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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #55730 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/55730)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Joe Wayring at Home, by Harry Castlemon
-
-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'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Joe Wayring at Home
- or The Adventures of a Fly-Rod
-
-Author: Harry Castlemon
-
-Release Date: October 11, 2017 [EBook #55730]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK JOE WAYRING AT HOME ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by David Edwards, Elizabeth Oscanyan and the
-Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
-(This file was produced from images generously made
-available by The Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: THE BATTLE WITH THE SQUATTERS.]
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- _FOREST AND STREAM SERIES._
-
- ---------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- JOE WAYRING AT HOME;
-
-
- OR THE
-
- ADVENTURES OF A FLY-ROD.
-
- BY HARRY CASTLEMON,
-
- AUTHOR OF “GUNBOAT SERIES,” “ROCKY MOUNTAIN SERIES,”
- “SPORTSMAN CLUB SERIES,” ETC.
-
-
-
-
- THE JOHN C. WINSTON CO.,
-
- PHILADELPHIA,
-
- CHICAGO, TORONTO.
-
-
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- FAMOUS CASTLEMON BOOKS.
-
-
-=GUNBOAT SERIES.= By HARRY CASTLEMON. 6 vols. 12mo.
-
- FRANK THE YOUNG NATURALIST.
- FRANK IN THE WOODS.
- FRANK ON THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI.
- FRANK ON A GUNBOAT.
- FRANK BEFORE VICKSBURG.
- FRANK ON THE PRAIRIE.
-
-=ROCKY MOUNTAIN SERIES.= By HARRY CASTLEMON. 3 vols. 12mo. Cloth.
-
- FRANK AMONG THE RANCHEROS.
- FRANK IN THE MOUNTAINS.
- FRANK AT DON CARLOS’ RANCH.
-
-=SPORTSMAN’S CLUB SERIES.= By HARRY CASTLEMON. 3 vols. 12mo. Cloth.
-
- THE SPORTSMAN’S CLUB IN THE SADDLE.
- THE SPORTSMAN’S CLUB AFLOAT.
- THE SPORTSMAN’S CLUB AMONG THE TRAPPERS.
-
-=FRANK NELSON SERIES.= By HARRY CASTLEMON. 3 vols. 12mo. Cloth.
-
- SNOWED UP.
- FRANK IN THE FORECASTLE.
- THE BOY TRADERS.
-
-=BOY TRAPPER SERIES.= By HARRY CASTLEMON. 3 vols. 12mo. Cloth.
-
- THE BURIED TREASURE.
- THE BOY TRAPPER.
- THE MAIL-CARRIER.
-
-=ROUGHING IT SERIES.= By HARRY CASTLEMON. 3 vols. 12mo. Cloth.
-
- GEORGE IN CAMP.
- GEORGE AT THE WHEEL.
- GEORGE AT THE FORT.
-
-=ROD AND GUN SERIES.= By HARRY CASTLEMON. 3 vols. 12mo. Cloth.
-
- DON GORDON’S SHOOTING BOX.
- THE YOUNG WILD FOWLERS.
- ROD AND GUN CLUB.
-
-=GO-AHEAD SERIES.= By HARRY CASTLEMON. 3 vols. 12mo. Cloth.
-
- TOM NEWCOMBE.
- GO-AHEAD.
- NO MOSS.
-
-=FOREST AND STREAM SERIES.= By HARRY CASTLEMON. 3 vols. 12mo. Cloth.
-
- JOE WAYRING.
- SNAGGED AND SUNK.
- STEEL HORSE.
-
-=WAR SERIES.= By HARRY CASTLEMON. 5 vols. 12mo. Cloth.
-
- TRUE TO HIS COLORS.
- RODNEY THE OVERSEER.
- MARCY THE REFUGEE.
- RODNEY THE PARTISAN.
- MARCY THE BLOCKADE-RUNNER.
-
- _Other Volumes in Preparation._
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- COPYRIGHT, 1886, BY PORTER & COATES.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- JOE WAYRING AT HOME
-
- OR
-
- THE STORY OF A FLY-ROD.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER I.
-
- IN WHICH I INTRODUCE MYSELF.
-
-
-I AM called “Old Durability”; but for fear my name may prove misleading,
-and cause those of my readers who are not acquainted with me to fall
-into the error of supposing that I am a very aged article, I desire to
-say, at the outset, that I am only four years old, and that I have been
-in active service just sixteen months. During that time I have seen a
-world of excitement and adventure, and have performed some exploits of
-which any fly-rod might be justly proud. I have hooked, at one cast, and
-successfully landed, two black bass, weighing together eight and a
-quarter pounds; I have so often been dumped in the cold waters of
-mountain lakes and streams that it is a wonder my ferrules were not
-rusted out long ago; I have been dragged about among snags and
-lily-pads, by enraged trout, pickerel and bass; I have been stolen from
-my lawful owner, been kept a prisoner by boys and tramps who either
-could not or would not take care of me, and one of my joints has been
-broken. Of course, I was skillfully patched up, but, like the man whose
-arm has been fractured, I am not quite as good as I used to be, and am
-reluctant to exert all my strength for fear that I shall break again in
-the same place. I can’t throw a fly as far as I could when I took my
-finest string of trout in front of the “sportsmen’s home” at Indian
-Lake, and when I am called upon to make the attempt, my ferrules groan
-and creak as if they were about to give away and let me fall to pieces.
-For this my master laid me up in ordinary (that is what sailors say of a
-war vessel when she goes out of commission, and is laid up in port to
-remain idle there until her services are needed again), saying, as he
-did so, that my days of usefulness were over, but that he would keep me
-for the good I had done.
-
-After having led an active life among the hills, lakes and forest
-streams almost ever since I could remember, you may be sure that I did
-not relish treatment of this sort. After doing my level best for my
-master, and landing more than one fish for him that he ought to have
-lost because he handled me so awkwardly—after going with him through
-some of the most exciting scenes of his life, and submitting to
-treatment that would have used up almost any other rod, must I be laid
-upon the shelf in a dark closet and left to my gloomy reflections, while
-a new favorite accompanied my master to the woods, caught the trout for
-his dinner, slept under his blanket, and listened to the thrilling and
-amusing stories that were told around the camp-fire? I resolved to
-prevent it, if I could; so when my master took me out of my case one day
-to assist him in catching a muskalonge he had seen in the lake back of
-his father’s house, I nerved myself to do valiant battle, hoping to show
-him that there was plenty of good hard work left in me, if he only knew
-how to bring it out.
-
-The muskalonge, which was lurking in the edge of the lily-pads ready to
-pounce upon the first unwary fish that approached his lair, took the
-frog that was on the hook at the very first cast, and then began the
-hardest struggle of my life. My rheumatic joints complained loudly as
-the heavy fish darted up and down the lake, and then dove to the bottom
-in his mad efforts to escape, but I held on the best I knew how until he
-leaped full length out of the water, and tried to shake the hook from
-his mouth; then I was ready to give up the contest. He was the largest
-fish I ever saw.
-
-“Scotland’s a burning!” exclaimed Joe. “Isn’t he a beauty? If this old
-rod was as good as he used to be, wouldn’t I have a prize in a few
-minutes from now?”
-
-I ought to have told you before that my master’s name is Joe Wayring;
-and a right good boy he is, too, as you will find before my story is
-ended. Nearly all the young fellows of my acquaintance, and I know some
-of the best there are in the country, have some favorite word or
-expression which always rises to their lips whenever they are surprised,
-excited or angry, and the words I have just quoted are the ones Joe
-always used under such circumstances. No matter how exasperated he was
-you never could get any thing stronger out of him.
-
-I will not dwell upon the particulars of that fight (my joints ache yet
-whenever I think of it), for I set out to talk about other matters. It
-will be enough to say that I held fast to the fish until he became
-exhausted and was drawn through the lily-pads to the bank; then the
-gaff-hook came to my assistance, and he was safely landed. He was a
-monster. I afterward learned that he weighed a trifle over nineteen
-pounds. Wasn’t that something of an exploit for an eight ounce rod who
-had been threatened with the retired list on account of supposed
-disability? I was so nearly doubled up by the long-continued strain that
-had been brought to bear upon me, that when my master threw me down on
-the ground while he gave his prize his quietus with the heavy handle of
-the gaff-hook, I could not immediately straighten out again, as every
-well-conditioned rod is expected to do under similar circumstances.
-
-“Why, what in the world have you got there?” cried Joe’s mother, as the
-boy entered the kitchen, carrying me in one hand and dragging the fish
-after him with the other. She seemed to be a little afraid of the young
-fisherman’s prize, and that was hardly to be wondered at, for his mouth
-was open, and it was full of long, sharp teeth.
-
-“It’s the biggest muskalonge that was ever caught in this lake,” replied
-Joe, as he laid me down upon a chair and took both hands to deposit his
-fish upon the table. “Didn’t he fight, though? I say, Uncle Joe,” he
-added, addressing himself to a dignified gentleman in spectacles, who
-just then came into the room with the morning’s paper in his hand, “I
-shall not need that new split bamboo you promised me for my birthday,
-though I thank you for your kind offer, all the same. This old rod is
-good for at least one more summer on Indian Lake. There is plenty of
-back-bone left in him yet.”
-
-Uncle Joe was a rich old bachelor and very fond of his namesake, Joe
-Wayring, on whom he lavished all the affection he would have given to
-his own children, if he had had any. He was an enthusiastic angler, a
-skillful and untiring bear and deer hunter, and he generally timed his
-trips to the woods and mountains so that Joe and some of his particular
-friends could go with him.
-
-“He is the most durable rod I ever saw,” added my master.
-
-“Well, then, call him ‘Old Durability’,” suggested Uncle Joe.
-
-The boy said he thought that name would just suit me, and from that day
-to this I have been known by every one who is acquainted with me as “Old
-Durability”.
-
-Having introduced myself, because there was no one to perform the
-ceremony for me, and told you how I came by my cognomen, I will now go
-back and relate how I made the acquaintance of my master, Joe Wayring.
-
-If you will review your own life, boy reader, you may be able to find in
-it some incident, which happened, perhaps, long before you were out of
-pinafores, and which you remember perfectly, while all your life
-previous to the occurrence of that particular incident is a blank to
-you. Just so it was in my own experience. When I first came to my
-senses, I found myself snugly tied up in my case and standing in a
-corner, looking through a glass door into a large store in which guns of
-all makes and fishing tackle of all kinds were kept for sale. At first I
-was greatly bewildered. I felt, if I may judge from what I have seen
-during my trips to the woods, like a boy who has just awakened from a
-sound sleep; but after a while my wits came to me, and then I found that
-I was not alone in the show-case. There were a dozen or two fly and bait
-rods standing in the corner beside me, and a little further down,
-looking toward the back end of the store, were single and
-double-barreled shot-guns, muzzle and breech-loading rifles, game-bags,
-creels, hunting knives, dog-whips, and almost every thing else that a
-sportsman is supposed to need. In the show-case, which rested on the
-long counter in front of me, were revolvers, pen-knives, lines, leaders,
-flies and ordinary fish-hooks without number; and on the opposite side
-of the store was an array of barrels containing glass balls, traps for
-throwing those balls, bicycles, tricycles, rowing and lifting
-machines—in fact, I saw so many things that I did not then know the name
-or use of, that I became confused while I looked at them.
-
-“Hallo, there! Have you waked up at last?” cried a voice, breaking in
-upon my meditations.
-
-A short investigation showed that the voice came from the case that
-stood next on my right. I did not know, of course, what sort of a rod he
-was, or whether or not he would prove to be an agreeable acquaintance;
-but wishing to be civil, I replied that I _had_ waked up, and that, if
-he could tell me, I should be glad to know where I was and how I came
-there.
-
-“Why, you are in a one-horse country town, a thousand miles from
-nowhere, and you have always been here,” was the answer, given as I
-thought in a tone of contempt. “I have traveled. I came all the way from
-New York.”
-
-“Who are you?” I ventured to ask; for my new acquaintance spoke in so
-dignified and lofty a tone, that I stood somewhat in awe of him.
-
-“I am a split bamboo,” said he; and then I saw very clearly that he was
-disposed to throw on airs, and to lord it over those who were not as
-fortunate as himself. “I am a gentleman’s rod, and it takes the ducats
-to buy me. I am worth forty-five dollars; while I see by the card tied
-to your case, that you are valued at only six and a half.”
-
-Not being quick at figures at this early period of my life, I could not
-tell just how much difference there was between forty-five dollars and
-six and a half, but I knew by the way the bamboo spoke, that the gulf
-that separated him from me was a wide one. I have learned some things
-since then. I know now that the qualities of a fly-rod do not depend
-upon the varnish that is put on the outside of him, any more than a
-boy’s qualities of mind and heart depend upon the clothes he wears. The
-stuff he is made of and the company he keeps have much to do with the
-record he makes in the world. While I was turning the matter over in my
-mind, somebody who had been listening to our conversation, suddenly
-broke in with:
-
-“You are neither one of you worth the money you cost.”
-
-I looked around to see who the new speaker was, and presently discovered
-him in the person of a handsome bird gun, who rested upon a pair of
-deer’s antlers a short distance away.
-
-“You can’t bring a squirrel out of the top of the tallest hickory in the
-woods, or stop a woodcock or a grouse on the wing, but I can,” continued
-the double-barrel.
-
-“I can catch a trout, if I have some one to back me who understands his
-business, and that’s more than you can do,” retorted the bamboo,
-spitefully. “I can throw a line sixty or seventy feet; I heard the
-proprietor of this store say so.”
-
-“And I can throw shot sixty or seventy yards, which is three times as
-far as you can throw a line,” shouted the double-barrel. “You seem to
-think yourself of some consequence because you came from New York. I
-came all the way from England, and that is on the other side of the
-ocean.”
-
-“So you are an assisted immigrant, are you?” cried the bamboo, in tones
-indicative of the greatest contempt. “Well, that’s all I care to know
-about you.”
-
-The disputants grew more and more in earnest the longer they talked, and
-pretty soon there were some hard words used. I took no part in the
-controversy, for I felt rather bashful in the presence of those who had
-seen so much more of the world than I had, and who were worth so much
-more money, and besides I could not see what there was to quarrel about.
-My sympathies were with the bamboo, arrogant as he had showed himself to
-be, because he was an American like myself; but still the English
-fowling-piece, “assisted immigrant” though he was, had a right to live
-in this country so long as he behaved himself, and as he was a showy
-fellow, I had no doubt that he would get out of the store before either
-the bamboo or myself. And so he did. While the dispute was at its height
-the door opened and a young man came in—a tall young man, with very thin
-legs, peaked shoes, gold eye-glasses and a downy upper lip. He walked
-with a mincing step and drawled out his words when he talked.
-
-“A dude!” whispered the bamboo.
-
-Before I could ask what a “dude” was, the proprietor came up, and the
-talking was for a moment hushed. Being impatient to be released from the
-show-case so that we could see what was going on in the great world
-outside, each one of us cherished the secret hope that we might find
-favor in the eyes of the prospective purchaser. We were so inexperienced
-and foolish that we didn’t care much who bought us, so long as we got
-out.
-
-“I—aw! I want to look at a nice light bird gun,” said the young man;
-“something you can recommend for woodcock and the like, don’t yer know?”
-
-“Why, that’s a countryman of mine,” exclaimed the double-barrel, who
-seemed to be highly excited by the discovery.
-
-The bamboo hastened to assure me that he wasn’t—that he was an American
-trying to ape English ways.
-
-“Do you want a hammerless?” asked the proprietor.
-
-“I—aw! They come pretty ’igh, don’t they?”
-
-“Not necessarily. Here’s one worth a hundred and twenty-five dollars,”
-replied the storekeeper; and as he spoke, he opened the show-case and
-took from it a double-barrel who was so very plain in appearance, that I
-had not before taken more than a passing glance at him. “I judge from
-your speech that you are an Englishman, and if you are, you of course
-know more about this make of guns than I can tell you. It is a Greener.”
-
-The young man seemed pleased to know that he had succeeded in making the
-proprietor believe that he was not an American, but he did not seem to
-appreciate the gun, nor did he handle it as if he were accustomed to the
-use of fire-arms. He hardly knew how to bring it to his face properly.
-
-“I—aw! Hit’s wery fine, no doubt,” said he, after he had made an awkward
-pretense of examining the gun, “but I—aw! I want something a little more
-showy and not quite so ’igh-priced, don’t yer know? Something that I can
-take pride in exhibiting to my ’unting friends, don’t yer know?”
-
-“We have guns that are more showy than this, but they are cheap affairs,
-and we don’t recommend them. How would this one suit you?” said the
-proprietor; and as he spoke, he opened another door in the show-case,
-and took my bragging friend down from his place on the antlers.
-
-It may have been all imagination on my part, but I would have been
-willing to affirm that his nickel-plated ornaments grew a shade dimmer
-as he was taken out of the case, and I am of the same opinion still. By
-his boasting he had led us all to believe that he was worth at least two
-or three hundred dollars; and you can imagine how surprised we were when
-we learned that he was valued at a very small fraction of that sum.
-
-“Aw! That looks more like a gun,” said the customer. “That’s a piece,
-don’t yer know, that a fellah can show to his friends. Hit’ll shoot, I
-suppose?”
-
-“Oh, yes, it will shoot, but it will not do as clean work as the one I
-just showed you.”
-
-“Hi’ll take the risk. ’Ow much for ’im?”
-
-“Twenty-five dollars; and that includes a trunk-shaped case,
-loading-tools, wiping-rod and fifty brass-shells.”
-
-The young man handed over the money and went out, after requesting that
-his purchase might be sent up to the Lambert House at once, as he wished
-to start for the woods on the following day. As soon as the door was
-closed behind him, the proprietor called out to the porter:
-
-“Oh, Rube! Come here and take this Brummagem shooting-iron up to the
-hotel. Thank goodness it is the last one we have in stock, and I’ll
-never buy another.”
-
-“I wonder how that boastful bird gun feels now,” whispered the bamboo.
-“His pride had to take a tumble, didn’t it? There’s no Brummagem about
-me, I can tell you.”
-
-“What do you mean by—by—” The word was too hard for me, and I stumbled
-over it.
-
-“By Brummagem?” said the bamboo, who felt so good over the discomfiture
-of the English fowling-piece that he was disposed to be friendly as well
-as civil. “Why, it’s something that is fine and showy, but which is not
-in reality worth any thing. A Yankee would say that that double-barrel
-was a ‘shoddy’ article.”
-
-“I feel guilty every time I sell one of those guns,” continued the
-proprietor. “They are made in Birmingham, England, at the cost of nine
-dollars apiece by the dozen.”
-
-“That dude will never hurt any thing with it,” observed the porter, who
-had taken a good look at the customer and heard all that passed between
-him and his employer.
-
-“I hope he will not hurt himself with it,” answered the latter. “What
-does he want to go into the woods for? He doesn’t know a woodcock from
-an ostrich.”
-
-“He goes because it is fashionable, I suppose,” said Rube; and I
-afterward found out that that was just the reason. I saw him in the
-wilderness a few weeks later, and had an opportunity to exchange a word
-or two with the Brummagem breech-loader. The latter looked decidedly
-seedy. He was covered with rust, his locks were out of order, and he had
-been put to such hard service that every joint in his make-up was loose.
-The second time I met him he could scarcely talk to me, because there
-was not much left of him except his stock. His ignorant owner—but we’ll
-wait until we come to that, won’t we?
-
-The next customers who came into the store were an elderly gentleman and
-a young lady. I certainly thought my chance for freedom had come, for
-when the gentleman said that his daughter wanted to look at a fly-rod,
-something light enough to be managed with one hand, and strong enough to
-land a perch or rock-bass, the proprietor pushed open the door in front
-of me and took me out.
-
-“Aha!” exclaimed the bamboo. “Your fate is to be the companion and
-plaything of a little girl, who will probably set you to catching
-sunfish and minnows, and throw you down in the mud when she gets through
-with you. I know that I am destined for the trout streams, and I have an
-idea that I shall be taken to Canada to have a shy at the lordly salmon.
-Good-by; but I am sorry for you.”
-
-I did not thank the bamboo for his words of sympathy, because I did not
-believe they were sincere. I thought I could detect a hypocritical twang
-in them; but before I could tell him so, I was taken out of my case, and
-for the first time given an opportunity to see how I looked.
-
-“There is a rod I can recommend. Lancewood throughout, nickel-plated
-ferrules and reel-seat and artistically wound with cane and silk,” said
-the proprietor, glibly. “I will warrant him to do good work, and if the
-lady breaks him she will not be much out of pocket—only six dollars and
-a half.”
-
-“Oh, I don’t want a cheap thing like that,” exclaimed the young lady,
-who would not take a second look at me after she heard that I was worth
-so little money. “I want a nice rod.”
-
-The storekeeper laid me on the show-case, and brought my friend the
-split bamboo out for exhibition. He was a splendid looking fellow, and I
-did not wonder that the young lady went into ecstasies over him, and
-declared at once that he was just the rod she had long been wishing for.
-Neither could I resist the temptation to say to him, as he was put back
-into his case:
-
-“What do you think now of your chances of going among the trout streams
-and of taking a shy at the lordly salmon! Good-by; but I am sorry for
-you.”
-
-The bamboo was so crest-fallen that he could make no response. He was
-carried away by his new owner, and I did not see him again until I was
-almost ready to be laid upon the shelf in my master’s closet, to enjoy a
-long winter’s rest after a season of the hardest kind of work. The pride
-and arrogance were all gone out of him, and he did not look much as he
-did when he left the store. If he had been a man, folks would have
-called him a tramp.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER II.
-
- THE HISTORIAN OF THE WAYRING FAMILY.
-
-
-THE bamboo having been disposed of I was returned to the show-case,
-where I spent two very lonely days. The rods around me were worth more
-money than I was, and feeling their importance they would scarcely speak
-to me, even to answer a civil question; so all I could do was to hold my
-peace and listen to their conversation. But fate had decreed that I
-should not long remain a captive. One afternoon there came into the
-store a gentleman in gold spectacles, accompanied by two bright boys
-about fifteen years of age. They must have been well known to the
-proprietor, for he shook their hands with all the cordiality which
-shopkeepers know how to assume toward their rich patrons, and greeted
-them with:
-
-“Ah, colonel, I am glad to see you. Well, Joseph, have you come after
-that rod?”
-
-“Yes, sir,” answered one of the boys, a curly-headed, blue-eyed lad, who
-looked so good-natured and jolly that I took a great fancy to him at
-once. “You remember what I told you the last time I was here, Mr.
-Brown—that I want something light and strong and inexpensive. I can’t
-afford to pay a high price for a rod that I may break at the very first
-cast. You know I never threw a fly in my life.”
-
-“Yes, I know that,” said Mr. Brown, “and I know, too, that as a bait
-fisher you have few equals and no superiors among boys of your age.”
-
-“I thank you for the compliment, but I am afraid I don’t deserve it,”
-said the blue-eyed boy, modestly.
-
-“Oh, yes, you do. Now here’s a rod that will suit you exactly,” answered
-the proprietor, pushing open the show-case and laying hold of me. “He
-weighs only eight ounces, hangs beautifully, and will answer your
-purpose as well as one worth five times the money. Only six and a half,
-and that’s cheaper than you could steal him, if you were in that line of
-business.”
-
-“What do you say, Uncle Joe?” asked the boy after he and his companion,
-whom he addressed as Roy Sheldon, had shaken me up and down in the air
-until it was a wonder to me that they did not break my back.
-
-“Since Mr. Brown has recommended him, I say that you can’t do better
-than to take him,” was the reply, and that settled the matter. I had a
-master at last, and a good one, too, if there were any faith to be put
-in appearances. I took him for a restless, uneasy fellow who would not
-let me rust for want of use, and I found that I had not been mistaken in
-my opinion of him.
-
-Joe, as I shall hereafter call him, next purchased, under his uncle’s
-supervision, three long water-proof lines, a Loomis automatic reel, a
-dozen cream-colored leaders of different lengths, a creel who afterward
-became my constant companion, and a fly-book filled with all the most
-tempting lures known to anglers, such as coachmen, white millers, red
-and brown hackles, and many other things whose names I did not know.
-With these under his arm and me on his shoulder he set out for home
-accompanied by Roy Sheldon, Uncle Joe taking leave of them at the door,
-saying that he was going to the post-office.
-
-“I wish every fellow in the world had an uncle like that,” said Joe, as
-he turned about and waved his hand to the gentleman with the gold
-spectacles.
-
-“So do I,” answered Roy, “excepting, of course, Tom Bigden and his
-crowd.”
-
-“I don’t except even them,” said Joe. “Tom pulls a lovely oar, and I
-never saw a fellow who could play short stop or train a spaniel like
-him. I have nothing against any of them, and should be glad to be
-friends with them if they would let me.”
-
-“But haven’t you seen to your satisfaction that they won’t let you?”
-demanded Roy, rather sharply. “They’ve got something against you, and
-they’ll continue to make you suffer for it; see if they don’t.”
-
-I wondered what it was that any one could have against so fine a young
-fellow as my new master appeared to be, and it was not many days before
-I found out. Tom Bigden and his followers _did_ make Joe suffer, but it
-was principally through his friends, that is, through his sail-boat, his
-shell in which he used to train for his races, his canvas canoe that had
-carried him safely down the most difficult rapids in Indian River, and
-finally through me. In fact, I became a regular shuttle-cock of fortune,
-and was so roughly knocked about from pillar to post, that it is a
-wonder to me that I am as good a rod as I am.
-
-After a few minutes’ walk along a quiet street shaded on each side by
-grand old trees, Joe and his companion turned into a wide carriage-way
-which led them by a circuitous route through a little grove of
-evergreens to the house in which Joe lived—a fine brick mansion, with
-stone facings, a carriage-porch at the side door, and a croquet ground
-and lawn tennis court in front. Behind the house the grounds sloped
-gently down to the shore of a beautiful lake, with an island near the
-center, and with banks on each side that were thickly wooded, save where
-the trees and undergrowth had been cleared away to make room for the
-cozy summer residences of the visitors who came there every year. For
-Mount Airy, that was the name of the village in which Joe Wayring lived,
-was acquiring some fame as a watering place. There were four springs in
-the vicinity, whose waters were supposed to possess some medicinal
-virtues, the scenery was grand, the drives numerous and pleasant, and
-the fishing (and the shooting, too, in the proper season), could not be
-surpassed.
-
-At the foot of the path that led from the carriage-porch to the lake,
-was a boat-house which afforded shelter to some of Joe’s friends whose
-acquaintance I was soon to make, and a short distance from its door his
-sail boat, the _Young Republic_, rode at her moorings. It was indeed a
-pleasant scene that was spread out before me; but before I had time to
-admire it sufficiently, Joe and his companion went up the stone steps
-three at a jump, rushed into the hall, fired their caps at the hat-rack,
-and without waiting to see whether or not they caught on the pegs at
-which they were aimed, ran up the wide stairs that led to the floor
-above. I held my breath in suspense and wondered what in the world was
-the matter now; but I afterward learned that I had no cause for
-uneasiness, and that that is the way boys generally conduct themselves
-when they go into a house. It saves them the trouble of hunting up their
-father and mother and telling them that they have got home without being
-run over by the cars, or knocked down by a runaway horse, or drowned in
-the lake.
-
-The room into which Joe conducted his friend was like the private
-sanctum of every other boy who delights in the sports of the woods and
-fields, with this exception: It was in perfect order, and as neat as a
-new pin. Joe’s mother wouldn’t have it any other way, and neither would
-Joe. Indeed it was a favorite saying of his that if folks would keep
-away and let his things alone (by “folks” he meant to designate old
-Betty, the housekeeper, who, according to Joe’s way of thinking, was
-“awful fussy”), he could find any thing he wanted, from a postage-stamp
-to a spoon-oar, on the darkest of nights, and without a lamp to aid him
-in the search.
-
-The room looked a good deal like a museum I afterward saw, only it was
-on a much smaller scale, of course, and it contained so many rare and
-curious things that Joe’s friends were always glad of an invitation “to
-step up for a few minutes.” Uncle Joe’s love for the rod and gun had led
-him to roam all over his own country, as well as to some remote corners
-of foreign lands, and during these rambles he never forgot the boy at
-home who thought so much of relics and souvenirs of all kinds, and took
-such good care of them. He gave Joe the Alpine stock which had assisted
-him in his ascent of Mount Blanc; the Indian saddle and bridle he had
-used when fleeing from the agency at the time the Utes rose in rebellion
-and killed Meeker and all the other whites who did not succeed in making
-good their escape; the head of the first bison he had ever shot, and
-which, having been mounted by an expert taxidermist, had been hung above
-the looking-glass over the mantle to serve as a resting place for the
-sword and pistols Uncle Joe carried during the war, the elk-horn bow,
-quiver of arrows, scalping knife and moccasins presented to him by a
-Sioux chief; and for the prize lancewood bow won by my master at a
-shooting match; for Joe was an archer, as well as an angler and wing
-shot, and he had been Master Bowman of the Mount Airy Toxophilites until
-he became tired of the office and gave it up. These articles, and a good
-many others which I did not have time to look at, were so neatly and
-artistically arranged that it did not seem to me that a single one of
-them could be moved without spoiling the effect of the whole. Nothing
-looked out of place, not even the black, uncouth object that lay in a
-little recess on the opposite side of the room. Having never seen any
-thing just like him before, I could not make out what he was, and I
-waited rather impatiently for his master to go out of the room so that I
-could speak to him; but Joe did not seem to be in any hurry to leave. He
-stood me up in a corner, and then he and Roy seated themselves at a
-table in the middle of the room, and proceeded to “fix up” a debate that
-was to be held at the High School on the afternoon of the coming Friday.
-The question was: “Ought corporal punishment in schools to be
-abolished?” No doubt it was a matter in which both Joe and Roy had been
-deeply interested in their younger days, but it did not affect me one
-way or the other, and consequently I paid very little attention to what
-they said. My time was fully taken up with the strange things I saw
-around me.
-
-At last, to my great satisfaction, the boys concluded that they could
-“fix up” the matter while sailing about the lake in the _Young
-Republic_, better than they could while sitting by the table, especially
-if they could find some boat to race with, so they bolted out of the
-room with much noise and racket, and left the house, banging the hall
-door loudly behind them. Then I turned to speak to the object that
-occupied the recess on the other side of the room, and found that he was
-quite as willing to make my acquaintance as I was to make his.
-
-“Hallo!” said he; and I afterward learned that that is the way in which
-school boys and telephones always greet each other.
-
-“Hallo!” said I, in reply. “Who are you? if I may be so bold as to
-inquire.”
-
-“Oh, that’s all right,” answered my new acquaintance, cheerfully.
-“Everybody who sees me for the first time wants to know all about me. I
-don’t suppose I am much to look at—indeed, I know I am not, because I
-can see my reflection in the mirror over the mantle—but I am the boss
-boat on the rapids, and am worth more on a ‘carry’ than all the cedar
-and birch-bark canoes in America. I am the historian of the Wayring
-family, or, rather, of the youngest branch of it,” he added, with no
-little pride in his tones. “I carry secrets enough to sink any ordinary
-craft, and if I only had the power to communicate some of them to my
-master, perhaps he wouldn’t open his eyes! I am a canvas canoe, at your
-service.”
-
-“Oh!” said I.
-
-“Yes,” said he. “And unless my judgment is at fault, you are a fly-rod.
-I heard Joe say that his uncle was going to get one for him.”
-
-“That is just what I am,” I made answer. “Nickel-plated ferrules and
-reel-seat, artistically wound with cane and silk, and lancewood
-throughout.”
-
-My lofty speech did not have the effect I thought it would. The canvas
-canoe seemed to have rather an exalted opinion of himself, and I did not
-see why I should stay in the background for want of somebody to praise
-me, and so I praised myself; and that’s a bad thing to do. I only
-succeeded in exciting the merriment of every occupant of the room, for I
-heard derisive laughter on all sides of me.
-
-“Don’t throw on airs, young fellow,” said the canvas canoe, as soon as
-he could speak. “You have come to the wrong shop for that sort of work.
