie wailed.
+
+I broke my way through the hedge to find what was left of her,
+while the riding-master bolted for the gate. But to my intense
+surprise Tish was not on the ground. Then I saw her. She was
+still on the creature, and she was coming back along the road,
+with her riding-hat on the back of her head and a gleam in her
+eye that I knew well enough was a gleam of triumph.
+
+She halted the thing beside me and looked down with a
+patronizing air.
+
+"He's a trifle nervous this morning," she said calmly. "Hasn't
+been worked enough. Good horse, though,--very neat jump."
+
+Then she rode on and out through the gates, ignoring Aggie's
+pitiful wail and scorning the leading-string the instructor
+offered.
+
+We reached Glacier Park without difficulty, although Tish
+insisted on talking to the most ordinary people on the train,
+and once, losing her, we found her in the drawing-room learning
+to play bridge, although not a card-player, except for casino.
+Though nothing has ever been said, I believe she learned when
+too late that they were playing for money, as she borrowed ten
+dollars from me late in the afternoon and was looking rather
+pale.
+
+"What do you think?" she said, while I was getting the money
+from the safety pocket under my skirt. "The young man who
+knocked me down on the ice that day is on the train. I've just
+exchanged a few words with him. He was not much hurt, although
+unconscious for a short time. His name is Bell--James C. Bell."
+
+Soon after that Tish brought him to us, and we had a nice talk.
+He said he had not been badly hurt on the ice, although he got a
+cut on the forehead from Tish's skate, requiring two stitches.
+
+After a time he and Aggie went out on the platform, only
+returning when Aggie got a cinder in her eye.
+
+"Just think," she said as he went for water to use in my eye-
+cup, "he is going to meet the girl he is in love with out at the
+park. She has been there for four weeks. They are engaged. He is
+very much in love. He didn't talk of anything else."
+
+She told him she had confided his tender secret to us, and
+instead of looking conscious he seemed glad to have three people
+instead of one to talk to about her.
+
+"You see, it's like this," he said: "She is very good looking,
+and in her town a moving-picture company has its studio. That
+part's all right. I suppose we have to have movies. But the fool
+of a director met her at a party, and said she would photograph
+well and ought to be with them. He offered her a salary, and it
+went to her head. She's young," he added, "and he said she could
+be as great a hit as Mary Pickford."
+
+"How sad!" said Aggie. "But of course she refused?"
+
+"Well, no, she liked the idea. It got me worried. Worried her
+people too. Her father's able to give her a good home, and I'm
+expecting to take that job off his hands in about a year. But
+girls are queer. She wanted to try it awfully."
+
+It developed that he had gone to her folks about it, and they'd
+offered her a vacation with some of her school friends in
+Glacier Park.
+
+"It's pretty wild out there," he went on, "and we felt that the
+air, and horseback riding and everything, would make her forget
+the movies. I hope so. She's there now. But she's had the bug
+pretty hard. Got so she was always posing, without knowing it."
+
+But he was hopeful that she would be cured, and said she was to
+meet him at the station.
+
+"She's an awfully nice girl, you understand," he finished. "It's
+only that this thing got hold of her and needed driving out."
+
+Well, we were watching when the train drew in at Glacier Park
+Station, and she was there. She was a very pretty girl, and it
+was quite touching to see him look at her. But Aggie observed
+something and remarked on it.
+
+"She's not as glad to see him as he is to see her," she said.
+"He was going to kiss her, and she moved back."
+
+In the crowd we lost sight of them, but that evening, sitting in
+the lobby of the hotel, we saw Mr. Bell wandering round alone.
+He looked depressed, and Aggie beckoned to him.
+
+"How is everything?" she asked. "Is the cure working?"
+
+He dropped into a chair and looked straight ahead.
+
+"Not so you could notice it!" he said bitterly. "Would you
+believe that there's a moving-picture outfit here, taking scenes
+in the park"
+
+"No!"
+
+"There is. They've taken two thousand feet of her already,
+dressed like an Indian," he said in a tone of suppressed fury.
+"It makes me sick. I dare say if we tied her in a well some fool
+would lower a camera on a rope."
+
+Just at that moment she sauntered past us with a reddish-haired
+young man. Mr. Bell ignored her, although I saw her try to catch
+his eye.
+
+"That's the moving-picture man with her," he said in a low,
+violent tone when they had passed. "Name's Oliver." He groaned.
+"He's told her she ought to go in for the business. She'd be a
+second Mary Pickford! I'd like to kill him!" He rose savagely
+and left us.
+
+We spent the night in the hotel at the park entrance, and I
+could not get to sleep. Tish was busy engaging a guide and going
+over our supplies, and at eleven o'clock Aggie came into my room
+and sat down on the bed.
+
+"I can't sleep, Lizzie," she said. "That poor Mr. Bell is on my
+mind. Besides, did you see those ferocious Indians hanging
+round?"
+
+Well, I had seen them, but said nothing.
+
+"They would scalp one as quick as not," Aggie went on. "And
+who's to know but that our guide will be in league with them?
+I've lost my teeth," she said with a flash of spirit, "but so
+far I've kept my hair, and mean to if possible. That old Indian
+has a scalp tied to the end of a stick. Lizzie, I'm nervous."
+
+"If it is only hair they want, I don't mind their taking my
+switch," I observed, trying to be facetious, although uneasy. As
+to the switch, it no longer matched my hair, and I would have
+parted from it without a pang.
+
+"And another thing," said Aggie: "Tish can talk about ponies
+until she is black in the face. The creatures are horses. I've
+seen them."
+
+Well, I knew that, too, by that time. As we walked to the hotel
+from the train I had seen one of than carrying on. It was
+arching its back like a cat that's just seen a strange dog, and
+with every arch it swelled its stomach. At the third heave it
+split the strap that held the saddle on, and then it kicked up
+in the rear and sent saddle and rider over its head. So far as I
+had seen, no casualty had resulted, but it had set me thinking.
+Given a beast with an India-rubber spine and no sense of honor,
+I felt I would be helpless.
+
+Tish came in just then and we confronted her.
+
+"Ponies!" I said bitterly. "They are horses, if I know a horse.
+And, moreover, it's well enough for you, Tish Carberry, to talk
+about gripping a horse with your knees. I'm not built that way,
+and you know it. Besides, no knee grip will answer when a
+creature begins to act like a cat in a fit."
+
+Aggie here had a bright idea. She said that she had seen
+pictures of pneumatic jackets to keep people from drowning, and
+that Mr. McKee, a buyer at one of the stores at home, had taken
+one, fully inflated, when he crossed to Paris for autumn suits.
+
+"I would like to have one, Tish," she finished. "It would break
+the force of a fall anyhow, even if it did puncture."
+
+Tish, who was still dressed, went out to the curio shop in the
+lobby, and returned with the sad news that there was nothing of
+the sort on sale.
+
+We were late in getting started the next morning owing partly to
+Aggie's having put her riding-breeches on wrong, and being
+unable to sit down when once in the saddle. But the main reason
+was the guide we had engaged. Tish heard him using profane
+language to one of the horses and dismissed him on the spot.
+
+The man who was providing our horses and outfit, however,
+understood, and in a short time returned with another man.
+
+"I've got a good one for you now, Miss Carberry," he said. "Safe
+and perfectly gentle, and as mild as milk. Only has one fault,
+and maybe you won't mind that. He smokes considerably."
+
+"I don't object, as long as it's in the open air," Tish said.
+
+So that was arranged. But I must say that the new man did not
+look mild. He had red hair, although a nice smile with a gold
+tooth, and his trousers were of white fur, which looked hot for
+summer.
+
+"You are sure that you don't use strong language?" Tish asked.
+
+"No, ma'am," he said. "I was raised strict, and very particular
+as to swearing. Dear, dear now, would you look at that cinch!
+Blow up their little tummies, they do, when they're cinched, and
+when they breathe it out, the saddle's as loose as the tongues
+of some of these here tourists."
+
+Tish swung herself up without any trouble, but owing to a large
+canvas bag on the back of my saddle I was unable to get my leg
+across, and was compelled to have it worked over, a little at a
+time. At last, however, we were ready. A white pack-horse,
+carrying our tents and cooking-utensils, was led by Bill, which
+proved to be the name of our cowboy guide.
+
+Mr. Bell came to say good-bye and to wish us luck. But he looked
+unhappy, and there was no sign whatever of the young lady, whose
+name we had learned was Helen.
+
+"I may see you on the trail," he said sadly. "I'm about sick of
+this place, and I'm thinking of clearing out."
+
+Aggie reminded him that faint heart never won fair lady, but he
+only shook his head.
+
+"I'm not so sure that I want to win," he said. "Marriage is a
+serious business, and I don't know that I'd care to have a wife
+that followed a camera like a street kid follows a brass band.
+It wouldn't make for a quiet home."
+
+We left him staring wistfully into the distance.
+
+Tish sat in her saddle and surveyed the mountain peaks that rose
+behind the hotel.
+
+"Twenty centuries are looking down upon us!" she said. "The
+crest of our native land lies before us. We will conquer those
+beetling crags, or die trying. All right, Bill. Forward!"
+
+Bill led off, followed by the pack-horse, then Tish, Aggie and
+myself. We kept on in this order for some time, which gave me a
+chance to observe Aggie carefully. I am not much of a horsewoman
+myself, having never been on a horse before. But my father was
+fond of riding, and I soon adapted myself to the horse's gait,
+especially when walking. On level stretches, however, where Bill
+spurred his horse to a trot, I was not so comfortable, and Aggie
+appeared to strike the saddle in a different spot every time she
+descended.
+
+Once, on her turning her profile to me in a glance of despair, I
+was struck by the strange and collapsed appearance of her face.
+This was explained, however, when my horse caught up to hers on
+a wider stretch of road, and I saw that she had taken out her
+teeth and was holding them in her hand.
+
+"Al-almost swallowed them," she gasped. "Oh, Lizzie, to think of
+a summer of this!"
+
+At last we left the road and turned onto a footpath, which
+instantly commenced to rise. Tish called back something about
+the beauties of nature and riding over a carpet of flowers, but
+my horse was fording a small stream at the time and I was too
+occupied to reply. The path--or trail, which is what Bill called
+it--grew more steep, and I let go of the lines and held to the
+horn of my saddle. The horses were climbing like goats.
+
+"Tish," Aggie called desperately, "I can't stand this. I'm going
+back! I'm--Lordamighty!"
+
+Fortunately Tish did not hear this. We had suddenly emerged on
+the brink of a precipice. A two-foot path clung to the cliff,
+and along the very edge of this the horses walked, looking down
+in an interested manner now and then. My blood turned to water
+and I closed my eyes.
+
+"Tish!" Aggie shrieked.
+
+But the only effect of this was to start her horse into a trot.
+I had closed my eyes, but I opened them in time to see Aggie
+give a wild clutch and a low moan.
+
+In a few moments the trail left the edge, and Aggie turned in
+her saddle and looked back at me.
+
+"I lost my lower set back there," she said. "They went over the
+edge. I suppose they're falling yet."
+
+"It's a good thing it wasn't the upper set," I said, to comfort
+her. "As far as appearance goes--"
+
+"Appearance!" she said bitterly. "Do you suppose we'll meet
+anybody but desperadoes and Indians in a place like this? And
+not an egg with us, of course."
+
+The eggs referred to her diet, as at different times, when
+having her teeth repaired, she can eat little else.
+
+"Ham," she called back in a surly tone, "and hard tack, I
+suppose! I'll starve, Lizzie, that's all. If only we had brought
+some junket tablets!"
+
+With the exception of this incident the morning was quiet. Tish
+and Bill talked prohibition, which he believed in, and the tin
+pans on the pack-horse clattered, and we got higher all the
+time, and rode through waterfalls and along the edge of death.
+By noon I did not much care if the horses fell over or not. The
+skin was off me in a number of places, and my horse did not like
+me, and showed it by nipping back at my leg here and there.
+
+At eleven o'clock, riding through a valley on a trail six inches
+wide, Bill's horse stepped on a hornets' nest. The insects were
+probably dazed at first, but by the time Tish's horse arrived
+they were prepared, and the next thing we knew Tish's horse was
+flying up the mountain-side as if it had gone crazy, and Bill
+was shouting to us to stop.
+
+The last we saw of Tish for some time was her horse leaping a
+mountain stream, and jumping like a kangaroo, and Bill was
+following.
+
+"She'll be killed!" Aggie cried. "Oh, Tish, Tish!"
+
+"Don't yell," I said. "You'll start the horses. And for Heaven's
+sake, Aggie," I added grimly, "remember that this is a pleasure
+trip."
+
+It was a half-hour before Tish and Bill returned. Tish was a
+chastened woman. She said little or nothing, but borrowed some
+ointment from me for her face, where the branches of trees had
+scraped it, while Bill led the horses round the fatal spot. I
+recall, however, that she said she wished now that we had
+brought the other guide.
+
+"Because I feel," she observed, "that a little strong language
+would be a relief."
+
+We had luncheon at noon in a sylvan glade, and Aggie was
+pathetic. She dipped a cracker in a cup of tea, and sat off by
+herself under a tree. Tish, however, had recovered her spirits.
+
+"Throw out your chests, and breathe deep of this pure air
+unsullied by civilization," she cried. "Aggie, fill yourself
+with ozone."
+
+"Humph!" said Aggie. "It's about all I will fill myself with."
+
+"Think," Tish observed, "of the fools and dolts who are living
+under roofs, struggling, contending. plotting, while all Nature
+awaits them."
+
+"With stings," Aggie said nastily, "and teeth, and horns, and
+claws, and every old thing! Tish, I want to go back. I'm not
+happy, and I don't enjoy scenery when I'm not happy. Besides, I
+can't eat the landscape."
+
+As I look back, I believe it would have been better if we had
+returned. I think of that day, some time later, when we made the
+long descent from the Piegan Pass under such extraordinary
+circumstances, and I realize that, although worse for our
+bodies, which had grown strong and agile, so that I have, later
+on, seen Aggie mount her horse on a run, it would have been
+better for our nerves had we returned.
+
+We were all perfectly stiff after luncheon, and Aggie was
+sulking also. Bill was compelled to lift us into our saddles,
+and again we started up and up. The trail was now what he called
+a "switchback." Halfway up Aggie refused to go farther, but on
+looking back decided not to return either.
+
+"I shall not go another step," she called. "Here I am, and here
+I stay till I die."
+
+"Very well," Tish said from overhead. "I suppose you don't
+expect us all to stay and die with you. I'll tell your niece
+when I see her."
+
+Aggie thought better of it, however, and followed on, with her
+eyes closed and her lips moving in prayer. She happened to open
+them at a bad place, although safe enough, according to Bill,
+and nothing to what we were coming to a few days later. Opening
+them as she did on a ledge of rock which sloped steeply for what
+appeared to be several miles down on each side, she uttered a
+piercing shriek, followed by a sneeze. As before, her horse
+started to run, and Aggie is, I believe Bill said, the only
+person in the world who ever took that place at a canter.
+
+We were to take things easy the first day, Bill advised. "Till
+you get your muscles sort of eased up, ladies," he said. "If you
+haven't been riding astride, a horse's back seems as wide as the
+roof of a church. But we'll get a rest now. The rest of the way
+is walking."
+
+"I can't walk," Aggie said. "I can't get my knees together."
+
+"Sorry, ma'am," said Bill. "We're going down now, and the
+animals has to be led. That's one of the diversions of a trip
+like this. First you ride and than you walk. And then you ride
+again. This here's one of the show places, although easy of
+access from the entrance. Be a good place for a holdup, I've
+always said."
+
+"A holdup?" Tish asked. Her enthusiasm seemed to have flagged
+somewhat, but at this she brightened up.
+
+"Yes'm. You see, we're near the Canadian border, and it would be
+easy for a gang to slip over and back again. Don't know why
+we've never had one. Yellowstone can boast of a number."
+
+I observed tartly that I considered it nothing to boast of, but
+Bill did not agree with me.
+
+"It doesn't hurt a neighborhood none," he observed. "Adds
+romance, as you might say."
+
+He went on and, happening to slide on a piece of shale at that
+moment, I sat down unexpectedly and the horse put its foot on
+me.
+
+I felt embittered and helpless, but the others kept on.
+
+"Very well," I said, "go on. Don't mind me. If this creature
+wants to sit in my lap, well and good. I expect it's tired."
+
+But as they went on callously, I was obliged to shove the
+creature off and to hobble on. Bill was still babbling about
+holdups, and Aggie was saying that he was sunstruck, but of
+course it did not matter.
+
+We made very slow progress, owing to taking frequent rests, and
+late in the afternoon we were overtaken by Mr. Bell, on foot and
+carrying a pack. He would have passed on without stopping, but
+Aggie hailed him.
+
+"Not going to hike, are you?" she said pleasantly. Aggie is fond
+of picking up the vernacular of a region.
+
+"No," he said in a surly tone quite unlike his former urbane
+manner, "I'm merely taking this pack out for a walk."
+
+But he stopped and mopped his face.
+
+"To tell you the truth, ladies," he said, "I'm working off a
+little steam, that's all. I was afraid, if I stayed round the
+hotel, I'd do something I'd be sorry for. There are times when I
+am not a fit companion for any one, and this is one of them."
+
+We invited him to join us, but he refused.
+
+"No, I'm better alone," he said. "When things get too strong for
+me on the trail I can sling things about. I've been throwing
+boulders down the mountain every now and then. I'd just as soon
+they hit somebody as not. Also," he added, "I'm safer away from
+any red-headed men."
+
+We saw him glance at Bill, and understood. Mr. Oliver was red-
+headed.
+
+"Love's an awful thing," said Bill as the young man went on,
+kicking stones out of his way. "I'm glad I ain't got it."
+
+Tish turned and eyed him. "True love is a very beautiful thing,"
+she rebuked him. "Although a single woman myself, I believe in
+it. 'Come live with me and be my love,'" she quoted, sitting
+down to shake a stone out of her riding-boot.
+
+Bill looked startled. "I might say," he said hastily. that I may
+have misled you, ladies. I'm married."
+
+"You said you had never been in love," Tish said sharply.
+
+"Well, not to say real love," he replied. "She was the cook of
+an outfit I was with and it just came about natural. She was
+going to leave, which meant that I'd have to do the cooking,
+which I ain't much at, especially pastry. So I married her."
+
+Tish gave him a scornful glance but said nothing and we went on.
+
+We camped late that afternoon beside Two Medicine Lake, and
+while Bill put up the tents the three of us sat on a log and
+soaked our aching feet in the water which was melted glacier,
+and naturally cold.
+
+What was our surprise, on turning somewhat, to see the angry
+lover fishing on a point near by. While we stared he pulled out
+a large trout, and stalked away without a glance in our
+direction. As Tish, with her usual forethought, had brought a
+trout rod, she hastily procured it, but without result.
+
+"Of course," Aggie said, "no fish! I could eat a piece of
+broiled fish. I dare say I shall be skin and bone at the end of
+this trip- -and not much skin."
+
+Bill had set up the sleeping-tent and built a fire, and it
+looked cozy and comfortable. But Tish had the young man on her
+mind, and after supper she put on a skirt which she had brought
+along and went to see him.
+
+"I'd take him some supper, Bill," she said, "but you are
+correct: you are no cook."
+
+She disappeared among the bushes, only to return in a short
+time, jerking off her skirt as she came.
+
+"He says all he wants is to be let alone," she said briefly. "I
+must say I'm disappointed in him. He was very agreeable before."
+
+I pass without comment over the night. Bill had put up the tent
+over the root of a large tree, and we disposed ourselves about
+it as well as we could. In the course of the night one of the
+horses broke loose and put its head inside the tent. Owing to
+Aggie's thinking it was a bear, Tish shot at it, fortunately
+missing it.
+
+But the frightened animal ran away, and Bill was until noon the
+next day finding it. We cooked our own breakfast, and Tish made
+some gems, having brought the pan along. But the morning
+dragged, although the scenery was lovely.
+
+At twelve Bill brought the horse back and came over to us.
+
+"If you don't mind my saying it, Miss Carberry," he observed,
+"you're a bit too ready with that gun. First thing you know
+you'll put a hole through me, and then where will you be?"
+
+"I've got along without men most of my life," Tish said sharply.
+"I reckon we'd manage."
+
+"Well," he said, "there's another angle to it. Where would I
+be?"
+
+"That's between you and your Creator," Tish retorted.
+
+We went on again that afternoon, and climbed another precipice.
+We saw no human being except a mountain goat, although Bill
+claimed to have seen a bear. Tish was quite calm at all times,
+and had got so that she could look down into eternity without a
+shudder. But Aggie and I were still nervous, and at the steepest
+places we got off and walked.
+
+The unfortunate part was that the exercise and the mountain air
+made Aggie hungry, and there was little that she could eat.
+
+"If any one had told me a month ago," she said, mopping her
+forehead, "that I would be scaling the peaks of my country on
+crackers and tea, I wouldn't have believed it. I'm done out,
+Lizzie. I can't climb another inch."
+
+Bill was ahead with the pack horse, and Tish, overhearing her,
+called back some advice.
+
+"Take your horse's tail and let him pull you up, Aggie," she
+said. "I've read it somewhere."
+
+Aggie, although frequently complaining, always does as Tish
+suggests. So she took the horse's tail. when a totally
+unexpected thing happened. Docile as the creature generally was,
+it objected at once, and kicked out with both rear feet. In a
+moment, it seemed to me, Aggie was gone, and her horse was
+moving on alone.
+
+"Aggie!" I called in a panic.
+
+Tish stopped, and we both looked about. Then we saw her, lying
+on a ledge about ten feet below the trail. She was flat on her
+back, and her riding-hat was gone. But she was uninjured,
+although shaken, for as we looked she sat up, and an agonized
+expression came over her face.
+
+"Aggie!" I cried. "Is anything broken?"
+
+"Damnation!" said Aggie in an awful voice. "The upper set is
+gone!"
+
+I have set down exactly what Aggie said. I admit that the
+provocation was great. But Tish was not one to make allowances,
+and she turned and went on, leaving us alone. She is not without
+feeling, however, for from the top of the pass she sent Bill
+down with a rope, and we dragged poor Aggie to the trail again.
+Her nerves were shaken and she was repentant also, for when she
+found that her hat was gone she said nothing, although her eyes
+took on a hunted look.
+
+At the top of the pass Tish was sitting on a stone. She had
+taken her mending-box from the saddle, where she always kept it
+handy, and was drawing up a hole in her stocking. I observed to
+her pleasantly that it was a sign of scandal to mend clothing
+while still on, but she ignored me, although, as I reflected
+bitterly, I had not been kicked over the cliff.
+
+It was a subdued and speechless Aggie who followed us that
+afternoon along the trail. As her hat was gone, I took the spare
+dish towel and made a turban for her, with an end hanging down
+to protect the back of her neck. But she expressed little
+gratitude, beyond observing that as she was going over the edge
+piecemeal, she'd better have done it all at once and be through
+with it.
+
+The afternoon wore away slowly. It seemed a long time until we
+reached our camping-place, partly because, although a small
+eater ordinarily, the air and exercise had made me feel
+famished. But the disagreement between Tish and Aggie, owing to
+the latter's unfortunate exclamation while kicked over the
+cliff, made the time seem longer. There was not the usual
+exchange of pleasant nothings between us.
+
+But by six o'clock Tish was more amiable, having seen bear
+scratches on trees near the camp, and anticipating the sight of
+a bear. She mixed up a small cup cake while Bill was putting up
+our tent, and then, taking her rod, proceeded to fish, while
+Aggie and I searched for grasshoppers. These were few, owing to
+the altitude, but we caught four, which we imprisoned in a match-
+ box.
+
+With them Tish caught four trout and, broiling them nicely, she
+offered one to poor Aggie. It was a peace offering, and taken as
+such, so that we were soon on our former agreeable footing, and
+all forgotten.
+
+The next day it rained, and we were obliged to sit in the tent.
+Bill sat with us, and talked mainly of desperadoes.
+
+"As I observed before," he said, "there hasn't been any tourist
+holdup yet. But it's bound to come. Take the Yellowstone, now,--
+one holdup a year's the average, and it's full of soldiers at
+that."
+
+"It's a wonder people keep on going," I observed moving out of a
+puddle.
+
+"Oh, I don't know," he said. "In one way it's good business. I
+take it this way: When folks come West they want the West
+they've read about. What do they care for irrigation and apple
+orchards? What they like is danger and a little gunplay, the
+sort of thing they see in these here moving pictures."
+
+"I'm sure I don't," Aggie remarked. It was growing dusk, and she
+peered out into the forest round us. "There is something
+crackling out there now," she said.
+
+"Only a bear, likely," Bill assured her. "We have a sight of
+bears here. No, ma'am, they want danger. And every holdup's an
+advertisement. You see, the Government can't advertise these
+here parks; not the way it should, anyhow. But a holdup's news,
+so the papers print it, and it sets people to thinking about the
+park. Maybe they never thought of the place and are arranging to
+go elsewhere. Then along comes a gang and raises h--, raises
+trouble, and the park's in every one's mouth, so to speak. We'd
+get considerable business if there was one this summer."
+
+At that moment the crackling outside increased, and a shadowy
+form emerged from the bushes. Even Bill stood up, and Aggie
+screamed.
+
+It was, however, only poor Mr. Bell.
+
+"Mind if I borrow some matches?" he said gruffly.
+
+"We can't lend matches," Tish replied. "At least, I don't see
+the use of sending them back after they've been lighted. We can
+give you some."
+
+"My mistake," he said.
+
+That was all he said, except the word "Thanks" when I reached
+him a box.
+
+"He's a surly creature," Tish observed as he crackled through
+the brush again. "More than likely that girl's better off
+without him."
+
+"He looks rather downhearted," Aggie remarked. "Much that we
+think is temper is due to unhappiness."
+
+"Much of your charitable view is due to a good dinner too," Tish
+said. "Here we are, in the center of the wilderness, with great
+peaks on every hand, and we meet a fellow creature who speaks
+nine words, and begrudges those. If he's as stingy with money as
+with language she's hard a narrow escape."
+
+"He's had kind of a raw deal," Bill put in. "The girl was stuck
+on him all right, until this moving-picture chap came along. He
+offered to take some pictures with her in them, and it was all
+off. They're making up a play now, and she's to be in it."
+
+"What sort of a play?" Tish demanded.
+
+"Sorry not to oblige," Bill replied. "Can't say the nature of
+it."
+
+But all of us felt that Bill knew and would not say.
+
+Tish, to whom a mystery is a personal affront, determined to
+find out for herself; and when later in the evening we saw the
+light of Bell's camp-fire, it was Tish herself who suggested
+that we go over and visit with him.
+
+"We can converse about various things," she said, "and take his
+mind from his troubles. But it would be better not to mention
+affairs of the heart. He's probably sensitive."
+
+So we left Bill to look after things, and went to call on Mr.
+Bell. It was farther to his camp than it had appeared, and Tish
+unfortunately ran into a tree and bruised her nose badly. When
+it had stopped bleeding, however, we went on, and at last
+arrived.
+
+He was sitting on a log by the fire, smoking a pipe and looking
+very sad. Behind him was a bit of a tent not much larger than an
+umbrella.
+
+Aggie touched my arm. "My heart aches for him," she said. "There
+is despair in his very eyes."
+
+I do not believe that at first he was very glad to see us, but
+he softened somewhat when Tish held out the cake she had
+brought.
+
+"That's very nice of you," he said, rising. "I'm afraid I can't
+ask you to sit down. The ground's wet and there is only this
+log."
+
+"I've sat on logs before," Tish replied. "We thought we'd call,
+seeing we are neighbors. As the first comers it was our place to
+call first, of course."
+
+"I see," he said, and poked up the fire with a piece of stick.
+
+"We felt that you might be lonely," said Aggie.
+
+"I came here to be lonely," he replied gloomily. "I want to be
+lonely."
+
+Tish, however, was determined to be cheerful, and asked him, as
+a safe subject, how he felt about the war.
+
+"War?" he said. "That's so, there is a war. To tell the truth, I
+had forgotten about it. I've been thinking of other things."
+
+We saw that it was going to be difficult to cheer him. Tish
+tried the weather, which brought us nowhere, as he merely
+grunted. But Aggie broached the subject of desperadoes, and he
+roused somewhat.
+
+"There are plenty of shady characters in the park," he said
+shortly. "Wolves in sheep's clothing, that's what they are."