-I wouldn’t boast until I had done something, if I were in your place. If
-there is any good in you, you will fare well in Joe’s hands, and he will
-do your bragging for you; but if you fail him when the pinch comes, you
-will most likely be chucked into the lake, or given away to the first
-little ragamuffin he can find who wants a rod that is good for nothing.
-So take a friend’s advice and hold your tongue until you have seen
-service.”
-
-I felt somewhat abashed by this rebuke, for, of course, I was desirous
-of making a favorable impression upon those with whom I was to be
-associated all the days of my life. I thought I had made them despise
-me; but the next words uttered by the canvas canoe showed me that I need
-have no fears on that score.
-
-“A boat and a rod generally go together, you know,” said he; “so I
-suppose that you and I will see much of each other hereafter.”
-
-“And how about me?” piped a shrill voice close beside me.
-
-I looked down, and there was the creel. I had not thought of him before,
-and it was plain that the canoe hadn’t either, for he exclaimed, in a
-tone of surprise:
-
-“Who spoke? Oh, it was you, was it? Well, I don’t know just what Joe
-will do with you, for he never owned a creel before. He has always
-carried his dinner in his pocket when he went trouting, or in a basket
-if he went out on the lake after bass, and brought his fish home on a
-string; but he will find use for you, you may depend upon that. He is a
-busy boy, is Joe, and he keeps every body around him busy, too.”
-
-“I understood you to say that you are the historian of the Wayring
-family,” I ventured to remark, when the canoe ceased speaking.
-
-“Of the youngest branch of it—yes. I have been a member of this
-household for a long time. Can’t you see that I am a veteran? Don’t you
-notice my wounds? I have been snagged more times than I can remember, I
-have had holes punched in me by rocks, and some of my ribs have been
-fractured; but I am a pretty good boat yet. At least Joe thinks so, for
-he is going to take me somewhere this coming summer, probably up into
-Michigan to run the rapids of the Menominee; and, to tell you the honest
-truth, I am looking forward to that trip with fear and trembling. I have
-heard Uncle Joe say that those rapids were something to make a man’s
-hair stand on end; but if my master says ‘go’, I shall take him through
-if I can. I have carried him through some dangerous places, and whenever
-I have got him into trouble, it has been owing to his own carelessness
-or mismanagement.”
-
-“I suppose he thinks a great deal of you?” said I.
-
-“Well, he ought to,” replied the canoe, with a self-satisfied air. “I
-have stuck to him through thick and thin for a good many years. I was
-the very first plaything he owned, after he took it into his head that
-he was getting too big to ride a rocking-horse. He used to paddle me
-around on a duck pond, where the water wasn’t more than a foot deep,
-long before it was thought safe to trust him with a rod or gun. But Joe
-does not seem to care much for a gun. He is fairly carried away by his
-love of archery, and a long bow is his favorite weapon.”
-
-“Do you know who Tom Bigden is, and what Joe has done to incur his
-ill-will?” I inquired.
-
-“I have some slight acquaintance with that young gentleman,” answered
-the canoe, with a laugh. “It was through him that I was snagged and sunk
-in the Indian Lake country. I don’t know how the fuss started, and
-neither does any body except Tom Bigden himself; but I suppose that
-fellow over there and a few others like him, are wholly to blame for
-it.”
-
-“What fellow? Over where?” I asked; for of course the canvas canoe could
-not point his finger or nod his head to tell me which way to look.
-
-“This fellow up here,” said a new voice, which came from over the
-bookcase.
-
-I looked up, and there was another lancewood bow, resting on a pair of
-deer’s antlers. He was not quite as fancy as the prize bow of whom I
-have already spoken. His green plush handle was beginning to look
-threadbare, and that, to my mind, indicated that he had seen service.
-
-“You wouldn’t think that a few insignificant things like that could be
-the means of setting a whole village together by the ears, would you?”
-continued the canoe.
-
-“Insignificant yourself,” retorted the long bow; but I was glad to
-notice that he did not speak as if he were angry. The various articles I
-saw about me all cherished the most friendly feelings for one another,
-but when they had nothing to do, they were like a lot of idle
-boys—always trying to “get a joke” upon some of their number. “You never
-won a prize for Joe, did you? Well, I have. Go and win a race before you
-brag. You can’t; you’re much too clumsy. One of those Shadow or Rob Roy
-canoes out there on the lake would beat you out of sight in going a
-mile.”
-
-I cared nothing at all for this side sparring. I knew that I would have
-plenty of time in which to listen to it during the long winter months,
-when canoe, long bow and fly-rod would be laid up in ordinary, while
-skates, snow-shoes and toboggans took our places in the affections of
-our master for the time being. For I saw snow-shoes and a toboggan
-there, and I knew what they were, because I had seen some like them in
-Mr. Brown’s store. They came from Canada, and were almost as full of
-stories as the canoe was. Joe had worn the snow-shoes while hunting
-caribou in Newfoundland in company with his uncle, and the toboggan had
-carried his master with lightning speed over the ice bridge at Niagara
-Falls. Many an hour that would otherwise have dragged by on leaden wings
-did they brighten for us by relating scraps of their personal history,
-and at some future time I may induce them to put those same narratives
-into print for your benefit; but just now we are interested in Tom
-Bigden. We want to know why he disliked Joe Wayring, and what made him
-take every opportunity he could find to annoy him.
-
-“When you talk about racing you don’t want to leave me out,” observed
-the toboggan, “for I am the lad to show speed. Give me a fair field, and
-I would not be much afraid to try conclusions with an express train. And
-it takes as much, if not more, skill to manage me than it does to handle
-an awkward canvas canoe, who is always bobbing about, turning first one
-way and then another as if he were too contrary to hold a straight
-course.”
-
-“I wasn’t intended for a racing boat, and I know I can’t compete with
-such flyers as you and a Rob Roy,” said the canvas canoe, modestly; and
-I afterward found that none of my new acquaintances were half as
-conceited as they pretended to be. They boasted just to hear themselves
-talk, and because they had no other way of passing the time when they
-were unemployed; but each was perfectly willing to acknowledge the
-superiority of the other in his own particular line of business. “I was
-intended for a portable craft—something that can be folded into a small
-compass and carried over a portage without much trouble; and in that
-respect I am far ahead of a stiff-necked Canuck, who, having made up his
-mind just how much space he ought to occupy in the world, would rather
-break than bend to give elbow-room to his betters.” “You wanted me to
-tell you something about Tom Bigden, I believe,” added the canoe,
-addressing himself to me. “Well, it is a long story, but you will have
-plenty of time to listen to it; for if Joe and Roy have gone out on the
-lake, they will not return much before dark. You ought to know the full
-history of Tom’s dealings with Joe, for you may become the victim of
-persecution as the rest of us are and have been ever since Tom came
-here; and if you were not posted, you would not know how to account for
-it. A long time ago—”
-
-But there! I never could learn to tell a story in the words of another,
-so I will, for a time, drop the personal pronoun, which I don’t like to
-use if I can help it, and give you in my own homely way the substance of
-the narrative to which I listened that afternoon. But please understand
-one thing before I begin: The historian was not a personal witness of
-all the incidents I am about to describe. He couldn’t have been, unless
-he possessed the power of being in half a dozen different places at the
-same time. He saw and heard some things, of course, but much of his
-information had been obtained from the long bow, and from Joe and his
-friends, who had freely discussed matters in his presence; and by
-putting all these different incidents together, he was able to make up a
-story which, to me, was very interesting. I hope it may prove so to you.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER III.
-
- SOMETHING ABOUT TOM BIGDEN AND HIS COUSINS.
-
-
-MOUNT AIRY, the village in which Joe Wayring and Roy Sheldon lived, was
-situated a few miles away from a large city which, for want of a better
-name, we will call New London. It was so far distant from the city that
-it could not properly be spoken of as one of its suburbs, and yet the
-railroad brought the village so near to it that a good many men who did
-business in New London, Joe’s father and Roy’s among the number, had
-their homes there. It was a veritable “hide and seek town”. Sometimes,
-as you were approaching it on the cars, you would see it very plainly,
-and then again you wouldn’t. It was nestled in among high mountains, and
-in the woods which covered them from base to summit could be found an
-abundance of small game, such as hares, squirrels and grouse, that
-afforded sport to the local Nimrods, and even received attention from
-the New London gunners. It was surrounded by a perfect network of
-babbling trout brooks, and there were several lakes and ponds in the
-vicinity in which some of the finest fish in the world awaited the lure
-of the skillful angler. And it required skill to take them, too. They
-were shy of strangers, and it wasn’t every body who could go out in the
-morning and come back at night with a full creel.
-
-Nor was larger game wanting to tempt the hunter who plumed himself on
-being a good shot with the rifle. Visitors standing upon the veranda of
-the principal hotel in the village had often heard wolves howling in the
-mountains, and on more than one occasion a deer had been seen standing
-on the opposite shore of Mirror Lake (it was generally called Wayring’s
-Lake, because Joe’s father owned the land on all sides of it), regarding
-with much curiosity the evidences of civilization that had sprung up on
-the other side. More than that, a bear was expected to make his
-appearance at least once every season; and when word was passed that he
-was in sight, what a hubbub it created among the visiting sportsmen! How
-prompt they were to seize their guns and run out after him, and how sure
-they were to come back empty-handed! Uncle Joe used to say that he
-believed the managers of the hotels would close their doors against the
-man who was lucky enough to shoot that bear, for unless Bruin had a
-companion to take his place, his death would spoil their advertisements.
-For years the proprietor of the Mount Airy House had been accustomed to
-tell the public, through the New London papers, that bear could be seen
-from the piazza of his hotel, and the announcement had brought him many
-a dollar from sportsmen who came from all parts of the country to shoot
-that bear. Why didn’t Uncle Joe shoot him? He owned the hotel.
-
-We have said that Mount Airy was acquiring some fame as a
-watering-place; but that must not lead you to infer that it was like
-other places of resort—lively enough in summer, but very dull in winter,
-for such was by no means the case. The village was lively at all seasons
-of the year. Of course there were many more people there in summer than
-there were in winter, for during warm weather the hotels and all the
-boarding houses were crowded with visitors, and so were the cottages on
-the other side of the lake; but when these visitors went away, the
-citizens did not hibernate like so many woodchucks and wait for them to
-come back, because they were not dependent upon tourists either for
-their livelihood or for means of entertainment. Strangers were
-astonished when they found what a driving, go-ahead sort of people they
-were. They were proud of their village, of its churches, its hotels, its
-fine private residences, and its high-school was so well and favorably
-known that it attracted students from all parts of the country. It could
-boast of an efficient fire department, composed of all the leading men
-in town (the ministers and teachers, to a man, belonged to it), a
-military company which formed a part of the National Guard of the State,
-and a band of archers known as the Mount Airy Toxophilites. We ought,
-rather, to say that there were _two_ bands of archers, one being
-composed of boys and girls, and the other of their fathers, mothers and
-older brothers and sisters. They were both uniformed, but the boy
-members of the Toxophilites were the only ones who ever paraded.
-
-It was worth a long journey to see these forty young archers turn out
-and march through the streets to the music of the band. They looked as
-neat in their green and white suits, with short top boots, and black
-hats turned up at one side and fastened with a black feather, as the
-military company did in their blue uniforms and white helmets: and as
-for their marching, it was nearly perfect. They had a manual of arms
-which originated with Uncle Joe, who, for more than a year, acted as
-their instructor and drill-master. They were governed by a constitution
-and by-laws, and fines were imposed upon those who did not turn out
-regularly to the drills and parades. They had shooting matches at which
-prizes were distributed, also a grand annual hunt, followed by a dinner
-that was equally grand; and every year some of the boys spent a week or
-two camping in the mountains, taking bows and arrows with them instead
-of guns. A good many of the young archers were very fine shots with
-these novel weapons, and there were about half a dozen of them, of whom
-Joe and Roy made two, who stood ready at any time to meet an equal
-number of riflemen at the trap, the archers shooting at twelve yards
-rise and the riflemen at twenty.
-
-On the morning of July 4, 18—, a large party of newly-arrived visitors
-were seated on the wide veranda of the Mount Airy House, enjoying the
-refreshing breeze that came to them from over the lake, and
-congratulating themselves on having left the city, with all its dust,
-heat and noise, behind them for one good long month at least. Some of
-these visitors had never been there before, and consequently they knew
-little or nothing about the village and its inhabitants. Among these
-were Tom Bigden and his two cousins, Ralph and Loren Farnsworth, who
-were leaning over the railing, fanning their flushed faces with their
-hats, and wondering how in the world they were going to put in four
-weeks’ time in that desolate town. They were city boys, any body could
-see that, and they were disappointed, and angry as well, because their
-parents had not decided to spend a portion of the summer at some place
-convenient to salt water, so that they could enjoy a dip in the surf now
-and then.
-
-“I see a boat down there,” observed Loren. “I wonder if we could hire it
-for an hour or two? I think I should like to take a sail on that lake,
-it looks so cool and inviting.”
-
-“Humph!” exclaimed Tom. “I’d much rather take a run up to Newport or
-over to Greenbush in my father’s yacht.”
-
-“I wouldn’t,” answered Loren. “I can go down to the Sound any day, but a
-gem of a lake like this is something I haven’t feasted my eyes upon in a
-long time. I am going to see if I can hire a boat; and after I get tired
-of sailing around in her, I’m going to lie to under the shade of some
-tree that hangs over the water, and be as lazy as I know how. That’s
-what I came up here for.”
-
-“Boom!” said a field-piece, from some distant part of the village.
-
-“What was that?” exclaimed Ralph. “A cannon?”
-
-“Naw,” replied Tom, in a tone which implied that he had no patience with
-any one who could ask such a question. “What would a cannon be doing up
-here in the woods? Do you think these greenhorns are going to try to get
-up a celebration for our benefit?”
-
-“No, I don’t; but they’ve got up one for their own. Do you hear that?”
-answered Ralph, as the warning roll of a drum, followed by the music of
-a band, rang out on the air. “The procession, or whatever it is, is
-coming this way, too. Now I shall expect to see something that will
-eclipse any thing New London ever thought of getting up.”
-
-It wasn’t a celebration; it was only the annual review of the Mount Airy
-fire department, which was always held on the Fourth of July. Ralph and
-his cousins were fully prepared to make all sorts of fun of it, but when
-the head of the procession came into view around the corner of the
-street below, they were so surprised at the size of it that they had not
-a word to say. It took up the whole width of the street, and that it was
-determined to have all the room it wanted, was made plain by the actions
-of a couple of mounted policemen who rode in front to clear the way.
-
-“That’s good marching, boys,” said Loren, who had seen so much of it in
-New London that he thought himself qualified to judge. “It is a very
-creditable display for so small a place as this.”
-
-“Every body seems to think it’s going to be something grand,” sneered
-Tom, who was really amazed at the rapidity with which the spacious
-veranda was filled by the guests, who came pouring out of the wide doors
-in a steady stream.
-
-“Why, there’s a military company in line with the firemen—two of them,”
-exclaimed Ralph.
-
-“Visiting companies, no doubt,” said Tom, “and that’s what makes every
-one so anxious to see them.”
-
-“There’s where you are wrong, Tom,” said Mr. Farnsworth, who,
-approaching them unobserved, had heard every word of their conversation.
-“You never saw a parade just like this, and I don’t believe you will
-ever see another unless your father and I carry out some plans we have
-been talking about, and come up here to live.”
-
-“To live?” echoed Tom.
-
-“Up here in the woods?” cried Ralph.
-
-“Among all these country greenhorns!” chimed in Loren.
-
-“You will find very few country greenhorns in Mount Airy,” said Mr.
-Farnsworth, with a laugh. “Why, boys, those fire companies represent
-millions of New London’s business capital.”
-
-“Oh!” said Tom.
-
-“Ah!” said Ralph.
-
-“That makes the thing look different,” added Loren. “I supposed that
-they were made up of the same material we used to find in the old
-volunteer organizations.”
-
-“By no means. They are all rich and intelligent men. They own valuable
-property here, and by taking an interest in their fire department, they
-get their insurance at much lower rates than we do in the city.”
-
-The near approach of the column put a stop to the conversation. First
-came the drum-major, a big six-footer, with a high bear-skin cap, which
-made him look a great deal taller than he really was, and behind him the
-band, which discoursed as fine music as any body wanted to hear. Then
-came the hook and ladder company, two hundred strong, marching four
-abreast and drawing their heavy truck after them without the least
-apparent exertion. Next came a steam fire engine, drawn by men instead
-of horses, after that a hose cart, followed by a small company of about
-twenty young fellows in black dress-coats and white trowsers and caps,
-who pulled along something that looked like a skeleton road wagon,
-loaded with Babcock fire extinguishers.
-
-“That’s a little the queerest looking turn-out I ever saw,” Tom
-remarked. “_They_ couldn’t do any thing toward putting out a fire. I
-suppose they are more for show than any thing else.”
-
-“Wrong again,” said Mr. Farnsworth. “They have done good work, and the
-citizens, in recognition of their services, presented them with money
-enough to build an engine house for themselves, and furnish it in fine
-style.”
-
-Next came the soldiers, veterans, every one of them, and behind them a
-company of oddly uniformed youngsters, whose movements were governed by
-the blast of a bugle instead of the word of command. They must have been
-the ones the guests were waiting for, for when they came in sight, and,
-following the movements of the military company, executed the maneuver:
-“Platoons right front into line,” which they did with as much
-soldier-like precision as the veterans themselves, the gentlemen on the
-veranda cheered them lustily, while the ladies waved their handkerchiefs
-and bombarded the ranks with bouquets, which were deftly caught by the
-boys, and impaled upon the ends of their long bows.
-
-“Now, then, can any body tell me who and what those fellows are?”
-exclaimed Ralph.
-
-“They are the Mount Airy Toxophilites,” replied Mr. Farnsworth.
-
-“Lovers of a bow or arrow,” said Ralph, who was well up in his Greek.
-“What do they do?”
-
-“Oh, they have regular shooting-matches, drills and parades, and now and
-then a hunt and a camp in the woods.”
-
-“They can’t hit any thing with those bows, of course.”
-
-“Yes, I believe they can,” replied Mr. Farnsworth. “I am told that when
-they go on a hunt, they are as sure of coming back full-handed as those
-who use guns. After passing in review before the trustees, they are to
-have a drill in the park. I see that a good many of the guests are
-getting ready to go down, and if you would like to see it, we will go
-also.”
-
-Tom and his cousins had found reason to change some of their opinions
-during the last few minutes, and that was just what Mr. Farnsworth
-desired. He had talked with that very end in view—to make them see that
-New London was not the only place in the world in which boys could enjoy
-themselves, and to prepare them for the change which he and his
-brother-in-law, Tom’s father, intended to make that very summer. They
-were anxious to get their boys away from New London, for it was full of
-temptations which Tom and his cousins found it hard to resist. They were
-learning to think more of billiards than they did of their books, and
-they had even been known to roll ten-pins for soda water. Soda water
-wasn’t hurtful, and neither were ten-pins nor billiards; but the
-conditions under which the one was imbibed and the others played
-certainly were. In Mount Airy there was none of that sort of thing. Of
-course there were billiard rooms and ten-pin alleys there, but they
-belonged to the hotels, and were kept for the exclusive use of the
-guests. The men who had just marched up the street owned all the land
-for miles around, and they would not sell a foot of it. They were
-willing to lease it for a term of years, but before they did so, they
-wanted to know all about the man who applied for the lease, and the
-business he intended to follow while he remained in town. In that way
-they made the society of the village just what they wanted it to be. It
-is true that some objectionable characters now and then secured a
-temporary foothold there, but as soon as they were detected, they were
-“bounced” without ceremony.
-
-Mr. Farnsworth and Mr. Bigden thought Mount Airy would be just the place
-for their boys, but the latter would have raised the most decided
-objections if the subject of a change of residence had been broached to
-them before they witnessed that parade, and learned something about the
-men and boys who composed it.
-
-“I’ll tell you what’s a fact!” said Tom, as he and his cousins walked
-with Mr. Farnsworth toward the park where the drill was to be held.
-“Uncle Alfred was right when he said that we would not find many country
-bumpkins here. Those bowmen must have lots of fun. Do you and father
-really intend to come here to live?” he added, turning to Mr.
-Farnsworth.
-
-“We have been thinking and talking about it for a long time,” was the
-answer.
-
-“All right. I am in favor of it,” said Tom. “I wonder if we could get
-into that company of archers!”
-
-“Of course we could,” said Loren.
-
-“There’s no ‘of course’ about it,” answered his father. “You would be
-balloted for the same as the rest; and I have been told that one
-black-ball would keep you out for a year.”
-
-“Humph!” exclaimed Tom. “They wouldn’t black-ball _us_. I guess our
-folks have just as much money as any body here.”
-
-“No, they haven’t; and even if they had, it would make no sort of
-difference. Money doesn’t rule the world up here as it does down in New
-London. I am informed that some of the boys in that company are so poor
-that the others had to help them buy their uniforms.”
-
-“Humph!” said Tom. “Well, if that’s the sort of trash they take into
-their company, I don’t know that I care to belong to it, do you, boys?
-We don’t have any thing to do with such fellows in the city.”
-
-“Couldn’t we gradually weed them out?” asked Loren. “That’s the way we
-did with our ball club, you know.”
-
-“Yes, and what was the consequence?” demanded his father. “You ‘weeded
-out’ your very best players, and you have been beaten by every club you
-have met since. Served you right, too.”
-
-“Well, I would rather be beaten than be chums with fellows who were too
-mean to chip in two or three dollars when we wanted to get up a dinner,”
-observed Loren.
-
-“They were not too mean; they couldn’t do it. The two or three dollars
-that you speak of so lightly, were a large sum in the eyes of boys whose
-fathers gain a livelihood by working by the day, and you ought to have
-exercised a little common sense in your dealings with them. If it were
-necessary that you should have the dinner or starve, why did you not pay
-for it yourselves, and not ask those poor boys to ‘chip in’, as you term
-it? There’s the high school,” said Mr. Farnsworth, pointing with his
-cane to an imposing building, standing in the midst of extensive and
-well-kept grounds which occupied one whole block of the village
-property.
-
-“That’s my great objection to Mount Airy,” said Ralph, shaking his fist
-at the school house. “Our teacher told us one day last term that the
-binomial theorem is just the same in China and Brazil that it is in New
-London, so I suppose it must be the same up here. Fine scenery around a
-school house doesn’t make the lessons inside any easier.”
-
-“You’re right there,” growled Tom, who was thinking of those Orations of
-Cicero to which he would have to devote his attention next term, “I’d
-much rather go fishing.”
-
-The boys reached the park long before the procession did, and took up a
-position near the pagoda in which the president of the village and the
-trustees were to stand while the line passed in review. When it arrived,
-the band led the way around the park until it met the advancing column;
-then it turned inside of it and went around again, and thus the whole
-line, with the exception of the Toxophilites, was wound up like a coil.
-The archers kept straight ahead, the boys in the ranks carrying arms,
-and the captain saluting by bringing his bow to a position that somewhat
-resembled the “secure arms” of the tactics, until they reached a clear
-space at the other end of the park which had been reserved on purpose
-for them. There they halted, and, when the firemen had broken ranks, and
-the soldiers had been brought to parade rest, their commanding officer
-put them through the manual of arms and some intricate evolutions in the
-school of the company, giving his orders to the bugler who stood beside
-him, and not to the company itself. Ralph and Loren were delighted with
-every thing they saw, and had many words of praise to bestow upon the
-young bowmen; but Tom was silent and sullen. He didn’t like to hear so
-much cheering when none of it was intended for him. When he was engaged
-in a game of ball he always flew into a passion if he made an error, or
-if any of the other side made a play that called forth applause from the
-spectators. He was angry now; but it would have puzzled a sensible boy
-to tell what reason he had for it.
-
-“That captain, or whatever you call him—” began Loren.
-
-“Master bowman,” said his father.
-
-“Well, he is a nobby fellow, and that bugler looks gorgeous in his green
-uniform with its white facings,” continued Loren. “I wonder who they
-are, any way?”
-
-“Why don’t you go and inquire?” asked Mr. Farnsworth.
-
-“They wouldn’t speak to you,” snarled Tom. “They’re little upstarts; I
-can tell that from here by the frills they throw on.”
-
-Loren and his brother didn’t care if they were. The signs seemed to
-indicate that they were coming to Mount Airy to live, and if that was
-the case, they wanted to know something about the boys they would have
-for their associates. So as soon as the drill was brought to an end and
-the ranks were broken, they set out to scrape an acquaintance with the
-master bowman and bugler, Tom following them with rather a listless,
-indifferent air. But in reality he was as eager as his cousins were.
-Would he not be willing to give something handsome if he could make
-himself the leader of a select band like that?
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IV.
-
- THE MOUNT AIRY TOXOPHILITES.
-
-
-LOREN and Ralph Farnsworth, in spite of Tom’s predictions to the
-contrary, had no trouble in scraping an acquaintance with the first
-bowman they met. It was Arthur Hastings, the secretary of the company
-and one of the best shots in it. They drew his attention by touching
-their hats to him as he passed (that is, the brothers did, Tom being in
-too bad humor to be civil), and Arthur seeing that they desired to speak
-to him, stopped and opened the conversation himself.
-
-“I know almost every stranger here this summer, but I don’t remember to
-have seen you two before,” said he, pulling off his white gloves and
-extending a hand to each of them.
-
-“We came on the early morning train,” replied Ralph. “We were just in
-time to witness your parade, which I assure you was something we did not
-expect to see up here in the woods. You bowmen are bully soldiers.”
-
-“Thank you,” said Arthur, raising his hand to his hat in response to
-Tom’s very slight nod. “There must be something in what you say, for
-every one who comes up here tells us the same. The truth is, we ought to
-be proficient. We have been under the strictest kind of a drill-master,
-and have done plenty of hard work since our organization two years ago.”
-
-“What first put the idea into your heads?” inquired Loren. “You got it
-out of your history, didn’t you?”
-
-“And if you did, why don’t you dress up like Indians and adopt their
-system of tactics?” chimed in Tom, who for the moment forgot that he had
-resolved that he would not have a word to say to any of the bowmen. “I
-have read that the Sioux have a drill of their own which is so very
-bewildering that our best troops can’t stand against it. It seems to me
-that you make hard work of something that might, under different
-management, be made to yield you any amount of pleasure.”
-
-“We are very well satisfied with the way our affairs are managed,”
-answered Arthur, who did not quite like the tone in which Tom uttered
-these words. “You must know that we are not copying the aborigines, but
-the Merry Bowmen of Robin Hood’s time. Of course we have to work, for if
-we didn’t we couldn’t give exhibition drills; but somehow we see plenty
-of fun with it all. The idea was suggested to us, not by our histories,
-but by an old man who lives up here in the woods,” added Arthur, turning
-to Loren, at the same time jerking his thumb over his shoulder and
-nodding his head toward an indefinite point of the compass. If he
-intended by these motions to give his auditors an idea of the direction
-in which the old man referred to lived, he failed completely. “He has
-seen better days. He used to belong to an archery club in his own
-country—that’s England, you know—and I tell you he is a boss shot. He
-makes a very good living with his bow now; but he is so much ashamed of
-the accomplishment—”
-
-“Excuse me,” interrupted Loren. “I don’t see why he should be ashamed of
-it.”
-
-“Neither do I,” said Arthur. “But you see, there are very few people in
-this country who take any interest in archery, and sportsmen, as a
-general thing, look upon the long bow as a toy; but they always change
-their minds when they see what it can be made to do in the hands of an
-expert. Now take those two boys, for example,” added Arthur, directing
-Loren’s attention to the master bowman and his bugler. “It isn’t every
-rifle shot who can break as many glass balls in the air as they can.”
-
-“Who are they?” inquired Tom. “We noticed them particularly during the
-drill.”
-
-“They are Wayring and Sheldon. Would you like to know them? They’re good
-fellows.”
-
-Arthur looked at Tom as he said this, but Tom didn’t act as though he
-heard him. He wasn’t anxious to make the acquaintance of boys who could
-beat him at any thing, but his cousins were not so mean spirited.
-
-“Certainly we would,” replied Ralph. “It looks now as though we were
-coming here to live; and if we do, we should like to know something
-about the boys into whose company we shall be thrown.”
-
-It would seem from this that Ralph took it for granted that he and his
-brother and cousin would get into the company without the least trouble,
-and he was somewhat surprised because Arthur did not offer to take in
-their names at the very next meeting; but he did not even ask them what
-their names were. He led them to the place where the master bowman and
-his bugler were standing in the midst of a party of their friends, and,
-as soon as the opportunity was presented, introduced them as visitors
-who thought it possible that they might one day become permanent
-residents of the village. Then he excused himself and went off to hunt
-up one of the girls with green and white badges, who were carrying
-little buckets of lemonade around among the thirsty firemen and
-soldiers.
-
-Tom and his cousins found the young archers to be very pleasant and
-agreeable fellows, but a trifle too independent to suit them. They did
-not seem to think that Tom was better than any other boy because his
-father was a banker, and owned a yacht in which he talked of going to
-Florida during the coming winter, and neither did they ask him and his
-cousins to step up to the armory when they fell into ranks and marched
-up to put away their bows and quivers. They left them standing in the
-park, as they did scores of others who had been talking to them, and
-that was a slight that Tom said he would not soon forget.
-
-“You are altogether too touchy,” said Loren, with some impatience in his
-tones. “You appear to think that every boy who lives outside the city
-limits must, of necessity, be a greenhorn. These fellows know as much
-about New London as we do.”
-
-“When I become a member of that company, I shall use my best endeavors
-to bring about a different state of affairs,” said Tom, decidedly. “If
-they are taking pattern after Robin Hood, why don’t they pass their time
-as he and his men did, lounging about in the greenwood under the shade
-of the trees, instead of parading through the streets on a hot day like
-this? I don’t see any fun in that.”
-
-Nevertheless, before he had passed a week in Mount Airy, Tom Bigden
-decided that it was just such a place as he had always thought he should
-like to live in, and his cousins came to the same conclusion. So did
-their fathers and mothers; and so it came about that a couple of Mr.
-Wayring’s handsome cottages, on the other side of the lake, were rented
-until such time as Mr. Farnsworth and his brother-in-law could erect
-houses on the grounds they had leased in the village.
-
-Tom and his cousins lost no time in getting ready to enjoy themselves.
-Before another week had passed away, they had the finest sail and row
-boats, and the most expensive canoes on the lake; and in anticipation of
-their immediate admittance to the ranks of the Toxophilites, they sent
-for a supply of bows and arrows and ordered uniforms of their tailor.
-But the old saying, that there’s many a slip, held good in their case;
-and this was the way they found it out:
-
-One afternoon they and their parents were invited to a lawn party, at
-which the Toxophilites, girls as well as boys, appeared in force and in
-uniform, the girls wearing white dresses, green sashes and badges, and
-light straw hats, turned up at the side and fastened by a tiny silver
-arrow, which, at the same time, held in place the long black plume of
-the company. Tom declared that they looked stunning; and when he saw how
-they sent their arrows into the target, hitting the gold almost as often
-as they missed it, and played croquet and skipped about the lawn tennis
-ground, he added that he had never been to such a party before, nor seen
-handsomer girls. He was going to apply for admission to the club, and he
-wasn’t going to waste any time in doing it, either. With this object in
-view, he hurried off to find Arthur Hastings.
-
-“I don’t wonder that you fellows are happy here,” was the way in which
-he began the conversation.
-
-“Yes, I suppose we see as much pleasure as falls to the lot of most
-people,” answered Arthur, “but we have any amount of hard work as well.”
-
-“I never see you do any,” said Tom.
-
-“That’s because you are not acquainted with us or our ways. I drilled
-until after ten o’clock last night, and spent this forenoon in working
-in the garden and wrestling with my geometry; getting ready for next
-term you know.”
-
-“Do you study and work during vacation?” exclaimed Tom, who had never
-heard of such a piece of foolishness before.
-
-“Of course I do; we all do.”
-
-“I’m glad that I haven’t such parents as you seem to have,” said Tom,
-rudely.
-
-“Our parents have nothing whatever to do with it. It’s the rule of the
-company.”