+
+"Bill, our guide, says there may be a holdup at any time."
+
+"Sure there is," he said calmly. "There's one going to be pulled
+off in the next day or two."
+
+We sat petrified, and Aggie's eyes were starting out of her
+head.
+
+"All the trimmings," he went on, staring at the fire. "Innocent
+and unsuspecting tourists, lunch, laughter, boiled coffee, and
+cold ham. Ambush. The whole business--followed by highwaymen in
+flannel shirts and revolvers. Dead tourist or two, desperate
+resistance--everything."
+
+Aggie rose, pale as an aspen. "You--you are joking!" she cried.
+
+"Do I look like it?" he demanded fiercely. "I tell you there is
+going to be the whole thing. At the end the lovely girl will
+escape on horseback and ride madly for aid. She will meet the
+sheriff and a posse, who are out for a picnic or some such
+damfool nonsense, and--"
+
+"Young man," Tish said coldly, "if you know all this, why are
+you sitting here and not alarming the authorities?"
+
+"Pooh!" he said disagreeably. "It's a put-up scheme, to
+advertise the park. Yellowstone's got ahead of them this year,
+and has had its excitement, with all the papers ringing with it.
+That was a gag, too, probably."
+
+"Do you mean--"
+
+"I mean considerable," he said. "That red- headed movie idiot
+will be on a rise, taking the tourists as they ride through. Of
+course he doesn't expect the holdup--not in the papers anyhow.
+He happens to have the camera trained on the party, and gets it
+all. Result--a whacking good picture, revolvers firing blank
+cartridges, everything which people will crowd to see. Oh, it's
+good business all right. I don't mind admitting that."
+
+Tish's face expressed the greatest rage. She rose, drawing
+herself to her full height.
+
+"And the tourists?" she demanded. "They lend themselves to this
+imposition? To this infamy? To this turpitude? "
+
+"Certainly not. They think it's the real thing. The whole
+business hangs on that. And as the sheriff, or whoever it is in
+the fool plot, captures the bandits, the party gets its money
+back, and has material for conversation for the next twenty
+years."
+
+"To think," said Tish, "of our great National Government lending
+itself to such a scheme!"
+
+"Wrong," said the young man. "It's a combination of Western
+railroads and a movie concern acting together."
+
+"I trust," Tish observed, setting her lips firmly, "that the
+tourists will protest."
+
+"The more noise, the better." The young man, though not more
+cheerful as to appearance, was certainly more talkative. "Trust
+a clergyman for yelling when his pocket's picked."
+
+With one voice the three of us exclaimed: "Mr. Ostermaier!"
+
+He was not sure of the name, but "Helen" had pointed the
+clergyman out to him, and it was Mr. Ostermaier without a doubt.
+
+We talked it over with Bill when we got back, and he was not as
+surprised as we'd expected.
+
+"Knew they were cooking up something. They've got some Indians
+in it too. Saw them rehearsing old Thunder Mountain the other
+day in nothing but a breech-clout."
+
+Tish reproved him for a lack of delicacy of speech, and shortly
+afterward we went to bed. Owing to the root under the tent, and
+puddles here and there, we could not go to sleep for a time, and
+we discussed the "nefarious deed," as Tish aptly termed it, that
+was about to take place.
+
+"Although," Tish observed, "Mr. Ostermaier has been receiving
+for so many years that it might be a good thing, for his soul's
+sake, to have him give up something, even if to bandits." I
+dozed off after a time, but awakened to find
+
+Tish sitting up, wide awake.
+
+"I've been thinking that thing over, Lizzie," she said in a low
+tone. "I believe it's our duty to interfere."
+
+"Of course," I replied sarcastically; "and be shown all over the
+country in the movies making fools of ourselves."
+
+"Did you notice that that young man said they would be firing
+blank cartridges?"
+
+Well, even a blank cartridge can be a dangerous thing. Then and
+there I reminded her of my niece's boy, who was struck on the
+Fourth of July by a wad from one, and had to be watched for
+lockjaw for several weeks.
+
+It was at that moment that we heard Bill, who had no tent, by
+choice, and lay under a tree, give a loud whoop, followed by
+what was unmistakably an oath.
+
+"Bear!" he yelled. "Watch out, he's headed for the tent! It's a
+grizzly."
+
+Tish felt round wildly for her revolver, but it was gone! And
+the bear was close by. We could hear it snuffing about, and to
+add to the confusion Aggie wakened and commenced to sneeze with
+terror.
+
+"Bill!" Tish called. "I've lost my revolver!"
+
+"I took it, Miss Carberry. But I've been lying in a puddle, and
+it won't go off."
+
+All hope seemed gone. The frail walls of our tent were no
+protection whatever, and as we all knew, even a tree was no
+refuge from a bear, which, as we had seen in the Zoological
+Garden at home, can climb like a cat, only swifter. Besides,
+none of us could climb a tree.
+
+It was at that moment that Tish had one of those inspirations
+that make her so dependable in emergencies. Feeling round in the
+tent for a possible weapon, she touched a large ham, from which
+we had broiled a few slices at supper. In her shadowy form there
+was both purpose and high courage. With a single sweeping
+gesture she flung the ham at the bear so accurately that we
+heard the thud with which it struck.
+
+"What the hell are you doing?" Bill called from a safe distance.
+Even then we realized that his restraint of speech was a pose,
+pure and simple. "If you make him angry he'll tear up the whole
+place."
+
+But Tish did not deign to answer. The rain had ceased, and
+suddenly the moon came out and illuminated the whole scene. We
+saw the bear sniffing at the ham, which lay on the ground. Then
+he picked it up in his jaws and stood looking about.
+
+Tish said later that the moment his teeth were buried in the ham
+she felt safe. I can still see the majestic movement with which
+she walked out of the tent and waved her arms.
+
+"Now, scat with you!" she said firmly. "Scat!"
+
+He "scatted." Snarling through his nose, for fear of dropping
+the ham, he turned and fled up the mountainside. In the open
+space Tish stood the conqueror. She yawned and glanced about.
+
+"Going to be a nice night, after all," she said. " Now, Bill,
+bring me that revolver, and if I catch you meddling with it
+again I'll put that pair of fur rugs you are so proud of in the
+fire."
+
+Bill, who was ignorant of the ham, emerged sheepishly into the
+open. "Where the--where the dickens did you hit him, Miss Tish?"
+he asked.
+
+"In the stomach," Tish replied tartly, and taking her revolver
+went back to the tent.
+
+All the next day Tish was quiet. She rode ahead, hardly noticing
+the scenery, with her head dropped on her chest. At luncheon she
+took a sardine sandwich and withdrew to a tree, underneath which
+she sat, a lonely and brooding figure.
+
+When luncheon was over and Aggie and I were washing the dishes
+and hanging out the dish towels to dry on a bush, Tish
+approached Bill, who was pouring water on the fire to extinguish
+it.
+
+"Bill," she stated, "you came to us under false pretenses. You
+swear, for one thing."
+
+"Only under excitement, Miss Tish," he said. "And as far as that
+goes, Miss Aggie herself said--"
+
+"Also," Tish went on hastily, "you said you could cook. You
+cannot cook."
+
+"Now, look here, Miss Tish," he said in a pleading tone, "I can
+cook. I didn't claim to know the whole cookbook. I can make
+coffee and fry bacon. How'd I know you ladies wanted pastry? As
+for them canned salmon croquettes with white sauce, I reckon to
+make them with a little showing, and--"
+
+"Also," said Tish, cutting in sternly, "you took away my
+revolver, and left us helpless last night, and in peril of wild
+beasts."
+
+"Tourists ain't allowed to carry guns."
+
+He attempted to look injured, but Tish ignored him.
+
+"Therefore," she said, "if I am not to send you back--which I
+have been considering all day, as I've put up a tent myself
+before this, and you are only an extra mouth to feed, which, as
+we are one ham short, is inconvenient--you will have to justify
+my keeping you."
+
+"If you will just show me once about them gems, Miss Tish--" he
+began.
+
+But Tish cut him off. "No," she said firmly, "you are too casual
+about cooking. And you are no dish-washer. Setting a plate in a
+river and letting the current wash it may satisfy cow-punchers.
+It doesn't go with me. The point is this: You know all about the
+holdup that is going to take place. Don't lie. I know you know.
+Now, you take us there and tell us all you know about it."
+
+He scratched his head reflectively. "I'll tell you," he said.
+"I'm a slow thinker. Give me about twenty minutes on it, will
+you? It's a sort of secret, and there's different ways of
+looking at it."
+
+Tish took out her watch. "Twenty minutes," she said. "Start
+thinking now."
+
+He wandered off and rolled a cigarette. Later on, as I have
+said, he showed Tish how to do it--not, of course, that she
+meant to smoke, but Tish is fond of learning how to do things.
+She got so she could roll them with one hand, and she does it
+now in the winter evenings, instead of rolling paper spills as
+formerly. When Charlie Sands comes, she always has a supply
+ready for him, although occasionally somewhat dry from waiting
+for a few weeks.
+
+At the end of twenty minutes Tish snapped her watch shut.
+
+"Time!" she called, and Bill came back.
+
+"Well, I'll do it," he said. "I don't know as they'll put you in
+the picture, but I'll see what I can do."
+
+"Picture nothing!" Tish snapped. "You take us there and hide us.
+That's the point. There must be caves round to put us in,
+although I don't insist on a cave. They're damp usually."
+
+Well, he looked puzzled, but he agreed. I caught Aggie's eye,
+and we exchanged glances. There was trouble coming, and we knew
+it. Our long experience with Tish had taught us not to ask
+questions. "Ours but to do and die," as Aggie later said. But I
+confess to a feeling of uneasiness during the remainder of that
+day.
+
+We changed our course that afternoon, turning off at Saint
+Mary's and spending the night near the Swiss Chalet at Going-to-
+the-Sun. Aggie and I pleaded to spend the night in the chalet,
+but Tish was adamant.
+
+"When I am out camping, I camp," she said. "I can have a bed at
+home, but I cannot sleep under the stars, on a bed of pine
+needles, and be lured to rest by the murmur of a mountain
+stream."
+
+Well, we gave it up and went with her. I must say that the trip
+had improved us already. Except when terrified or kicked by a
+horse, Aggie was not sneezing at all, and I could now climb into
+the saddle unassisted. My waistbands were much looser, too, and
+during a short rest that afternoon I put a dart in my riding-
+breeches, during the absence of Bill after the pack-horse, which
+had strayed.
+
+It was on that occasion that Tish told us as much of her plan as
+she thought it wise for us to know.
+
+"The holdup," she explained, "is to be the day after to-morrow
+on the Piegan Pass. Bill says there is a level spot at the top
+with rocks all about. That is the spot. The Ostermaiers and
+their party leave the automobiles at Many Glaciers and take
+horses to the pass. It will be worth coming clear to Montana to
+see Mrs. Ostermaier on a horse."
+
+"I still don't see," Aggie observed in a quavering voice, "what
+we have to do with it."
+
+"Naturally not," said Tish. "You'll know as soon as is good for
+you."
+
+"I don't believe it will ever be good for me," said poor Aggie.
+"It isn't good for anybody to be near a holdup. And I don't want
+to be in a moving picture with no teeth. I'm not a vain woman,"
+she said, "but I draw the line at that."
+
+But Tish ignored her. "The only trouble," she said, "is having
+one revolver. If we each had one--Lizzie, did you bring any
+ink?"
+
+Well, I had, and said so, but that I needed it for postcards
+when we struck a settlement.
+
+Tish waved my objection aside. "I guess it can be managed," she
+observed. "Bill has a knife. Yes, I think it can be done."
+
+She and Bill engaged in an earnest conference that afternoon. At
+first Bill objected. I could see him shaking his head. Then Tish
+gave him something which Aggie said was money. I do not know.
+She had been short of cash on the train, but she may have had
+more in her trunk. Then I saw Bill start to laugh. He laughed
+until he had to lean against a tree, although Tish was quite
+stern and serious.
+
+We reached Piegan Pass about three that afternoon, and having
+inspected it and the Garden Wall, which is a mile or two high at
+that point, we returned to a "bench" where there were some
+trees, and dismounted.
+
+Here, to our surprise, we found Mr. Bell again. As Tish
+remarked, he was better at walking than at talking. He looked
+surprised at seeing us, and was much more agreeable than before.
+
+"I'm afraid I was pretty surly the other night," he said. "The
+truth is, I was so blooming unhappy that I didn't give a damn
+for anything."
+
+But when he saw that Bill was preparing to take the pack off the
+horse he looked startled.
+
+"I say," he said, "you don't mean to camp here, do you?"
+
+"Such is my intention," Tish observed grimly.
+
+"But look here. Just beyond, at the pass, is where the holdup is
+to take place to-morrow."
+
+"So I believe," said Tish. "What has that to do with us? What
+are you going to do?"
+
+"Oh, I'm going to hang round."
+
+"Well, we intend to hang round also."
+
+He stood by and watched our preparations for camp. Tish chose a
+small grove for the tent, and then left us, clambering up the
+mountain-side. She finally disappeared. Aggie mixed some muffins
+for tea, and we invited the young man to join us. But he was
+looking downhearted again and refused.
+
+However, when she took them out of the portable oven, nicely
+browned, and lifting the tops of each one dropped in a
+teaspoonful of grape jelly, he changed his mind.
+
+"I'll stay, if you don't mind," he said. "Maybe some decent food
+will make me see things clearer."
+
+When Tish descended at six o'clock, she looked depressed. "There
+is no cave," she said, "although I lave gone where a mountain
+goat would get dizzy. But I have found a good place to hide the
+horses, where we can get them quickly when we need them."
+
+Aggie was scooping the inside out of her muffin, being unable to
+eat the crust, but she went quite pale.
+
+"Tish," she said, "you have some desperate plan in view, and I
+am not equal to it. I am worn with travel and soft food, and am
+not as young as I once was."
+
+"Desperate nothing!" said Tish, pouring condensed milk into her
+tea. "I am going to teach a lot of idiots a lesson, that's all.
+There should be one spot in America free from the advertising
+man and his schemes, and this is going to be it. Commercialism,"
+she went on, growing oratorical, "does not belong here among
+these mighty mountains. Once let it start, and these towering
+cliffs will be defaced with toothpowder and intoxicating-liquor
+signs."
+
+The young man knew the plans for the holdup even letter than
+Bill. He was able to show us the exact spot which had been
+selected, and to tell us the hour at which the Ostermaier party
+was to cross the pass.
+
+"They'll lunch on the pass," he said, "and, of course, they
+suspect nothing. The young lady of whom I spoke to you will be
+one of their party. She, however, knows what is coming, and is,
+indeed, a party to it. The holdup will take place during
+luncheon."
+
+Here his voice broke, and he ate an entire muffin before he went
+on: "The holdup will take place on the pass, the bandits having
+been hidden on this 'bench' right here. Then the outlaws, having
+robbed the tourists, will steal the young lady and escape down
+the trail on the other side. The guide, who is in the plot, will
+ride ahead in this direction and raise the alarm. You
+understand," he added, "that as it's a put-up job, the tourists
+will get all their stuff back. I don't know how that's to be
+arranged."
+
+"But the girl?" Tish asked.
+
+"She's to make her escape later," Mr. Bell said grimly, "and
+will be photographed galloping down the trail, by another idiot
+with a camera, who, of course, just happens to be on the spot.
+She'll do it too," he added with a pathetic note of pride in his
+voice. "She's got nerve enough for anything."
+
+He drew a long breath, and Aggie poured him a third cup of tea.
+
+"I dare say this will finish everything," he said dejectedly. "I
+can't offer her any excitement like this. We live in a quiet
+suburb, where nobody ever fires a revolver except on the Fourth
+of July."
+
+"What she needs," Tish said, bending forward, "is a lesson, Mr.
+Bell--something to make her hate the very thought of a moving
+picture and shudder at the sound of a shot."
+
+"Exactly," said Mr. Bell. "I've thought of that. Something to
+make her gun-shy and camera-shy. It's curious about her. In some
+ways she's a timid girl. She's afraid of thunder, for one
+thing."
+
+Tish bent forward. "Do you know," she said, "the greatest weapon
+in the world?"
+
+"Weapon? Well, I don't know. These new German guns--"
+
+"The greatest weapon in the world," Tish explained, "is
+ridicule. Man is helpless against it. To be absurd is to be
+lost. When the bandits take the money, where do they go?"
+
+"Down the other side from the pass. A photographer will
+photograph them there, making their escape with the loot."
+
+"And the young lady?"
+
+"I've told you that," he said bitterly. "She is to be captured
+by the attacking party."
+
+"They will all be armed?"
+
+"Sure, with blanks. The Indians have guns and arrows, but the
+arrows have rubber tips."
+
+Tish rose majestically. "Mr. Bell," she said, "you may sleep to-
+night the sleep of peace. When I undertake a thing, I carry it
+through. My friends will agree with me. I never fail, when my
+heart is set on it. By the day after to-morrow the young lady in
+the case will hate the sight of a camera."
+
+Although not disclosing her plan, she invited the young man to
+join us. But his face fell and he shook his head.
+
+Tish said that she did not expect to need him, but that, if the
+time came, she would blow three times on a police whistle, which
+she had, with her usual foresight, brought along. He agreed to
+that, although looking rather surprised, and we parted from him.
+
+"I would advise," Tish said as he moved away, "that you conceal
+yourself in the valley below the pass on the other side."
+
+He agreed to this, and we separated for the night. But long
+after Aggie and I had composed ourselves to rest Tish sat on a
+stone by the camp-fire and rolled cigarettes.
+
+At last she came into the tent and wakened us by prodding us
+with her foot.
+
+"Get all the sleep you can," she said. "We'll leave here at dawn
+to-morrow, and there'll be little rest for any of us to-morrow
+night."
+
+At daylight next morning she roused us. She was dressed, except
+that she wore her combing-jacket, and her hair was loose round
+her face.
+
+"Aggie, you make an omelet in a hurry, and, Lizzie, you will
+have to get the horses."
+
+"I'll do nothing of the sort," I said, sitting up on the ground.
+"We've got a man here for that. Besides, I have to set the
+table."
+
+"Very well," Tish replied, "we can stay here, I dare say. Bill's
+busy at something I've set him to doing."
+
+"Whose fault is it," I demanded, "that we are here in
+'Greenland's Icy Mountains'? Not mine. Id never heard of the
+dratted place. And those horses are five miles away by now, most
+likely."
+
+"Go and get a cup of tea. You'll have a little sense then," said
+Tish, not unkindly. "And as for what Bill's doing, he's making
+revolvers. Where's your writing ink?"
+
+I had none! I realized it that moment. I had got it out at the
+first camp to record in my diary the place, weather,
+temperature, and my own pulse rate, which I had been advised to
+watch, on account of the effect of altitude on the heart, and
+had left the bottle sitting on a stone.
+
+When I confessed this to Tish, she was unjustly angry and a
+trifle bitter.
+
+"It's what I deserve, most likely, for bringing long two
+incompetents," was her brief remark. "Without ink we are
+weaponless."
+
+But she is a creature of resource, and a moment later she
+emerged from the tent and called to Bill in a cheerful tone.
+
+"No ink, Bill," she said, "but we've got black- berry cordial,
+and by mixing it with a little soot we may be able to manage."
+
+Aggie demurred loudly, as there are occasions when only a
+mouthful of the cordial enables her to keep doing. But Tish was
+firm. When I went to the fire, I found Bill busily carving
+wooden revolvers, copying Tish's, which lay before him. He had
+them done well enough, and could have gone for the horses as
+easy as not, but he insisted on trimming them up. Mine, which I
+still have, has a buffalo head carved on the handle, and Aggie's
+has a wreath of leaves running round the barrel.
+
+In spite of Aggie's wails Tish poured a large part of the
+blackberry cordial into a biscuit pan, and put in a chip of
+wood.
+
+"It makes it red," she said doubtfully. "I never saw a red
+revolver, Bill."
+
+"Seems like an awful waste," Bill said. But having now completed
+the wreath he placed all three weapons --he had made one for
+himself--in the pan. The last thing I saw, as I started for the
+horses, was the three of them standing about, looking down, and
+Aggie's face was full of misery.
+
+I was gone for a half-hour. The horses had not wandered far, and
+having mounted mine, although without a saddle, I copied as well
+as I could the whoop Bill used to drive them in, and rounded
+them up. When I returned, driving them before me, the pack was
+ready, and on Tish's face was a look of intense satisfaction. I
+soon perceived the reason.
+
+Lying on a stone by the fire were three of the shiniest black
+revolvers any one could want. I eyed Tish and she explained.
+
+"Stove polish," she said. "Like a fool I'd forgot it. Gives a
+true metallic luster, as it says on the box."
+
+Tish is very particular about a stove, and even on our camping-
+trips we keep the portable stove shining and clean.
+
+"Does it come off?"
+
+"Well, more or less," she admitted. "We can keep the box out and
+renew when necessary. It is a great comfort," she added, "to
+feel that we are all armed. We shall need weapons."
+
+"In an emergency," I observed rather tartly, "I hope you will
+not depend on us too much. While I don't know what you intend to
+do, if it is anything desperate, just remember that the only way
+Aggie or I can do any damage with these things is to thrust them
+down somebody's throat and strangle him to death."
+
+She ignored my remark, however, and soon we were on our horses
+and moving along the trail toward the pass.
+
+
+It will be unnecessary to remind those familiar with Glacier
+Park of the trail which hugs the mountain above timber-line, and
+extends toward the pass for a mile or so, in a long semicircle
+which curves inward.
+
+At the end it turns to the right and mounts to an acre or so of
+level ground, with snow and rocks but no vegetation. This is the
+Piegan Pass. Behind it is the Garden Wall, that stupendous mass
+of granite rising to incredible heights. On the other side the
+trail drops abruptly, by means of stepladders which I have
+explained.
+
+Tish now told us of her plan.
+
+"The unfortunate part is," she said, "that the Ostermaiers will
+not see us. I tried to arrange it so they could, but it was
+impossible. We must content, ourselves with the knowledge of a
+good deed done."
+
+Her plan, in brief, was this: The sham attacking party was to
+turn and ride away down the far side of the pass, up which the
+Ostermaiers had come. They were, according to the young man, to
+take the girl with them, with the idea of holding her for
+ransom. She was to escape, however, while they were lunching in
+some secluded fastness, and, riding back to the pass, was to
+meet there a rescue party, which the Ostermaiers were to meet on
+the way down to Gunsight Chalet.
+
+Tish's idea was this: We would ride up while they were lunching,
+pretend to think them real bandits, paying no attention to them
+if they fired at us, as we knew they had only blank cartridges,
+and, having taken them prisoners, make them walk in ignominy to
+the nearest camp, some miles farther.
+
+"Then," said Tish, "either they will confess the ruse, and the
+country will ring with laughter, or they will have to submit to
+
+arrest and much unpleasantness. It will be a severe lesson."
+
+We reached the pass safely, and on the way down the other side
+we passed Mr. Oliver, the moving-picture man, with his outfit on
+a horse. He touched his hat politely and moved out on a ledge to
+let us by.
+
+"Mind if I take you as you go down the mountain?" he called.
+"It's a bully place for a picture." He stared at Aggie, who was
+muffled in a cape and had the dish towel round her head. "I'd
+particularly like to get your Arab," he said. "The Far East and
+the Far West, you know."
+
+Aggie gave him a furious glance. "Arab nothing!" she snapped.
+"If you can't tell a Christian lady from a heathen, on account
+of her having lost her hat, them you belong in the dirty work
+you're doing."
+
+"Aggie, be quiet!" Tish said in an awful voice.
+
+But wrath had made Aggie reckless. "'Dirty work' was what I
+said," she repeated, staring at the young man.
+
+"I beg your pardon. I'm sure I--"
+
+"Don't think," Aggie went on, to Tish's fury, "that we don't
+know a few things. We do."
+
+"I see," he said slowly. "All right. Although I'd like to know--
+"
+
+"Good-morning," said Aggie, and kicked her horse to go on.
+
+I shall never forget Tish's face. Round the next bend she got
+off her horse and confronted Aggie.
+
+"The older I get, Aggie Pilkington," she said, "the more I
+realize that to take you anywhere means ruin. We are done now.
+All our labor is for nothing. There will be no holdup, no
+nothing. They are scared off."
+
+But Aggie was still angry. "Just let some one take you for a
+lousy Bedouin, Tish," she said, "and see what you would do. I'm
+not sorry anyhow. I never did like the idea."
+
+But Tish dislikes relinquishing an idea, once it has taken hold.
+And, although she did not speak to Aggie again for the next
+hour, she went ahead with her preparations.
+
+"There's still a chance, Lizzie," she said. "It's not likely
+they'll give up easy, on account of hiring the Indians and
+everything."
+
+About a mile and a half down the trail, she picked out a place
+to hide. This time there was a cave. We cleared our saddles for
+action, as Tish proposed to let them escape past us with the
+girl, and then to follow them rapidly, stealing upon them if
+possible while they were at luncheon, and covering them with the
+one real revolver and the three wooden ones.
+
+The only thing that bothered us was Bill's attitude. He kept
+laughing to himself and muttering, and when he was storing
+things in the cave, Tish took me aside.
+
+"I don't like his attitude, Lizzie," she said. "He's likely to
+giggle or do something silly, just at the crucial moment. I
+cannot understand why he thinks it is funny, but he does. We'd
+be much better without him."
+
+"You'd better talk to him, Tish," I said. "You can't get rid of
+him now."
+
+But to tell Tish she cannot do a thing is to determine her to do
+it.
+
+It was still early, only half-past eight, when she came to me
+with an eager face.
+
+"I've got it, Lizzie," she said. "I'll send off Mona Lisa, and
+he will have to search for her. The only thing is, she won't
+move unless she's driven. If we could only find a hornet's nest
+again, we could manage. It may be cruel, but I understand that a
+hornet's sting is not as painful to a horse as to a human
+being."
+
+Mona Lisa, I must explain, was the pack-horse. Tish had changed
+her name from Jane to Mona Lisa because in the mornings she was
+constantly missing, and having to be looked for.
+
+Tish disappeared for a time, and we settled down to our long
+wait. Bill put another coat of stove polish on the weapons, and
+broke now and then into silent laughter. On my giving him a
+haughty glance, however, he became sober and rubbed with
+redoubled vigor.
+
+In a half-hour, however, I saw Tish beckoning to me from a
+distance, and I went to her. I soon saw that she was holding her
+handkerchief to one cheek, but when I mentioned the fact she
+ignored me.
+
+"I have found a nest, Lizzie," she cried. "Slip over and
+unfasten Mona Lisa. She's not near the other horses, which is
+fortunate."
+
+I then perceived that Tish's yellow slicker was behind her on
+the ground and tied into a bundle, from which emerged a dull
+roaring. I was wondering how Tish expected to open it, when she
+settled the question by asking me to cut a piece from the
+mosquito netting which we put in the doorway of the tent at
+night, and to bring her riding-gloves.
+
+Aggie was darning a hole in the tablecloth when I went back and
+Bill was still engaged with the weapons. Having taken what she
+required to Tish, under pretense of giving Mona Lisa a lump of
+sugar, I untied her. What followed was exactly as Tish had
+planned. Mona Lisa, not realizing her freedom, stood still while
+Tish untied the slicker and freed its furious inmates. She then
+dropped the whole thing under the unfortunate animal, and
+retreated, not too rapidly, for fear of drawing Bill's
+attention. For possibly sixty seconds nothing happened, except
+that Mona Lisa raised her head and appeared to listen. Then,
+with a loud scream, she threw up her head and bolted. By the
+time Bill had put down the stove brush she was out of sight
+among the trees, but we could hear her leaping and scrambling
+through the wood.
+
+"Jumping cats!" said Bill, and ran for his horse. "Acts as
+though she'd started for the Coast!" he yelled to me, and flung
+after her.
+
+When he had disappeared, Tish came out of the woods, and,
+getting a kettle of boiling water, poured it over the nest. In
+spite of the netting, however, she was stung again, on the back
+of the neck, and spent the rest of the morning holding wet mud
+to the affected parts.
+
+Her brain, however, was as active as ever, and by half-past
+eleven, mounting a boulder, she announced that she could see the
+Ostermaier party far down the trail, and that in an hour they
+would probably be at the top. She had her field-glasses, and she
+said that Mrs. Ostermaier was pointing up to the pass and
+shaking her head, and that the others were arguing with her.