-
-“That you shall work during vacation?” cried Tom.
-
-“That we shall keep busy at something—yes. We are told that an idle
-brain is the workshop of a certain old chap who shall be nameless, but
-we go further, and hold that there is no such thing as an idle brain. It
-is at work all the time during our waking hours, and sometimes when we
-are asleep—dreams, you know—and if it is not busy with good things, it
-is ready to take in bad ones. Have you seen any boys loafing around the
-corners since you have been here? Then you can bet your bottom dollar
-that they didn’t belong to us.”
-
-“Well, when I get to be a member of the company, I shall vote down all
-such rules as that,” said Tom to himself. “A fellow needs a little time
-to be lazy, and I shall take it, too, without asking any body’s
-consent.” Then aloud he asked, as if the thought had just occurred to
-him: “By the way, when do you hold your next meeting?”
-
-“Thursday night.”
-
-“Well, take in our names, will you? Mine and my cousins’.”
-
-“I should be glad to oblige you, but I can’t do it.”
-
-“You can’t do it?” said Tom, who was angry in an instant. “Why not, I’d
-like to know?”
-
-“There are two reasons. In the first place, you have not been here long
-enough—we don’t know any thing about you.”
-
-“If that isn’t a little ahead of any thing I ever heard of I wouldn’t
-say so!” exclaimed Tom, as soon as his rage would permit him to speak.
-“My father is—”
-
-“We don’t care who or what your father is; we must know what _you_ are.
-In the second place, our membership is limited, and the boys’ roster is
-full.”
-
-“Couldn’t you suspend the rules for once?”
-
-“That’s no rule. It is a part of the constitution.”
-
-“Well, couldn’t you amend it?”
-
-“No, we couldn’t. It has been tried in the case of one of the best
-fellows in town—or, rather, he was one of the best until he found that
-he couldn’t wind eighty boys and girls around his finger, and then he
-turned against us and stands ready to-day to do us all the harm he can.”
-
-“And you will find, to your cost, that my cousins and I will do the same
-thing,” thought Tom, and it was all he could do to keep from uttering
-the words aloud. “Things have come to a pretty pass when a lot of Yahoos
-can make gentlemen knuckle to them. Who is this boy?”
-
-“His name is Prime; but I tell you, as a friend, that you must not have
-any thing to do with him if you want to get into the company. There are
-half a dozen of our fellows going away this fall, and then, if you feel
-like it, you can make a try for membership. Perhaps I shall be able to
-help you to the extent of one vote, though I can’t promise to do so.”
-
-“How about the yacht and canoe clubs?” said Tom, with something like a
-sneer in his tones. “No doubt they are full, too.”
-
-“Oh, no, they’re not. Any good fellow who owns a boat or who intends to
-get one, can come in there. Are you and your cousins good swimmers? Then
-why don’t you join us and enter for the up-set race that will come off
-next month.”
-
-“I don’t know what kind of a race that is.”
-
-“It’ll not take long to tell you. You see the contestants come out clad
-in some light stuff that won’t hold much water, and when they are well
-started in the race, a signal is given, generally the blast of a bugle,
-whereupon each fellow must overturn his boat, climb into her again and
-go ahead as if nothing had happened. The one who crosses the line first,
-is of course the winner.”
-
-“Who among you is the best at that kind of a race?”
-
-“Well,” replied Arthur, with some hesitation, “it is nip and tuck
-between Wayring, Sheldon and me.”
-
-“I expected as much,” said Tom, to himself. “Wayring, Sheldon and
-Hastings are better than the rest at every thing. I shall enter for that
-or some other race, and if I don’t take the conceit out of all of you, I
-shall never forgive myself. Then it would not be of any use for me to
-try to get into the Toxophilites?” he said, aloud.
-
-“Not the slightest. I’ll tip you the wink when there is an opening, and
-you can apply or not, just as you think best. We never ask any body to
-join us.”
-
-“But you asked me to join the canoe and yacht clubs.”
-
-“I know it, and I had a right to. The three organizations are governed
-by entirely different rules. There’s the bugle,” said Arthur, catching
-up his bow which lay on the rustic bench on which he and Tom had been
-sitting during this conversation. “I must go and shoot as soon as I can
-find my girl. Come on, and see us punch the gold three times out of
-five.”
-
-“I can’t,” replied Tom. “I must hunt up the hostess, tell her I have had
-a very pleasant time and all that, and bid her good-by. I have another
-engagement.”
-
-This was not quite in accordance with the facts of the case. Tom had no
-other engagement, but he wanted to go off by himself, or in company with
-Loren and Ralph, and give full vent to his feelings of disappointment
-and rage. He shook his fist at Arthur when the latter turned his back
-and hurried away, and it would have afforded him infinite satisfaction
-if he could have followed him up and knocked him down. He found his
-cousins after a while, and although they stood in the midst of a jolly
-group and were laughing gaily, and appeared to be enjoying themselves,
-Tom was well enough acquainted with them to tell at a glance that they
-were as angry as he was.
-
-“Sorry to break in upon so pleasant a gathering as this one seems to
-be,” said Tom, approaching the group, one of whom was the young lady in
-whose honor the party was given, “but our time is up.”
-
-“Why, Mr. Bigden, you don’t mean to say that you are going away so soon,
-and before supper, too?” exclaimed the young lady, who looked so
-charming in her neat uniform that Tom had half a mind to go back and
-pound Arthur Hastings for telling him that he couldn’t become a
-Toxophilite at once.
-
-“Must—can’t be helped,” answered Tom, giving his cousins a look which
-they understood. “We are indebted to you for a very pleasant afternoon,
-Miss Arden.”
-
-“I don’t believe you have enjoyed yourselves one bit,” exclaimed the
-fair archer. “If you have, why do you go away so early? The next time
-you attend one of our lawn parties, be sure and arrange your business so
-that your other engagements can wait.”
-
-After a little more badinage of this sort, Tom and his cousins lifted
-their hats and walked off. As soon as the front gate had closed behind
-them, the expression on their faces changed as if by magic, and the
-three boys turned toward one another with clenched fists and flashing
-eyes. After each one had glared savagely at his neighbor as if he were
-going to strike him, they all put their hands in their pockets and moved
-away. Tom was the first to speak.
-
-“Now that I look back at it, I don’t see how I kept my hands off that
-Hastings boy while he was talking so insolently to me,” said Tom. “He
-told me that he didn’t care who or what my father was, but I couldn’t
-get into the archery club, and that was all there was about it. They
-must stick to their constitution, no matter if the world goes to pieces
-on account of their obstinacy. He asked me to join the canoe and yacht
-clubs, but said they never asked any body to apply for admission to the
-Toxophilites.”
-
-“I guess Ralph and I know just what he said to you first and last,”
-remarked Loren, “for Sheldon talked to us in about the same way. We are
-going to enter for the upset race.”
-
-“I thought you would,” answered Tom, “and so I made up my mind to go in
-too. We’ll make it our business to see that neither Sheldon nor Wayring
-wins that or any other race. If we find that we can’t beat them by fair
-means, and I have an idea that I can paddle a boat about as fast as the
-next boy, although I never got into one until last week, we’ll foul
-them, and sink their boats so deep that they will never come up again.”
-
-“Loren and I talked that matter over, and resolved upon the same thing,”
-said Ralph. “Did Hastings tell you any thing about a George Prime who is
-down on them because they would not take his name before the
-Toxophilites? Sheldon told us to give him a wide berth, but Loren and I
-thought we would do as we pleased about that.”
-
-“That’s just what I thought,” answered Tom. “I think it would be a good
-plan to hunt him up the very first thing we do. If he has reason to
-dislike Wayring and his friends, we might induce him to strike hands
-with us.”
-
-“That was our idea,” said Ralph. “It can’t be possible that Prime is the
-only boy in this village who does not like Wayring and the rest, and if
-we find them to be the right sort, and can raise enough of them, what’s
-the reason we can’t get up a club of our own?”
-
-“That’s another idea,” said Tom, who was delighted with it. “I wish I
-had thought to ask Hastings where Prime lives.”
-
-“I know where his father’s drug-store is, for I saw the sign over the
-door,” said Loren. “Let’s go down there and get a cigar, and trust to
-our wits to learn something about him.”
-
-The others agreeing to this proposition, Loren led the way to the
-drug-store, and the three stopped in front of the show-case near the
-door in which the cigars were kept.
-
-“That’s Prime, and I know it,” whispered Tom, as a dashing young fellow,
-who was seated at the further end of the store reading a paper, came up
-to attend to their wants. “He looks to me like a chap who isn’t in the
-habit of allowing himself to be imposed upon, and that’s the sort we
-want to run with.”
-
-“See-gahs? Yes, sir,” said the clerk. “Being from the city, you want the
-best, of course. There you are, sir. Genuine imported.”
-
-“How do you know that we are from the city?” inquired Loren, as he made
-a selection from the box that was placed on the show-case.
-
-“Because I was a city boy myself, until father took it into his head
-that he wanted to spend a summer at Mount Airy,” replied the clerk.
-“That was a bad move for me, for we have been here ever since. Besides,
-in a little place like this, every body knows more about your business
-than you do yourself. I know who you are, and where you came from, and
-all about it.”
-
-“Then it was a bad change for you, was it?” said Ralph. “You don’t like
-to live here? Neither do we.”
-
-“I don’t blame you,” said the clerk. “Wait until you get acquainted with
-some of these old-timers and find out what an exclusive lot they are,
-and you will dislike it worse than you do now. There are a few of them,
-especially the Toxophilites, as they call themselves, who try to
-monopolize all the fun there is going.”
-
-“Why don’t you join them?” asked Tom.
-
-“Because they won’t let me—that’s why.”
-
-“Then you must be George Prime.”
-
-“That’s my name, and you are Tom Bigden, and you two are Loren and Ralph
-Farnsworth.”
-
-“You’ve hit it,” answered Tom. “They wouldn’t take us in either. They
-told us so not more than an hour ago. Why didn’t you go to the party?”
-
-“Because they didn’t invite me,” said Prime, angrily. “I don’t get
-invitations to any thing any more. I showed rather too much spirit to
-suit them, and so they dropped me.”
-
-“Probably they will do the same by us,” said Loren. “We have always been
-in the habit of doing as we pleased, and we don’t intend to change our
-mode of life for the sake of getting into an archery club that makes its
-members drill until ten o’clock when they might see more fun in playing
-billiards. There will be some vacancies this fall, and then we shall
-make another attempt to get in.”
-
-“Is that what you have made up your minds to? Well, now, look here.” As
-Prime said this, he came out from behind the counter and stood in the
-open door, looking up and down the street. “You must begin by doing your
-smoking in secret,” he continued, as he came back and motioned to the
-boys to follow him toward the rear of the store.
-
-“Do you mean to say that the Toxophilites look with disfavor upon a good
-cigar?” demanded Tom.
-
-“I do, indeed. You mustn’t use tobacco in any form, and you must be
-temperate in all things—in eating, drinking and talking. They’ll fine
-you if you use any language while you are out with your companions, that
-you wouldn’t use if your mother or sister was present. Now sit down
-here, and if you see any body coming, you can put your cigars out of
-sight.”
-
-“But we don’t know all the members of the club,” said Loren.
-
-“No difference. Don’t let any one see you with a weed in your mouth. If
-you do, good-by to all your chances of being a Toxophilite.”
-
-“Why, it’s the meanest little town I ever heard of!” exclaimed Ralph,
-who was greatly surprised as well as disgusted. “I didn’t suppose that
-there were any such boys in this wicked world. I thought they all lived
-in Utopia.”
-
-“So did I, until I found some of them right here in Mount Airy,”
-answered Prime. “The girls are at the bottom of it—you know that they
-are never easy unless they are kicking up a row of some kind—and if I
-had been a member of the club when it was organized, wouldn’t I have
-worked hard to keep them out? I was very anxious to get into it once,
-but I don’t believe I care to be one of them now.”
-
-Tom and his cousins began to feel the same way.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER V.
-
- TOM INTERVIEWS THE SQUATTER.
-
-
-“I DON’T believe I care to be one of them now,” repeated Prime, who,
-being a pretty good judge of character, knew that he ran no risk in
-speaking freely in the presence of the three boys before him. “I wish I
-could see their old organization knocked higher than the moon; or else I
-wish that a few more new fellows of the right sort would come in, so
-that we could have a club of our own.”
-
-“I was about to suggest that very thing,” said Tom. “It can’t be
-possible that Wayring and his cronies have got every boy in town under
-their thumbs.”
-
-“Not by a long shot!” exclaimed Prime. “There are ten or a dozen besides
-myself who do not bow to them.”
-
-“And my cousins and I add three to the number,” replied Tom. “That’s
-enough for a hunting club. But we will talk about that at some future
-time. Do you belong to the other clubs?”
-
-Prime replied that he did, adding that any body could get into them, for
-there was no limit to the membership.
-
-“The canoe and yacht clubs are getting large enough to be unwieldy,”
-said he. “I know of a good many boys who are not satisfied with the way
-things are managed, and it wouldn’t surprise me at all if there should
-be a split some day. There are a few of us who are talking it up as fast
-as we can. We are getting tired of seeing the same old tickets elected
-every year, and think it high time we had a change.”
-
-“Is Wayring much of a canoeist?” asked Tom.
-
-“Indeed, he is. He can walk away from any one around here, I am sorry to
-say, and in fact, there’s hardly any thing that boy can’t do. I would
-give almost any thing to see him beaten, and I—say!” exclaimed Prime, a
-bright idea striking him. “Are you fellows canoeists?”
-
-“My cousins are; but I can’t say as much for myself,” answered Tom. “I
-have always been called a very fair sculler, and after I learn how to
-balance a canoe, I know I have muscle enough to make her get through the
-water. Hastings led me to believe that it was a tight squeak between
-Wayring, Sheldon and himself.”
-
-“Aw!” said Prime, in a tone of disgust. “You let Hastings alone for
-shoving in a good word for himself as often as the opportunity offers.
-He never won the first prize in his life. Joe Wayring walks away with it
-every time. Suppose you fellows come in and see if you can’t make Joe
-lower his broad pennant for a while. If you find that you can’t beat
-him—and, although I am no friend of his, I tell you plainly that it will
-be the hardest piece of work you ever undertook—you might get in his way
-and let him foul you, you know. I tried my level best to do it last
-year, but he was too smart for me.”
-
-By this time it was plain to all the boys that they understood one
-another perfectly. The truth of the matter was, that Joe Wayring and
-some of his particular friends had won too many honors, and made
-themselves altogether too popular in the community. These boys were
-angry about it, because they wanted to be first in every thing
-themselves. Tom Bigden and his cousins had fully intended to take Mount
-Airy by storm, and to establish themselves at once as leaders among
-their new acquaintances; and their failure to accomplish their object
-bewildered as well as enraged them. If they had known how to go about
-it, they would have disgraced Joe Wayring before he saw the sun rise
-again. So would George Prime. Of course they did not say it in so many
-words, but that was what each boy told himself.
-
-Before Tom and his cousins left the store they entered into an alliance
-with Prime, both offensive and defensive, and talked over various plans
-for annoying the boys who had unwittingly incurred their displeasure. If
-they could not injure Joe and his friends in any other way, they could
-put them to some trouble and expense, and this they resolved to do the
-very first good chance they got. They did not decide upon any particular
-course of action, but Prime said that if Tom and his cousins would come
-to the store the next day, he would introduce them to a lot of good
-fellows who did not like Joe and his “clique” any too well, and who
-would be glad to be revenged upon them for some real or imaginary
-grievance.
-
-“I see very clearly that there is a good deal of feeling against Wayring
-and his followers, and if we handle it rightly we can make it work to
-our advantage,” remarked Tom, as he and his cousins walked slowly
-homeward. “It is a wonder to me that something hasn’t been done to him
-before this time. What they lack is a leader—some one to propose a plan
-and go ahead with it.”
-
-“Well, they have found him at last—three of him,” said Loren. “I always
-was opposed to living in a little country town, because you invariably
-find fellows there who think they know more than any body else—”
-
-“And plenty of others who are willing to uphold them in that belief,”
-chimed in Ralph. “I say, don’t let’s have any thing to do with the
-Toxophilites. Let’s get up a club of our own and manage it as we see
-proper.”
-
-“I am in favor of that,” replied Tom. “We’ll have no fines and drills,
-for one thing, and neither will we admit any girls who stick up their
-noses at a good cigar. But there is one thing we must not forget to do
-when we meet those fellows at the store to-morrow. If we decide upon any
-thing, we must be careful how we carry it out. If we are foolish enough
-to let Joe and the rest know that we are down on them, and that we
-intend to do them all the injury we can, they will make things very
-unpleasant for us. We don’t want them to serve us as they have served
-Prime, and read us entirely out of their good books—”
-
-“And that is just what they will do if they see us in Prime’s company,”
-interrupted Loren. “Sheldon said so.”
-
-“There is no need that they should ever see us in his company,” replied
-Tom. “Our best plan would be to hold all our meetings in secret—”
-
-“And keep our organization, if we have any, a secret,” chimed in Ralph.
-
-“That’s the idea,” said Tom. “Then we can do as much damage as we please
-in the way of setting boats adrift, and so on, and Joe and his followers
-will be at loss to know where the annoyance comes from. We mustn’t
-forget to speak to the fellows about that to-morrow.”
-
-Unfortunately an incident happened that very afternoon which made it
-comparatively easy for the three schemers to carry out the plans they
-proposed. It was, in fact, a fight between a squatter and the Mount Airy
-authorities, to whom he had made himself obnoxious. Tom and his cousins
-were witnesses of the preliminary skirmish, that is, the serving of the
-notice of ejectment, and when they heard a full report of the matter
-from one of the boys to whom Prime introduced them, their delight was
-almost unbounded. Tom danced a horn-pipe in the excess of his joy, and
-repeatedly declared that nothing could have happened that was so well
-calculated to further their designs. It came about in this way:
-
-Mr. Wayring’s summer cottages were all located on the opposite shore of
-the lake. The road that led to them ran down the hill, around the foot
-of the lake, and through a little settlement which bore the euphonious
-name of “Stumptown.” Why this name had been given to it no one seemed to
-know. It certainly was not appropriate, for there was not a stump to be
-seen in any of its well-cultivated gardens, from which the Mount Airy
-and Lambert Houses drew their supplies of vegetables and small fruits.
-
-The male members of this little community were licensed guides and
-boatmen—the only ones, in fact, who had the right to serve the guests of
-the hotels in that capacity. They lived on Mr. Wayring’s land, and in
-neat little cottages which the liberal owner had erected for their
-especial benefit. When the season was over and the guests returned to
-their homes in the city, these men hunted and trapped in the mountains,
-and entertained the village boys, with whom they were great favorites,
-and who often invaded their humble abodes during the long winter
-evenings, with thrilling and amusing tales of life in the wilderness.
-They taught the boys woodcraft, and made themselves so useful in other
-ways, that the young Nimrods of the village had never been able to
-decide how they could manage to get on without them.
-
-Into this settlement there came one day an unkempt man, with a red nose
-and a very forbidding face, who brought with him a large punt, into
-which he had crowded all his worldly treasures, including his wife and
-two stalwart sons, not one of whom was one whit more prepossessing than
-the husband and father. Without saying a word to any body the red-nosed
-man, who answered to the name of Matt Coyle, took possession of a piece
-of ground that had been cleared but not fenced in, and began the
-erection of a shanty with boards which formed a part of the punt’s
-cargo. While he and his sons were at work Mr. Hastings, who was one of
-the village trustees, rode by. He did not at all like the appearance of
-the new-comers, but he had nothing to say to them. There was room for
-more guides and boatmen, and Matt and his family might turn out better
-than they looked. If they proved to be honest, industrious people who
-were willing to work for a living, Mr. Hastings was perfectly willing
-that they should stay, and he knew that Mr. Wayring would provide a
-house and garden for them. If they proved to be objectionable in any
-way, it would be an easy matter to get rid of them.
-
-Shortly after Mr. Hastings passed out of sight Matt Coyle wanted a
-drink; and he found it—not in the lake, or in the ice-cold spring from
-which the guides obtained their supply of water, but in a jug which he
-fished out from a lot of miscellaneous rubbish in the punt. After he had
-quenched his thirst he passed the jug over to his wife and boys, the
-whole proceeding being witnessed by Nat Clark, the oldest man and best
-guide and boatman in the settlement, who was getting his skiff ready to
-take out a fishing party from one of the hotels.
-
-“Look a yer, friend,” said Nat. “What you got into that there jug o’
-your’n?”
-
-“The best kind o’ whisky,” answered Matt Coyle, cheerfully. “An’ I’ve
-got as much as half a bar’l more in the punt. Want a drop?”
-
-“Not much,” replied Nat, emphatically. “An’ if you’re goin’ to stay
-about yer, you’d best knock in the head of that there bar’l an’ smash
-that there jug without wastin’ no time.”
-
-“What fur?” demanded the red-nosed man, who was very much surprised.
-
-“’Cause why, it’s agin the law fur stuff of that kind to be brung into
-these yer grounds.”
-
-“Who made that there law?”
-
-“The trustees. You’d best do as I tell you, ’cause if they find out that
-you’ve got it, they’ll spill the last drop of it fur you.”
-
-“They will, eh?” exclaimed Matt. “I’d like to see ’em try it on. They’d
-better not try to boss me, ’cause me an’ my boys have got rifles into
-the punt, an’ we know how to use ’em too. Them there trustees ain’t got
-no more right to say what I shall drink than they have to say what I
-shall eat. Besides, how are they goin’ to find out that I have got it?”
-
-“_I_ shan’t tell ’em, ’cause I’ve got enough to do without botherin’ my
-head with other folks’s business,” answered the guide, who knew by the
-tone in which they were uttered that there was a threat hidden under
-Matt Coyle’s last words. “But you can’t keep it hid from ’em, an’
-they’re bound to find it out.”
-
-And sure enough they did.
-
-Having built his shanty and moved his household goods into it, Matt
-Coyle and his boys presented themselves before the manager of the
-Lambert House and demanded employment as guides and boatmen. That
-functionary, who did not know that there were any such disreputable
-looking people in town, gazed at them in surprise, and told them rather
-bluntly that he had nothing for them to do. The manager of the Mount
-Airy House told them the same thing. The hotel guides were neat in
-person and respectful in demeanor, and Matt and his boys were just the
-reverse. The managers would not insult their guests by giving them boats
-manned by such persons as they were. Matt and his boys were angry, of
-course, and after wasting the best portion of the day grumbling over
-their hard luck, they put the jug into the punt and started out on a
-fishing excursion. They came back with a good string, but the hotels and
-boarding-houses refused to purchase, because their guests, with the
-assistance of the guides, kept the tables well supplied.
-
-Things went on in this way for a month, during which Matt and his boys
-had twice been thrust into the calaboose for attempting to “run the
-town” to suit themselves, and at the end of that time the trustees
-decided that he and his family were of no use in Mount Airy, and that
-they had better go somewhere else. On the day the lawn tennis party was
-held, a notice to Matt Coyle to pull down his shanty and vacate the
-ground of which he had taken unauthorized possession, was given to a
-constable, and Tom Bigden and his cousins happened along just as the
-officer had begun to read it to him. The boys knew that there was
-something going on in the settlement before they came within sight of
-it, for when the officer took the notice from his pocket the squatter
-declared that he would not have any papers served on him: and then
-followed a loud and angry altercation in which Matt Coyle and his
-family, the constable and half a dozen guides took part. Tom and his
-companions quickened their pace to a run, and arrived upon the scene
-just in time to hear the squatter say, in savage tones:
-
-“I know what’s into that there paper, an’ I tell you agin that I won’t
-listen to it. Some of them rich fellers up there on the hill want me to
-go away from here, but I tell you I won’t do it. I’ve got just as much
-right—”
-
-“Keep still, can’t you?” shouted the officer. He had to shout in order
-to make himself heard, for Matt Coyle’s voice was almost as loud as a
-fog whistle. “I am going to read this notice whether you listen or not.”
-
-“No, I won’t listen,” roared the squatter, swinging his arms around his
-head. “I’ve got just as much right on this here ’arth as them rich folks
-up on the hill have. Where shall I go if I leave here?”
-
-“I am sure I don’t care where you go,” replied the officer. “But you are
-not wanted in Mount Airy and you can’t stay.”
-
-“But I tell you I will stay, too,” shouted Matt, who was so nearly
-beside himself that Tom and his companions looked for nothing but to see
-him assault the officer. Probably he would have laid violent hands upon
-him had it not been for the presence of the stalwart guides, who stood
-close behind him. “I came here ’cause I heared that there was plenty
-that an honest, hard-workin’ man could do.”
-
-“And so there is,” answered the constable, “but you are neither honest
-nor hard-working.”
-
-“They wouldn’t have me an’ my boys fur guides, ’cause we didn’t have no
-fine clothes to wear,” continued Matt. “An’ nuther would they buy the
-fish we ketched, ’cause—look a yer. You needn’t try to read that there
-paper to me, ’cause I won’t listen to it, I tell you.”
-
-But the constable, who had grown tired of talking, paid no attention to
-him. He read the notice, raising his voice as often as the squatter
-raised his; then Matt’s boys, and finally his wife came to his
-assistance, and this started the guides, who flourished their fists in
-the air and shouted until they were red in the face. Among them all they
-raised a fearful hubbub, and, of course, the officer’s voice was
-entirely inaudible; but he read calmly on, and when he had finished the
-document he walked away, followed by the guides, and leaving the
-squatter and his family in a towering rage. Ralph and Loren were afraid
-of them now that the constable and his broad-shouldered backers were
-gone, but Tom looked serenely on, and could hardly resist the impulse to
-laugh outright when he saw Matt and his family stamping about, shaking
-their clenched hands in the air, and acting altogether as though they
-had taken leave of their senses.
-
-“Let’s get away from here,” whispered Loren, when Matt made a sudden and
-furious rush toward the shanty, and began trying to kick the side of it
-in with his heavy boots, just to show how mad he was, and to give his
-wife and boys some idea of the damage he would do if he only possessed
-the power.
-
-“What’s your hurry?” asked Tom, indifferently. “Can’t you see how we can
-turn this to our advantage?”
-
-“I can see that those people are in a terrible rage,” replied Loren, who
-was really alarmed, “and I am afraid they will turn on us next.”
-
-“There’s no danger of that,” answered Tom, confidently. “When men rant
-and rave in that way they are not to be feared for any thing they may do
-openly. They are the ones who work in secret.”
-
-At this moment Matt Coyle became aware that he and his family were not
-alone—that there were three interested spectators close at hand; and as
-if to show Tom that he was mistaken in the opinions to which he had just
-given expression, Matt rushed toward him as if he meant to annihilate
-him, followed by all the members of his family, who shook their fists
-and shouted as if they were very angry indeed. Ralph and Loren shrank
-back, but Tom, who was nobody’s coward, stood his ground, looked
-squarely into Matt’s eyes, and coolly put his hands into his pockets.
-
-“What you standin’ here gapin’ at?” demanded the squatter, fiercely. He
-had drawn back his fist with the full intention of striking Tom; but
-when he saw that the boy did not appear to be at all afraid of him, he
-thought better of it.
-
-“Why do you come at us in that savage way?” demanded Tom. “We don’t
-scare worth a cent. If you want to get even with any one for the
-shameful manner in which you have been treated, there’s the man you must
-go for,” he added, pointing toward the grove which concealed Mr.
-Wayring’s house from view. “He is entirely to blame for all the trouble
-you have had. Your cabin is on his land, and the trustees never would
-have thought of ordering you off if he had not complained of you.”
-
-Matt and his family were greatly astonished. They thought that every one
-in town looked down on them because they were poor, but here was
-somebody who sympathized with them. Tom, quick to see that he had made
-an impression upon the angry squatter, went on to say—
-
-“If the people of this village should treat me as they have treated you,
-it would make a regular Ishmaelite of me.”
-
-“What sort of a feller is that?” asked Matt.
-
-“Why, Ishmael was a hunter who lived a good many years ago,” answered
-Tom. “His hand was against every man, and every man’s hand was against
-him. He didn’t have a friend in the world.”
-
-“That’s me,” exclaimed Matt, who seemed pleased to know that there was,
-or had been, at least one other man in existence who knew what trouble
-was. “I ain’t got no friends nuther. These rich folks have tried to
-starve me since I came here, but they didn’t do it—not by a long shot.”
-
-“Now, if I were situated as you are,” continued Tom, “I would draw a
-bee-line for Sherwin’s pond—”
-
-“Where’s that?” inquired Matt.
-
-“It lies off that way, fifteen miles from the head of this lake,”
-replied Tom, indicating the direction with his finger, and wondering at
-the same time how Matt could have expected to render acceptable service
-as guide to the guests of the hotels, when he was not acquainted with
-the surrounding country. “There are about twelve miles of rapids in the
-stream that connects the lake with Sherwin’s pond, but your punt will go
-through easy enough if you can keep her clear of the rocks. As I was
-saying, I would go down there, put up my cabin and live in peace. I’d
-make more money, too, than I could by acting as guide and boatman.”
-
-“How would you do it?” asked the squatter, whose anger was all gone now.
-
-“Simply by keeping my eyes open. You see those sail-boats anchored out
-there? Well, if one of them should happen to get adrift some stormy
-night, and come safely through the rapids into the pond and I should
-catch it, I wouldn’t give it up until I got a big reward for saving it,
-would I? Then again, the pointers, setters and hounds that hunt in these
-fields and woods very often get lost, and their owners are willing to
-give almost any price to get them back. I tell you,” exclaimed Tom, who
-knew by the gleam of intelligence that appeared on the swarthy faces
-before him that Matt and his family understood him perfectly, “I could
-make plenty of money by taking up my abode down there on the shore of
-that pond. If the things I have been talking about didn’t happen of
-themselves, I’d _make_ them happen—do you see? Well, good-by, and
-remember that we three boys had no hand in driving you out of Mount
-Airy.”
-
-So saying Tom walked off followed by his companions, while Matt and his
-family faced about and went toward their shanty.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VI.
-
- TOM’S PLANS ARE UPSET.
-
-
-FOR a while the three boys walked along in silence, Loren and Ralph
-being too amazed to speak, and Tom pluming himself on having done
-something that would, in the end, bring Joe Wayring and some of the
-other boys he disliked no end of trouble. The fact that it might bring
-trouble to himself as well, never once entered his mind. Ralph was the
-first to speak.
-
-“I wouldn’t have had that thing happen for any thing,” said he.
-
-“What thing?” demanded Tom.
-
-“Why, that interview with the squatter. I could see, by the expression
-on his face, that you put the very mischief into his head.”
-
-“And that was just what I meant to do,” replied Tom, who laughed
-heartily when he saw how troubled his cousins were over what he had said
-to Matt Coyle. “I saw he was thick-headed and needed help, and so I gave
-it to him.”
-
-“But don’t you know that it is dangerous to trust a man like that? If he
-gets into trouble through the suggestions you made to him—and he will
-just as surely as he attempts to act upon them—he’ll blow the whole
-thing.”
-
-“What in the world has he got to blow, and how have I trusted him?”
-asked Tom, rather sharply. “I didn’t tell him to turn the sail-boats
-adrift or to steal the guests’ hunting-dogs, did I? I simply told him
-what I should do if I were in his place.”
-
-“But you intended it for a suggestion, and hoped he would act upon it,
-didn’t you?”
-
-“Well, _that’s_ a different matter,” answered Tom. “If he tries to
-revenge himself upon the citizens of Mount Airy for refusing to employ
-him or to buy his fish, and his efforts in that direction bring him into
-trouble, it will be his own fault. You and I want to see some of these
-conceited fellows, who think they know more and are better than any body
-else, brought down a peg or two, and if that squatter is accommodating
-enough to do the work for us—why, I say let him do it.”
-
-Tom continued to talk in this way for a long time, and to such good
-purpose that when they reached home his cousins had forgotten their
-fears, and even expressed much interest and curiosity regarding the
-course of action that Matt Coyle might see fit to pursue. If he followed
-Tom’s suggestion and built his shanty on the shore of Sherwin’s pond,
-they might expect to hear from him before many days more had passed
-away.
-
-“I hope that if Matt does take it into his head to do any thing, he’ll
-run off Wayring’s sail-boat,” said Loren, gazing proudly at his own
-beautiful little sloop, which rode at her moorings in front of the
-boat-house. He had brought her up there on purpose to beat the _Young
-Republic_, which was said to be one of the swiftest boats on the lake;
-but the first time they came together under sail, the _Republic_ had run
-away from her would-be rival with all ease, and it began to look as
-though the “Challenge Cup” would become Joe’s own property. He had won
-it twice, and if he won it again it would be his to keep. There were
-those in the village who didn’t want to see him get it. They had
-expected great things of the _Uncle Sam_—that was the name of Loren’s
-boat—and indeed she did look like a “flyer”; but when they witnessed the
-short race, which Joe Wayring purposely brought about one afternoon to
-test the _Uncle Sam’s_ speed, they were much disappointed, and told one
-another that the cup was Joe’s for a certainty.
-
-“If Matt will only take that boat, I’ll win the next regatta,” continued
-Loren. “If he does take her, Joe will never see her again, for she will
-be smashed to pieces in the rapids.”
-
-“If I could have my way, I should prefer to have Matt run off Joe’s Rob
-Roy, for then you and Ralph would stand a chance of winning some of the
-canoe races,” observed Tom. “But, of course, he couldn’t steal the canoe
-without breaking into the boat-house, and that would send him up for
-burglary.”
-
-“Oh, no; he won’t do that,” exclaimed Loren.
-
-Tom made no audible reply, but to himself he said:
-
-“I don’t suppose he will; but _I_ might do it, and let Joe and the rest
-blame Matt Coyle for it.”
-
-There were still several hours of daylight left, and for want of some
-better way of passing the time, as well as to put themselves in trim for
-the coming canoe meet, Tom and his cousins decided that they would spend
-the rest of the afternoon on the water. Ever since their canoes came
-into their possession they had been assiduously practicing with their
-double paddles, and Tom, who was quick to learn any thing that required
-strength and skill for its execution, was fast becoming an expert
-canoeist. In a hurry-scurry or portage race he could beat either of his
-cousins, and on this particular afternoon he wanted to try an upset
-race, of which he had that day heard for the first time.
-
-“I saw an upset race rowed, or rather paddled, during the meet of the
-American Canoe Association at Lake George last summer, and I wonder that
-I didn’t think to speak of it,” said Ralph. “Well, better late than
-never. We will go up to the head of the lake, where no one will be
-likely to see us, and make our first trial. We are all good swimmers,
-and it seems to me that we ought to make good time. The secret lies in
-getting back into our canoes after we have upset them. If we can learn
-to do that easily and quickly, we will stand a chance of putting Joe
-Wayring to his mettle, even if we don’t beat him in the race.”
-
-The boys went into the boat-house by a side door, and about ten minutes
-afterward the front door swung open, and two Shadow canoes and one Rob
-Roy were pushed into the water, and as many young fellows, dressed in
-light gymnastic suits, sprang into them and paddled up the lake. They
-met a few sailing parties, who waved their handkerchiefs and hats to
-them as they shot by, and at the end of half an hour reached a wide and
-deep cove near the head of the lake. This was their practice ground.
-They had chosen it for that purpose because it was a retired spot, and
-so effectually concealed by the long, wooded point at the entrance, that
-a fleet of boats might have sailed by without knowing that there was any
-one in the cove.
-
-“We’ll start from this side and go across and back, as we have done
-heretofore,” said Ralph, who led the way in his Rob Roy. “We’ll upset
-twice—once while we are going, and once while we are coming.”
-
-“But how does a fellow get into his canoe after he gets out of it?”
-inquired Tom.
-
-“The rule is to climb in over the stern and work your way to your seat,”
-replied Ralph. “But at Lake George I saw some of the contestants throw
-themselves across the cock-pit and get in that way. We’ll try both
-plans, and each fellow can adopt the one that suits him best.”
-
-When the boys had taken up their positions at safe distances from one
-another, Ralph gave a shrill whistle and away they started, the light
-Rob Roy taking the lead with Tom close behind. A few minutes’ work with
-the double paddles brought them to the middle of the cove, and then
-Ralph uttered another whistle. An instant later the three canoeists were
-in the water. The Rob Roy turned completely over and came right side up
-in a twinkling; and at the same moment Ralph’s head bobbed up close
-alongside. He threw himself across the cock-pit and climbed in with the
-greatest ease; and while bailing out the water with a tin basin that was
-tied to one of the timbers of the canoe so that it could not float away
-or fill and sink, he looked complacently at his companions, who were
-making desperate efforts to regain their seats by climbing over the
-sterns of their respective crafts.
-
-“Grab hold of the side of your canoe, draw yourself as far as you can
-out of the water, turn a hand-spring and land on your feet in the
-cock-pit,” shouted Ralph, addressing himself to no one in particular. “I
-saw that done at Lake George last summer by two or three different men.”
-
-“Suppose you do it yourself and show us how,” answered Tom, who having
-at last succeeded in gaining the deck, was slowly working his way toward
-his seat; but instead of sitting astride of his canoe, as he ought to
-have done, he tried to make headway on his hands and knees in order to
-beat Loren, who was making all haste to reach the cock-pit of his own
-craft. In his eagerness Tom forgot how cranky his canoe was, and,
-neglecting to trim her properly, she turned over and let him down into
-the water again.
-
-Ralph, of course, could have won the race very easily, but he lingered
-to watch the others, so that they all reached the turning point at the
-same moment. On the home stretch another upset occurred, and this time
-Tom and Loren did not waste as many minutes in getting back as they did
-before. They learned rapidly, and when half a dozen more races had been
-tried they became so expert that Ralph had little the advantage of them.
-By this time they began to think they had had enough of the water for
-one afternoon, so they pulled away for the boat house, Tom easily
-distancing his cousins, who tried in vain to keep up with him.
-
-“This afternoon’s work has opened my eyes to a thing or two,” said
-Ralph, after they had changed their clothes and sponged out their
-canoes.
-
-“So it has mine,” exclaimed Tom. “Let me talk first, and see how far my
-conclusions agree with yours. In the first place, you ought to win the
-upset race.”
-
-“That’s my opinion,” said Loren. “He shall win it, too, if strategy is
-of any use.”
-
-“You are no sooner out of your canoe than you are back into it again,”
-continued Tom. “I am sure that neither Wayring, Hastings nor Sheldon can
-do better than that. I only wish you had a little more muscle.”
-
-“But I haven’t got it and can’t get it between this time and the race,
-and so you fellows will have to help me.”
-
-“Trust us for that,” answered Tom. “Then we’ll turn to and foul the best
-contestant in the hurry-scurry race, so that Loren can win that; and if
-you will lend me your Rob Roy, I’ll take my chances on carrying off the
-honors in the portage race.”
-
-“That is just the way I had planned it,” exclaimed Ralph. “We’ll show
-these fellows who think themselves so smart, that there are others in
-the world who are quite as smart as they are.”
-
-It was a very pretty programme, no doubt, but it never occurred to Tom
-and his cousins that possibly the boys to whom Prime was to introduce
-them the next day, might not think favorably of it. There were those
-among them who had never been first in any race, although they were very
-expert canoeists; and it was not at all likely that they would consent
-to see these new-comers carry off the prizes for which they had
-contended ever since the club was organized.
-
-Tom and his cousins were tired enough to rest now, and they found it
-lounging in their hammocks under the trees, and watching the boats that
-passed up and down the lake. They took another short run in their canoes
-by moonlight, spent the next forenoon sailing about in Loren’s sloop,
-and at one o’clock bent their steps toward the store where they were to
-meet George Prime and his friends. When they arrived at the place where
-Matt Coyle’s shanty stood the day before, they were surprised as well as
-delighted to find that it wasn’t there.
-
-“He’s gone, as sure as the world,” cried Ralph. “Now we shall very soon
-know whether or not he has the pluck to do any thing to the men who
-would not give him a chance to earn an honest living.”
-
-Tom laughed loudly.
-
-“Did you really think I was in earnest when I told Matt yesterday that I
-thought he had been shamefully treated?” said he, as soon as he could
-speak. “Why, Ralph, I thought you had more sense. I said that just to
-make him mad. If I succeeded, he will do the work that we would
-otherwise have been obliged to do ourselves.”
-
-When they reached the drug-store they found Prime waiting for them.
-After he had treated them to a cigar apiece, he led them through a rear
-door into a store-room, where they discovered a dozen or more fellows
-perched upon boxes and barrels, each one puffing vigorously at a cigar
-or pipe. They were engaged in a very earnest conversation which they
-brought to a sudden close when the door opened.
-
-“Here they are,” exclaimed Prime, as the boys arose to their feet and
-took their pipes and cigars out of their mouths. “Tom Bigden, and his
-cousins Ralph and Loren Farnsworth, gentlemen. I believe you have met
-some of my friends before at lawn parties, ball matches and the like,”
-added Prime, addressing himself to the new-comers.
-
-“I had the good fortune to meet them yesterday at Miss Arden’s,” said
-one of the boys, Frank Noble by name, advancing and shaking Tom and his
-cousins by the hand. “And I also had the pleasure of putting them to
-their speed one day last week, when I happened to catch them out on the
-lake with their canoes. You ought to make a good one,” he added, turning
-to Tom. “I could see by the way you made that Shadow spin through the
-water that you’ve got the muscle. All you want is practice. If you keep
-it up, you can go in next year with some hope of winning.”
-
-Tom was somewhat disconcerted by these words, and so were Ralph and
-Loren, if one might judge by the blank look on their faces. It was clear
-to them that there were others besides themselves who wanted prizes, and
-who looked to their friends to assist them in winning those prizes.
-
-“I thank you for your compliment and for your words of encouragement,”
-replied Tom, concealing his disappointment as well as he could, and
-turning to shake hands with another boy he had met at the lawn party on
-the previous day, “but I am going to win the portage race this year.”
-
-“And if I don’t come in first in the paddle race, it will not be because
-I do not try my level best,” added Loren.
-
-“And I’m going to give somebody a pull for the upset race,” chimed in
-Ralph.
-
-It was now Noble’s turn to be astonished. He looked inquiringly at
-Prime, and Prime looked at Tom and his cousins. The latter saw very
-plainly that while they were laying their plans they had interfered with
-arrangements that had already been made by the boys by whom they were
-surrounded, but they were none the less determined to have their own way
-in the matter. Tom, who could hardly conceal the rage that had taken
-possession of him, resolved then and there that he would stick to his
-programme, no matter what promises he might be obliged to make to the
-contrary. He was like an Indian, in one respect: When he wanted a thing
-he wanted it with his whole heart, and he wanted it immediately. He
-wanted a prize to show to his city friends when they came to visit him,
-and he wanted the honors that prize would bring him.
-
-“Well—yes,” said Prime, who knew that Noble and the rest expected him to
-say something. “We’d like to have you win under different circumstances,
-but as it is, I think—you see—look here; I suppose you are with us
-against Wayring and the other fellows who have been walking off with the
-prizes every year since the club had an existence!”
-
-“Certainly I am,” answered Tom. “We all are, and we’re going to do the
-best we can to beat them, too. Didn’t you tell us no longer ago than
-yesterday that you wished we would come into the club and make Joe
-Wayring lower his broad pennant for a while?” he added, turning to
-Prime.
-
-“I did; but I have had opportunity to talk the matter over with my
-friends since then, and we have decided that those who have worked so
-long and so hard for the prizes, ought to have them in preference to any
-new-comers.”
-
-“All right,” said Tom, silencing by a look the words of indignant
-protest that arose to Ralph’s lips and Loren’s. “Who comes in for the
-paddle race?”
-
-“I do,” said Noble.
-
-“And who is put down for the upset race?” continued Tom.
-
-Bob Lord said that he was; and a young fellow named Scott volunteered
-the information that his friends had decided that he ought to be allowed
-to win the portage race, because he came so near winning it fairly the
-year before.
-
-“Then it seems that my cousins and I are to be left out in the cold,”
-observed Tom, who was mad enough to break things.
-
-“By no means,” some of the boys hastened to explain. “There are some
-handsome prizes offered for the sailing races, and we intend that you
-shall win them if we can make you do it.”
-
-“Don’t want ’em,” said Tom, gruffly. “Couldn’t enter for them if we
-did.”
-
-“Why not?”
-
-“Because we bought our canoes for exploring purposes, and not for
-sailing. We received such contradictory advice from those to whom we
-applied for information, that it was all we could do to make up our
-minds what kind of canoes to get; and when it came to the sails, we
-thought we would let them go until we could decide upon the style of rig
-we needed without asking any one’s advice. We may make up our minds that
-we don’t want any sails at all.”
-
-“Oh, you mustn’t do that,” exclaimed Noble, “for if you do you will lose
-half the sport of canoeing. By the way, the club meets Saturday evening,
-and if you say so, I will take in your names.”
-
-“I am obliged to you,” replied Tom. “But we had about half agreed with
-Wayring and Hastings to propose us for membership.”
-
-Ralph and Loren were greatly astonished, and Prime and his friends saw
-that they were.
-
-“I am sorry you did that,” said Noble. “Every one of us here present has
-pledged himself not to vote for any thing brought forward by Wayring and
-his crowd.”
-
-“I did it before I knew what sort of boys they were,” said Tom,
-apologetically, “and I don’t like to go back from my word. Are you going
-to black-ball us for it?”
-
-“By no means,” exclaimed all the boys, in a breath.
-
-“We want you to help us carry out our programme,” added George Prime.
-
-“Well, all the help you will get from me won’t amount to much, you may
-be sure of that,” said Tom, to himself; and his cousins were so well
-acquainted with him that they could tell pretty nearly what he was
-thinking about.
-
-“Have you spoken to Wayring about proposing you for the yacht club?”
-asked Scott.
-
-Tom, with unblushing mendacity, replied that he had.
-
-“I don’t believe the regatta will amount to much this year,” remarked
-one of the boys who had not spoken before. “If Matt Coyle carries out
-the threats he made yesterday, there won’t be any yachts to contend for
-the prizes. You heard about that, I suppose?” he added, turning to Tom
-and his cousins.
-
-“We were present when a legal process of some kind was served on him
-yesterday, and we heard Matt say that he wouldn’t go away,” answered
-Loren. “But when we came around the foot of the lake a little while ago,
-we found that he had cleared out, taking his shanty with him.”
-
-“You saw the constable serve him with a notice to quit, did you!”
-exclaimed Noble. “Well, you missed the best part of it. You ought to
-have been there about three hours later, and witnessed the fight that
-took place between Matt and his family, and the officer and his posse.
-The old woman proved herself to be the best man in the lot. Matt
-evidently knew that an effort would be made to eject him by force, and
-his wife prepared for it by boiling a big kettle of water. When the
-constable, with a crowd of guides at his back, presented himself at the
-door, she opened on him with that hot water; and if you could have seen
-the stampede that followed, you would have laughed until your sides
-ached, as I did.”
-
-“You didn’t laugh much when it happened,” Prime remarked. “I was there,
-and I know there wasn’t a man or boy in the party who showed a neater
-pair of heels than one Frank Noble.”
-
-When the burst of merriment that followed these words, and in which
-Frank joined as heartily as any of his companions, had somewhat
-subsided, the narrator continued:
-
-“I am free to confess that I didn’t see any thing funny in the way the
-old woman jammed that long-handled dipper into the kettle and sent its
-boiling contents flying toward us, but it was very amusing after it was
-all over, and I woke up in the night and laughed about it. Of course the
-defiant squatters were over-powered after a while, but not until Matt
-and both his boys had been knocked flat, and one of the guides had
-disarmed the old woman by running in and kicking over her kettle of
-water. The officer was determined to arrest the last one of them for
-resisting his authority; but Mr. Hastings, who happened along just then,
-and who thought that neighbors so undesirable could not be got rid of
-any too quick, told the constable to chuck the squatter and all his
-belongings into the punt and shove them out into the lake, after giving
-them fair warning that they would be sent up as vagrants if they stopped
-this side of Sherwin’s pond.”
-
-“Did he do it?” asked Ralph.
-
-“Of course he did. But before Matt put his oars into the water he made
-us a speech containing threats which I, for one, hope he will have the
-courage to carry out.”
-
-Here Noble stopped to light his cigar which had gone out while he was
-talking.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VII.
-
- A DOG WITH A HISTORY.
-
-
-“YOU don’t want to say that out loud, Frank,” observed Scott.
-
-“Say what out loud?” demanded Noble, after he had taken a few long pulls
-at his cigar to make sure that it was going again.
-
-“That you hope Matt Coyle will have the courage to carry out the threats
-he made yesterday.”
-
-“Of course not. But I can express my honest sentiments here, for we are
-all friends, I take it. Matt’s speech was a short one,” said Noble, once
-more addressing himself to Tom Bigden and his cousins, “but it was to
-the point. ‘You see all them there sail-boats ridin’ at anchor, an’ all
-them fine houses up there on the hill?’ said Matt. ‘Wal, the boats’ll
-sink if there’s holes knocked into ’em, an’ the houses’ll burn if
-there’s a match set to ’em, I reckon. Good-by till you hear from me
-agin.’ He hasn’t got a very handsome face at any time, Matt hasn’t, and
-his intense rage, and the black and blue lump as big as a hen’s egg,
-which had been raised on one of his cheeks by a whack from a guide’s
-fist, made him look like a savage in his war-paint. He was in dead
-earnest when he uttered the words, and if the Mount Airy boys, and men
-too, who have incurred his enmity don’t hear from him again, I shall be
-surprised.”
-
-“And disappointed as well,” added Prime.
-
-“I didn’t say that,” replied Noble.
-
-“Of course you didn’t. Nobody said it, but I think we understand one
-another.”
-
-Ralph and Loren looked frightened, while Tom drew admiring applause from
-the boys and gave expression to his feelings at the same time by dancing
-a few steps of a hornpipe.
-
-“Well, we must be off,” said he, suddenly. “Another engagement, you
-know.”
-
-“What’s your hurry,” exclaimed Prime. “Stay and smoke another cigar.”
-
-“Can’t,” replied Tom, turning a significant look upon Loren and Ralph,
-who wondered what new idea he had got into his head. “We’ll go and see
-Wayring according to promise, and then start for home.”
-
-“But we haven’t said a word about organizing that new archery club,”
-interposed Noble. “Prime told us that you three fellows were strongly in
-favor of it.”
-
-“So we are,” was Tom’s reply; “and some day, when we have plenty of
-leisure, we’ll talk it over. We are happy to have met you, and will now
-say good-by until we see you again.”
-
-So saying, Tom bowed himself out of the store-room followed by his
-cousins, who could hardly hold their tongues until they reached the
-street, so impatient were they to know what he was going to do now. They
-were certain of one thing, and that was, that Tom did not think as much
-of George Prime and his friends as he thought he was going to.
-
-“I am disgusted,” declared Loren, as soon as they were safely out of
-hearing.
-
-“Not with me, I hope,” said his cousin.
-
-“Yes, with you and with the fellows we have just left.”
-
-Tom thrust his hands deep into his pockets, looked up at the clouds and
-laughed heartily.
-
-“I expected it,” said he; then he stopped laughing and scowled fiercely.
-His merriment was forced, and he was as angry as he ever got to be.
-
-“Are you willing that Prime and his crowd should lay out a programme for
-the races without saying a word to us about it?” demanded Ralph, who
-forgot that that was just the way in which he and his two companions had
-treated Prime.
-
-“And did you really ask Wayring to propose our names at the club’s next
-meeting?” chimed in Loren.
-
-“No, to both your questions,” replied Tom, emphatically. “They must be a
-bright set of boys if they think we are going to let them rule us. Why,
-that was the reason we decided that we did not want any thing to do with
-Wayring and his followers. But I have thought better of that resolution,
-and I’m going to make friends with Joe if I can.”
-
-“And cut Prime and the rest?” exclaimed Ralph.
-
-“Not directly. Look here,” said Tom, suddenly stopping in the middle of
-the sidewalk and facing his cousins. “We’ve got our choice between two
-cliques, both of which have showed a disposition to make us do as they
-say. Now which one shall we take up with? I prefer Joe’s. He and his
-friends are in the majority, and they are not one bit more overbearing
-than Prime and _his_ friends. Besides, they will let us win a race if we
-can do it fairly, but the crowd we have just left want all the honors
-themselves.”
-
-“If you try to carry water on both shoulders you will be sure to spill
-some of it,” observed Loren.
-
-“I’ll risk that,” replied Tom, confidently. “I didn’t ask Joe to take
-our names in to the club, but I’m going to before I am ten minutes
-older.”
-
-“Why didn’t you ask Prime or Noble to take them in?” inquired Ralph.
-
-“Because I didn’t want Joe to know that we had become intimate enough
-with those two boys to ask favors of them. Now, then, here we are. You
-know Joe invited us to call as often as we could, so we are sure of a
-welcome if he is at home. Stand ready to back me, if you think
-circumstances require it, but don’t be surprised at any thing I say.”
-
-As Tom uttered these words he opened one of the wide gates that gave
-entrance into Mr. Wayring’s grounds, and the three walked up the
-carriage way toward the house, until their progress was stopped by the
-sudden appearance of one of Joe’s pets—a Newfoundland dog, which came
-out from among the evergreens and stood in their path. He was a
-noble-looking fellow, and although he was gray with age, the attitude of
-defiance he assumed seemed to say that he considered himself quite as
-able to keep intruders off those premises as he had been during his
-younger days.
-
-“Come on,” shouted a familiar voice. “Mars won’t trouble you. He don’t
-like tramps,” added Joe Wayring, leaning his double paddle against the
-side of the house, and coming forward to greet his visitors. “But
-fellows like you could go all over the place; and so long as you did not
-pick up any thing, Mars would not say a word to you. How are you, any
-way; and where are you going on foot? Why didn’t you come over in your
-canoes, so that we could have a little race all by ourselves? Come on.
-Sheldon and Hastings are down to the boat-house waiting for me.”
-
-“We came over to ask a favor of you,” replied Tom, as soon as Joe gave
-him a chance to speak. “Would you mind taking in our names at the next
-meeting of the canoe club?”
-
-“On the contrary, I shall be pleased to do it,” answered Joe, readily.
-“You have been pretty sly since your canoes came to hand, but we know
-more about you than you think we do,” he added, as he led the way
-through the carriage-porch and down the terraced bank toward the
-boat-house.
-
-“I don’t quite understand you,” said Tom.
-
-“I mean that we have watched you while you were taking your morning and
-evening spins up and down the lake, and we have come to the conclusion
-that some of us are going to get beaten. I’ll say this much for you,
-Bigden: I never saw a Shadow canoe get through the water, until I saw
-yours going down the lake yesterday afternoon.”
-
-“Thank you,” said Tom. “Do you know who are booked for winners this
-year?”
-
-“Booked!” repeated Joe. “There’s nobody booked. The best men will win,
-as they always have done.”
-
-“I am afraid you are mistaken.”
-
-“Oh, no; I guess not. We don’t have any jockeying here, and if any
-member of the club should so far forget himself as to interfere with one
-of the contestants, he would never row another race on this lake.”
-
-“I know some boys who are going to take their chances on it,” said Tom,
-quietly.
-
-“On fouling the head man so that somebody else can win?” cried Joe.
-
-“That’s just what I mean.”
-
-Joe could hardly believe his ears, and neither could Loren and Ralph
-believe theirs. This, then, was what Tom meant when he cautioned them
-against being surprised at any thing he might say! They _were_
-surprised—they couldn’t help it; and in order that Joe might not see
-their faces they fell behind, and allowed him and Tom to go on ahead.
-
-“You know boys who are going to try to win by foul means!” repeated Joe.
-“I didn’t suppose that there was any one in the club who would be so
-mean. It is true that last year a certain canoeist persisted in keeping
-as close to me as he could, and drove the bow of his craft toward the
-stern of my own as often as he got the chance; but I thought it was
-accident, while some of my friends on shore declared that it was his
-intention to run into me, and claim the race because I got in his way.
-But, as luck would have it, I was able to paddle fast enough to keep out
-of his road. It seems to me that if I couldn’t win a prize fairly, I
-shouldn’t want to win it at all.”
-
-“I know who that fellow was,” said Tom, “and I know, also, that he tried
-his very best to foul you. It was Prime. I heard all about it.”
-
-Tom and his cousins supposed that Joe’s next question would be: Who told
-you about this plot, and what are the names of the boys who are “booked”
-to win by fair means or foul? But greatly to their surprise Joe
-propounded no such inquiry. The latter knew very well that if some one
-had not reposed confidence in him, Tom never would have heard of any
-plot; and Joe was too much of a gentleman to ask him to violate that
-confidence. He wanted to turn the conversation into another channel, and
-so he began talking about Mars, who was walking along the path before
-them.
-
-“That fellow is the only foreigner in the party,” said Joe. “He was born
-and received the rudiments of his education on the bleak shores of
-Newfoundland.”
-
-“Then how did you come to get hold of him?” inquired Tom.
-
-“I was up there two winters ago with my uncle, hunting caribou.”
-
-“What sort of an animal is that?” asked Tom. He spoke before he thought,
-and was provoked at himself for it. He did not want to be constantly
-asking information of a boy who never came to him for any. As Tom would
-have expressed it: “He didn’t care to make Joe and his friends any more
-conceited than they were already.” Joe, however, was not at all
-conceited; but if Tom Bigden had known as much as he did, and been as
-expert in all sorts of athletic sports, he would have thought himself
-too grand to associate with common fellows.
-
-“The caribou is the American reindeer, but it is not broken to harness
-like the European animal of the same species,” replied Joe. “It is
-hunted as game, and Nova Scotia, New Brunswick and Newfoundland are the
-best places to go to find it. Uncle Joe went up there two years ago,
-taking Hastings, Sheldon and myself with him. We went in a little
-fishing schooner that was bound from Gloucester to the Bay of Fundy for
-swordfish.”
-
-Tom would have been glad to know where the Bay of Fundy was, and what
-the schooner’s crew intended to do with the swordfish after they caught
-them, but his pride would not let him ask. The sequel proved that it was
-not necessary, for Joe went on to explain.
-
-“The Bay of Fundy runs up between New Brunswick and Nova Scotia, as you
-of course know as well as I do, and the fish are used for food. When
-they are put on the market they are sliced up like halibut. They are
-caught with harpoons. They are ugly, I tell you, and when one of them
-weighing four hundred pounds comes flopping over the rail and begins to
-swing that sword of his around like lightning, you may be sure that he
-gets all the room he wants.”
-
-“What do you do with the swords after they are taken off?”
-
-“Keep them as curiosities or sell them, just as you please. There is
-great demand for them. I have one that I should not like to part with.
-It belonged to a two hundred pounder. The sailors thought they had
-killed him before they hauled him aboard; but he gave one expiring flop
-after he reached the deck, and the point of his sword cut a big hole in
-the leg of my trowsers. If I had been a little closer to him, he might
-have injured me very badly. If a man had his only weapon of offense and
-defense made fast to his nose, he wouldn’t do much with it, would he?
-But it just suits the swordfish, which, according to Captain Davis,
-delivers his blows so rapidly that he will kill half a dozen out of a
-school of albicore before they can get out of his reach.”
-
-“But what has all this got to do with Mars?” inquired Tom.
-
-“I came pretty near forgetting about him, didn’t I?” said Joe, with a
-laugh. “Well, we went back to Gloucester with Captain Davis, who, as
-soon as he had disposed of his swordfish, fitted out for the banks—for
-codfish, you know—and went with him. He was to land us at some little
-fishing hamlet, whose name I have forgotten, where we were to obtain
-guides and go back into the interior after caribou; but he managed to
-run the schooner ashore in a thick fog, and there we stuck until Mars
-brought off a line to us. That was all that saved us. The sailors hauled
-in on it, and finally brought aboard a larger and stronger line to which
-a hawser was made fast. We took a turn with that around the capstan, and
-after a good deal of hard work, succeeded in pulling the schooner over
-the bar into deeper water nearer the shore. We got off just in the nick
-of time, too; for that night a storm came up, and raised a sea that
-would have made short work with us if we had been exposed to its fury.”
-
-“Were there men on shore opposite the place you struck?” inquired Tom.
-
-“Certainly. If there hadn’t been, who would have tied the line to the
-dog’s collar and told him to take it out to us?”
-
-“I should think they would have gone to your assistance in their boats,”
-replied Tom.
-
-“So they would, under ordinary circumstances; but no boat that was ever
-built could have lived a moment in the surf that was breaking over the
-bar when we ran on to it. I don’t understand to this day how Mars
-managed to get through it. I have seen him swim a good many times since
-that day, and in smooth water he doesn’t seem to be any better than any
-other dog. It is when the wind is blowing and the white caps are running
-that he shows what he can do. Uncle Joe was so well pleased with the
-dog’s performance that as soon as he could find his owner, he offered to
-buy him. Of course the man didn’t want to sell, but he was poor, and
-when he thought of the comforts that the hundred dollars which uncle
-counted out before him would buy for his wife and children, he came to
-the conclusion that we could have the dog. He’s mine now, for Uncle Joe
-gave him to me as soon as the bargain was struck.”
-
-“Did you get any caribou?”
-
-“Plenty of them, and, would you believe it? we had to take along a
-supply of food for that dog the same as we did for ourselves. He
-wouldn’t look at any thing except salt meat or codfish. I really believe
-he would have starved with a meal before him that would have made any
-other dog’s mouth water. But he is civilized now, and takes his rations
-like other white folks. He’s got a history, Mars has, and if his
-adventures and exploits were written out, they would make a good-sized
-book.”
-
-A loud and hearty greeting from the two boys who were standing on the
-dock in front of the boat-house, put a stop to the conversation. Tom and
-his cousins expected that the first thing Joe Wayring did would be to
-acquaint his two friends with the fact that a plot had been formed to
-keep the best man from winning at the next canoe meet, and to throw the
-different races to those who could not by any possibility win them
-fairly; but again they were disappointed. Joe did not say a word on the
-subject, and the reason was because it was too serious a matter to be
-discussed in the presence of boys with whom he was so little acquainted.
-
-“A dog that will fetch a bone will carry one,” was Joe’s mental comment.
-“Tom and his cousins may be friendly to us, and then again, if there is
-any truth in this report, they may have brought it to me on account of
-some spite they have against those from whom they got it. It’s best to
-keep on the safe side, and so I will hold my tongue until I have a
-chance to speak to Hastings and Sheldon in private. We have received
-warning, and if they beat us, it will be our own fault.”
-
-“We were just going over to ask you three fellows to come out and take a
-spin with us,” exclaimed Hastings. “We have had our eyes on you, and to
-tell you the truth, we don’t quite like the way you handle those paddles
-of yours.”
-
-“Of course we don’t ask you to do your best—indeed we would be foolish
-to expect it,” chimed in Sheldon. “But still we should like to try a few
-short races with you, if you don’t mind.”
-
-“We shall be glad of the chance to see how much we lack of being good
-canoeists,” said Loren, readily. “We’ll walk back and go around the foot
-of the lake—”
-
-“Oh, no,” interrupted Joe. “That’s too hard work, and besides it would
-take up too much time. There’s my skiff. We can put her into the water
-and step the mast in a minute, and she’ll take you over flying. Come in
-here; I want to show you something. We three belong to the committee
-which was appointed to draw up a programme for the meet,” added Joe,
-taking a folded paper from a little writing desk that stood in one
-corner of the boat-house, “and here’s what we shall submit to the club
-at the next meeting.”
-
-Tom Bigden and the Farnsworth boys ran their eyes over the paper, and
-the only things they found in it that possessed any particular interest
-for them were the following:
-
-“_Portage race._—Paddle a quarter of a mile, carry canoe twenty-five
-yards over a stony point, re-embark and paddle back to starting point.
-
-“_Single paddling race._—Half a mile and return.
-
-“_Hurry-Skurry race._—Run ten yards, swim twenty-five yards, paddle
-three hundred yards.”