+
+"It would be just like the woman," Tish said bitterly, "to
+refuse to come any farther and spoil everything."
+
+But a little later she announced that the guide was leading Mrs.
+Ostermaier's horse and that they were coming on.
+
+We immediately retreated to the cave and waited, it being Tish's
+intention to allow them to reach the pass without suspecting our
+presence, and only to cut off the pseudo-bandits in their
+retreat, as I have explained.
+
+It was well that we had concealed the horses also, for the party
+stopped near the cave, and Mrs. Ostermaier was weeping. "Not a
+step farther!" she said. "I have a family to consider, and Mr.
+Ostermaier is a man of wide usefulness and cannot be spared."
+
+We did not dare to look out, but we heard the young lady
+speaking, and as Aggie remarked later, no one would have
+thought, from the sweetness of her voice, that she was a
+creature of duplicity.
+
+"But it is perfectly safe, dear Mrs. Ostermaier," she said "And
+think, when you go home, of being able to say that you have
+climbed a mountain pass."
+
+"Pass!" sniffed Mrs. Ostermaier. "Pass nothing! I don't call a
+wall a mile high a pass."
+
+"Think," said the girl, "of being able to crow over those three
+old women who are always boasting of the things they do.
+Probably you are right, and they never do them at all, but you--
+there's a moving-picture man waiting, remember, and you can show
+the picture before the Dorcas Society. No one can ever doubt
+that you have done a courageous thing. You'll have the proof."
+
+"George," said Mrs. Ostermaier in a small voice, "if anything
+happens, I have told you how I want my things divided."
+
+"Little devil!" whispered Aggie, referring to the girl. "If that
+young man knows when he is well off, he'll let her go."
+
+But beyond rebuking her for the epithet, Tish made no comment,
+and the party moved on. We lost them for a time among the trees,
+but when they moved out above timber-line we were able to watch
+them, and we saw that Mrs. Ostermaier got off her horse, about
+halfway up, and climbed slowly on foot. Tish, who had the
+glasses, said that she looked purple and angry, and that she
+distinctly saw the guide give her something to drink out of a
+bottle. It might, however, have been vichy or some similar
+innocent beverage. and I believe in giving her the benefit of
+the doubt.
+
+When at last they vanished over the edge of the pass, we led out
+our horses and prepared for what was to come. Bill had not
+returned, and, indeed, we did not see him until the evening of
+the second day after that, when, worn but triumphant, we emerged
+from the trail at the Many Glaciers Hotel. That, however, comes
+later in this narrative.
+
+With everything prepared, Tish judged it best to have luncheon.
+I made a few mayonnaise-and-lettuce sandwiches, beating the
+mayonnaise in the cool recesses of the cave, and we drank some
+iced tea, to which Aggie had thoughtfully added sliced lemon and
+a quantity of ginger ale. Feeling much refreshed, we grasped our
+weapons and waited.
+
+At half-past twelve we heard a loud shriek on the pass, far
+overhead, followed almost immediately by a fusillade of shots.
+Then a silence, followed by more shots. Then a solitary horseman
+rode over the edge of the pass and, spurring his horse, rode
+recklessly down the precipitous trail. Aggie exclaimed that it
+was Mr. Ostermaier, basely deserting his wife in her apparent
+hour of need. But Tish, who had the glasses, reported finally
+that it was the moving-picture man.
+
+We were greatly surprised, as it had not occurred to us that
+this would be a part of the program.
+
+As he descended, Tish announced that there must be another
+photographer on top, as he was "registering" signs of terror--a
+moving-picture expression which she had acquired from Charlie
+Sands--and looking back frequently over his shoulder.
+
+We waited until he reached timber-line, and then withdrew to a
+group of trees. It was not our intention to allow him to see us
+and spoil everything. But when he came near, through the woods,
+and his horse continued at unabated speed, Tish decided that the
+animal, frightened by the shots, was running away.
+
+She therefore placed herself across the trail to check its
+headlong speed, but the animal merely rushed round her. Mr.
+Oliver yelled something at us, which we were, however, unable to
+hear, and kept madly on.
+
+Almost immediately four men, firing back over their shoulders,
+rode into sight at the pass and came swiftly down toward us.
+
+"Where's the girl?" Tish cried with her glasses to her eyes.
+"The idiots have got excited and have forgotten to steal her."
+
+That was plainly what had happened, but she was determined to be
+stolen anyhow, for the next moment she rode into view, furiously
+following the bandits.
+
+"She's kept her head anyhow," Tish observed with satisfaction.
+"Trust a lot of men to go crazy and do the wrong thing. But
+they'll have to change the story and make her follow them."
+
+At timber-line the men seemed to realize that she was behind
+them, and they turned and looked up. They seemed to be at a loss
+to know what to do, in view of the picture. But they were quick
+thinkers, too, we decided. Right then and there they took her
+prisoner, surrounding her.
+
+She made a desperate resistance, even crying out, as we coed
+plainly see. But Tish was irritated. She said she could not see
+how the story would hold now. Either the girl should have
+captured them, they being out of ammunition, or the whole thing
+should have been done again, according to the original plan.
+However, as she said, it was not our affair. Our business was to
+teach them a lesson not to impose on unsuspecting tourists, for
+although not fond of Mrs. Ostermaier, we had been members of Mr.
+Ostermaier's church, and liked him, although his sermons were
+shorter than Tish entirely approved of.
+
+We withdrew again to seclusion until they had passed, and Tish
+gave them ten minutes to get well ahead. Then we rode out.
+
+Tish's face was stern as she led off. The shriek of Mrs.
+Ostermaier was still, as she said in a low tone, ringing in her
+ears. But before we had gone very far, Tish stopped and got off
+her horse. "We've got to pad the horses' feet," she said. "How
+can we creep up on them when on every stony place we sound like
+an artillery engagement?"
+
+Here was a difficulty we had not anticipated. But Tish overcame
+it with her customary resource, by taking the blanket from under
+her saddle and cutting it into pieces with her scissors, which
+always accompany her. We then cut the leather straps from our
+saddles at her direction, and each of us went to work. Aggie,
+however, protested.
+
+"I never expected," she said querulously, "to be sitting on the
+Rocky Mountains under a horse, tying piece of bed quilt on his
+feet. I wouldn't mind," she added, "if the creature liked me.
+But the way he feels toward me he's likely to haul off and
+murder me at any moment."
+
+However, it was done at last, and it made a great change. We
+moved along silently, and all went well except that, having
+neglected to draw the cinch tight, and the horse's back being
+slippery without the padding, my saddle turned unexpectedly,
+throwing me off into the trail. I bruised my arm badly, but Tish
+only gave me a glance of scorn and went on.
+
+Being above carelessness herself, she very justly resents it in
+others.
+
+We had expected, with reason, that the so-called highwaymen,
+having retreated to a certain distance, would there pause and
+very possibly lunch before returning. It was, therefore, a
+matter of surprise to find that they had kept on.
+
+Moreover, they seemed to have advanced rapidly, and Tish, who
+had read a book on signs of the trail, examined the hoofprints
+of their horses in a soft place beside a stream, and reported
+that they had been going at a lope.
+
+"Now, remember," she said as she prepared to mount again, "to
+all intents and purposes these are real bandits and to be
+treated accordingly. Our motto is 'No quarter.' I shall be
+harsh, and I expect no protest from either of you. They deserve
+everything they get."
+
+But when, after another mile or two, we came to a side trail,
+leading, by Tish's map, not to Many Glaciers, but up a ravine to
+another pass, and Tish saw that they had taken that direction,
+we were puzzled.
+
+But not for long.
+
+"I understand now," she said. "It is all clear. The photographer
+was riding ahead to get them up this valley somewhere. They've
+probably got a rendezvous all ready, with another camera in
+place. I must say," she observed, "that they are doing it
+thoroughly."
+
+We rode for two hours, and no sign of them. The stove polish had
+come off the handles of our revolvers by that time, and Aggie,
+having rubbed her face ever and anon to remove perspiration,
+presented under her turban a villainous and ferocious expression
+quite at variance with her customary mildness.
+
+I urged her to stop and wash, but Tish, after a glance, said to
+keep on.
+
+"Your looking like that's a distinct advantage, Aggie," she
+said. "Like as not they'll throw up their hands the minute they
+see you. I know I should. You'd better ride first when we get
+near."
+
+"Like as not they'll put a hole in me," Aggie objected. "And as
+to riding first, I will not. This is your doing, Tish Carberry,
+and as for their having blank cartridges--how do we know someone
+hasn't made a mistake and got a real one?"
+
+Tish reflected on that. "It's a possibility," she agreed. "If we
+find that they're going to spend the night out, it might be
+better to wait until they've taken off all the hardware they're
+hung with."
+
+But we did not come up with them. We kept on finding traces of
+the party in marshy spots, and once Tish hopped off her horse
+and picked up a small handkerchief with a colored border and
+held it up to us.
+
+"It's hers," she said. "Anybody would know she is the sort to
+use colored borders. They're ahead somewhere."
+
+But it seemed strange that they would go so far, and I said so.
+
+"We're far enough off the main trail, Tish," I said. "And it's
+getting wilder every minute. There's nothing I can see to
+prevent a mountain lion dropping on us most any time."
+
+"Not if it gets a good look at Aggie!" was Tish's grim response.
+
+It began to grow dark in the valley, and things seemed to move
+on either side of the trail. Aggie called out once that we had
+just passed a grizzly bear, but Tish never faltered. The region
+grew more and more wild. The trail was broken with mudholes and
+crossed by fallen logs. With a superb disdain Tish rode across
+all obstacles, not even glancing at them. But Aggie and I got
+off at the worst places and led our horses. At one mudhole I was
+unfortunate enough to stumble. A horse with a particle of
+affection for a woman who had ridden it and cared for it for
+several days would have paused.
+
+Not so my animal. With a heartlessness at which I still shudder
+the creature used me as a bridge, aril stepped across, dryfoot,
+on my back. Owing to his padded feet and to the depth of the mud-
+ - some eight feet, I believe--I was uninjured. But it required
+ten minutes of hard labor on the part of both Tish and Aggie to
+release me from the mud, from which I was finally raised with a
+low, hissing sound.
+
+"Park!" said Aggie as she scraped my obliterated features with a
+small branch. "Park, indeed! It's a howling wilderness. I'm fond
+of my native land," she went on, digging out my nostrils, so I
+could breathe, "but I don't calculate to eat it. As for that
+unfeeling beast of yours, Lizzie, I've never known a horse to
+show such selfishness. Never."
+
+Well, we went on at last, but I was not so enthusiastic about
+teaching people lessons as I had been. It seemed to me that we
+might have kept on along the trail and had a mighty good time,
+getting more and more nimble and stopping now and then to bake a
+pie and have a decent meal, and putting up our hair in crimps at
+night, without worrying about other folks' affairs.
+
+Late in the afternoon of that day, when so far as I could see
+Tish was lost, and not even her gathering a bunch of wild
+flowers while the horses rested could fool me, I voiced my
+complaint.
+
+"Let me look at the map, Tish," I suggested. "I'm pretty good at
+maps. You know how I am at charades and acrostics. At the church
+supper--"
+
+"Nonsense, Lizzie," she returned. "You couldn't make head or
+tail of this map. It's my belief that the man who made it had
+never been here. Either that or there has been an earthquake
+since. But," she went on, more cheerfully, "if we are lost, so
+are the others."
+
+"If we even had Bill along!"
+
+"Bill!" Tish said scornfully. "It's my belief Bill is in the
+whole business, and that if we hadn't got rid of him we'd have
+been the next advertising dodge. As far as that goes," she said
+thoughtfully, "it wouldn't surprise me a particle to find that
+we've been taken, without our knowing it, most any time. Your
+horse just now, walking across that bridge of size, for one
+thing."
+
+Tish seldom makes a pun, which she herself has said is the
+lowest form of humor. The dig at my figure was unkind, also, and
+unworthy of her. I turned and left her.
+
+At last, well on in the evening, I saw Tish draw up her horse
+and point ahead.
+
+"The miscreants!" she said.
+
+True enough, up a narrow side canon we could see a camp-fire. It
+was a small one, and only noticeable from one point. But Tish's
+keen eye had seen it. She sat on her horse and gazed toward it.
+
+"What a shameful thing it is," she said, "to prostitute the
+beauties of this magnificent region to such a purpose. To make
+of these beetling crags a joke! To invade these vast gorges with
+the spirit of commercialism and to bring a pack of movie actors
+to desecrate the virgin silence with ribald jests and laughter!
+Lizzie, I wish you wouldn't wheeze!"
+
+"You would wheeze, too, Tish Carberry," I retorted, justly
+indignant, "if a horse had just pressed your spinal column into
+your breast bone. Goodness knows," I said, "where my lungs are.
+I've missed them ever since my fall."
+
+However, she was engrossed with larger matters, and ignored my
+petulance. She is a large-natured woman and above pettiness.
+
+We made our way slowly up the canon. The movie outfit was
+securely camped under an overhanging rock, as we could now see.
+At one point their position commanded the trail, which was
+hardly more than a track through the wilderness, and before we
+reached this point we dismounted and Tish surveyed the camp
+through her glasses.
+
+"We'd better wait until dark," Tish said. "Owing to the padding
+they have not heard us, but it looks to me as if one of them is
+on a rock, watching."
+
+It seemed rather strange to me that they were keeping a lookout,
+but Tish only shrugged her shoulders.
+
+"If I know anything of that red-headed Oliver man," she said,
+"he hates to let a camera rest. Like as not he's got it set up
+among the trees somewhere, taking flashlights of wild animals.
+It's rather a pity," she said, turning and surveying Aggie and
+myself, "that he cannot get you two. If you happen to see
+anything edible lying on the ground, you'd better not pick it
+up. It's probably attached to the string that sets off the
+flash."
+
+We led our horses into the woods, which were very thick at that
+point, and tied them. My beast, however, lay down and rolled,
+saddle and all, thus breaking my mirror--a most unlucky omen--
+and the bottle of olive oil which we had brought along for
+mayonnaise dressing. Tish is fond of mayonnaise, and, besides,
+considers olive oil most strengthening. However, it was gone,
+and although Aggie comforted me by suggesting that her boiled
+salad dressing is quite tasty, I was disconsolate.
+
+It was by that time seven o'clock and almost dark. We held a
+conference. Tish was of the opinion that we should first lead
+off their horses, if possible.
+
+"I intend," she said severely, "to make escape impossible. If
+they fire, when taken by surprise. remember that they have only
+blank cartridges. I must say," she added with a confession of
+unusual weakness, "that I am glad the Indians escaped the other
+way. I would hardly know what to do with Indians, even quite
+tame ones. While I know a few letters of the deaf-and-dumb
+language, which I believe all tribes use in common, I fear that
+in a moment of excitement I would forget what I know."
+
+The next step, she asserted, was to secure their weapons.
+
+"After all," she said, "the darkness is in our favor. I intend
+to fire once, to show them that we are armed and dangerous. And
+if you two will point the guns Bill made, they cannot possibly
+tell that they are not real."
+
+"But we will know it," Aggie quavered. Now that the quarry was
+in sight she was more and more nervous, sneezing at short
+intervals in spite of her menthol inhaler. "I am sorry, Tish,
+but I cannot feel the same about that wooden revolver as I would
+about a real one. And even when I try to forget that it is only
+wood the carving reminds me."
+
+But Tish silenced her with a glance. She had strangely altered
+in the last few minutes. All traces of fatigue had gone, and
+when she struck a match and consulted her watch I saw in her
+face that high resolve, that stern and matchless courage, which
+I so often have tried to emulate and failed.
+
+"Seven o'clock," she announced. "We will dine first. There is
+nothing like food to restore failing spirits."
+
+But we had nothing except our sandwiches, and Tish suggested
+snaring some of the stupid squirrels with which the region
+abounded.
+
+"Aggie needs broth," she said decidedly. "We have sandwiches,
+but Aggie is frail and must be looked to."
+
+Aggie was pathetically grateful, although sorry for the
+squirrels, which were pretty and quite tame. But Tish was firm
+in her kindly intent, and proceeded at once to set a rabbit
+snare, a trick she had learned in the Maine woods. Having done
+this, and built a small fire, well hidden, we sat down to wait.
+
+In a short time we heard terrible human cries proceeding from
+the snare, and, hurrying thither, found in it a young mountain
+lion. It looked dangerous, and was biting in every direction. I
+admit that I was prepared to leave in haste, but not so Tish.
+She fetched her umbrella, without which she never travels, and
+while the animal set its jaws in it--a painful necessity, as it
+was her best umbrella--Tish hit it on the head--not the
+umbrella, but the lion--with a large stone.
+
+Tish's satisfaction was unbounded. She stated that the flesh of
+the mountain lion was much like veal, and so indeed it proved.
+We made a nourishing soup of it, with potatoes and a can of
+macedoine vegetables, and within an hour and a half we had dined
+luxuriously, adding to our repast what remained of the
+sandwiches, and a tinned plum pudding of English make, very
+nutritious and delicious.
+
+For twenty minutes after the meal we all stood. Tish insists on
+this, as aiding digestion. Then we prepared for the night's
+work.
+
+I believe that our conduct requires no defense. But it may be
+well again to explain our position. These people, whose camp-
+fire glowed so brazenly against the opposite cliff, had for
+purely mercenary motives committed a cruel hoax. They had posed
+as bandits, and as bandits they deserved to be treated. They had
+held up our own clergyman, of a nervous temperament, on a
+mountain pass, and had taken from him a part of his stipend. It
+was heartless. It was barbarous. It was cruel.
+
+My own courage came back with the hot food, which I followed by
+a charcoal tablet. And the difference in Aggie was marked.
+Possibly some of the courage of the mountain lion, that bravest
+of wild creatures, had communicated itself to her through the
+homely medicine of digestion.
+
+"I can hardly wait to get after them," she said.
+
+However, it was still too early for them to have settled for the
+night. We sat down, having extinguished our fire, and I was just
+dozing off when Tish remembered the young man who was to have
+listened for the police whistle.
+
+"I absolutely forgot him," she said regretfully. "I suppose he
+is hanging round the foot of Piegan's Pass yet. I'm sorry to
+have him miss this. I shall tell him, when I see him, that no
+girl worth having would be sitting over there at supper with
+four moving-picture actors without a chaperon. The whole
+proceeding is scandalous. I have noticed," she added, "that it
+is the girls from quiet suburban towns who are really most prone
+to defy the conventions when the chance comes."
+
+We dozed for a short time.
+
+Then Tish sat up suddenly. "What's that?" she said.
+
+We listened and distinctly heard the tramp of horses' feet. We
+started up, but Tish was quite calm.
+
+"They've turned their horses out," she said. "Fortune is with
+us. They are coming this way."
+
+But at first it did not seem so fortunate, for we heard one of
+the men following them, stumbling along, and, I regret to say,
+using profane language They came directly toward us, and Aggie
+beside me trembled. But Tish was equal to the emergency.
+
+She drew us behind a large rock, where, spreading out a raincoat
+to protect us from the dampness, we sat down and waited.
+
+When one of the animals loomed up close to the rock Aggie gave a
+low cry, but Tish covered her mouth fiercely with an ungentle
+hand.
+
+"Be still!" she hissed.
+
+It was now perfectly dark, and the man with the horses was not
+far off. We could not see him, but at last he came near enough
+so that we could see the flare of a match when he lighted a
+cigarette. I put my hand on Aggie, and she was shaking with
+nervousness.
+
+"I am sure I am going to sneeze, Lizzie," she gasped.
+
+And sneeze she did. She muffled it considerably, however, and we
+were not discovered. But, Tish, I knew, was silently raging.
+
+The horses came nearer.
+
+One of them, indeed, came quite close, and took a nip at the toe
+of my riding-boot. I kicked at it sharply, however, and it moved
+away.
+
+The man had gone on. We watched the light of his cigarette, and
+thus, as he now and then turned his head, knew where he was. It
+was now that I felt, rather than heard, that Tish was crawling
+out from the shelter of the rock. At the same time we heard, by
+the crunching of branches, that the man had sat down near at
+hand.
+
+Tish's progress was slow but sure. For a half-hour we sat there.
+Then she returned, still crawling, and on putting out my hand I
+discovered that she had secured the lasso from her saddle and
+had brought it back. How true had been her instinct when she
+practiced its use! How my own words, that it was all
+foolishness, came back and whispered lessons of humility in my
+ear!
+
+At this moment a deep, resonant sound came from the tree where
+the movie actor sat. At the same moment a small creature dropped
+into my lap from somewhere above, and ran up my sleeve. I made
+frantic although necessarily silent efforts to dislodge it, and
+it bit me severely.
+
+The necessity for silence taxed all my strength, but managing
+finally to secure it by the tail, I forcibly withdrew it and
+flung it away. Unluckily it struck Aggie in the left eye and
+inflicted a painful bruise.
+
+Tish had risen to her feet and was standing, a silent and
+menacing figure, while this event transpired. The movements of
+the horses as they grazed, the soft breeze blowing through the
+pines, were the only sounds. Now she took a step forward.
+
+"He's asleep!" she whispered. "Aggie, sit still and watch the
+horses. Lizzie, come with me."
+
+As I advanced to her she thrust her revolver into my hand.
+
+"When I give the word," she said in a whisper, "hold it against
+his neck. But keep your finger off the trigger. It's loaded."
+
+We advanced slowly, halting now and then to listen. Although
+brush crackled under our feet, the grazing horses were making a
+similar disturbance, and the man slept on. Soon we could see him
+clearly, sitting back against a tree, his head dropped forward
+on his breast. Tish surveyed the scene with her keen and
+appraising eye, and raised the lasso.
+
+The first result was not good. The loaded end struck a branch,
+and, being deflected, the thing wrapped itself perhaps a dozen
+times round my neck. Tish, being unconscious of what had
+happened, drew it up with a jerk, and I stood helpless and
+slowly strangling. At last, however, she realized the difficulty
+and released me. I was unable to breathe comfortably for some
+time, and my tongue felt swollen for several hours.
+
+Through all of this the movie actor had slept soundly. At the
+second effort Tish succeeded in lassoing him without difficulty.
+We had feared a loud outcry before we could get to him, but
+owing to Tish's swiftness in tightening the rope he was able to
+make, at first, only a low, gurgling sound. I had advanced to
+him, and was under the impression that I was holding the
+revolver to his neck. On discovering, however, that I was
+pressing it to the trunk of the tree, to which he was now
+secured by the lariat, I corrected the error and held it against
+his ear.
+
+He was now wide awake and struggling violently. Then, I regret
+to say, he broke out into such language as I have never heard
+before. At Tish's request I suppress his oaths, and substitute
+for them harmless expressions in common use.
+
+"Good gracious!" he said. "What in the world are you doing
+anyhow? Jimminy crickets, take that thing away from my neck!
+Great Scott and land alive, I haven't done anything! My word,
+that gun will go off if you aren't careful!"
+
+I am aware that much of the strength of what he said is lost in
+this free translation. But it is impossible to repeat his real
+language.
+
+"Don't move," Tish said, "and don't call out. A sound, and a
+bullet goes crashing through your brain."
+
+"A woman!" he said in most unflattering amazement. "Great
+Jehoshaphat, a woman!"
+
+This again is only a translation of what he said.
+
+"Exactly," Tish observed calmly. She had cut the end off the
+lasso with her scissors, and was now tying his feet together
+with it. "My friend, we know the whole story, and I am ashamed,
+ashamed," she said oratorically, "of your sex! To frighten a
+harmless and well-meaning preacher and his wife for the purpose
+of publicity is not a joke. Such hoaxes are criminal. If you
+must have publicity, why not seek it in some other way?"
+
+"Crazy!" he groaned to himself. "In the hands of lunatics! Oh,
+my goodness!" Again these were not exactly his words.
+
+Having bound him tightly, hand and foot, and taken a revolver
+from his pocket, Tish straightened herself.
+
+"Now we'll gag him, Lizzie," she said. "We have other things to
+do to-night than to stand here and converse." Then she turned to
+the man and told him a deliberate lie. I am sorry to record
+this. But a tendency to avoid the straight and narrow issues of
+truth when facing a crisis is one of Tish's weaknesses, the only
+flaw in an otherwise strong and perfect character.
+
+"We are going to leave you here," she said. "But one of our
+number, fully armed, will be near by. A sound from you, or any
+endeavor to call for succor, will end sadly for you. A word to
+the wise. Now, Lizzie, take that bandanna off his neck and tie
+it over his mouth."
+
+Tish stood, looking down at him, and her very silhouette was
+scornful.
+
+"Think, my friend," she said, "of the ignominy of your position!
+Is any moving picture worth it? Is the pleasure of seeing
+yourself on the screen any reward for such a shameful position
+as yours now is? No. A thousand times no."
+
+He made a choking sound in his throat and writhed helplessly.
+And so we left him, a hopeless and miserable figure, to ponder
+on his sins.
+
+"That's one," said Tish briskly. "There are only three left.
+Come, Aggie," she said cheerfully--"to work! We have made a good
+beginning."
+
+It is with modesty that I approach that night's events,
+remembering always that Tish's was the brain which conceived and
+carried out the affair. We were but her loyal and eager
+assistants. It is for this reason that I thought, and still
+think, that the money should have been divided so as to give
+Tish the lion's share. But she, dear, magnanimous soul, refused
+even to hear of such a course, and insisted that we share it
+equally.
+
+Of that, however, more anon.
+
+We next proceeded to capture their horses and to tie them up. We
+regretted the necessity for this, since the unfortunate animals
+had traveled far and were doubtless hungry. It went to my heart
+to drag them from their fragrant pasture and to tie them to
+trees. But, as Tish said, "Necessity knows no law," not even
+kindness. So we tied them up. Not, however, until we had moved
+them far from the trail.
+
+Tish stopped then, and stared across the canon to the enemy's
+camp-fire.
+
+"No quarter, remember," she said. "And bring your weapons."
+
+We grasped our wooden revolvers and, with Tish leading, started
+for the camp. Unluckily there was a stream between us, and it
+was necessary to ford it. It shows Tish's true generalship that,
+instead of removing her shoes and stockings, as Aggie and I were
+about to do, she suggested getting our horses and riding across.
+This we did, and alighted on the other side dryshod.
+
+It was, on consulting my watch, nine o'clock and very dark. A
+few drops of rain began to fall also, and the distant camp-fire
+was burning low. Tish gave us each a little blackberry cordial,
+for fear of dampness, and took some herself. The mild glow which
+followed was very comforting.
+
+It was Tish, naturally, who went forward to reconnoiter. She
+returned in an hour, to report that the three men were lying
+round the fire, two asleep and one leaning on his elbow with a
+revolver handy. She did not see Mr. Oliver, and it was possible
+that it was he we had tied to the tree. The girl, she said, was
+sitting on a log, with her chin propped in her hands.
+
+"She looked rather low-spirited," Tish said. "I expect she liked
+the first young man better than she thought she did. I intend to
+give her a piece of my mind as soon as I get a chance. This
+playing hot and cold isn't maidenly, to say the least."
+
+We now moved slowly forward, after tying our horses. Toward the
+last, following Tish's example, we went on our hands and knees,
+and I was thankful then for no skirts. It is wonderful the
+freedom a man has. I was never one to approve of Doctor Mary
+Walker, but I'm not so sure she isn't a wise woman and the rest
+of us fools. I haven't put on a skirt braid since that time
+without begrudging it.
+
+Well, as I have stated, we advanced, and at last we were in full
+sight of the camp. I must say I'd have thought they'd have a
+tent. We expected something better, I suppose, because of the
+articles in the papers about movie people having their own
+limousines, and all that. But there they were, open to the wrath
+of the heavens, and deserving it, if I do say so.
+
+The girl was still sitting, as Tish had described her. Only now
+she was crying. My heart was downright sore for her. It is no
+comfort, having made a wrong choice, to know that it is one's
+own fault.
+
+Having now reached the zone of firelight Tish gave the signal,
+and we rose and pointed our revolvers at them. Then Tish stepped
+forward and said:--
+
+"Hands up!"
+
+I shall never forget the expression on the man's face.
+
+He shouted something, but he threw up his hands also, with his
+eyes popping out of his head. The others scrambled to their
+feet, but he warned them.
+
+"Careful, boys!" he yelled. "They're got the drop on us."
+
+Just then his eyes fell on Aggie, and he screeched:--
+
+"Two women and a Turk, by ___." The blank is mine.