-
-These were the ones, as we know, which Tom and his cousins had “booked”
-themselves to win. Then there were sailing races, tandem races, and boys
-and girls’ races; and the meet was to wind up with a greasy pole walk.
-
-“You fellows must certainly enter for that,” said Sheldon. “You have no
-idea how much sport there is in it. Some of the Mount Airy people say
-that it is the best part of the performance.”
-
-Tom replied that he did not know just what a greasy pole walk was, and
-reminded Sheldon that he and his cousins were not yet members of the
-club.
-
-“But you will be members before the day set for the races, you may be
-sure of that,” said Joe. “I’ll propose you at the next meeting, and I
-know there will not be a dissenting vote.”
-
-“I wish you could give us the same assurance in regard to the archery
-club,” said Tom.
-
-“So do I, but I can’t,” answered Joe; and then, as if that were a
-subject that he could not talk about just at that time, he hastened to
-add: “I can soon tell you what a greasy pole walk is. Did you notice
-that high derrick built on the end of our pier? Well, a long, stout spar
-is run out from that derrick, and after being braced and guyed so
-securely that it will not sway about under any reasonable weight, it is
-thickly covered with slush to make it slippery. There is a prize of some
-sort at the outer end of it, and the boy who can walk along the pole and
-capture that prize before he falls off into the water, is the best
-fellow.”
-
-“What is the prize?” inquired Ralph.
-
-“Last year there were so many lucky fellows that we had to provide
-several of them,” was the reply. “The one that created the most fun was
-a pig in a bag. Noble captured that, and I tell you he had a time of it.
-You see, the pig was greased as well as the pole, and the bag was tied
-in such a way that when Noble dived for it—that was the only way he
-could get hold of it, you know—the mouth of the bag opened and the pig
-slipped out. Then the uproar began. Noble, who is a plucky fellow and a
-splendid swimmer, didn’t know that the pig was greased, and he tried for
-a long time to tow him ashore by one of his hind legs, but, of course,
-he couldn’t do it. At last he began to suspect something, and the way he
-larruped that pig over the head with the bag to make him turn toward the
-shore, was a caution. He finally succeeded in his object, and the
-instant the pig’s feet touched the beach, Noble sprung up, threw the bag
-over his head and secured him easy enough. Whatever you do, you mustn’t
-miss the greasy pole walk.”
-
-“I suppose we shall be laughed at if we tumble off the pole into the
-water?”
-
-“Certainly. That isn’t down in the programme, but it is a part of it,
-all the same.”
-
-“How many trials does each contestant have?”
-
-“Only two. You see, there are so many of us and so much fun in trying to
-secure the prize, that if we didn’t set some limit to the number of
-trials, the boys would keep on trying for an indefinite length of time.”
-
-While the boys were talking in this way they had pushed Joe’s skiff out
-of the boat-house into the water, stepped the mast and unfurled the sail
-that was wrapped around it. Every thing being ready for the start, the
-little fleet set out for the opposite side of the lake, Tom and his
-cousins in the skiff, and Joe and his companions in their canoes. The
-skiff was made fast to Mr. Bigden’s pier, and a quarter of an hour later
-three more canoes shot out of the boat-house, and the trials of speed
-began. They continued nearly all the afternoon, and when the rival
-factions bade each other good-night and paddled off toward their
-respective boat-houses, there was a decided feeling of uneasiness among
-some of them, while the others were correspondingly confident and happy.
-
-“It doesn’t seem possible that this is Bigden’s first season in a
-canoe,” said Sheldon, as soon as Tom and his cousins were out of
-hearing. “He is going to crowd the best of us this year, and if he keeps
-up his practice until the next meet, there won’t be a boy in the club
-who can touch him with a ten-foot pole. He’s going to make an expert.”
-
-“I’ll just tell you what’s a fact,” said Loren, after the canoes had
-been wiped out and hoisted in their slings, “I am not so much afraid of
-Joe and his crowd as I was. I don’t think there will be any need of the
-fouling business. I kept pace with Hastings in spite of all he could do
-to shake me off, and could have passed him if I had let out a little
-more strength.”
-
-“That shows how much you know about these things,” said Tom, in reply.
-“Do you suppose that Hastings did the best he could? I kept up with Joe
-without any very great exertion, but I don’t crow over it. They had
-plenty of speed in reserve, but you will have to wait till the day of
-the races if you want to see what they are capable of.”
-
-The sequel proved that Tom was right.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VIII.
-
- RUNNING THE RAPIDS.
-
-
-“NOW that we are here by ourselves,” continued Ralph, “I’d like to ask
-you why you told Joe that the best man was not to be allowed to win at
-the next meet. I never heard of such a thing before in my life. What do
-you suppose Prime and his crowd would say to you if they should find it
-out?”
-
-“I don’t believe they will ever find it out,” replied Tom, who did not
-seem to think that he had been guilty of any thing mean. “If I have
-formed a correct estimate of Joe Wayring’s disposition and character, he
-is a boy who knows how to hold his tongue. I posted him simply to
-off-set the coolness and impudence displayed by Prime and his friends in
-shutting us out of all the races, without so much as saying by your
-leave. Since they would not give us a chance to win some of the prizes,
-I say that _they_ shall not win _any_ of them. We are not going to play
-into the hands of boys who work against us.”
-
-“That’s what I say,” exclaimed Loren. “But I thought Joe acted very
-indifferently.”
-
-“Because he did not ask me to go into the particulars of the scheme, and
-give him the names of the fellows who were in it?” said Tom. “I thought
-so myself at first, but after turning the matter over in my mind, I came
-to the conclusion that his indifference was put on; and that the reason
-he did not ask me to go into details was because he was afraid I would
-say to him that I was taught not to tell names and tales too.”
-
-“It seems to me that that is about the size of it,” Loren remarked. “But
-look here, Tom. You have undertaken a pretty big contract if you expect
-to keep on the right side of both those crowds. One or the other of them
-will very soon have reason to suspect you, and then down you will go.
-What are you going to do about the races?”
-
-“My proposition is, that we keep up our regular exercise and training,
-and do the best we can to carry out our own programme, leaving Prime’s
-clique and Joe’s to carry out theirs, if they are able to do it. If we
-find that we stand no show, I would much rather see Joe and his friends
-win than Prime and _his_ friends.”
-
-“So would I,” said Ralph. “Now I should like to have some one tell me
-what excuse we have for being down on those boys. We got mad at them
-simply because they would not break their rules and take us into their
-archery club.”
-
-“And wasn’t that reason enough?” cried Tom, hotly. “I wasn’t used to
-such treatment while I lived in the city, and I won’t submit to it now.
-I don’t think any more of Hastings than I did on the day he so coolly
-told me that he would not help me get into their club. I don’t care
-whether he wins or not. What I mean to say is, that Prime and the rest
-shall not carry off any of the prizes if I can help it. I intend to show
-them that the next time they want any help from me, they had better let
-me have a voice in making up the programme; and I shall do it in such a
-way that they can not possibly misunderstand me. You two can do as you
-please, of course; but if you are going to weaken, I wish you would say
-so at once, so that I may make my arrangements accordingly.”
-
-Ralph and Loren hastened to assure their cousin that they had not the
-slightest intention of going back from their original agreement, and
-that they would stick to him through thick and thin, no matter what
-happened; but still they wished that Tom would learn to like Joe
-Wayring, and give up his idea of being revenged upon him for slights
-which were wholly imaginary. Joe had a much larger following than Prime
-and Noble, through him they could get more invitations to parties,
-picnics and hunting and fishing excursions than they could in any other
-way, and his influence might eventually gain for them an honor which
-they craved above all others—a membership in the Toxophilites; for those
-young ladies they met at Miss Arden’s lawn party were handsome and
-stylish, that was a fact, and Ralph and Loren had more than once told
-themselves that they would even be willing to give up their cigars, if
-by so doing they could win the privilege of shooting with those same
-young ladies twice a week. If they became intimate with George Prime,
-and were often seen in his company, the Toxophilites would drop them
-like so many hot potatoes; and then, when invitations for any social
-gathering were issued, they would be left out in the cold, the same as
-George was. But whatever they decided to do they must keep on the right
-side of Tom, for if they did not, he would be sure to make things
-unpleasant for them. It looked as though Ralph and Loren would have to
-do the very thing against which they had cautioned their vindictive
-relative, that is, try to carry water on both shoulders and take their
-chances of spilling some of it.
-
-“Now we’ll take Joe’s skiff back and put it where we found it, provided
-the boat-house is open,” said Tom. “If there is any boy in the world who
-ought to be supremely happy, he is the fellow. He has every thing he can
-ask for, including a rich and good-natured uncle, who takes him off on
-hunting and fishing trips nearly every year. Why that boy, young as he
-is, has shot caribou and moose and caught salmon.”
-
-Yes, Joe Wayring was happy, but it was not wholly on account of his
-pleasant surroundings. His source of happiness was within himself, and
-he knew it. He had been taught that lesson at the same time that he was
-being instructed in athletics and field-sports. He thought more of
-others than he did of Joe Wayring, and he would go into the dumps in a
-minute if he saw any of his friends in a disconsolate mood. If things
-didn’t go right with him—and they went wrong sometimes, as they do with
-every body—it made no sort of difference with Joe’s good-nature. He kept
-his troubles to himself; but Tom would get angry and go into the sulks
-and make all around him miserable. While going on the principle that
-whatever is worth doing at all is worth doing well, Joe was nevertheless
-perfectly willing to be beaten by any one who could do it fairly; but
-Tom wanted to be first at any cost. This was the principal difference
-between the two boys.
-
-Tom cast off the skiff’s painter while Loren and Ralph stepped the mast
-and shook out the sail, and in twenty minutes more they found themselves
-in the boat-house, where Joe and his two friends were waiting for them.
-
-“I saw you coming and took the cover off one of my pets so that you
-could take a look at her,” said the former, directing the attention of
-his visitors to a neat cedar shell in which he had been wont to win
-honors before he became a convert to canoeing. “She has taken me first
-by the judges’ boat in more than one hotly-contested race while I was
-going to school at Dartmouth Academy. Handsome, isn’t she? No doubt you
-will be surprised to hear me say it, but _there_ is something that I
-think more of than I do of her.”
-
-As Joe said this, he pointed toward an ungainly looking object which lay
-on the floor at the further end of the boat-house. It was a canvas
-canoe, whose battered sides bore evidence to numerous encounters with
-sharp-pointed rocks and snags.
-
-“It must be on account of its associations,” replied Loren, looking
-first at the clumsy canoe and then at the clear-cut lines of the shell.
-“If I had my choice between the two, it would not take me long to make
-up my mind which one I wanted.”
-
-“Of course not. There is as much difference between them as there is
-between a trotter and a plow-horse; but each one has served the purpose
-for which it was intended, and served it well, too. I like the canoe
-better, because she was the first thing in the shape of a boat I ever
-owned. She has carried me a good many hundred miles, first and last, and
-although she has often got contrary and spilled me out into the water
-when I wasn’t expecting it, I have had any amount of fun with her
-exploring creeks and ponds that I could not otherwise have reached. She
-is fourteen feet long, weighs fifty pounds fully equipped, and packs in
-that little chest you see there. I know she isn’t very good-looking, but
-when it comes to running the rapids she is there, every time. That’s the
-reason I took her out of the chest. We are going down to Sherwin’s Pond
-to-morrow after bass; will you join us?”
-
-Tom and his cousins replied that they would be glad to do so, and Joe
-went on to say:
-
-“You see, the fishing in the pond is better than it is in the lake. The
-people who come here to spend the summer do not often go down there,
-because there is no wagon road through the woods, and they are afraid to
-trust themselves to the rapids. Well, they are frightful to look at,
-that’s a fact, but—”
-
-“We know that very well,” interrupted Ralph. “We have gone down there a
-dozen times with our minds fully made up that we would run those rapids,
-or smash our canoes in trying, and we have as often come back without
-making the attempt. When we reached the place where the water leaves the
-lake, and goes foaming and boiling over the rocks in the gorge below,
-our arms always went back on us.”
-
-“Your arms?” repeated Sheldon.
-
-“Yes. Our hearts were brave enough for any thing, but our cowardly arms
-wouldn’t pull the canoes into the rapids.”
-
-“Oh!” said Sheldon. “Well, your cowardly arms were the wisest part of
-you, for you certainly ought not to try to go through until you know
-where the channel is. Those rapids have been run hundreds of times,
-though not always without accident to be sure, and if you will follow
-close in our wake to-morrow, we’ll take you safely to the bottom.”
-
-“We must make an early start,” said Hastings, “for we want to reach the
-pond just about the time the first rays of the sun strike the water. Can
-you be ready at four o’clock? All right. Catch a good supply of minnows
-to-night, and then you won’t have to waste valuable time over it in the
-morning.”
-
-“And take the strongest and stiffest bait-rod you have,” added Joe.
-“Leave your fly-rods, if you have any, at home, for you will have no use
-for them. About June 1st, when the bass season opens, those who know how
-to throw a fly have very fine fishing among the rocks close to the
-shore; but as the weather grows warmer the fish gradually draw off into
-deep water, and all the bass we shall catch to-morrow will be near the
-middle of the pond where the springs boil up.”
-
-“And don’t forget your gun,” said Sheldon.
-
-“Nor your rubber blankets,” chimed in Hastings.
-
-“Do you think it will rain?” asked Ralph.
-
-“We hope not, and indeed there are no signs of it. When we reach the
-head of the rapids we will pull off our heaviest clothing, so that we
-will be ready for a swim in case we are unlucky enough to capsize, and
-the things we don’t wear we will wrap up in our rubber blankets so that
-they won’t get wet.”
-
-“Suppose we get down all right,” said Loren. “How are we going to get
-back?”
-
-“We’ll shoulder our canoes and come up the portage road which has been
-cut through the woods around the rapids. For that reason we don’t want
-to take any thing with us that we can possibly dispense with.”
-
-After listening to a few more hints like these, Tom and his cousins set
-out for the post-office; and having secured their mail they went home by
-the road that led around the foot of the lake, running at the top of
-their speed all the way through the woods to improve their wind. Their
-skiff, patent minnow buckets and dip nets were at once brought into
-requisition, and by the time the supper bell rang, they had caught bait
-enough to last them through a long day’s successful angling.
-
-Promptly at four o’clock the next morning Tom Bigden opened the front
-door of the boat-house, and waved his hat in response to a similar
-signal of greeting which came to him from over the lake. Joe Wayring and
-his friends were just putting their canoes into the water.
-
-“Splendid day,” said the former, when the two little fleets came
-together near the middle of the lake. “There’s going to be just wind
-enough to ripple the water, but not enough to raise a sea, and I
-wouldn’t take a dollar for my chance of catching the finest string of
-bass that has been seen in Mount Airy this year.”
-
-“So say we all of us,” exclaimed Sheldon; and this suggested the song
-which every school-boy knows, but to Tom Bigden’s ill-concealed disgust,
-it was sung to the words: “Joe Wayring is a jolly good fellow,” and that
-was a sentiment in which Tom did not fully concur. It put him in bad
-humor for the whole of the day, or, rather, until circumstances threw in
-his way an opportunity to make that jolly good fellow as miserable as he
-was himself. After that he felt better.
-
-Under the steady motion of the sinewy arms which swung the long double
-paddles, the light canoes made quick work with the three miles that lay
-between the boat-houses and the lower end of the lake, and presently
-Arthur Hastings turned toward the nearest shore, looking over his
-shoulder as he did so to call out to the canoeists behind him:
-
-“Let’s make believe this is a hurry-skurry race, and that there is a
-prize in the pond waiting for the man who reaches the bottom of the
-rapids first.”
-
-The challenge was promptly accepted. In a twinkling the little crafts
-were going toward the beach with greatly increased speed, and in a
-remarkably short space of time six young athletes, clad only in
-flesh-colored tights, were prancing around their canoes, busily engaged
-in wrapping their clothing in their water-proof blankets, and lashing
-their rods and minnow buckets fast so that they would not be thrown out
-into the water by a heavy lurch, or even by a capsize. Tom Bigden was
-the first to shove his canoe away from the shore, but there he had to
-stop. He was not acquainted with the channel, and needed a guide to show
-him the way through; but he won the second place, and was prompt to fall
-into it when Arthur Hastings caught up his paddle and pulled away from
-the beach.
-
-Tom and his cousins had often viewed the rapids from the bank while
-trying in vain to screw up courage enough to attempt their passage, and
-if they looked dangerous to them then, they looked ten times more
-frightful when they surveyed them from their canoes on this particular
-morning. The sight of them was enough to make any body’s nerves quiver.
-They looked as steep as the roof of a house, and the bottom of the gorge
-through which they ran, seemed to be literally covered with bowlders.
-Tom could not see a single place which looked wide enough to admit of
-the passage of a canoe.
-
-“What do you think of them?” asked Arthur, as he and Tom backed water
-with their paddles to keep their canoes from taking the plunge before
-they were ready.
-
-“Who was the first man who went down here?” said Tom, in reply.
-
-“One of the hotel guides.”
-
-“Was he a graduate of a lunatic asylum, or did he go there afterward?”
-inquired Tom.
-
-Arthur laughed until the woods echoed.
-
-“Neither,” he answered, as soon as he could speak. “He’s got a level
-head on his shoulders yet, if one may judge by the constant demands that
-are made upon his time. Some of the people who come here every summer
-like him so well that they begin to make bargains with him before the
-ice is out of the lake. They wouldn’t do that if they had any reason to
-believe he was crazy, would they? Well, what do you say?”
-
-“I say, go ahead whenever you get ready,” was the response.
-
-“All right,” said Arthur, who saw by the expression on Tom’s face that
-he had no intention of backing out. “Now, watch every move I make, and
-let me get at least twenty or thirty feet ahead of you before you start.
-Look out for both ends of your boat. You won’t run on to an isolated
-rock unless you try, because the water runs away from it. That has a
-tendency to throw the bow from the obstruction, and the stern toward it;
-so the minute the bow is out of harm’s way, drop your paddle into the
-water on the side opposite the rock, and use it the best you know how.”
-
-“Why, that will throw me square upon the rock,” cried Tom.
-
-“No, it won’t,” insisted Arthur. “It will throw you away from danger,
-and the current rushing around the rock will carry you still further
-away. But if you use the paddle on the other side, you will come up
-against the rock ker-chunk; and then you will have to swim the rest of
-the way down, because the stern of your canoe will, most likely, be
-smashed in. Understand?”
-
-Tom replied that he did; whereupon Arthur settled his cap more firmly on
-his head, took his paddle in both hands and with one bold stroke sent
-his frail craft into the rapids. The moment the current caught him in
-its grasp, he began to shoot ahead like a boy coasting down hill. Tom
-shut his teeth hard and gripped his paddle until the muscles on his bare
-arms stood out like a gold-beater’s; and so intent was he upon watching
-every move his guide made, that he forgot to look out for himself, until
-he was called to his senses by a warning shout from his friends behind.
-
-“Look out, there,” yelled Joe and Roy, in concert. “You’ll be over the
-brink the first thing you know.”
-
-Tom heard the warning, but it came too late. He dropped his paddle into
-the water and made desperate efforts to check his canoe, which had
-already gained rapid headway; but the swift current had taken firm hold
-of him, and finding that it was much stronger than he was, he resolved
-to go ahead and trust to luck to keep from running into Arthur Hastings,
-in case the latter met with an accident.
-
-[Illustration: SHOOTING THE RAPIDS.]
-
-Tom afterward said that he did not remember much about that wild ride.
-He was lost in admiration of Arthur Hastings’s skill as a canoeist, and
-followed in his wake through all the turns he made, which were so
-numerous and bewildering that Tom did not see how one boy’s head could
-contain them all. It was a lucky thing for him and his cousins that they
-did not attempt to go through there without a guide. He did not hear the
-waters foaming and roaring around him, nor did he see a single one of
-the rocks past which he went with such speed that the wind whistled
-through his hair; but he did see the smooth surface of the pond the
-instant he came within sight of it, and when he shot into it, propelled
-by the momentum he had acquired during his descent of the rapids, he
-called out gleefully that he had not touched a solitary obstruction on
-the way.
-
-“Of course not,” answered Arthur. “If you had, you would not be as dry
-as you are now. There is a clearly defined channel all the way through
-the gorge, and you won’t touch any thing if you keep in it. What would
-happen to you if you should get out of it, I don’t know; but I think you
-would be fortunate if you came off with a simple capsize.”
-
-It was a thrilling sight that was presented to their gaze as they sat
-there in their canoes at the bottom of the rapids and watched the others
-as they came down. First Joe Wayring dashed into view around the bend,
-closely followed by Ralph Farnsworth, who seemed to be quite as much at
-his ease as his guide was, and handled his paddle and managed his canoe
-quite as skillfully. By the time they reached the smooth water at the
-foot Roy and Loren came in sight, and in five minutes more the little
-fleet was reunited. The hearts of three of the canoeists beat a trifle
-faster than usual, but they had accomplished the run in perfect safety,
-and without a wetting, and they were ready to try it again at the very
-first opportunity.
-
-“Take time to learn the channel before attempting any thing reckless,”
-cautioned Joe. “After that you can come down by yourselves as often as
-you feel equal to the task of carrying your boats back over the
-portage.”
-
-The boys went ashore long enough to put on their clothes, untie their
-rods, and put fresh water on their minnows, and then they were ready for
-the bass.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IX.
-
- THE SQUATTER TURNS UP AGAIN.
-
-
-ONE fishing excursion is much like another, and any boy who has handled
-a nicely-balanced bait-rod when the black bass, perch, and yellow pike
-were hungry and full of fight, as they were on the morning of which we
-write, will have a clearer idea of the sport Tom Bigden and the rest
-enjoyed there on the pond than we could possibly give him. We did not
-follow them through the rapids to tell how they played their fish and
-how many they caught, and so we shall have but little to say about it.
-Joe Wayring affirmed that the twenty minutes’ fight he had with a nine
-pound pike, which began in less than half a second after he dropped his
-hook into the water, gave him solid comfort and enjoyment for a week
-afterward; but whether or not he found any comfort in something that
-happened when they went ashore to eat their lunch, is another matter
-altogether.
-
-About eight o’clock the fish gave notice that they had quit business for
-the day by refusing to notice any of the lures that were dropped among
-them, and then the boys discovered that their long pull before breakfast
-had made them hungry.
-
-“Did you ever eat a fish that had been baked in the ashes?” inquired
-Joe, addressing himself to Tom and his cousins. “Then you have yet one
-enjoyment in store for you. You won’t think much of house-cooking after
-you have eaten one of Roy’s dinners. We know a nice place on the point
-above, with an ice-cold spring handy, and we’ll—”
-
-“Excuse me for interrupting,” said Loren, suddenly. “But did you ever
-see a dog like that before?”
-
-The speaker was not a little surprised by the effect his words produced
-upon some of his companions. They all looked in the direction indicated
-by his finger, and then Joe began pulling up his anchor with almost
-frantic haste, while Arthur and Roy reached rather hurriedly for their
-guns.
-
-“You can’t do any thing with him from here,” said Joe.
-
-“And if we paddle for the shore he will see us and take to his heels,”
-added Roy.
-
-“Why who—what are you going to do to him?” stammered Ralph.
-
-“We’d be glad to shoot him if we could,” replied Joe. “He’s no dog. He’s
-a half-grown bear.”
-
-Tom and his cousins, of course, asked a good many questions with their
-lips and more with their eyes, but Joe and his two friends were too busy
-to answer them. They made all haste to raise their anchors, and then
-pulled rapidly but silently toward the shore, all the while keeping a
-close watch over the movements of the bear, which was wandering
-listlessly about, now and then stopping to look into the water or to
-sniff at a log, as if he were hunting for something he had lost. Tom and
-his cousins thought he looked too small for a bear, but as he did not
-walk or act like a dog or any other animal they had ever seen at large,
-they were forced to conclude that he really was a bear, and that he was
-in search of his breakfast. They didn’t know whether to be afraid of him
-or not; but when they saw how anxious Joe and his two friends were to
-bring themselves within shooting distance of him, they lost no time in
-pulling up their own anchors and falling in behind them. The bear,
-however, was not to be taken unawares. He did not appear to notice their
-approach, but he had his eyes on them nevertheless, and when he thought
-they had come close enough, he left the beach and lumbered off into the
-bushes.
-
-“There!” said Tom, who was glad to see the last of him. “He has taken
-himself safely off.”
-
-“We expected it,” said Roy, redoubling his exertions at the paddle. “If
-we only had Mars with us we could see more fun with him in half an hour
-than we could in a week’s fishing. He begged hard to be allowed to come,
-but Joe made him stay behind. You see, he won’t sit anywhere but in the
-bow, and he is so heavy that he makes a canoe hard to manage in rough
-water.”
-
-“He wouldn’t trail the bear, would he?”
-
-“Of course he would, and be glad of the chance. If he found him, he
-would set up such a yelping that you would think there were a dozen dogs
-in the woods.”
-
-“What are you going to do now?” inquired Ralph, as the six canoes ran
-their bows upon the beach, one after the other.
-
-“We are going to stretch our legs, and that will be a comfort after
-sitting in such cramped positions for four long hours,” replied Joe, at
-the same time catching up his double-barrel and springing ashore with
-it. “We’ll follow up his trail, which we can easily do for a mile or
-more, because all the ground about here is swampy, and when we lose it,
-we’ll knock over a few squirrels and go up to the point and eat our
-breakfast. Keep close to us, or else stay within sight of the beach. The
-woods are thick, and you could get lost without half trying.”
-
-Led by Arthur Hastings, the boys ran up the shore of the pond until they
-reached the place where the bear had turned off into the bushes, and
-then the pursuit began in earnest. Whether or not Loren and Ralph were
-as anxious to get a shot at the game as they pretended to be, it is hard
-to tell; but they made a great show of eagerness and enthusiasm, and
-Tom, not wishing to be out-done, floundered along the trail behind them.
-But he did not keep his companions in sight for more than five
-minutes—in fact, he didn’t mean to. He gradually fell to the rear, and
-when the bushes closed up behind Roy Sheldon, who was the last boy on
-the trail, Tom sat down on a log and thought about it.
-
-“That bear doesn’t belong to me, and I don’t know that it is any concern
-of mine whether they find him or not,” said he to himself. “It is easier
-to sit here in the shade, even if one does have to fight musquitoes,
-than it is to go prancing about through a swamp where the water, in some
-places, is up to the tops of a fellow’s boots.”
-
-Tom suddenly brought his soliloquy to a close and jumped to his feet.
-There was a frightened expression on his face, but the determined manner
-in which he gripped his gun showed that he had no intention of running
-away until he had had at least one shot at the bear; for that it _was_
-the bear which occasioned the slight rustling in the thicket a short
-distance away, Tom had not the slightest doubt. Probably the animal had
-made a short circuit through the woods, and was now coming back to the
-pond to finish his breakfast. While these thoughts were passing through
-Tom’s mind, the bushes toward which he was gazing parted right and left,
-and a big red nose, with a shock of uncombed hair above and a mass of
-tangled brown whiskers below it, was cautiously thrust into view, being
-followed a moment later by the burly form of Matt Coyle, the squatter.
-He was as ragged and dirty as ever, and carried a heavy rifle on his
-shoulder.
-
-The meeting, which was entirely unexpected, was a surprise to both of
-them. To tell the truth, Tom was more alarmed when the squatter emerged
-from the thicket than he would have been if the bear had made his
-appearance. Matt Coyle was very angry at the Mount Airy people on
-account of the indignities they had put upon him, and who could tell but
-that Tom Bigden himself was included in the list of those against whom
-he had threatened vengeance? The squatter seemed to read the thoughts
-that were passing in the boy’s mind, for as soon as he could speak he
-hastened to say:
-
-“You needn’t be no ways skeary about meetin’ us. We ain’t forgot that
-you was the only one who said a kind word to us while we was down
-there”—here Matt gave his head a backward jerk intending, no doubt, to
-indicate the village of Mount Airy—“an’ of course we ain’t got nothing
-agin you.”
-
-Tom drew a long breath of relief as he listened to these words. Matt
-wouldn’t do any thing to him, and neither would he injure any of his
-property.
-
-“But as fur the rest of ’em, they had better watch out,” continued the
-man, in savage tones. “I shan’t forget ’em, an’ I’ll even up with them
-some day. It may be five year, an’ it may be ten; but I’ll even up with
-’em.”
-
-“What are you and your boys doing now?” inquired Tom. He did not like
-the way the squatter glared around him when he spoke of the village
-people, and he wanted to turn the conversation into another channel if
-he could.
-
-[Illustration: TOM UNEXPECTEDLY MEETS MATT COYLE.]
-
-“We ain’t doin’ nothin’,” was the surly reply, “’cause why, we ain’t got
-nothin’ to do with. We ain’t got a bite of meat in the house, an’ I was
-after that there b’ar when you fellers come up an’ skeared him away. So
-thinks I to myself, I’ll jest go down to the pond where their boats is,
-an’ I’ll take the best one of ’em an’ cl’ar out afore they gets back.
-Then I’d have somethin’ to do with.”
-
-“Where would you go?”
-
-“Up to Injun Lake. I’m the bulliest kind of a guide fur that neck of the
-woods, an’ so’s my two boys; but you see we ain’t got no boats, an’
-we’re too poor to buy ’em.”
-
-“Why don’t you go to the hotels and hire out to them?” demanded Tom; and
-then he wondered if there were a landlord in the world who would trust a
-boat-load of passengers, ladies and children for instance, to the care
-of the walking whisky barrel he saw before him.
-
-“Didn’t I try that very thing down there”—another backward jerk of the
-head—“an’ didn’t they tell me that they didn’t have no use fur sich
-lookin’ fellers as me an’ my boys was?” exclaimed Matt Coyle, fiercely.
-“They did fur a fact. But if I had a boat of my own I could go up to
-Injun Lake where they ain’t so perticular about the clothes a man wears,
-so long as he understands his business, an’ I’d make piles of money,
-too; ’cause why—I’d work fur less’n the reg’lar hotel guides. See?”
-
-“Yes, I see; but how long would it be before the regular guides would
-run you out, the same as the Mount Airy people did? They would make the
-country so hot for you that you couldn’t stay there.”
-
-“Suppos’n they tried that little game on?” answered Matt, laying down
-his rifle long enough to shake both his huge fists in the air. “Ain’t
-that somethin’ that two can play at? I’d break up the business of
-guidin’ in less’n two seasons.”
-
-“How would you do it?”
-
-“Yes, I would,” Matt went on. “If I only had a boat that was easy to
-slip around in an’ light to tote over the carries, I’d make the folks
-who come there fur fun so sick of them woods that they wouldn’t never
-come there no more; then what would become of them two big hotels when
-there wasn’t no custom to run ’em?”
-
-“How would you go about it?” repeated Tom.
-
-“Oh, there’s plenty of ways,” answered the squatter, shaking his head
-knowingly.
-
-“Give us one of them.”
-
-“Wal, s’pos’n I should see a big party, with childern among ’em, start
-out from one of them hotels as big as life, an’ I should foller along
-after ’em, easy like, an’ some day, when there wasn’t no men folks
-about, I should slip up, grab one of them childern an’ run him off to
-the mountains? An’ s’pos’n one of my boys should happen to be loafin’
-around that hotel when the party come back without the child, an’ should
-hear that a reward of a hunderd, mebbe two hunderd dollars had been
-offered fur his safe return? Couldn’t my boy easy hunt me up, an’
-couldn’t I tote that young un back to his pap an’ claim them dollars?
-Eh?”
-
-Tom was so astounded that he could say nothing in reply. Matt Coyle was
-a great deal worse than he thought he was. The squatter saw that his
-solitary auditor was interested, and went on to tell of another way in
-which he could break up the business of guiding in the wilderness about
-Indian Lake, in case the people living there didn’t treat him and his
-family as well as Matt thought they ought to be treated.
-
-“Or s’pos’n there wasn’t no childern into the party,” said he. “There’d
-be fine guns an’ fish poles an’ lots of nice grub, in course; an’
-couldn’t I slip up to their camp when there wasn’t no body there to
-watch it, an’ tote some of them guns an’ things off into the bresh an’
-hide ’em? Oh, there’s plenty of ways to bust up guidin’ an’ them big
-hotels along with it. They would think twice before bein’ too rough on
-me, ’cause they know me up there to Injun Lake.”