+
+"Lizzie," said Tish sternly, as all of them, including the girl,
+held their hands up, "just give me your weapon and go over
+them."
+
+"Go over them?" I said, not understanding.
+
+"Search them," said Tish. "Take everything out of their pockets.
+And don't move," she ordered them sternly. "One motion, and I
+fire. Go on, Lizzie."
+
+Now I have never searched a man's pockets, and the idea was
+repugnant to me. I am a woman of delicate instincts. But Tish's
+face was stern. I did as commanded, therefore, the total result
+being:--
+
+Four revolvers.
+
+Two large knives.
+
+One small knife.
+
+One bunch of keys.
+
+One plug of chewing-tobacco.
+
+Four cartridge belts.
+
+Two old pipes.
+
+Mr. Ostermaier's cigar-case, which I recognized at once, being
+the one we had presented to him.
+
+Mrs. Ostermaier's wedding-ring and gold bracelet, which her
+sister gave her on her last birthday.
+
+A diamond solitaire, unknown, as Mrs. Ostermaier never owned
+one, preferring instead earrings as more showy.
+
+And a considerable sum of money, which I kept but did not count.
+
+There were other small articles, of no value.
+
+"Is that all the loot you secured during the infamous scene on
+Piegan Pass?" Tish demanded, "You need not hide anything from
+us. We know the facts, and the whole story will soon be public."
+
+"That's all, lady," whined one of the men. "Except a few boxes
+of lunch, and that's gone. Lady, lemme take my hands down. I've
+got a stiff shoulder, and I--"
+
+"Keep them up," Tish snapped. "Aggie, see that they keep them
+up."
+
+Until that time we had been too occupied to observe the girl,
+who merely stood and watched in a disdainful sort of way. But
+now Tish turned and eyed her sternly.
+
+"Search her, Lizzie," she commanded.
+
+"Search me!" the girl exclaimed indignantly. "certainly not!"
+
+"Lizzie," said Tish in her sternest manner, "go over that girl.
+Look in her riding-boots. I haven't come across Mrs.
+Ostermaier's earrings yet."
+
+At that the girl changed color and backed off.
+
+"It's an outrage," she said. "Surely I have suffered enough."
+
+"Not as much," Tish observed, "as you are going to suffer. Go
+over her, Lizzie."
+
+While I searched her, Tish was lecturing her.
+
+"You come from a good home, I understand," she said, "and you
+ought to know better. Not content with breaking an honest heart,
+you join a moving- picture outfit and frighten a prominent
+divine- - for Mr. Ostermaier is well known--into what may be an
+illness. You cannot deny," she accused her, "that it was you who
+coaxed them to the pass. At least you needn't. We heard you."
+
+"How was I to know--"the girl began sullenly.
+
+But at that moment I found Mrs. Ostermaier' chamois bag thrust
+into her riding-boot, and she suddenly went pale.
+
+Tish held it up before her accusingly. "I dare say you will not
+deny this," she exclaimed, and took Mrs. Ostermaier's earrings
+out of it.
+
+The men muttered, but Aggie was equal to the occasion.
+"Silence!" she said, and pointed the revolver at each in turn.
+
+The girl started to speak. Then she shrugged her shoulders. "I
+could explain," she said, "but I won't. If you think I stole
+those hideous earrings you're welcome to."
+
+"Of course not," said Tish sarcastically. "No doubt she gave
+them to you--although I never knew her to give anything away
+before."
+
+The girl stood still, thinking. Suddenly she said "There's
+another one, you know. Another man."
+
+"We have him. He will give no further trouble," Tish observed
+grimly. "I think we have you all, except your Mr. Oliver."
+
+"He is not my Mr. Oliver," said the girl. "I never want to see
+him again. I--I hate him."
+
+"You haven't got much mind or you couldn't change it so
+quickly."
+
+She looked sulky again, and said she'd thank us for the ring,
+which was hers and she could prove it.
+
+But Tish sternly refused. "It's my private opinion," she
+observed, " that it is Mrs. Ostermaier's, and she has not worn
+it openly because of the congregation talking quite considerably
+about her earrings, and not caring for jewelry on the minister's
+wife. That's what I think."
+
+Shortly after that we heard a horse loping along the road. It
+came nearer, and then left the trail and came toward the fire.
+Tish picked up one of the extra revolvers and pointed it. It was
+Mr. Oliver!
+
+"Throw up your hands!" Tish called. And he did it. He turned a
+sort of blue color, too, when he saw us, and all the men with
+their hands up. But he looked relieved when he saw the girl.
+
+"Thank Heaven!" he said. "The way I've been riding this country--
+ "
+
+"You rode hard enough away from the pass," she replied coldly.
+
+We took a revolver away from him and lined him up with the
+others. All the time he was paying little attention to us and
+none at all to the other men. But he was pleading with the girl.
+
+"Honestly," he said, "I thought I could do better for everybody
+by doing what I did. How did I know," he pleaded, "that you were
+going to do such a crazy thing as this?"
+
+But she only stared at him as if she hated the very ground he
+stood on.
+
+"It's a pity," Tish observed, "that you haven't got your camera
+along. This would make a very nice picture. But I dare say you
+could hardly turn the crank with your hands in the air."
+
+We searched him carefully, but he had only a gold watch and some
+money. On the chance, however, that the watch was Mr.
+Ostermaier's, although unlikely, we took it.
+
+I must say he was very disagreeable, referring to us as
+highwaymen and using uncomplimentary language. But, as Tish
+observed, we might as well be thorough while we were about it.
+
+For the nonce we had forgotten the other man. But now I noticed
+that the pseudo-bandits wore a watchful and not unhopeful air.
+And suddenly one of them whistled--a thin, shrill note that had,
+as Tish later remarked, great penetrative power without being
+noisy.
+
+"That's enough of that," she said. "Aggie, take another of these
+guns and point them both at these gentlemen. If they whistle
+again, shoot. As to the other man, he will not reply, nor will
+he come to your assistance. He is gagged and tied, and into the
+bargain may become at any time the victim of wild beasts."
+
+The moment she had said it, Tish realized that it was but too
+true, and she grew thoughtful. Aggie, too, was far from
+comfortable. She said later that she was uncertain what to do.
+Tish had said to fire if they whistled again. The question in
+her mind was, had it been said purely for effect or did Tish
+mean it? After all, the men were not real bandits, she
+reflected, although guilty of theft, even if only for
+advertising purposes. She was greatly disturbed, and as
+agitation always causes a return of her hay fever, she began to
+sneeze violently.
+
+Until then the men had been quiet, if furious. But now they fell
+into abject terror, imploring Tish, whom they easily recognized
+as the leader, to take the revolvers from her.
+
+But Tish only said: "No fatalities, Aggie, please. Point at an
+arm or a leg until the spasm subsides."
+
+Her tone was quite gentle.
+
+Heretofore this has been a plain narrative, dull, I fear, in
+many places. But I come now to a not unexciting incident--which
+for a time placed Tish and myself in an unpleasant position.
+
+I refer to the escape of the man we had tied.
+
+We held a brief discussion as to what to do with our prisoners
+until morning, a discussion which Tish solved with her usual
+celerity by cutting from the saddles which lay round the fire a
+number of those leather thongs with which such saddles are
+adorned and which are used in case of necessity to strap various
+articles to the aforesaid saddles.
+
+With these thongs we tied them, not uncomfortably, but firmly,
+their hands behind them and their feet fastened together. Then,
+as the night grew cold, Tish suggested that we shove them near
+the fire, which we did.
+
+The young lady, however, offered a more difficult problem. We
+compromised by giving her her freedom, but arranging for one of
+our number to keep her covered with a revolver.
+
+"You needn't be so thoughtful," she said angrily, and with a
+total lack of appreciation of Tish's considerate attitude. "I'd
+rather be tied, especially if the Moslem with the hay fever is
+going to hold the gun."
+
+It was at that moment that we heard a whistle from across the
+stream, and each of the prostrate men raised his head eagerly.
+Before Tish could interfere one of them had whistled three times
+sharply, probably a danger signal.
+
+Without a word Tish turned and ran toward the stream, calling to
+me to follow her.
+
+"Tish!" I heard Aggie's agonized tone. "Lizzie! Come back. Don't
+leave me here alone. I--"
+
+Here she evidently clutched the revolver involuntarily, for
+there was a sharp report, and a bullet struck a tree near us.
+
+Tish paused and turned. "Point that thing up into the air,
+Aggie," she called back. "And stay there. I hold you
+responsible."
+
+I heard Aggie give a low moan, but she said nothing, and we kept
+on.
+
+The moon had now come up, flooding the valley with silver
+radiance. We found our horses at once, and Tish leaped into the
+saddle. Being heavier and also out of breath from having
+stumbled over a log, I was somewhat slower.
+
+Tish was therefore in advance of me when we started, and it was
+she who caught sight of him first.
+
+"He's got a horse, Lizzie," she called back to me. "We can get
+him, I think. Remember, he is unarmed."
+
+Fortunately he had made for the trail, which was here wider than
+ordinary and gleamed white in the moonlight. We had, however,
+lost some time in fording the stream, and we had but the one
+glimpse of him as the trail curved.
+
+Tish lashed her horse to a lope, and mine followed without
+urging. I had, unfortunately, lost a stirrup early in the chase,
+and was compelled, being unable to recover it, to drop the lines
+and clutch the saddle.
+
+Twice Tish fired into the air. She explained afterward that she
+did this for the moral effect on the fugitive, but as each time
+it caused my horse to jump and almost unseat me, at last I
+begged her to desist.
+
+We struck at last into a straight piece of trail, ending in a
+wall of granite, and up this the trail climbed in a switchback.
+Tish turned to me.
+
+"We have him now," she said. "When he starts up there he is as
+much gone as a fly on the wall. As a matter of fact," she said
+as calmly as though we had been taking an afternoon stroll, "his
+taking this trail shows that he is a novice and no real
+highwayman. Otherwise he would have turned off into the woods."
+
+At that moment the fugitive's horse emerged into the moonlight
+and Tish smiled grimly.
+
+"I see why now," she exclaimed. "The idiot has happened on Mona
+Lisa, who must have returned and followed us. And no pack-horse
+can be made to leave the trail unless by means of a hornet.
+Look, he's trying to pull her off and she won't go."
+
+It was true, as we now perceived. He saw his danger, but too
+late. Mona Lisa, probably still disagreeable after her
+experience with the hornets, held straight for the cliff.
+
+The moon shone full on it, and when he was only thirty feet up
+its face Tish fired again, and the fugitive stopped.
+
+"Come down," said Tish quietly.
+
+He said a great many things which, like his earlier language, I
+do not care to repeat. But after a second shot he began to
+descend slowly.
+
+Tish, however, approached him warily, having given her revolver
+to me.
+
+"He might try to get it from me, Lizzie," she observed. "Keep it
+pointed in our direction, but not at us. I'm going to tie him
+again."
+
+This she proceeded to do, tying his hands behind him and
+fastening his belt also to the horn of the saddle, but leaving
+his feet free. All this was done to the accompaniment of bitter
+vituperation. She pretended to ignore this, but it made an
+impression evidently, for at last she replied.
+
+"You have no one to blame but yourself," she said. "You deserve
+your present humiliating position, and you know it. I've made up
+my mind to take you all in and expose your cruel scheme, and I
+intend to do it. I'm nothing if I am not thorough," she
+finished.
+
+He made no reply to this, and, in fact, he made only one speech
+on the way back, and that, I am happy to say, was without
+profanity.
+
+"It isn't being taken in that I mind so much," he said
+pathetically. "It's all in the game, and I can stand up as well
+under trouble as any one. It's being led in by a crowd of women
+that makes it painful."
+
+I have neglected to say that Tish was leading Mona Lisa, while I
+followed with the revolver.
+
+It was not far from dawn when we reached the camp again. Aggie
+was as we had left her, but in the light of the dying fire she
+looked older and much worn. As a matter of fact, it was some
+weeks before she looked like her old self.
+
+The girl was sitting where we had left her, and sulkier than
+ever. She had turned her back to Mr. Oliver, and Aggie said
+afterward that the way they had quarreled had been something
+terrible.
+
+Aggie said she had tried to make conversation with the girl, and
+had, indeed, told her of Mr. Wiggins and her own blasted life.
+But she had remained singularly unresponsive.
+
+The return of our new prisoner was greeted by the other men with
+brutal rage, except Mr. Oliver, who merely glanced at him and
+then went back to his staring at the fire. It appeared that they
+had been counting on him to get assistance, and his capture
+destroyed their last hope. Indeed, their language grew so
+unpleasant that at last Tish hammered sharply on a rock with the
+handle of her revolver.
+
+"Please remember," she said, "that you are in the presence of
+ladies!"
+
+They jeered at her, but she handled the situation with her usual
+generalship.
+
+"Lizzie," she said calmly, "get the tin basin that is hanging to
+my saddle, and fill it with the water from that snowbank. On the
+occasion of any more unseemly language, pour it over the
+offender without mercy."
+
+It became necessary to do it, I regret to state. They had not
+yet learned that Tish always carries out her threats. It was the
+one who we felt was the leader who offended, and I did as I had
+been requested to. But Aggie, ever tender-hearted, feared that
+it would give the man a severe cold, and got Tish's permission
+to pour a little blackberry cordial down his throat.
+
+Far from this kindness having a salubrious effect, it had the
+contrary. They all fell to bad language again, and, realizing
+that they wished the cordial, and our supply being limited, we
+were compelled to abandon the treatment.
+
+It had been an uncomfortable night, and I confess to a feeling
+of relief when "the rift of dawn" broke the early skies.
+
+We were, Tish calculated, some forty miles from breakfast, and
+Aggie's diet for some days had been light at the best, even the
+mountain-lion broth having been more stimulating than staying.
+We therefore investigated the camp, and found behind a large
+stone some flour, baking-powder, and bacon. With this equipment
+and a frying-pan or two we were able to make some very fair
+pancakes-- or flapjacks, as they are called in the West.
+
+Tish civilly invited the girl to eat with us, but she refused
+curtly, although, on turning once, I saw her eyeing us with
+famished eyes. I think, however, that on seeing us going about
+the homely task of getting breakfast, she realized that we were
+not the desperate creatures she had fancied during the night,
+but three gentlewomen on a holiday--simple tourists, indeed.