-
-And the man might have added that that was the very reason they drove
-him away from there—because they knew him.
-
-“But the trouble is, I ain’t got no boat of my own to run about with.
-The punt, she’s too heavy, an’ I ain’t got no other,” continued Matt
-Coyle; and then he stopped and looked hard at Tom, and Tom, in return,
-looked hard at Matt. An idea came into his head; or, to speak more in
-accordance with the facts, Tom suddenly recalled some words which the
-squatter had let fall at the beginning of their interview.
-
-“You said you were on your way to the pond to pick out a boat when you
-met me,” said Tom. “Well, why don’t you go ahead and get it? There is
-one among them that will just suit your purpose. It is a canvas canoe.
-It is very light, and you can pack it across a four mile portage without
-any trouble at all. If you don’t want to do that, you can take it to
-pieces and carry it in your hand as you would a grip-sack. It will hold
-up eight hundred pounds, and you can’t over-turn it by rocking it from
-side to side.”
-
-“Who belongs to it?” inquired Matt, who had never heard of such a craft
-before.
-
-“Joe Wayring; and his father is one of the Mount Airy trustees. Your
-house was on his land, and if Mr. Wayring had said the word, you might
-have been living happily there now, with plenty to do in the way of
-boating and guiding and with money in your pocket,” said Tom, hoping
-that this reference to Mr. Wayring and the influence he might have
-exerted in Matt’s behalf, if he had seen fit to do so, would make the
-squatter angry, and awaken in him a desire to be revenged on the son
-since he could not harm the father in any way. The plan succeeded
-admirably. Matt laid his rifle on the ground so that he could shake both
-his fists, and the oaths and threats he uttered when he had thus
-relieved himself of all incumbrance, were frightful to hear. He did not
-yell, as he would like to have done, for he knew that the boys who had
-gone in pursuit of the bear were not far away; but he hissed out the
-words between his clenched teeth, and kicked and trampled down the
-bushes in his rage.
-
-“I’d take the boat now, even if I knowed it wouldn’t be of no use to
-me,” said he, as soon as he could speak. “It’ll cost ole man Wayring
-five an’ mebbe twenty dollars to buy him another—”
-
-“More than that,” said Tom. “A good deal more.”
-
-“Wal, it’ll be jest that much out of his pocket whatever it is,”
-answered Matt Coyle. “Where did you say them boats was?”
-
-“Right down there on the beach,” replied Tom, indicating the direction
-with his finger. “You know which one I mean, don’t you? You’re sure you
-can tell a canvas canoe from a Shadow or a Rob Roy?”
-
-“Am I sure that I can tell a pipe from a shot gun?” retorted Matt.
-
-“Yes, I suppose you can do that, but I am not so positive that you can
-tell one canoe from another,” answered Tom. “Of course it wouldn’t be
-safe for me to go down to the beach with you, for if Joe should happen
-to be anywhere within sight, I’d be in a pretty fix. You may be sure I
-shall not so much as hint that I saw you here in the woods, and you
-mustn’t lisp it to a living person.”
-
-“Course not,” said Matt. “Mum’s the word between gentlemen.”
-
-Tom could scarcely restrain an exclamation of disgust. It looked as
-though this blear-eyed ragamuffin considered himself quite as good as
-the boy he was talking to.
-
-“Take the canoe just as it stands,” continued Tom, “and you will find a
-good lunch as well as a fine fishing-rod in it. Be lively now, for Joe
-may come back at any moment. I’ll keep out of sight, for of course I
-don’t want to know any thing about it.”
-
-“I don’t care fur them new-fangled poles what’s got a silver windlass
-onto the ends of ’em, an’ I wouldn’t tech it if I didn’t think I could
-sell it to somebody; but I’ll go fur the grub, I tell you.”
-
-So saying Matt Coyle went through with some contortions with the left
-side of his face which were, no doubt, intended for a friendly farewell
-wink, and stole off toward the beach; while Tom turned and walked away
-in the opposite direction. When he thought he had put a safe distance
-between himself and the pond, he sat down to await developments. Nor was
-he obliged to wait long. A rifle cracked away off to the left of his
-place of concealment, then a shot gun roared, and presently voices came
-to him from the depths of the forest. Joe and his companions had given
-up the chase, and were now on their way back to the pond, shooting
-squirrels as they came. Tom knew when they passed by within less than a
-hundred yards of him, and he knew, too, that they were surprised because
-they did not meet him in the woods or find him on the beach, for they
-set up a series of dismal whoops as soon as they reached the water’s
-edge.
-
-“Now for it,” thought Tom, drawing his hand over his face and looking as
-innocent as though he had never been guilty of a mean act in his life.
-“I’ve got to meet them some time, and it might as well be now as an hour
-later. Whoop-pee!” he yelled in answer to the shouts that were sent up
-from the shore of the pond.
-
-Tom’s ears also told him when Joe Wayring first discovered that his
-canvas canoe was missing. The yells suddenly ceased, and Tom heard no
-more from Joe and his companions until he came out of the woods and
-halted on the beach a short distance from the place where they were
-standing. They were gathered in a group around Roy Sheldon, who was bent
-over with his hands on his knees, and his eyes fastened upon a
-foot-print in the mud. They were listening so eagerly to something Roy
-was saying, that Tom walked up within reach of them before any of the
-group knew that he was about.
-
-“What have you found that is so very interesting?” inquired Tom, who
-knew that he ought to open the conversation in some way.
-
-“Oh, here you are,” exclaimed Hastings. “We could not imagine what had
-become of you. Until we heard you call out there in the woods, we
-supposed that the bear had come back, and that you had gone after him in
-Joe’s boat.”
-
-“Not by a long shot!” cried Tom, who saw very plainly what Arthur was
-driving at. “I haven’t seen the bear since I lost sight of you, and if I
-had, I should have gone away from him and not toward him. I have no
-ambition to shine as a bear hunter, and consequently I am here safe and
-sound.”
-
-“But Joe’s canoe isn’t,” said Roy.
-
-Tom looked, and sure enough the place where Joe had left his boat when
-he went into the woods was vacant. With much apparent anxiety and
-uneasiness he turned toward his canoe as if to satisfy himself that his
-own treasures were safe, when Roy broke out with—
-
-“Oh, you’re a sufferer the same as the rest of us. Your lunch and your
-fine bait-rod have gone off to keep Joe’s canoe company. He took all our
-rods and his pick of the fish, too, and it is a great wonder to me that
-he was good enough to leave us our paddles.”
-
-Tom was really surprised now, and he was deeply in earnest when he said:
-
-“If I ever meet the man who did that I’ll have him arrested if I can
-find any one to make out a warrant for him.” Then suddenly recollecting
-that he was not supposed to know who the thief was, he added: “Do you
-suspect any body?”
-
-“No, we don’t suspect; we know,” answered Joe. “Look at that!”
-
-“Can you tell a man’s name by looking at the print of his foot in the
-mud?” asked Tom.
-
-“I can tell that man’s name, for I know how he was shod the last time I
-saw him,” replied Joe. “It was Matt Coyle. He made a good many threats
-before he left the village, and he has begun to carry them out already.
-He has put up his shanty somewhere in the vicinity of this pond, and
-will make it his business to do some damage to every hunting and fishing
-party that comes here.”
-
-“Well, what are we standing here for?” exclaimed Tom, who had expected
-before this time to hear somebody propose an immediate pursuit of the
-robber.
-
-“We might as well stay here and take it easy, as to get wild and rush
-around through the woods for nothing,” replied Joe; and Tom was
-surprised to see how ready he was to give his boat up for lost. “In the
-first place, we couldn’t overtake the robber, and in the second, we
-couldn’t recover our property if we did. The day of reckoning will
-surely come, but we can’t do any thing to hasten it.”
-
-The idea that the squatter would disturb any of the things in the other
-canoes had never entered into Tom’s mind. Matt seemed to remember, with
-as much gratitude as such a man was capable of, that Tom was one of the
-few who sympathized with him when he was ordered out of Mount Airy, and
-yet he had made little distinction between his property and that
-belonging to the sons of the trustees who ordered him away. There was no
-sham about his rage. He was angry because his elegant rod and German
-silver bass reel had disappeared, and because he knew that he would
-never dare have Matt Coyle arrested for the theft. If the latter should
-go before a magistrate and repeat the words that had passed between Tom
-and himself not more than half an hour ago, wouldn’t he be in a pretty
-scrape? He was in one already, for the squatter had a hold upon him, and
-subsequent events proved that Matt knew how to use it to his own
-advantage.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER X.
-
- FOREST COOKERY.
-
-
-“HOW in the world did you manage to get separated from us so quickly?”
-asked Roy, addressing himself to Tom Bigden. “The last time I saw you,
-you were bringing up the rear all right, but when we lost the trail and
-stopped to hold a consultation, you were not to be seen.”
-
-Tom had been expecting this, and he was ready with his answer. Pointing
-to his boots, which he had purposely stuck into a mud-hole, shortly
-after his companions left him, he said:
-
-“I got mired in the swamp, and by the time I could crawl out and pour
-the water from my boots, you had left me so far behind that I could
-neither see nor hear any thing of you. If I had come directly back to
-the pond instead of wasting time in looking for you, I might have been
-able to stop Matt Coyle’s raid on our canoes.”
-
-“I doubt it very much,” replied Joe Wayring. “No doubt Matt has been
-watching us all the morning and waiting for us to come ashore so that he
-could steal something, and I believe he would have made his ‘raid’ if we
-had all been here to oppose him. As it was, he had full swing, and there
-are none of us hurt.”
-
-“That’s my idea,” said Arthur. “Judging by his countenance Matt is a bad
-man and a desperate one. Well, we have lost our rods and reels, which
-must be worth considerably more than a hundred dollars, but we have
-learned one thing, that we ought to profit by, and another that we can
-use to our advantage. To begin with, so long as Matt Coyle is allowed to
-stay about in this neck of the woods—”
-
-“And I guess he’ll stay here as long as he has a mind to,” observed Roy.
-
-“Well, I guess he won’t,” retorted Arthur.
-
-“I know what you mean,” said Roy. “You mean that the arm of the law is
-strong enough to snatch him out of the swamp. I don’t dispute it. The
-trouble is going to be to get hold of him. If he finds the low lands
-getting too warm for him, he will take to the mountains; and you know
-that there are a good many places among them where a white man has never
-yet set his foot.”
-
-“He’ll come out, all the same,” answered Arthur; “but as long as he
-stays around, Sherwin’s Pond is no place for hunting and fishing
-parties, unless they bring some one with them to watch the camp while
-they are rambling about in the woods. We must warn the hotel people as
-soon as we get back to town.”
-
-“You said there was something we could use to our advantage,” suggested
-Joe.
-
-“Yes. We can see any amount of sport here this fall with the grouse. We
-flushed a lot of them while we were gone,” he added, turning to Tom,
-“but of course we didn’t shoot at them.”
-
-“Why not?” inquired the latter.
-
-“Why, because the close season isn’t over yet, and the birds are
-protected by law.”
-
-Tom and his cousins had nothing to say, but they wondered if Arthur
-Hastings always obeyed the game laws when he was alone in the woods.
-They had not much respect for him if he did. They could not lay claim to
-any great skill themselves. An October grouse on the wing would have
-been as safe from harm a dozen yards away from the muzzles of their
-double-barrels, as though he had been on the other side of the globe.
-They always killed their game sitting; and they would shoot at a robin
-as soon as they would shoot at a wild turkey.
-
-“We didn’t come down here to go home hungry,” said Joe, pointing to a
-bunch of squirrels that lay at the foot of the nearest tree. “We’ll have
-two courses to our dinner or breakfast, or whatever you call a meal
-eaten at this time of day, and there’s plenty of water in the spring to
-wash it down with.”
-
-The boys were all hungry, and there was nothing appetizing in looking
-forward to a breakfast of meat and fish. Joe Wayring and his friends did
-not mind it, for they had eaten many such meals during their vacation
-wanderings in the woods; but Tom Bigden was not much accustomed to
-roughing it, and he condemned the squatter almost as bitterly for
-walking off with the hard-boiled eggs, sardines, canned fruit and bottle
-of cold coffee, which he had provided as his share of the common dinner,
-as he did for stealing his fishing-rod.
-
-“When Matt opens my bundle and finds all that buttered tissue paper in
-it I guess he’ll wonder,” said Joe, as he stepped into Roy’s canoe and
-picked up one of the joints of the double paddle. “He won’t know what I
-intended to do with it; do you, Bigden?”
-
-After a little reflection Tom concluded that he couldn’t tell what use
-the buttered tissue paper could be put to, unless Joe intended to start
-a fire with it, and the latter went on to explain.
-
-“We always take a supply with us as a substitute for a frying-pan,” said
-he. “After cleaning the fish in good shape, we wrap him up in this
-tissue paper, and then add three or four thicknesses of wet brown paper.
-In the meantime, the fellow whose business it is to see to the fire has
-taken care to have a nice bed of coals ready. We rake these coals apart,
-put in the fish, and cover him up so quickly that the paper around him
-has no time to get afire, and there he stays until he is done. Then we
-poke him out, and when the paper is taken off the skin and scales come
-with it; and if you relish a well-cooked fish, there he is.”
-
-“But how do you know when the fish is done?” asked Ralph.
-
-“A potato is as good a clock as you want to go by,” answered Joe.
-
-“A potato?” repeated Ralph.
-
-“Yes. I brought several with me, intending to put them on the table
-after they had done duty as clocks, but they have gone off with the
-sugar, lemons and other good things I had in my bundle. As soon as your
-fish is covered up in the coals,” continued Joe, “put your potatoes in
-alongside of him and cover them up also. You can test them with a sharp
-stick at any time, and when they are done, which will be at the end of
-half an hour, if your fire is just right, poke them out, break them open
-and place them on a flat stone which you have previously washed, to
-cool. Then poke out your fish, take off the wrappings and fall to work.
-But we shall have to use boards this trip—there are plenty of them lying
-around loose on the point, unless Matt Coyle has carried them off to
-patch up his shanty—and make our noses do duty as clocks.”
-
-Tom did not understand this, either; but believing that he had made a
-sufficient airing of his ignorance of woodcraft for one day, at least,
-he asked no more questions.
-
-Half an hour’s steady paddling brought the boys to the point, on which
-they landed to prepare their meager breakfast. That it was a favorite
-resort for parties like their own was evident. Beds of ashes surrounding
-the mossy bowlder from beneath which the spring bubbled up, marked the
-places where roaring camp-fires had once been built, and the empty fruit
-and meat cans that had been tossed into the bushes told what good
-dinners had been eaten there.
-
-Joe Wayring at once set off to hunt up a couple of suitable boards,
-another started a fire, two more fell to work upon the fish and
-squirrels, and the rest found employment in gathering a supply of fuel,
-and providing birch-bark plates and platters. Although Tom and his
-cousins did their full share of the work, they did not neglect to keep
-an eye on their more experienced companions; and they were astonished to
-see how easily one can get on without a good many things which the
-majority of people seem to think necessary to their very existence. When
-the fish had been cleaned and washed in the pond, they were spread out
-flat and fastened with wooden pins to the boards, which were propped up
-in front of the fire; while the squirrels were impaled upon forked
-sticks and held over the coals by Arthur Hastings and Roy, who turned
-first one side and then the other to the heat, until they were done to a
-delicious brown.
-
-“If Matt Coyle had only been good enough to leave us the bacon, which I
-was careful to have put up with my lunch, these squirrels would be much
-better than they are going to be,” said Arthur, addressing himself to
-Ralph, who manifested the greatest interest in this rude forest cookery.
-“Their meat is rather dry, you know, and a strip of nice fat bacon
-pinned to each side of them would furnish the necessary grease—that
-isn’t a very elegant word, I know, but it expresses my meaning all the
-same—and give them a flavor also. It would make the fish more palatable,
-too. My advice to you is, always take a chunk of bacon with you if you
-are going to cook your dinner in the woods.”
-
-“What’s he doing?” inquired Ralph, nodding toward Joe Wayring, who stood
-around with his hands in his pockets, now and then elevating his chin
-and sniffing the air like a pointer that had struck a fresh scent.
-
-Arthur laughed heartily.
-
-“Joe’s timing the fish,” was his reply. “When they smell so good that he
-can’t wait any longer, he will know they are done; and then dinner will
-be ready. It’s rather a novel way, I confess, but Joe hits it every
-pop.”
-
-This was the first time that Tom and his cousins had ever sat down to a
-meal that was composed of nothing but fish and meat, but it tasted much
-better than they thought it would. Perhaps the reason was because they
-were hungry. At any rate they disposed of all that was placed before
-them, and would have asked for another piece of squirrel if there had
-been any more on the big slice of bark that did duty as a platter.
-
-“This meal will give you an idea of what we could have done if that
-squatter had not stumbled on our canoes while we were after that bear,”
-said Roy, who stood holding the empty platter in one hand and his light
-bird gun in the other. As he spoke, he sent the platter flying over the
-pond, and broke it into inch pieces by the two charges of shot he put
-into it before it struck the water. “What’s the next thing on the
-programme?” he continued. “I don’t much like the idea of undertaking
-that long carry during the heat of the day, but I don’t see what else we
-can do unless we are willing to stay here and be idle for hours to come.
-We can’t fish any more, that’s certain. We haven’t brought our long bows
-with us, and who wants to shoot squirrels with a shot gun? Not I, for
-one.”
-
-There was no debate upon the question Roy had raised. They had their
-choice between going home, and staying where they were until the sun
-sank out of sight behind the mountains; and they were not long in making
-up their minds what they would do. When Joe Wayring picked up his gun
-and stepped into Roy’s canoe (it was a Rice Laker, and not being decked
-over, it could easily accommodate him and its owner), the others got
-into theirs, and the fleet started toward the upper end of the pond.
-
-We have said that Mirror Lake and Sherwin’s Pond were fifteen miles
-apart, and that there were about twelve miles of rapids in the stream by
-which they were connected. This, of course, would leave three miles of
-still water; but the trouble was, it could not be made use of by any one
-going from the pond to the lake. At every one of the points at which the
-rapids ceased and the stretches of still water began, the banks were
-high and steep, and so densely covered with briers and bushes that the
-most active boy would have found it a difficult task to work his way to
-the water’s edge, and an impossible one if he had a canoe on his back.
-This being the case our six friends had a long portage (they generally
-called it a “carry”) to look forward to; but three of them, at least,
-went at it as they went at every thing else that was hard—with the
-determination to do it at once and have it over with. Arthur Hastings
-went first with his little Rob Roy on his back, Joe Wayring followed
-close behind him with all the guns and paddles he could carry (the rest
-of them were lashed fast in the cock-pits so that they would not fall
-out when the canoes were turned bottom up), and they led their
-companions nearly a third of the distance before they put down their
-loads and leaned up against a tree to rest.
-
-“This is my last visit to Sherwin’s pond this season,” panted Arthur, as
-he drew his handkerchief from his pocket and wiped the big drops of
-perspiration from his forehead. “It’s too much sugar for a
-cent—altogether too much.”
-
-“Every time you come through here on a hot day you say the same thing,”
-observed Joe.
-
-“I know it; but I am in dead earnest now. The game isn’t worth the
-candle.”
-
-“What’s the matter? Are you sorry that you didn’t smash your canoe in
-the rapids?” asked Roy.
-
-“Or didn’t you catch fish enough to suit you?” chimed in Ralph.
-
-“Perhaps he is disgusted because he didn’t shoot that bear,” said Joe.
-
-“It’s hard work,” repeated Arthur. “The fun of running the rapids,
-catching a nice string of bass and seeing a bear, does not repay one for
-the horrors of this fifteen mile carry. It is worse for me to-day than
-it ever was before, because we have been so very unlucky. We have used
-our rods for the last time, and Joe will never see his canvas canoe
-again.”
-
-This was the way in which Arthur and his two friends referred to their
-losses whenever they referred to them at all. There was no unreasonable
-exhibition of rage, such as Tom Bigden would have been glad to indulge
-in, if he could have found the least excuse for so doing.
-
-If Tom had possessed even the semblance of a heart, it would have smote
-him when he saw how patiently Joe and his chums bore up under their
-misfortunes. If Matt Coyle had turned the matter over in his mind for a
-whole month, he could not have hit upon anything that was so well
-calculated to render these three boys miserable, as was the piece of
-villainy which he had that day carried out at the suggestion of Tom
-Bigden. Tom was glad of one thing: His companions did not ask him any
-questions, and consequently he was not obliged to tell them any lies.
-
-The boys rested a good many times while they were on the carry, and when
-at last they launched their canoes on the broad bosom of the lake they
-were so weary and devoid of ambition, that it was a task for them to
-paddle down to the boat-houses; but, like their arduous journey across
-the portage, it was accomplished at last by steady and persevering
-effort, and when they separated near the middle of the lake and pulled
-away toward their respective homes, they told one another that the next
-time they went down to the pond they would see to it that Matt Coyle had
-no chance to spoil their day’s sport.
-
-“There’s something about that business that don’t look just right to
-me,” said Ralph Farnsworth, as soon as Joe and his friends were out of
-hearing. “I don’t mind my own loss, but I am really sorry for Joe
-Wayring.”
-
-“So am I,” said Loren. “He prized that canoe very highly. I believe he
-would rather have lost his handsome breech-loader. I tell you we made a
-mistake in having any thing to do with George Prime. Wayring and his
-crowd are much the better lot of fellows.”
-
-These remarks settled one thing to Tom Bigden’s satisfaction. Ever since
-his interview with the squatter he had been asking himself whether or
-not he ought to take his cousins into his confidence, and now he knew
-that he had better not. He was afraid, as well as ashamed, to show them
-how far his unreasonable enmity toward Joe Wayring had led him, and so
-he said nothing.
-
-Great was the indignation among some of the Mount Airy people when it
-became known that Matt Coyle had turned up again when he was least
-expected, and that he had walked off with a hundred and fifty dollars
-worth of property that did not belong to him. But Mount Airy, as we have
-seen, was like other places in that it numbered among its inhabitants
-certain evil-minded and envious persons, who were never so happy as when
-they were listening to the story of some one’s bad luck. George Prime
-and the boys who made their head-quarters in his father’s store were
-delighted to hear that the squatter had begun operations against Joe and
-his chums, and hoped he would “keep it up” until he had stolen or
-destroyed every thing they possessed. They declared that they were sorry
-for Tom and his cousins, but when they came to say that much to them by
-word of mouth, as they did the next afternoon when Tom, Ralph and Loren
-dropped into the drug-store on their way to the post-office, they did it
-in such a way that Tom became disgusted, and left without buying the
-cigar he had intended to ask for.
-
-“The more I see of those fellows, the less I like them,” said Tom; and
-then he was about to open his battery of abuse upon Prime and his
-friends, when he discovered several of the Toxophilites coming down the
-side-walk. “I’ll tell you what’s a fact, boys,” Tom added in a lower
-tone. “It’s a lucky thing for us that we didn’t buy those cigars. Here
-comes Miss Arden with a whole crowd of girls, and there isn’t a street
-or alley that we could slink into if we had a weed in our hands.”
-
-The boys lifted their hats as the girls came up, and passed on rejoicing
-over their escape. If they had been caught in the act of smoking they
-might have said good-by to all their hopes of getting into the archery
-club. A little further on they stopped in front of the window of a
-jewelry store, where some of the prizes that were to be distributed at
-the canoe meet had been placed for exhibition. Their three companions of
-the previous day were there, and their attention was concentrated upon a
-beautiful blue silk flag, trimmed with gold fringe and bearing in its
-center the monogram of the Mount Airy canoe club, which occupied a
-conspicuous position among the prizes.
-
-“That’s some of Miss Arden’s handiwork,” said Joe Wayring, after he had
-cordially greeted Tom and his cousins. “It is to go to the first one who
-walks the greasy pole.”
-
-“Great Moses!” ejaculated Tom. “To what base uses—”
-
-“That’s just what I said,” interrupted Arthur Hastings. “I told her,
-too, that it wouldn’t make half the fun the greasy pig did, and you
-ought to have seen her stick up her nose. Another thing, now that I
-think of it: Unless the wind is just right, the flag will wallop itself
-over and around the pole until it is all covered with grease.”
-
-“And the boy who is lucky enough to capture it will have to take it into
-the water with him, and there is her elegant prize ruined at the start,”
-chimed in Joe Wayring.
-
-“Don’t you think Miss Arden had wit enough to provide for that?”
-exclaimed Mr. Yale, the jeweler, who happened to overhear this remark.
-“Do you see that little flag beside the blue one? Well, that is intended
-to represent the prize. If you are fortunate enough to capture that, you
-can fly the blue pennant at your masthead.”
-
-Miss Arden was right when she told her friends that she was sure that
-the gallant fellows who belonged to the canoe club would work harder for
-her flag than they would for a greasy pig. Every one of the boys who
-stopped in front of Mr. Yale’s window that afternoon to look at the
-prizes, told himself that if he did not win that flag it would be
-because some lucky member walked off with it before he had a chance to
-try for it.
-
-During the next two weeks little or nothing happened in or about Mount
-Airy that is worthy of note. A deputy sheriff and constable went down to
-Sherwin’s Pond to arrest Matt Coyle, and, after a three days’ search
-returned empty-handed. They found the place where the squatter had built
-his shanty, but it was gone when they got there, and so were Matt and
-his family. The authorities at Indian Lake were requested to keep a
-look-out for him, but Matt was too old a criminal to be easily caught.
-He and his boys offered themselves as guides to the guests of the
-hotels, but when they were told that they were not wanted, they set
-themselves to work to carry out the programme of which Matt had spoken
-to Tom Bigden on the day he stole Joe Wayring’s canoe—that is, to break
-up the business of guiding in the region about Indian Lake, and to make
-the people who came there for recreation so sick of the woods that they
-would never come there again. Whether or not they succeeded in their
-object shall be told further on.
-
-Tom Bigden and his cousins never knew how near they came to being
-black-balled when their names were brought before the canoe club at its
-next meeting. Prime and his friends were suspicious of Tom. The latter
-kept away from the drug-store altogether; he and his cousins were often
-seen in Joe Wayring’s company, and Prime said that looked as though Tom
-wasn’t in earnest when he promised to assist in carrying out the
-arrangements that had been made for defeating Joe and Arthur at the
-coming canoe meet.
-
-“I’ll vote for him,” said Prime, after Noble, Scott, and one or two
-others had labored with him for a long time, “but if he plays us false,
-as I really think he means to do, he can just hang up his fiddle, so far
-as the Toxophilites are concerned. I’ll take pains to let Miss Arden and
-the rest of the girls know that he and his cousins smoke and play
-billiards and cards on the sly, and they’ll make dough of his cake in
-short order.”
-
-“The agony is over at last,” said Tom, after Joe Wayring and his
-inseparable companions Arthur and Roy, who came over in the _Young
-Republic_ the next morning to announce the result of the ballot, had
-gone home again. “Bear in mind, now, that we are to stick to our
-original programme and win if we can. If we find that we have no show,
-and that the prizes must go to Wayring and his friends, or to Prime and
-his followers, we’ll stand by Wayring every time. We’ll teach that
-drug-store crowd that the next time they make up a slate they had better
-put our names on it if they expect us to help them.”
-
-It never occurred to Tom and his cousins that possibly Joe Wayring, and
-all the other boys who believed that friendly trials of strength and
-skill, like those that were to come off during the canoe meet, should be
-fairly conducted, would not thank them for their interference. Joe had
-warned all his friends that there were boys in the club who had been
-“booked” to win by fair means or foul (of course he did not tell them
-where he got his information), and they made some pretty shrewd guesses
-as to who those boys were. Being forewarned they were forearmed, and
-they did not want any help. Tom found it out on the day the races came
-off.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XI.
-
- THE CANOE MEET.
-
-
-THE first thing the members of the canoe club did when they sprang out
-of bed on the morning of the second day of August, was to run to the
-window, draw aside the curtain and take a look at the sky and the lake.
-The one was cloudless, and the surface of the other was rippled by a
-little breeze which promised, by the time the sun was an hour high, to
-freshen into a capital sailing wind. For all the members of the club
-were not so deeply interested in the paddle, portage and hurry-skurry
-races as Joe Wayring and Tom Bigden were. A few of them were expert
-sailors, and anxious to show the spectators (there would be more
-strangers among them this year than ever before), how skillfully they
-could manage their cranky little boats when they were under canvas.
-
-The young athletes were all in excellent training, and there was not one
-among them who did not expect to win a prize of more or less value
-during the day. Some of the canoeists had discovered a couple of Yale
-college students among the guests at the Mount Airy House, and after a
-little urging they had consented to assume the management of affairs,
-one as judge and the other as referee. They knew all about the rules of
-boating, and Joe Wayring told himself, that Prime and his friends would
-have to be smarter than he thought they were if they could play any
-tricks under the watchful eyes of those two college men without being
-caught in the act.
-
-At an early hour Mr. Wayring’s spacious boat-house, which was to be used
-as head-quarters and had been handsomely decorated for the occasion, was
-thrown open, and shortly afterward the members of the club began to
-arrive. They drew their canoes upon the beach at the side of the
-boat-house and disappeared in the dressing-room, where they remained
-until the warning blast of a bugle notified them that it was time to
-begin operations. Now and then one of them would take a cautious peep
-out at the back door and turn around to inform his companions that all
-New London had come up to attend the meet; and although they knew that
-there were a good many people assembled to witness the sports, they were
-all surprised, and not a few of them were made nervous by the scene that
-was presented to their gaze when they sprang off the wharf, and ran to
-push their canoes into the water. Mr. Wayring’s grounds were crowded
-with gayly dressed spectators, who where lounging on the grass or
-sitting comfortably under the tents that had been provided for them, and
-the lake was covered with sail and row boats, all of which were flying
-as many flags as they could find places for.
-
-A mile up the lake the stake-boat was anchored. In it was one of the
-judges, who reclined at his ease on a couch of cushions with an awning
-over him to keep off the sun. The other judge was Mr. Hastings, who
-stood on the wharf to act as starter. The referee’s barge, propelled by
-six of the best oarsmen that could be found among the guides, lay off
-the wharf, and the police-boats had already cleared the course.
-
-“All you young gentlemen who are to compete in this race draw a number
-as you pass, and station yourselves accordingly,” said Mr. Hastings, who
-held a small tin box above his head so that the contestants could not
-look into it and pick a number instead of taking it at random. “Go down
-as far as the leaning tree so as to get a good start, and fill away at
-the sound of the bugle, No. 1 taking the outside.”
-
-The first event was a sailing race—two miles with a turn. Those who had
-entered for it drew a number from the box, lingered a moment to look at
-the swinging silver pitcher and gold-lined goblets, which, with a tray
-to hold them, were to go to the boy who sent his canoe first across the
-line on the home stretch, and then ran out to launch their canoes and
-hoist their sails. There were ten starters, and they made a pretty
-picture as they came up the lake before the fresh breeze that was then
-blowing, and dashed across the imaginary line that marked the beginning
-of the course. Another blast from the bugle warned them that it was a
-“go,” and the race was begun.
-
-The sound of the bugle seemed to excite every body—the people on shore
-as well as the boys in the boats, who crowded their cranky little crafts
-until it looked as if some of them must certainly go over. There were
-several of Prime’s friends among the contestants, and Joe and his two
-chums wondered if any one of them had been “booked” to come out ahead in
-this particular race. They saw nothing to indicate it. There was no
-attempt to foul the boy who seemed likely to win, and indeed there was
-no chance for any such proceeding. The referee’s barge easily kept
-abreast of the racers, and the man in the stake-boat kept his glass
-directed toward them from the start. There was some crowding and
-confusion at the turn, and some of the little vessels came dangerously
-near to one another; but their crews made desperate efforts to clear
-themselves, some because they knew they were closely watched, and others
-because they were determined to win fairly or not at all, and the race
-was not interrupted. It was a close and exciting struggle, and the boy
-who brought his Rice Laker first across the line was fairly entitled to
-the silver pitcher.
-
-“That was a splendid race,” exclaimed Joe Wayring, as the contestants,
-after beaching their canoes, came into the boat-house to listen to the
-congratulations, or to receive the sympathy of their friends. “The
-paddle race comes off now, and I hope that those of us who take part in
-it will make as good a showing as you did.”
-
-While Joe was talking in this way, Ned Stewart, one of the boys who had
-just been defeated, drew a few of his friends around him in a remote
-corner of the boat-house by intimating to them in a mysterious way that
-he had something of importance to say to them.
-
-“Look here, Bigden,” said Ned, in an excited whisper. “I believe it is
-understood that some of us are to foul Wayring or any fellow in his
-crowd who stands a chance of winning, and give Noble a chance to carry
-off the honors of the paddle race?”
-
-“I believe you did make some such arrangement as that,” replied Tom,
-indifferently. “But if my memory serves me, you did not consult me in
-regard to it.”
-
-These words produced the utmost consternation among the boys in the
-corner.
-
-“Are you going back from your word?” cried Noble, as soon as he could
-speak.
-
-“What do you mean by that?” demanded Tom.
-
-“You know very well what he means,” exclaimed Bob Lord, who, it will be
-remembered, had been “booked” to win the upset race. “Now, look here,
-Bigden: You have been running with Wayring a good deal, of late, and we
-might have expected this of you. You want Wayring to win because you
-think he can do more to get you into the archery club than we can; but I
-assure you that you are mistaken there. You can’t get in without our
-votes, and if you go back on us we shan’t give them to you.”
-
-“I don’t want Wayring to win,” said Tom, emphatically. “My Cousin Loren
-is going to come out at the top of the heap in this race.”
-
-“Well, I’ll bet you a dollar he isn’t,” exclaimed Noble, whose flashing
-eyes showed how angry he was. “If I don’t win this race nobody shall.”
-
-“Well, I’ll bet you two dollars that I shall keep pretty close to Loren,
-and that the boy who interferes with him purposely will go out of his
-canoe in less time than he can say ‘General Jackson’ with his mouth
-open. Not only that, but I’ll thrash him the very first time I can catch
-him ashore,” replied Tom, returning Noble’s angry scowl with interest,
-and doubling up his fists as if he were ready and willing to put his
-threat into execution then and there.
-
-“Look here! Look here, boys,” whispered Prime, who was really afraid the
-two would come to blows. “Such work as this will never do. If we quarrel
-among ourselves, Wayring and his crowd will walk off with all the prizes
-as they have always done.”
-
-“I have no intention of quarreling,” said Noble, who did not like the
-way Tom glared at him. “I only want Bigden to keep his promise.”
-
-“What promise?” demanded Tom.
-
-“Why, didn’t you say that you were down on Wayring and Hastings, and
-that you did not want to see them win any of the races?” inquired Scott.
-
-“I did.”
-
-“And didn’t you promise that you would help _us_ win?” chimed in Frank
-Noble.
-
-“No, I didn’t. When you told me what your programme was, I simply said:
-‘All right.’ By that I meant that you could do as you pleased, and my
-cousins and I would do as _we_ pleased. You were very good to yourselves
-when you picked out all the best races for your own men, and left us out
-in the cold, were you not? We do not consider that we are under
-obligations to abide by any such arrangement, and we shan’t do it. We’ve
-got a programme of our own that we mean to carry out if we can, and the
-fellow who interferes with us in any way may make up his mind to take
-the consequences.”
-
-So saying Tom walked off followed by his cousins, leaving Prime and his
-companions lost in wonder.
-
-“Serves us just right for having any thing to do with such upstarts,”
-said Noble, who was the first to speak. “They have gone back on us fair
-and square; that’s easy enough to be seen.”
-
-“Who ever heard of such impudence?” exclaimed Prime. “They came to Mount
-Airy with the idea that they could run the town to suit themselves, and
-because they can’t do it, they are mad about it. They must not be
-allowed to win a race. I would much rather see Wayring or Hastings come
-in first.”
-
-“That brings me to what I wanted to say to you,” said Ned Stewart. “I
-don’t know whether or not that college man in the stake-boat suspects
-any thing, but he certainly acted like it. He kept his eyes on us from
-the time we crossed the line until we got home. If you try to foul any
-body you must be very sly about it, or else you will be caught and ruled
-out.”
-
-If Stewart had any thing else to say he did not have time to say it, for
-just then the bugle sounded another warning, and that put a stop to the
-conversation. It was a call to the boys who were to take part in the
-paddle race. A few seconds later thirteen active young fellows in showy
-uniforms sprang off the wharf one after the other, shoved their canoes
-into the water, and paddled away to take the positions assigned them by
-the numbers they had drawn from the tin box. As luck would have it, Tom
-Bigden found himself near the center of the line, with his Cousin Loren
-on one side of him and Frank Noble on the other. Joe Wayring was on the
-right, nearest the shore, and Arthur Hastings on the extreme left, near
-the middle of the lake.
-
-“It’s a bad outlook for us,” whispered Loren, after he had run his eye
-up and down the line. “Joe and Arthur are so far away that you can’t
-touch them.”
-
-“Never mind,” replied Tom, in the same cautious whisper. “They will have
-to come closer together when we get to the stake-boat, and then,
-perhaps, we can do something. Keep your weather eye peeled for Noble.
-He’ll spoil your chances if he can. He’s bound to win or kick up a row.”
-
-“Are you all ready?” shouted Mr. Hastings, from his place on the wharf.
-
-There was no response in words, but each boy grasped his double paddle
-with a firmer hold, dipped one blade of it into the water and leaned
-forward so that he could put all his strength into the first stroke,
-which was given before the notes of the bugle had fairly died away.
-
-The thirteen contestants got off well together, and for a while it was
-any body’s race; but by the time a quarter of a mile had been passed
-over, Arthur Hastings and Roy Sheldon, who “made the pace”, began to
-draw to the front, while others fell behind, and when they rounded the
-stake-boat the line was very much broken. Tom Bigden did not try to win.
-According to the agreement this was not his race. He simply kept close
-beside his cousin—he had harder work to do it than he expected to have,
-for Loren sent his canoe through the water at an astonishing rate of
-speed—holding himself in readiness to frustrate any attempt at trickery
-on Frank Noble’s part, or to foul Frank if he showed speed enough to
-beat Loren fairly.
-
-How the struggle would have ended, had each boy been as determined to
-win or lose on his merits as the majority of them were, it is hard to
-tell. Arthur and Roy paddled much faster now than they did on the day
-they had those friendly trials with Tom and his cousin, and so did
-Loren. Frank Noble, who was by no means an antagonist to be despised,
-kept close company with them, while Joe Wayring seemed content to linger
-behind and save his wind so that he could force the pace on the way
-home; consequently he was an eye-witness to a piece of deliberate
-rascality on the part of Tom Bigden, which was so neatly executed that
-it might have passed for an accident, if Joe, when questioned by the
-judge, had not told the truth concerning it. It came about in this way:
-
-Arthur and Roy rounded the stake-boat together, keeping far enough away
-from each other to avoid all danger of a collision. Frank Noble followed
-in their wake, and close behind him came Loren Farnsworth, who having
-got his “second wind”, was plying his paddle with so much strength and
-skill that he was rapidly closing up the gap between himself and his
-leaders. Noble saw defeat staring him in the face, and believing that he
-could gain a few feet on Hastings and his companion, and throw Loren out
-of the race at the same time, he resorted to an expedient which drew a
-warning shout from Joe Wayring, who was contentedly following in Tom’s
-rear.
-
-“Look out there, Frank!” cried Joe. “You’ll be foul of somebody in a
-minute more.”
-
-“I told Tom that Loren Farnsworth should never come out at the top of
-the heap in this race, and I meant every word of it,” said Frank, to
-himself; and paying no attention to Joe’s warning, he shot his canoe
-across Loren’s bow, passing so close to him that the latter was obliged
-to stop paddling and back water in order to escape the collision which
-for a second or two seemed inevitable.
-
-This was Tom Bigden’s opportunity and he was prompt to improve it. With
-a movement so quick and dextrous that it looked like an accident to the
-people on shore who witnessed it, Tom unjointed his paddle, dropped one
-blade of it overboard, and laying out all his strength on the other, he
-swung the bow of his canoe around and sent it crashing into the side of
-Noble’s boat, overturning it in an instant and throwing its occupant out
-into the water. Then, quick as a flash, Tom backed his canoe out of
-Loren’s way and sent it directly in the path of the other boys, who were
-thus given their choice between two courses of action: One was to make a
-wide detour in order to clear the three boats that lay in their way, and
-the other was to give up the race, which was now virtually left to
-Hastings, Sheldon and Loren Farnsworth. The most of them preferred to
-draw out of a contest in which they had no show of winning, and with
-many exclamations of anger and disgust turned about and paddled back to
-the starting point; while the others crowded up around the stake-boat to
-hear what the judge and referee would have to say about it.
-
-“I claim foul on that!” shouted Tom; and the words and the speaker’s
-easy assurance so astonished Joe Wayring, that he sat in his canoe with
-his paddle suspended in the air as if he did not know what to do with
-it.
-
-“I claim foul!” sputtered Noble, as soon as his head appeared above the
-surface of the water. “Bigden capsized me on purpose.”
-
-“I say I didn’t!” cried Tom, looking very surprised and innocent indeed.
-“What business had you to try to cross my bows, when any body with half
-an eye could see that you had no chance to do it? You declared that if
-you didn’t win this race no one else should, and that’s why you got in
-my way.”
-
-“And you said that your Cousin Loren was booked to win, if you could
-make him do it,” retorted Noble, who had climbed into his canoe and was
-rapidly throwing out the water it had shipped in righting. “That’s why
-you capsized me. It is a lucky thing for you that you didn’t smash in
-the side of my boat as you tried to do. I would have made you pay
-roundly for it, if there is law enough in Mount Airy to—”
-
-“That will do,” said the judge, in a tone of authority. “This is not the
-place to settle quarrels, and neither am I the one to do it.”
-
-“My paddle got unjointed, and I couldn’t shift from one side to the
-other quick enough to keep clear of you,” said Tom.
-
-Meanwhile Hastings, Sheldon and Loren Farnsworth were making fast time
-down the home stretch toward the starting point. To the surprise of
-every body, and to the no small annoyance of Arthur Hastings, who had
-never before been so closely followed by any one except Sheldon and
-Wayring, Loren was not only holding his own, but he was gaining at every
-stroke. There is no telling which one of the three would have come out
-ahead at the finish, had they been permitted to continue the struggle;
-but the referee, seeing the commotion among the rest of the fleet,
-called out: “No race!” and pulled up to the stake-boat to see what was
-the matter. The judge gave him his version of the affair, Noble and Tom
-Bigden gave theirs, and each of the two boys would have expressed his
-opinion of the other in no very complimentary terms, had not the referee
-interrupted them by saying—
-
-“Hard words can’t settle disputes of this kind. The race will have to be
-tried over again, and Noble, I don’t think you will be allowed to take
-any part in it. You made a mistake in trying to cross Bigden’s bows when
-you did, because you had no room to do it without interfering with him.
-You threw him out of the contest, and came very near throwing Farnsworth
-out, too; consequently it will be my duty to bar you. I am sorry—”
-
-“You needn’t be, for I am sure I don’t care,” replied Noble, rudely. He
-tried hard to control himself so that the boys around him should not see
-how very angry he was, but his efforts met with little success. To be
-ruled out of one contest was to be ruled out of all; and that was a
-severe blow to a boy who had confidently expected to carry off some of
-the best prizes. “What are you going to do with Bigden?” he asked, or
-rather demanded of the referee.
-
-“That depends,” answered the latter, somewhat sharply.
-
-“He can’t do any thing with me because I have violated no rule,” said
-Tom, defiantly. “You ran across my path when you had no business to do
-it, and an accident to my paddle made me run into you. That’s all there
-is of it.”
-
-But the referee and judge seemed to hold a different opinion. They
-conversed for a few minutes in tones so low that no one but the guides
-could hear what they said, and presently the judge appealed to Joe
-Wayring.
-
-“You were close behind Bigden when this happened,” said he. “Do you
-think it was an accident?”
-
-“What does he know about it?” cried Tom, fiercely. “I don’t care what he
-or anybody else says; I know—”
-
-“One moment, please,” interrupted the referee. “You have had your say,
-and you don’t help your side of the case any by showing so much
-excitement over it.”
-
-“Do you think Bigden unjointed his paddle purposely?” continued the
-judge, addressing himself to Joe.
-
-“Yes, sir,” answered the latter, promptly.
-
-“Do you think he could have kept clear of Noble if he had made use of
-ordinary skill and caution?”
-
-“I am sure of it.”
-
-“How could he have done it?”
-
-“By working his paddle on the port side of his canoe. That would have
-thrown him around the stake-boat very neatly and given him a winning
-place in the race; but instead of that he used his paddle on the
-starboard side, and of course that threw the bow of his canoe plump into
-Noble’s side.”
-
-Frank and the judge nodded as if to say that that was about the way the
-thing stood, and after a few minutes’ reflection the referee said—
-
-“I am perfectly satisfied and will announce my decision where all the
-members of the club can hear it. As we are wasting time and delaying the
-other sports by staying here, we will go back to head-quarters.”
-
-It was not a very sociable company of boys who turned about at this
-command and paddled slowly back to the starting point, and neither were
-Noble and Tom Bigden the only ones among them who were mad enough to
-fight. Two of their number were so jealous of each other and so anxious
-to win prizes, that they had deliberately disgraced the club in the
-presence of hundreds of strangers; and it is hard to see how any lover
-of fair play could help being annoyed over it. Joe Wayring felt it very
-keenly; and consequently when Tom Bigden paddled up alongside and told
-him that he intended to get even with him some way for the stand he had
-taken, Joe was in just the right humor to give him as good as he sent.
-
-“Joe Wayring, you have made an enemy of me by this day’s work,” said
-Tom, in a threatening tone.
-
-“By telling the truth in regard to your fouling of Frank Noble?”
-exclaimed Joe. “I don’t care if I have. I saw the whole proceeding, and
-I know that you meant to do it. I warned you that any boy who could so
-far forget himself as to deliberately interfere with another, would be
-forever ruled out of the club’s races, and you will find that I knew
-what I was talking about.”
-
-“You might as well expel me and be done with it?” exclaimed Tom,
-angrily. “What’s the use of my belonging to the club if I am not allowed
-to take part in its contests? Joe Wayring, there’s no honor about you.
-You have led me to believe that you were my friend, and then you went
-back on me the very first chance you got.”
-
-“Do you mean that I have been sailing under false colors?” cried Joe,
-indignantly. “If you throw out any more insinuations of that sort before
-we reach the boat-house I’ll dump you in the lake. When the judge
-questioned me I told him the truth; and I wouldn’t have done otherwise
-to please any body.”
-
-Something must have warned Tom that Joe would be as good as his word,
-for he had nothing more to say to him. He gradually fell behind and
-allowed him to paddle down to the boat-house in peace.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XII.
-
- OFF FOR INDIAN LAKE.
-
-
-WHEN Joe Wayring beached his canoe below the boat-house, he was
-immediately surrounded by his friends who were impatient to hear all
-about it. They knew there had been a foul, for some of the laggards in
-the race had seen it; but they could not tell how it had been brought
-about, or who was to blame for it.
-
-“It was Noble’s fault in the first place, and Tom Bigden’s in the
-second,” said Joe, in response to their hurried inquiries. “It seems
-that there are three ‘cliques’ in the club, one of which believes in
-doing things fairly, while the other two do not. Loren Farnsworth was
-‘booked’ by one of the cliques to win the paddle race, while Frank Noble
-was the choice of the other. Each was determined that his opponent
-should not win, and the result was most disgraceful—a deliberate
-collision at the stake-boat in the presence of all these strangers. What
-sort of a story will they carry back to the city about the Mount Airy
-canoe club? Noble began the row by putting himself in Loren’s way and
-Tom retaliated by capsizing Frank’s canoe and throwing him out into the
-water.”
-
-“Do you think he meant to do it?” inquired Hastings, who was far in the
-lead at the time, and could not of course see what was going on behind
-him.
-
-“I know he did,” replied Joe, who then went on to give a circumstantial
-account of the manner in which the fouling was done. The boys all
-declared that it was a very neat trick, and one of them added—
-
-“That Tom Bigden’s cheek is something wonderful. As soon as he had
-backed out of Loren’s way and laid himself across the course so that we
-couldn’t get by him without losing more ground than we could possibly
-make up, he called out that he claimed foul on that. Did you ever hear
-of such impudence?”
-
-“Please give me your attention for one moment, gentlemen,” shouted the
-president of the club; and Joe and his friends turned about to see the
-referee perched upon a dry-goods box.
-
-“Young gentlemen,” said he, as the boys gathered around him, “the
-contestants in the paddle race will go over the course again this
-afternoon, one hour after lunch. They will be the same as before, with
-the exception of Frank Noble and Thomas Bigden, whom I am compelled to
-bar out. It is exceedingly unpleasant to me to be obliged to render this
-decision, but the rules under which your sports are conducted leave me
-no alternative.”
-
-“What do you think of that, fellows?” said Arthur Hastings. “If Bigden
-isn’t satisfied now that he can’t run this club to suit his own ideas, I
-shall always think he ought to be.”
-
-“Well, Noble,” said Prime. “You’re done for at last. You are ruled out
-of every thing. What are you going to do?”
-
-“What are _you_ going to do?” asked Frank in reply.
-
-“I? Nothing at all. What can I do?”
-
-“You can go home with me, can’t you?”
-
-“Eh? Well—yes; I suppose I could, but I don’t want to. The fun is only
-just beginning.”
-
-“And are you going to stay here and enjoy yourself and assist in making
-the meet a success when one of your friends is barred out?” exclaimed
-Noble, indignantly. “I didn’t think that of you, Prime. Why didn’t you
-stay close to me so that you could put in a word to help me? You knew
-what I was going to do.”
-
-“I couldn’t stay close to you. Those fellows in the lead made the pace
-so hot that I had to fall behind, and I didn’t see the foul when it
-occurred.”
-
-“No matter for that. You could have said something in my defense if you
-had wanted to; but instead of standing by me, you left me to fight Joe
-Wayring and the judge alone. Look there! Bigden’s cousins are not going
-back on him as you are going back on me. Tom is preparing to go home,
-and they are going with him.”
-
-But Noble did not know what a stormy time Tom had with Loren and Ralph
-before he could induce them to forego all the sports and pleasures of
-the meet. Loren was particularly obstinate. He was satisfied now that he
-was a pretty good hand with a double paddle, and confident that if any
-of the three recognized champions beat him when the afternoon race came
-off, they would have to make their canoes get through the water faster
-than they ever did before. Then there was the upset race, which Ralph
-was almost sure he could win, and the greasy pole walk, with Miss
-Arden’s silk flag to go to the best man—must they give up all these
-things just because Tom had been ruled out?
-
-“What’s the reason I am ruled out?” exclaimed Tom, who was as mad as a
-boy ever gets to be. “Isn’t it because I tried my best to help Loren win
-the paddle race? I tell you that you don’t stand the least show of
-winning any thing; but stay if you want to.”
-
-Ralph and Loren were well enough acquainted with Tom to know that there
-was a volume of meaning in his last words. If they braved his anger they
-would be sure to suffer for it in the end, and if Tom turned against
-them, where could they look for friends and associates? Prime and his
-followers would not have any thing more to do with them; Joe Wayring,
-unless he was as blind as a bat, had seen quite enough to make him
-suspicious of them; and when they came to look at it, they found that
-they were in a very unenviable situation.
-
-“I’d give almost any thing if I could live the last half hour over
-again,” declared Loren, after he had taken a few minutes in which to
-consider the matter. “We’ve made Noble and his crowd so mad that they’ll
-never look at us again, Tom is just as good as expelled from the club,
-and we may as well give up all hope of being admitted to the
-Toxophilites. We’re at outs with every body, and the only thing we can
-do is to stand by one another.”
-
-Ralph thought so, too. Without wasting any more time in argument they
-put on their long coats to cover up the uniforms they would probably
-never wear again, shoved off their canoes, and set out for home; and no
-one except Frank Noble saw them go. The other members of the club were
-too much interested in their own affairs to pay any attention to the
-movements of a boy who had gone deliberately to work to mar their day’s
-enjoyment.
-
-“Tom’s got two fellows to stand by him, but I am left alone,” thought
-Noble, with no little bitterness in his heart. “Prime and the rest of
-them pretend to hate Wayring and his crowd, and yet they are willing to
-stay and help on the sports after I have been kicked out of the lists.
-For two cents I’d hunt up Wayring and tell him to look out for Scott and
-Lord.”
-
-But he didn’t do it. He knew that such a proceeding would turn every
-body against him, and he had made enemies enough already. Without
-attracting attention he got into his canoe and paddled down to his
-boat-house.
-
-The unfortunate ending of the paddle race had a most depressing effect
-upon the members of the canoe club, some of whom declared that their
-organization was on the eve of falling to pieces. After that every thing
-“dragged”. The whole programme was duly carried out, but the contestants
-did not enter into the sports with their usual spirit and energy. Scott
-and Lord, who were “booked” for the sailing and upset races,
-respectively, won nothing at all. They could not win fairly, and the
-promptness with which Tom and Frank had been ruled out deterred them
-from attempting any tricks. Arthur Hastings won the paddle race after a
-hard struggle; Joe Wayring, being the first to walk the greasy pole,
-carried off Miss Arden’s silk flag; and Roy for once went home as empty
-handed as he came, the sailing and upset races being won by other boys.
-But Roy wasn’t mad about it, as some of the unsuccessful ones were. He
-had come there for a “good time”, and he had it; and his failure to win
-a prize did not spoil his day’s sport.
-
-After the spectators had gone back to their hotels and all the members
-of the club had set out for home, the three chums sat down in the
-boat-house to compare notes.
-
-“I am glad it’s over,” said Roy, giving expression to the thoughts that
-were passing through the minds of his companions. “It was the meanest
-meet I ever heard of. I wouldn’t have had that affair at the stake-boat
-happen for any thing. Those visitors from New London will say that we
-are as bad as the professional oarsmen who saw their boats, and capsize
-themselves on purpose.”
-
-“Well, you expected something of the kind, didn’t you?” said Joe. “I
-did. When Bigden told me that there were certain boys in the club who
-had been ‘booked’ to win certain races, I was sure that Prime had a
-finger in the pie, and that the reason Tom told me about it was because
-he had got mad at him or some member of his party. The events of the day
-have proved that I was right. In making up the slate, Prime and his
-friends either forgot or refused to give any of the races to Tom and his
-cousins, and that was what caused the trouble.”
-
-“Well, it’s some satisfaction to know that they will never have a chance
-to cause us any more trouble,” said Arthur. “They will withdraw from the
-club, of course.”
-
-“I think there’s no doubt about that,” said Joe. “I know that that is
-what I should do if I were in their place. As Tom Bigden said: ‘What’s
-the use of belonging to a club if you are not allowed to take part in
-the contests?’ I am of the opinion that they will band together and get
-up a club of their own. Now let’s talk about something else. To-morrow
-we start for Indian Lake.”
-
-This was a much more agreeable topic of conversation than the canoe
-meet, and they talked about it until the lengthening shadows admonished
-Arthur and Roy that it was time for them to set out for their homes.
-
-Indian Lake was a favorite place of resort for the Mount Airy sportsmen,
-and for these three boys in particular. They went there regularly every
-summer. The country about the village was not wild enough to suit them,
-and besides the trout streams were so constantly fished by the New
-London anglers, that they were beginning to show signs of giving out.
-Joe and his friends were so well acquainted with the lake that they
-never thought of taking a guide when they went there for recreation.
-They went everywhere that a guide could take them, and with no fear of
-being lost. They were joint partners in a skiff, which they had fitted
-up with special reference to these annual trips—a strong, easy running
-craft, so light that it could be carried over the portages without any
-great outlay of strength, and so roomy that the boys could sleep in it
-without being crowded. It was provided with lockers fore and aft, in
-which the owners carried their extra clothing, provisions and camp
-equipage, an awning to keep off the sun and a water-proof tent which
-would keep them dry, no matter how hard the rain came down. With this
-boat a journey of a hundred miles—that was the distance between Mount
-Airy and Indian Lake, and there was a navigable water-course almost all
-the way—was looked upon as a pleasure trip. The boys would have been
-astonished if they had known what was to be the result of this
-particular visit to the lake.
-
-That night there were three busy young fellows in Mount Airy, who were
-packing up and getting ready for an early start on the following
-morning. If you could have seen their things after they got them
-together, you might have been surprised to see that there was not a
-single fowling-piece among them. What was the use of taking guns into
-the woods during the “close” season—that is, while the game was
-protected by law? But each boy took with him a weapon which, in his
-hands, was almost as deadly as a shot gun is in the hands of an ordinary
-marksman—a long bow with its accompanying quiver full of arrows. The law
-permitted them to shoot loons—if they could. At any rate it was sport to
-try, and to see the lightning-like movements of the bird as it went
-under water at the twang of the bow-string.
-
-“There’s one thing about your outfit that doesn’t look just right,” said
-Uncle Joe, pointing to the heavy bait-rod which his nephew placed in the
-corner beside his long bow. “The idea of catching trout with a thing
-like that, and worms for bait! Before you go into the woods again I will
-see that you have a nice light fly-rod.”
-
-“But I can’t throw a fly,” said Joe.
-
-“Well, you can learn, can’t you?”
-
-Joe said he thought he could, and there the matter rested for a whole
-year.
-
-The next morning at four o’clock Joe Wayring was sitting on the wharf in
-front of the boat-house, watching Arthur Hastings, who was coming up the
-lake in the skiff. When he arrived Joe passed down to him two cases, one
-containing his long bow and quiver, the other his bait-rod and dip-net,
-a bundle of blankets, a soldier’s knapsack with a change of clothing in
-it, and the contents of a big market basket. The basket itself was left
-on the wharf, because it would have taken up too much valuable space in
-the lockers. Mars, the Newfoundlander, begged to go, too, and growled
-spitefully at Arthur’s little cocker spaniel, which growled defiantly
-back at him from his safe perch on the stern locker. Jim (that was the
-spaniel’s name), always went on these expeditions as body-guard and
-sentinel. He seemed to have a deep sense of the responsibility that
-rested upon him, and the arrogant and overbearing manner in which he
-conducted himself toward strangers, proved that he considered himself to
-be of some consequence in the world. He was a featherweight and took up
-but little room; while the Newfoundlander’s huge bulk would have been
-sadly in their way. They might as well have added another boy to the
-party.
-
-Having stowed his supplies and equipments away in the lockers, Joe
-picked up an oar and assisted Arthur to pull the skiff up to Mr.
-Sheldon’s boat-house, where they found Roy waiting for them. He soon
-transferred himself and his belongings from the wharf to the cock-pit,
-and then the skiff went at a rapid rate across the lake toward the
-river, the boys chanting a boat song as they steadily plied the oars.
-They paused a moment at the head of the rapids, and as they gazed at
-them, Arthur said—
-
-“How do you suppose Matt Coyle ever succeeded in getting that big heavy
-punt of his down there? I wouldn’t make the passage in her for all the
-money there is in Mount Airy.”
-
-“It’s a wonder to me that he didn’t smash her all to pieces,” said Joe.
-“She’s in Sherwin’s Pond now, I suppose, and there she will have to
-stay, for there is no way to get her out. I wonder what Matt has done
-with my canoe?”
-
-“Oh, he has snagged and sunk her before this time,” replied Roy,
-consolingly. “I wonder what he has done with the rod he stole from me?”
-
-“Some black bass has smashed it for him most likely,” said Arthur. “At
-any rate you will never handle it again.”
-
-The boys had from the first given up all hope of ever recovering their
-lost property. The deputy sheriff and constable, stimulated to extra
-exertion by the offer of a large reward by the Mount Airy authorities,
-had scoured the woods in every direction in search of the thief, but
-their efforts had met with no success. They found the site of Matt’s
-shanty, as we have said, but the shanty itself had disappeared. So had
-Matt and his family, and the officers could not get upon their trail.
-Perhaps if we go back to the day on which Matt stole Joe Wayring’s canoe
-and follow his fortunes for a short time, we shall see what the reason
-was.
-
-When the squatter picked up Joe’s double paddle and shoved away from the
-shore, after taking possession of all the fishing rods and bundles that
-he could lay his hand on, he told himself that he had done something
-toward paying off the Mount Airy people for the shameful manner in which
-they had treated him and his family.
-
-“They wouldn’t let us stay up there to the village an’ earn an honest
-livin’, like we wanted to do,” said Matt, with a chuckle, “an’ now I’ll
-show ’em how much they made by it. Them things must be wuth a power of
-money,” he went on, looking down at the elegant rods which he had
-unjointed and laid on the bottom of the canoe, “an’ I reckon mebbe we’ve
-got grub enough to last us fur a day or two—good grub, too, sich as
-don’t often come into our house less’n we hooks it. This is a powerful
-nice little boat, this canoe is, an’ now we’ll go up to Injun Lake, an’
-me an’ the boys will set up fur independent guides. If they won’t have
-us there, we’ll bust up the business.”
-
-While communing thus with himself the squatter did not neglect to ply
-his paddle vigorously, nor to look over his shoulder now and then to
-satisfy himself that his rascality had not yet been discovered. But Joe
-and his companions spent fully half an hour in roaming about through the
-woods, looking for the bear and shooting squirrels for their dinner, and
-when they came out, Matt was nowhere in sight. He had crossed the pond,
-and was urging the canoe up a narrow winding creek toward his
-habitation. With a caution which had become a part of his nature, he had
-concealed his place of abode so effectually that a fleet of canoeists
-might have passed up the creek without knowing that there was a shanty
-within less than a stone’s throw of them. The only visible sign that any
-body had ever been in the creek was a disreputable looking punt, with a
-stove and battered bow, which was drawn out upon the bank. She had had a
-hard time of it in getting through the rapids, and it was a mystery how
-Matt had saved himself from a capsize, and kept his miserable old craft
-afloat until he could get her up the creek. She had carried the squatter
-and all his worldly possessions for many a long mile on Indian Lake and
-its tributary streams, but her days of usefulness were over now. Her
-trip down the rapids was the last she ever made. She was in Sherwin’s
-Pond and there she must stay.
-
-“Hi, there!” yelled Matt, as he ran the bow of the canvas canoe upon the
-bank.
-
-An answering yelp came from the bushes, and presently Matt’s wife and
-boys came hurrying out. They would not have expressed the least surprise
-if the squatter had come back with as many turkeys or chickens as he
-could conveniently carry, because they were accustomed to such things;
-but to see him in possession of a nice little canoe, five silver mounted
-fishing rods and as many big bundles, excited their astonishment.
-
-“Where did you get ’em, old man, an’ what’s into them there bundles?”
-was the woman’s whispered inquiry.
-
-“I got ’em up there in the pond clost to the foot of the rapids,”
-answered Matt, gleefully. “I’ll learn them rich fellers up to Mount Airy
-to treat a gentleman right the next time they see one. We’re jest as
-good as they be if we are poor.”
-
-“Course we be,” said Jake, Matt’s oldest boy. “What’s them there
-things—fish poles? I want one of ’em.”
-
-“All right. You an’ Sam take your pick, an’ we’ll sell the rest. If you
-see a feller that is needin’ a pole, you can tell him that you know
-where he can get one worth the money.”
-
-“About how much?” queried Jake.
-
-“Wal,” said Matt, reflectively, “them poles must have cost nigh onto
-five dollars; but seein’ that they’re second hand we will have to take a
-leetle less fur ’em—say two an’ a half.”
-
-“An’ how much be them there things with the cranks onto ’em wuth?” asked
-Sam.
-
-“’Bout the same. You tell the feller, when you find him, that he can
-have a pole an’ a windlass fur five dollars.”
-
-This showed how much the squatter knew about some things. There wasn’t a
-rod in the lot that cost less than twenty dollars, or a reel that was
-worth less than thirteen. Matt would have thought himself rich if he had
-known the real value of the property he had in his possession.