+
+"I wish," she said at last almost wistfully--"I wish that I
+could understand it all. I seem to be all mixed up. You don't
+suppose I want to be here, do you?"
+
+But Tish was not in a mood to make concessions. "As for what you
+want," she said, "how are we to know that? You are here, aren't
+you? --here as a result of your own cold-heartedness. Had you
+remained true to the very estimable young man you jilted you
+would not now be in this position."
+
+"Of course he would talk about it!" said the girl darkly.
+
+"I am convinced," Tish went on, dexterously turning a pancake by
+a swift movement of the pan, "that sensational movies are
+responsible for much that is wrong with the country to-day. They
+set false standards. Perfectly pure-minded people see them and
+are filled with thoughts of crime."
+
+Although she had ignored him steadily, the girl turned now to
+Mr. Oliver.
+
+"They don't believe anything I tell them. Why don't you
+explain?" she demanded.
+
+"Explain!" he said in a furious voice. "Explain to three
+lunatics? What's the use?"
+
+"You got me into this, you know."
+
+"I did! I like that! What in the name of Heaven induced you to
+ride off the way you did?"
+
+Tish paused, with the frying-pan in the air. "Silence!" she
+commanded. "You are both only reaping what you have sowed. As
+far as quarreling goes, you can keep that until you are married,
+if you intend to be. I don't know but I'd advise it. It's a pity
+to spoil two houses."
+
+But the girl said that she wouldn't marry him if he was the last
+man on earth, and he fell back to sulking again.
+
+As Aggie observed later, he acted as if he had never cared for
+her, while Mr. Bell, on the contrary, could not help his face
+changing when he so much as mentioned her name.
+
+We made some tea and ate a hearty breakfast, while the men
+watched us. And as we ate, Tish held the moving-picture business
+up to contumely and scorn.
+
+"Lady," said one of the prostrate men, "aren't you going to give
+us anything to eat?"
+
+"People," Tish said, ignoring him, "who would ordinarily cringe
+at the sight of a wounded beetle sit through bloody murders and
+go home with the obsession of crime."
+
+"I hope you won't take it amiss," said the man again, "if I say
+that, seeing it's our flour and bacon, you either ought to feed
+us or take it away and eat it where we can't see you."
+
+"I take it," said Tish to the girl, pouring in more batter,
+"that you yourself would never have thought of highway robbery
+had you not been led to it by an overstimulated imagination."
+
+"I wish," said the girl rudely, "that you wouldn't talk so much.
+I've got a headache."
+
+When we had finished Tish indicated the frying-pan and the
+batter. "Perhaps," she said, "you would like to bake some cakes
+for these friends of yours. We have a long trip ahead of us."
+
+But the girl replied heartlessly that she hoped they would
+starve to death, ignoring their pitiful glances. In the end it
+was our own tender-hearted Aggie who baked pancakes for them
+and, loosening their hands while I stood guard, saw that they
+had not only food but the gentle refreshment of fresh tea. Tish
+it was, however, who, not to be outdone in magnanimity,
+permitted them to go, one by one, to the stream to wash. Escape,
+without horses or weapons, was impossible, and they realized it.
+
+By nine o'clock we were ready to return. And here a difficulty
+presented itself. There were six prisoners and only three of us.
+The men, fed now, were looking less subdued, although they
+pretended to obey Tish's commands with alacrity.
+
+Aggie overheard a scrap of conversation, too, which seemed to
+indicate that they had not given up hope. Had Tish not set her
+heart on leading them into the great hotel at Many Glaciers, and
+there exposing them to the taunts of angry tourists, it would
+have been simpler for one of us to ride for assistance, leaving
+the others there.
+
+In this emergency Tish, putting her hand into her pocket for her
+scissors to trim a hangnail, happened to come across the
+policeman's whistle.
+
+"My gracious!" she said. "I forgot my promise to that young
+man!"
+
+She immediately put it to her lips and blew three shrill blasts.
+To our surprise they were answered by a halloo, and a moment
+later the young gentleman himself appeared on the trail. He was
+no longer afoot, but was mounted on a pinto pony, which we knew
+at once for Bill's.
+
+He sat on his horse, staring as if he could not believe his
+eyes. Then he made his way across the stream toward us.
+
+"Good Heavens!" he said. "What in the name of--" Here his eyes
+fell on the girl, and he stiffened.
+
+"Jim!" cried the girl, and looked at him with what Aggie
+afterward characterized as a most touching expression.
+
+But he ignored her. "Looks as though you folks have been pretty
+busy," he observed, glancing at our scowling captives. "I'm a
+trifle surprised. You don't mind my being rather breathless, do
+you?"
+
+"My only regret," Tish said loftily, "is that we have not
+secured the Indians. They too should be taught a lesson. I am
+sure that the red man is noble until led away by civilized
+people who might know better."
+
+It was at this point that Mr. Bell's eyes fell on Mr. Oliver,
+who with his hands tied behind him was crouching over the fire.
+
+"Well!" he said. "So you're here too! But of course you would
+be." This he said bitterly.
+
+"For the love of Heaven, Bell," Mr. Oliver said, "tell those mad
+women that I'm not a bandit."
+
+"We know that already," Tish observed.
+
+"And untie my hands. My shoulders are about broken."
+
+But Mr. Bell only looked at him coldly. "I can't interfere with
+these ladies," he said. "They're friends of mine. If they think
+you are better tied, it's their business. They did it."
+
+"At least," Mr. Oliver said savagely, "you can tell them who I
+am, can't you?"
+
+"As to that," Mr. Bell returned, "I can only tell them what you
+say you are. You must remember that I know nothing about you.
+Helen knows much more than I do."
+
+"Jim," cried the girl, "surely you are going to tell these women
+that we are not highway robbers. Tell them the truth. Tell them
+I am not a highway robber. Tell them that these men are not my
+accomplices, that I never saw them before."
+
+"You must remember," he replied in an icy tone, "that I no
+longer know your friends. It is some days since you and I parted
+company. And you must admit that one of them is a friend of
+yours- -as well as I can judge, a very close friend."
+
+She was almost in tears, but she persisted. "At least," she
+said, "you can tell them that I did not rob that woman on the
+pass. They are going to lead us in to Many Glaciers, and--Jim,
+you won't let them, will you? I'll die of shame."
+
+But he was totally unmoved. As Aggie said afterward, no one
+would have thought that, but a day or two before, he had been
+heartbroken because she was in love with someone else.
+
+"As to that," he said, "it is questionable, according to Mrs.
+Ostermaier, that nothing was taken from you, and that as soon as
+the attack was over you basely deserted her and followed the
+bandits. A full description of you, which I was able to correct
+in one or two trifling details, is now in the hands of the park
+police."
+
+She stared at him with fury in her eyes. "I hope you will never
+speak to me again," she cried.
+
+"You said that the last time I saw you, Helen. If you will
+think, you will remember that you addressed me first just now."
+
+She stamped her foot.
+
+"Of course," he said politely, "you can see my position. You
+maintain and possibly believe that these--er--acquaintances of
+yours"--he indicated the men--"are not members of the moving-
+picture outfit. Also that your being with them is of an
+accidental nature. But, on the other hand--"
+
+She put her fingers in her ears and turned her back on him.
+
+"On the other hand," he went on calmly, "I have the word of
+these three respectable ladies that they are the outfit, or part
+of it, that they have just concluded a cruel hoax on
+unsuspecting tourists, and that they justly deserve to be led in
+as captives and exposed to the full ignominy of their position."
+
+Here she faced him again, and this time she was quite pale. "Ask
+those--those women where they found my engagement ring," she
+said. "One of those wretches took it from me. That ought to be
+proof enough that they are not from the moving-picture outfit."
+
+Tish at once produced the ring and held it out to him. But he
+merely glanced at it and shook his head.
+
+"All engagement rings look alike," he observed. "I cannot
+possibly say, Helen, but I think it is unlikely that it is the
+one I gave you, as you told me, you may recall, that you had
+thrown it into a crack in a glacier. It may, of course, be one
+you have recently acquired."
+
+He glanced at Mr. Oliver, but the latter only shrugged his
+shoulders.
+
+Well, she shed a few tears, but he was adamant, and helped us
+saddle the horses, ignoring her utterly. It was our opinion that
+he no longer cared for her, and that, having lost him, she now
+regretted it. I know that she watched him steadily when he was
+not looking her way. But he went round quite happily, whistling
+a bit of tune, and not at all like the surly individual we had
+at first thought him.
+
+The ride back was without much incident. Our prisoners rode with
+their hands tied behind them, except the young lady.
+
+"We might as well leave her unfastened," the young man said
+casually. "While I dare say she would make her escape if
+possible, and particularly if there was any chance of getting
+filmed while doing it, I will make myself personally
+responsible."
+
+As a matter of fact she was exceedingly rude to all of us, and
+during our stop for luncheon, which was again bacon and
+pancakes, she made a dash for her horse. The young man saw her,
+however, in time, and brought her back. From that time on she
+was more civil, but I saw her looking at him now and then, and
+her eyes were positively terrified.
+
+It was Aggie, at last, who put in a plea for her with him,
+drawing him aside to do so. "I am sure," she said, "that she is
+really a nice girl, and has merely been led astray by the search
+for adventure. Naturally my friends, especially Miss Tish, have
+small sympathy with such a state of mind. But you are younger--
+and remember, you loved her once."
+
+"Loved her once!" he replied. "Dear lady, I'm so crazy about her
+at this minute that I can hardly hold myself in."
+
+"You are not acting much like it."
+
+"The fact is," he replied, "I'm afraid to let myself go. And if
+she's learned a lesson, I have too. I've been her doormat long
+enough. I tried it and it didn't work. She's caring more for me
+now, at this minute, than she has in eleven months. She needs a
+strong hand, and, by George! I've got it--two of them, in fact."
+
+We reached Many Glaciers late that afternoon, and Tish rode
+right up to the hotel. Our arrival created the most intense
+excitement, and Tish, although pleased, was rather surprised. It
+was not, however, until a large man elbowed his way through the
+crowd and took possession of the prisoners that we understood.
+
+"I'll take them now," he said. "Well, George, how are you?"
+
+This was to the leader, who merely muttered in reply.
+
+"I'd like to leave them here for a short time," Tish stated.
+"They should be taught a severe lesson and nothing stings like
+ridicule. After that you can turn them free, but I think they
+ought to be discharged."
+
+"Turn them free!" he said in a tone of amazement. "Discharged!
+My dear madam, they will get fifteen years' hard labor, I hope.
+And that's too good for them."
+
+Then suddenly the crowd began to cheer. It was some time before
+Tish realized that they were cheering us. And even then, I shall
+have to confess, we did not understand until the young man
+explained to ms.
+
+"You see," he said, "I didn't like to say anything sooner, for
+fear of making you nervous. You'd done it all so well that I
+wanted you to finish it. You're been in the right church all
+along, but the wrong pew. Those fellows aren't movie actors,
+except Oliver, who will be freed now, and come after me with a
+gun, as like as not! They're real dyed-in- the-wool desperadoes
+and there's a reward of five thousand dollars for capturing
+them."
+
+Tish went rather white, but said nothing. Aggie, however, went
+into a paroxysm of sneezing, and did not revive until given
+aromatic ammonia to inhale.
+
+"I was fooled at first too," the young man said. "We'd been
+expecting a holdup and when it came we thought it was the faked
+one. But the person" --he paused and looked round--"the person
+who had the real jolt was Helen. She followed them, since they
+didn't take her for ransom, as had been agreed in the plot.
+
+"Then, when she found her mistake, they took her along, for fear
+she'd ride off and raise the alarm. All in all," he said
+reflectively, "it has been worth about a million dollars to me."
+
+We went into the hotel, with the crowd following us, and the
+first thing we saw was Mrs. Ostermaier, sitting dejectedly by
+the fire. When she saw us, she sprang to her feet and came to
+meet us.
+
+"Oh, Miss Tish, Miss Tish!" she said. "What I have been through!
+Attacked on a lonely mountain-top and robbed of everything. My
+reason is almost gone. And my earrings, my beautiful earrings!"
+
+Tish said nothing, but, reaching into her reticule, which she
+had taken from the horn of her saddle, she drew out a number of
+things.
+
+"Here," she said. "Are your earrings. Here also is Mr.
+Ostermaier's cigar-case, but empty. Here is some money too. I'll
+keep that, however, until I know how much you lost."
+
+"Tish!" screeched Mrs. Ostermaier. "You found them!"
+
+"Yes," Tish said somewhat wearily, "we found them. We found a
+number of things, Mrs. Ostermaier,--four bandits, and two
+lovers, or rather three, but so no longer, and your things, and
+a reward of five thousand dollars, and an engagement ring. I
+think," she said, "that I'd like a hot bath and something to
+eat."
+
+Mrs. Ostermaier was gloating over her earrings, but she looked
+up at Tish's tired and grimy face, at the mud encrusted on me
+from my accident the day before, at Aggie in her turban.
+
+"Go and wash, all of you," she said kindly, "and I'll order some
+hot tea."
+
+But Tish shook her head. "Tea nothing!" she said firmly. "I want
+a broiled sirloin steak and potatoes. And"-- she looked Mrs.
+Ostermaier full in the eye--"I am going to have a cocktail. I
+need it."
+
+Late that evening Aggie came to Tish's room, where I was sitting
+with her. Tish was feeling entirely well, and more talkative
+than I can remember her in years. But the cocktail, which she
+felt, she said, in no other way, had gone to her legs.
+
+"It is not," she observed, "that I cannot walk. I can, perfectly
+well. But I am obliged to keep my eyes on my feet, and it might
+be noticed."
+
+"I just came in," Aggie said, "to say that Helen and her lover
+have made it up. They are down by the lake now, and if you will
+look out you can see them."
+
+I gave Tish an arm to the window, and the three of us stood and
+looked out. The moon was rising over the snow-capped peaks
+across the lake, and against its silver pathway the young people
+stood outlined. As we looked he stooped and kissed her. But it
+was a brief caress, as if he had just remembered the strong hand
+and being a doormat long enough.
+
+Tish drew a long breath.
+
+"What," she said, "is more beautiful than young love? It will be
+a comfort to remember that we brought them together. Let go of me now,
+Lizzie. If I keep my eye on the bedpost I think I can get back."
+
+
+
+
+
+End of The Project Gutenberg Etext of Tish, by Mary Roberts Rinehart
+
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