-
-“What’s into them there bundles?” demanded the old woman.
-
-“Grub,” answered Matt. “Good grub, too.”
-
-In less time than it takes to tell it, the bundles had been jerked out
-of the canoe and torn open. Matt’s family was always hungry, and his
-wife and boys fairly gloated over the hard boiled eggs, bacon, sardines,
-sandwiches and other nice things which the boys’ thoughtful mothers had
-put up for their dinner.
-
-“Rich folks has nice grub to eat, don’t they?” said Jake, speaking as
-plainly as a mouthful of bread and meat would permit.
-
-“Yes; an’ we’ll soon be in a fix to have nice things, too,” said Matt,
-confidently. “I’ve got a boat of my own now, an’ I’m goin’ to Injun Lake
-an’ set myself up fur a guide.”
-
-“But, pap, they drove us away from there once,” exclaimed Jake. “They
-was jest like the Mount Airy folks—they didn’t want us around.”
-
-“Don’t I know it?” cried Matt, laying down his sandwich long enough to
-shake both his fists in the air. “But they won’t drive us away again, I
-bet you, ’cause it’ll be wuss for ’em if they try it. I’ll kick up sich
-a rumpus in them woods that every body will steer cl’ar of ’em; then
-what’ll become of them big hotels when they ain’t got no custom to
-support ’em? I reckon we’d best be gettin’ away from here this very
-night. I’m in a hurry to get to guidin’ so’t I can make some money
-before the season’s over, an’ besides I kinder want to get outen the way
-of that there constable. He’ll be along directly, lookin’ fur these
-things, an’ I don’t care to see him.”
-
-“What’ll we do with the house?” asked the old woman. “We can’t tote it
-cl’ar to the lake on our backs.”
-
-“Course not. We’ll burn it an’ the punt, too. They won’t never be of no
-more use, ’cause ’taint no ways likely that we shall ever come here
-agin’, an’ we ain’t goin’ to leave ’em fur them Mount Airy fellers to
-use when they come to the pond huntin’ an’ fishin’.”
-
-The squatter need not have borrowed trouble on this score. There was not
-a hunter or a fisherman in the village who could have been induced to
-occupy his shanty or use his punt, for, like their owners, they were
-things to be avoided. But Matt and his family seemed to think that they
-would be accommodating somebody if they left them there, and the order
-to destroy them by fire was carried out as soon as they had eaten the
-last of the stolen provisions.
-
-While his wife was engaged in removing the bedding and cooking utensils,
-and tying them in small bundles so that they could be easily carried,
-and the boys were at work hauling the punt out of the water and turning
-it up against the house so that the two would burn together, Matt busied
-himself in putting the rods into their cases; after which he walked
-around the canvas canoe and gave it a good looking over. Tom Bigden had
-told him that if he didn’t want to carry the canoe on his back, he could
-take it to pieces and carry it in his hand as he would a gripsack; but
-the trouble was, Matt did not know how to go to work to take it apart.
-Every thing fitted snugly, and he could not find any place to begin. The
-only parts of it that he could move were the bottom boards; and when he
-had taken them out, the frame-work of the canoe was as solid as ever. He
-spent a quarter of a hour in unavailing efforts to start something, and
-then giving it up as a task beyond his powers, he decided that the only
-thing he could do was to carry it as he would carry any other canoe. A
-less experienced man would have shrunk from the undertaking. It was
-fully twenty miles to the river which connected the two lakes, and the
-course lay through a dense forest where there was not even the semblance
-of a path. But there was no other way to get the canoe to Indian Lake.
-
-Meanwhile, Matt’s wife and boys had worked to such good purpose that
-every thing was ready for the start. Each one had a bundle to carry, and
-the boys had set fire to a quantity of light wood which they had piled
-in the middle of the shanty. They lingered long enough to see the fire
-fairly started, and then turned their faces hopefully toward Indian
-Lake, the old woman leading the way, and Matt bringing up the rear with
-the canvas canoe on his back.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIII.
-
- SNAGGED AND SUNK.
-
-
-HAVING plenty of time at their disposal, Joe Wayring and his friends
-were in no particular hurry to reach Indian Lake. After they entered the
-river they kept the skiff moving rapidly, but at the same time they did
-not neglect to keep their eyes open for “rovers”—that is, any objects,
-animate or inanimate, that would give them an opportunity to try their
-skill with their long bows. If a thieving crow, a murderous blue jay, or
-a piratical kingfisher showed himself within range, the sharp hiss of an
-arrow admonished him that there were enemies close at hand. Kingfishers
-were objects of especial dislike. The boys were fish culturists in a
-small way, and had stocked a pond on Mr. Sheldon’s grounds. On the very
-day that the “fry” were put into it, the kingfishers and minks made
-their appearance, and then began a contest which had been kept up ever
-since. By the aid of traps and breech-loaders the boys waged an
-incessant warfare upon the interlopers, and finally succeeded in
-thinning them out so that the trout were allowed to rest in comparative
-peace.
-
-The boys did not stop at noon, but ate their lunch as they floated along
-with the current. The monotony of the afternoon’s run was broken by an
-hour’s chase after an eagle, which they did not succeed in shooting,
-although one of Roy’s arrows ruffled the feathers on his back, and by a
-long search for an otter which swam across the river in advance of them.
-About four o’clock in the afternoon they reached a favorite camping, or
-rather, anchoring ground, a deep pool noted for its fine yellow perch,
-and there they decided to stop for the night. The anchor was dropped
-overboard just above the pool, and when the skiff swung to the current,
-the bait-rods they had purchased to replace those that Matt Coyle had
-stolen from them, were taken out of the lockers, floats were rigged, a
-box of worms which they had been thoughtful enough to bring with them
-was opened, and the sport commenced.
-
-The fish in that pool were always hungry, and the floats disappeared as
-fast as they were dropped into the water. A few “fingerlings” were put
-back to be caught again after they had had time to grow larger, but the
-most of those they captured were fine fellows, and heavy enough to make
-a stubborn resistance. In less than half an hour they had taken all they
-wanted for supper, and then the anchor was pulled up and the skiff drawn
-alongside the bank. Roy and Joe went ashore to clean the fish, and
-Arthur staid in the boat to put up the tent. This done, he brought out a
-pocket cooking stove which he placed on the forward locker, and by the
-time the fish were ready, he had an omelet browning in the frying pan.
-That, together with an ample supply of fried perch, bread and butter and
-a cup of weak tea, made up a supper to which they did full justice.
-
-There were still a few hours of daylight left, and as soon as the dishes
-had been washed and packed away in the locker, the boys took their bows
-and went ashore to stretch their legs and shoot at “rovers”. Arthur
-succeeded in bringing down a kingfisher after half an hour’s hard
-stalking, and his companions shot a squirrel apiece for breakfast. Just
-at dusk they met at the boat, which was hauled out into the stream and
-anchored. The jack-lamp was lighted and hung upon one of the poles that
-supported the tent, the rubber mattress was inflated, and the three
-friends lounged around and talked until they began to grow sleepy. Then
-the blankets and pillows were brought to light, one side of the tent was
-buttoned down to the gunwale, the other being left up to admit the air,
-and the boys laid down to sleep, trusting to Jim to give them notice of
-the approach of danger. He gave them notice before three hours had
-passed away.
-
-About midnight the spaniel, which for half an hour or more had been very
-restless, suddenly jumped to his feet and set up a frightful yelping. If
-some one had been pounding him he could not have been in greater
-distress. The boys started up in alarm to find the sky overcast with
-black clouds, the wind coming down the river in strong and fitful gusts
-and the anchor dragging. There was a storm coming up, it promised to be
-a severe one, too, but it did not find the young voyagers unprepared to
-meet it. The forward end of the tent was promptly rolled up, a spare
-anchor dropped into the water, and the skiff was again brought to a
-stand-still. By that time the rain was falling in sheets, but the boys
-paid no sort of attention to it. They buttoned the tent down all around
-and went to sleep again, fully satisfied with the precautions they had
-taken. Jim was satisfied too, although he thought it necessary to
-slumber lightly. Whenever a strong gust of wind came roaring down the
-river, he would turn his head on one side and look critically at the
-anchor ropes, which led through ring-bolts in the bow, and were made
-fast to cleats on the forward locker; and having made sure that the
-ground tackle was doing its full duty, he would go to sleep again.
-
-The night passed without further incident, the morning dawned clear and
-bright, and after a breakfast of fried perch and broiled squirrel, the
-boys resumed their journey toward Indian Lake. On the evening of the
-fifth day after leaving Mount Airy, they found themselves within a short
-distance of their destination; but instead of going on to the lake they
-turned into a creek which connected the river with a lonely pond that
-lay deep in the forest. They did not intend to go to Indian Lake until
-they stood in need of supplies. There were big hotels and a crowd of
-guests there, and they saw enough of them at home. To quote from Joe
-Wayring, their object was to get away from every body and be lazy.
-
-The sun went down long before they turned into the creek, and night was
-coming on; but they pushed ahead in order to reach a favorite anchorage
-in the mouth of a little brook, whose waters could be relied on to
-furnish them with a breakfast of trout. They laid out all their strength
-on the oars and the skiff flew swiftly and noiselessly up the stream,
-its movements being governed by Arthur Hastings, who looked over his
-shoulder now and then to take his bearings. After they had been speeding
-along for half an hour, he began keeping a sharp lookout for the brook;
-and once when he turned around he thought he saw a moving object in the
-creek a short distance away. He looked again, and a thrill of exultation
-and excitement ran all through him.
-
-“Joe,” said he, in a scarcely audible whisper, “there’s your canvas
-canoe, as sure as I’m a foot high.”
-
-“Where?” exclaimed Joe and Roy, turning quickly about on their seats.
-
-In reply Arthur pointed silently up the creek. His companions looked,
-and then they too became excited. There was a canoe in advance of them
-sure enough, and dark as it was, they instantly recognized it as the one
-Matt Coyle had stolen from Joe Wayring.
-
-There was somebody in it, and he was plying his double paddle as if he
-were in a great hurry. He did not appear to know that there was any one
-besides himself in the creek, for he never once looked behind him.
-
-“It isn’t big enough for Matt, and so it must be one of his boys,”
-whispered Roy.
-
-“Boy or man, he shall not go much further with that canoe.” said Joe in
-a resolute tone. “That’s my boat and I’m going to have it, if you
-fellows will stand by me.”
-
-“Now Joe!” exclaimed Roy, reproachfully.
-
-“I didn’t mean that. Of course I know that you can be depended on,” said
-Joe, hastily. “Let’s take after him. If we find that we can’t take the
-canoe away from him, we’ll sink her. Matt Coyle shan’t have her any
-longer.”
-
-The three oars fell into the water simultaneously, and the skiff shot
-silently up the creek in pursuit of the canoe, whose occupant was making
-his double paddle whirl through the air like the shafts of a windmill.
-An oar rattled behind him and aroused him from his reverie. He faced
-about to see the skiff close upon him. The night had grown so dark that
-he could not tell who the crew were, but he knew that they would not
-come at him in that fashion unless they had some object in view. Matt
-and his boys always had the fear of the law before their eyes, and Jake,
-believing that a constable or deputy sheriff was in pursuit of him,
-turned about and churned the water into foam in his desperate attempt to
-outrun the skiff. He succeeded in getting a good deal of speed out of
-his clumsy craft, but fast as he went the pursuers gained at every
-stroke.
-
-“Hold on with that boat!” shouted Arthur. “We’ve got you and you might
-as well give in.”
-
-But Jake wasn’t that sort. He redoubled his exertions with the paddle,
-but all of a sudden his progress was stopped so quickly that Jake left
-his seat and pitched headlong into the bow of the canoe. Speaking in
-western parlance he had “picked up a snag” whose sharp, gnarled end
-penetrated the canvas covering of the canoe, tearing a hole in it that
-was as big as Jake’s head. It did not hang there but floated off with
-the current, and began filling rapidly. In a few seconds she was out of
-sight, and Jake was making all haste to reach the shore. A moment later
-the skiff dashed up, and Roy Sheldon struck a vicious blow at the
-swimmer with his oar; but he was just out of reach. A few long strokes
-brought him to shallow water, two jumps took him to dry land, and in an
-instant more he was out of sight in the bushes.
-
-“What tumbled him out so suddenly?” exclaimed Joe.
-
-“Look out, boys! There’s a snag right under us,” said Roy.
-
-“Where in the world is the boat?” inquired Arthur.
-
-“There she is,” answered Joe, pointing to a swirl in the water which
-marked the spot where the canvas canoe was quietly settling down on the
-bottom of the creek.
-
-“Sunk!” cried Roy. “So she is. She must have a cargo of some sort
-aboard, or she would not have gone down like that. Now, what’s to be
-done?”
-
-“We can’t do any thing to-night,” replied Joe. “I propose that we anchor
-here and wait until morning comes to show us how she lies. If the water
-isn’t over thirty feet deep we can raise her.”
-
-The others agreeing to this proposition, the ground tackle was got
-overboard, and Roy, who handled the rope, encouraged Joe by assuring him
-that the water was not an inch over twelve feet deep.
-
-“If that is the case,” said the latter, hopefully, “I shall soon have my
-boat back again. It will be no trouble at all to take a line down twelve
-feet. I’d give something to know what she is loaded with.”
-
-“Contraband goods, I’ll be bound,” said Arthur. “The fruits of a raid on
-somebody’s smoke-house or hen-roost. I am sorry to know that Matt Coyle
-is in the neighborhood, for we don’t know at what moment he may jump
-down on us and steal something.”
-
-“We mustn’t let him catch us off our guard,” said Roy. “It won’t be safe
-to leave the skiff alone for a minute.”
-
-The boys’ hands were as busy as their tongues, and in a short time the
-tent was up, a light from the jack-lamp was streaming out over the
-water, and the appetizing odor of fried bacon filled the air. The
-knowledge that the thieving squatter was no great distance away, and
-that he might make his appearance at any moment, did not cause them to
-eat lighter suppers than usual, nor did it interfere with their
-customary sound and refreshing sleep. They felt safe from attack. They
-did not believe that Matt Coyle had a boat (they knew very well that he
-could not have brought the punt with him), and consequently there was no
-way for him to reach them unless he resorted to swimming; and they did
-not think he would be foolish enough to try that.
-
-The boys slept soundly that night, but the next morning’s sun found them
-astir. Arthur made a cup of coffee over the pocket cooking stove, after
-which the tent was taken down, and Joe Wayring made ready for business
-by divesting himself of his clothing.
-
-The first thing was to find out just where the canoe lay, and that did
-not take them as long as they thought it would. The water was as clear
-as crystal, and every thing on the bottom could be plainly seen by Joe
-and Roy, who leaned as far as they could over opposite sides of the
-skiff, while Arthur rowed them back and forth in the vicinity of the
-snag.
-
-“There she is!” cried Roy, suddenly; and as he spoke he caught up the
-anchor and dropped it overboard. “We’re right over her, and there isn’t
-a snag or any other obstruction in the way.”
-
-Joe Wayring stepped upon the forward locker, holding in his hand one end
-of a rope which he had coiled down on the bottom of the skiff so that it
-would run out easily, and as soon as the boat stopped swinging he dived
-out of sight. When the commotion in the water occasioned by his descent
-had ceased, his companions could observe every move he made as he
-scrambled about over the sunken canoe, and presently they saw him coming
-up.
-
-“Haul away,” said Joe, as he shook the water from his face and climbed
-back into the skiff.
-
-“What’s it fast to?” asked Roy.
-
-“A bag of potatoes.”
-
-“What did I tell you?” exclaimed Arthur Hastings. “I knew that fellow
-had been on a plundering expedition.”
-
-“But you thought he had been robbing somebody’s hen-roost or
-smoke-house,” Roy reminded him.
-
-“And so he has,” said Joe. “There’s a whole side of bacon down there.”
-
-The boys pulled gently on the line, and presently the bag of potatoes
-came to the surface. It was seized and hauled into the skiff, the line
-was unfastened and passed over to Joe, who was about to go down again,
-when his movements were arrested by the snapping of twigs and the sound
-of voices which came from the depths of the woods. They were angry
-voices, too, and rendered somewhat indistinct by distance and
-intervening bushes, but the boys recognized them at once.
-
-“There comes Matt Coyle, his wife and both their boys,” said Joe. “Now
-we shall hear something.”
-
-“I wonder what they think they are going to do,” said Roy. “Just listen
-to the noise they make in crashing through the brush. One would think
-there were a lot of wild cattle in there.”
-
-Joe Wayring did not await their appearance, but went down to reeve the
-line through a ring-bolt in the stern-post of the sunken canoe, and to
-bring up her painter and the side of bacon. When he arose to the surface
-Matt Coyle and his family were striding up and down the bank, shaking
-their fists and swearing lustily.
-
-“That there is my hog-meat, too,” roared the squatter, as Joe tossed the
-bacon into the skiff. “I want it an’ I’m goin’ to have it, I tell you.”
-
-“We don’t know that these provisions rightfully belong to you,” said
-Roy. “We have an idea that you stole them last night or, rather,—”
-
-“No, I didn’t steel ’em nuther,” shouted Matt.
-
-“Or, rather, that one of your boys did,” continued Roy, while Joe hung
-on to the side of the skiff and looked over it at the angry party on the
-shore. “I am sure we don’t want them.”
-
-“Then bring ’em ashore like we told you,” screamed the old woman.
-“You’re thieves yourselves if you keep ’em.”
-
-“Do you see any thing green about us?” demanded Arthur. “I’ll tell you
-what we will do: If you will stay there on the bank in plain sight until
-we get our boat raised, we will go up the creek and leave the potatoes
-and bacon opposite the mouth of the trout brook, so that you can get
-them after we have gone away. What are you going to do with those
-sticks?” he added, addressing himself to the two boys who just then came
-out of the bushes with a heavy club in each hand.
-
-“We’re goin’ to knock you out o’ that boat if you don’t fetch that there
-grub of our’n ashore without no more foolin’,” answered Jake, in
-threatening tones. “It’s our’n an’ we’re goin’ to have it back.”
-
-“That’s the idee, Jakey,” exclaimed the old woman, approvingly. “Knock
-the young ’ristocrats out o’ their boat. I reckon that’ll bring ’em to
-time.”
-
-“If you try that, I’ll lay some of you out flatter than so many
-pancakes,” returned Roy, defiantly; and as he spoke he tore open the bag
-containing the potatoes. Catching up one in each hand, his example being
-promptly followed by Arthur Hastings, he arose to his feet just in time
-to dodge one of Jake’s clubs, which came whirling through the air
-straight for his head. Before the missile had struck the water on the
-other side of the skiff, Roy launched one of his potatoes at the
-aggressor. Like most left-handed fellows Roy could throw like lightning;
-and the potato, flying true to its aim and with terrific force, struck
-Jake fairly in the pit of the stomach, and doubled him up like a
-jack-knife.
-
-“That’s the idee, Jakey,” yelled Joe Wayring, who was delighted with the
-accuracy of his chum’s shot. “Knock them young ’ristocrats out o’ their
-boat. I reckon that’ll bring ’em to time. Throw another, Jakey.”
-
-But Jake was in no condition to throw another. It was a long time before
-he could get his breath; and when he did get it, the howls with which he
-awoke the echoes of the surrounding woods were wonderful to hear. The
-squatter’s family, believing that Jake had been mortally wounded,
-gathered about him with expressions of sympathy, and Joe Wayring took
-advantage of the confusion to climb into the skiff and put on his
-clothes. If there was going to be a fight he wanted to take a hand in
-it.
-
-“Whoop!” shrieked the old woman, rolling up her sleeves and shaking a
-pair of huge, tan-colored fists at the object of her wrath. “If I was a
-man I’d swim off to that there boat an’ maul the last one of you. Matt,
-why don’t you do it? Seems like you was afeard of them fellers.”
-
-“Yes, Matt, why don’t you do it?” said Arthur, encouragingly.
-
-“Yes, Matt, show a little pluck,” chimed in Roy. “Come on. Swim off to
-us; and if I don’t sink you before you have got ten feet from the shore,
-I’m a Dutchman.”
-
-“I don’t think we have any thing more to fear from them,” said Joe, in a
-low tone. “It’s a lucky thing for us that Roy thought of using those
-potatoes. If we had nothing to defend ourselves with they could drive us
-away from here very easily. Now let’s raise the canoe, and go up to the
-brook and catch our breakfast. I’m getting hungry.”
-
-It was scarcely two minutes’ work to bring the wreck to the surface. It
-readily yielded to the strain that Joe and Arthur brought to bear upon
-the lines, and as soon as they could get hold of it, they drew it into
-the skiff stern foremost, thus compelling the water with which it was
-filled to run out at the hole in the bow. After that it was turned
-bottom upward over the stern locker and lashed fast. Of course Matt
-Coyle and his family had not been silent all this while. They had kept
-up a constant storm of threats and abuse, and the squatter fairly danced
-with rage when he saw the boat, with which he had expected to accomplish
-so much in the way of “independent guidin’” was lost to him forever. But
-they did not attempt any more violence, for Roy stood guard over his
-companions with a potato in each hand, and ready to open fire on them at
-any moment.
-
-“Now, then!” exclaimed Joe, as he pulled up the anchor while the other
-boys shipped their oars, “do you want these provisions, or don’t you?”
-
-“Course I want ’em,” growled Matt, in reply. “They’re mine, an’ we ain’t
-got no grub to eat.”
-
-“All right. I don’t suppose that you have the shadow of a right to them,
-but we will give them up to you if you will do as we say.”
-
-“Wal, I won’t do as you say, nuther,” declared Matt. “I ain’t goin’ to
-let myself be bossed around by no ’ristocrats, I bet you.”
-
-“Then you shan’t have the potatoes,” said Joe, decidedly. “Give way,
-boys.”
-
-“Say! Hold on, there,” exclaimed Matt, whose larder was empty and had
-been for some time. “What do you want me to do?”
-
-“We want you to stay right there on the bank until we can go up and land
-your provisions on the point opposite the mouth of the brook,” replied
-Joe. “You must keep out in plain sight, mind you, for if you go back
-into the woods we shall think you are up to something, and then you can
-whistle for your grub.”
-
-As Joe said this he shipped an oar, and the skiff moved up the creek
-toward the point. The boys kept a close watch over Matt Coyle, but he
-never left the bank. He was biding his time, so he told his wife and
-boys. Joe and his friends had the advantage of him now, but there might
-come a day when he could catch them off their guard, and then they had
-better look out. If he couldn’t take vengeance on them this summer, he
-would do it next summer. He would follow them wherever they went; and if
-he couldn’t get a chance to steal every thing they had, he would make
-the country about Indian Lake so warm for them that they would be glad
-to go somewhere else to spend their vacations.
-
-As Matt remained on the bank in plain sight and did not attempt to
-approach them under cover of the bushes, the boys landed the provisions,
-according to promise—that is, they put some of them on the point; but
-Roy was sharp enough to keep out about half a peck of the potatoes to be
-used in case of emergency. This being done, they pulled across the creek
-into the mouth of the brook to catch a mess of trout, which they decided
-to cook over a fire on the bank. The breeze was so strong that the lamp
-in their little stove would not burn in the open air, and they knew that
-if they put up their tent, Matt and his boys would have the advantage if
-they opened a fire of clubs upon them when they came after their
-potatoes and bacon.
-
-It was well that they took these precautions, for when the squatter
-appeared on the opposite bank he was fierce for a fight. He and his
-backers were all armed with clubs, one of which was sent sailing through
-the air toward the skiff. Jim was sitting on one of the lockers,
-impatiently waiting to be called to breakfast, and the club, after
-glancing from the side of the boat, struck him in the ribs and tumbled
-him off into the creek.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIV.
-
- THE HISTORIAN CONCLUDES HIS NARRATIVE.
-
-
-“WHOOP-EE!” yelled Matt Coyle, dancing about on the bank in high glee.
-“That was a good shot. Lookout! Here comes another that’s goin’ to send
-some of you to keep company with the purp. I reckon we’ve got you whar
-we want you this time, cause the taters is all on our side the creek.”
-
-As the squatter spoke a second club left his hand, being thrown with so
-much force and accuracy that if the boys had not been on the alert, some
-and perhaps all of them would have been knocked overboard, for the
-missile was almost as long as the cock-pit, and as it came through the
-air with a rotary motion, it covered space enough to hit all their heads
-at once. This was the signal for a perfect shower of clubs. Every one of
-the family had two or more, which were thrown as rapidly as they could
-be changed from one hand to the other, and Joe and his chums were kept
-so busy dodging them, that they could not find opportunity to return the
-fire. But when the squatter and his allies had thrown all their clubs
-without effect, and thus disarmed themselves, the boys sprang to their
-feet and opened their battery. The first potato Roy threw took Jake
-square in the mouth, bringing forth another series of doleful yells from
-that unlucky young ruffian, and the second put the old woman’s right arm
-in a sling for a week. At the same moment Arthur wiped out the insult
-that had been put upon Jim by taking Matt a whack under the eye that
-raised a lump as large as a hen’s egg.
-
-“Whoop-ee!” shouted Joe Wayring, as a potato from his own hand struck
-Sam’s tattered cap from his head. “That was a bully shot. Look out! Here
-comes another. We ain’t got no taters on this side of the creek, I
-reckon.”
-
-The fusillade that followed was a hot one, and the squatter and his
-family, finding that they could not stand against it, beat a hasty
-retreat into the bushes. Then Arthur turned to assist Jim, who had been
-making desperate but unavailing efforts to climb into the skiff. He
-wasn’t hurt at all, but he was very mad.
-
-The plucky boys were not called upon to defend themselves. Matt Coyle
-made an attempt to secure the provisions, but went back with an aching
-head and a bloody nose, and the three chums saw no more of him that
-summer. But they heard him. From his place of concealment in the bushes
-the squatter and his wife abused them roundly, and shouted at them
-threats that were enough to frighten almost any body.
-
-The boys caught a fine string of trout, cooked and ate breakfast in
-peace, and then kept on up the creek toward the pond. As soon as they
-were out of range, Matt and his family came from their hiding-places
-after the potatoes and bacon; but they made no demonstration beyond
-showing the boys their fists and swearing at them.
-
-After that things went smoothly with Joe and his companions. They
-thoroughly enjoyed their outing, and when it was ended they went home
-with a new lease of life, and with brains invigorated to such degrees
-that they were ready to grapple with any thing that might come before
-them during the school term, which was to begin on the following Monday.
-
-During the year affairs in Mount Airy moved along in much the same way
-that they do in every little village which can boast of a popular high
-school and rival organizations of almost every kind. After the canoe
-meet, the line was sharply drawn between the two opposing factions. They
-did not come to open warfare, but they were intensely hostile, and a
-very little thing would have precipitated a fight between Joe Wayring
-and his friends on one side, and Noble, Scott, Prime and Tom Bigden and
-his cousins on the other; for the latter did not long remain at swords’
-points with the boys who made their head-quarters at the drug-store.
-They had a stormy time when they first came together, and Tom announced
-his readiness to thrash all the boys who had interfered with Loren
-during the paddle race, provided they would come one at a time; but
-Prime and a few others exerted themselves to bring order out of the
-confusion, and through their efforts Tom was elected president of the
-new canoe club which was organized at once. But that did not satisfy
-him. If he could have had his own way in the matter, he would have
-preferred to be a respected member of the other club without any office
-at all. Besides, Prime and his friends could not forget that Tom, a
-new-comer, had deliberately “booked” himself and his cousins for all the
-best races, in utter disregard of the rights of those who ought to have
-been allowed to win. They never quite forgave him for that, and there
-was not that harmony in the new club that there ought to have been in
-order to insure its prosperity. Tom was also elected short-stop in
-Prime’s ball-club, and in the first match game that was played, had the
-gratification of putting out Joe Wayring and Arthur Hastings every time
-they went to the bat. That did Tom more good than any thing he had
-accomplished since he came to Mount Airy, although he did feel rather
-mean when Joe and Arthur complimented him on his swift and accurate
-throwing.
-
-At the next meeting of the Toxophilites many vacancies were made by the
-resignation of boys who knew that they stood a fine chance of being
-expelled for what they had done at the canoe meet, and by the voluntary
-withdrawal of a number of others, who preferred Prime’s company and
-Noble’s to the companionship of fellows who were willing to be ruled by
-a lot of girls.
-
-In the new club, of which Loren Farnsworth was chosen secretary, there
-were no restrictions laid upon cribbage, cigars and billiards, and so
-very good-natured was the master bowman, that he did not even object to
-pipes when his men were drilling in the ranks. But he insisted on prompt
-and regular attendance at all the meetings, because he wanted his
-company to march in the procession on the next 4th of July.
-
-“Say, captain,” exclaimed Tom Bigden one night after the long, fatiguing
-drill was over. “We had forty men in line to-night, and I think we went
-through the school of the company in a very creditable way, if some of
-us are green. Couldn’t we get up a street parade just to show the
-Toxophilites that some folks can do things as well as others?”
-
-The captain was Frank Noble, and a very good drill-master he had proved
-himself to be; although he was hardly strict enough to suit a veteran,
-seeing that he permitted his men to smoke in the ranks.
-
-“I have been thinking about that,” replied the captain, as the young
-archers gathered about him after putting their long bows away in the
-lockers. “But I think it would be better to wait awhile. It will not be
-long before the lake will be frozen over, and then we will give an
-exhibition drill on the ice. What’s the matter with that?”
-
-“Nothing,” shouted all the boys. “It’s the very thing.”
-
-“Well, then, in order to accustom ourselves to the movements and
-evolutions, let every fellow bring his rollers next Thursday night, and
-we will see what we can do with them.”
-
-The boys thought it the best thing they had ever heard of, but Scott had
-a suggestion to make.
-
-“Why can’t we rent the rink for a few nights?” said he. “This armory is
-hardly large enough, and besides, the floor isn’t as smooth as it might
-be.”
-
-“We could engage the rink, of course,” replied the captain. “But if we
-do, the Toxophilites will find out what is going on, and we don’t want
-them to know any thing about it.”
-
-“Why, as to that, they are bound to know about it,” said Tom. “We can’t
-keep it from them. You know what a fearful noise rollers make, don’t
-you?”
-
-“Well, we can’t help that,” answered Frank. “If we do our drilling here,
-they can’t look through the windows and see what we are about, as they
-could if we drilled at the rink. Now, if you want to go into this, you
-must be on hand every night. I will promise to get you in fine trim by
-the time the ice is in condition, if you will only attend to business.”
-
-“I wonder if we couldn’t get up a competitive drill with the
-Toxophilites?” said Loren.
-
-“Not much,” replied Prime, with a laugh. “There are too many raw
-recruits among us.”
-
-“We’ll wait and give them a pull for something at the next canoe meet,”
-said Tom.
-
-“You don’t expect to enter for any of the prizes next summer, do you?”
-
-“Of course I do,” replied Tom, “and so do my cousins. We have sent to
-New London for a rowing machine, and intend to keep up our practice all
-winter.”
-
-“You might as well make kindling wood of that rowing machine when it
-comes to hand, for it will not do you any good as far as winning a prize
-from Joe Wayring is concerned,” said Scott. “You can’t race with him.”
-
-“I’ll see how that is,” answered Tom, who was thinking about one thing
-while Scott was thinking about another. “I was under the impression that
-when our new club was organized, it was the sentiment of the members
-that we were to challenge their best men for every thing. Before we can
-do that, it will be necessary to have a series of trial races among
-ourselves in order to determine who stand the best chance of winning,
-and I calculate to be one of the select few.”
-
-“I believe some of the fellows did speak about that, but it was all
-talk,” said Captain Noble. “You see, Tom, you and I have been ruled out
-of every thing by the referee’s decision on the day of the meet, and you
-don’t suppose that our friends here are going to take part in sports
-that we can’t have a hand in, do you? Haven’t we promised to stand by
-one another?”
-
-“Oh,” said Tom, “I didn’t know what Scott meant, but I understand the
-matter now. The others won’t compete because you and I can’t. I am glad
-to hear it.”
-
-“Of course we are not barred out of any thing except the sports that
-take place during the canoe meet,” added Prime. “We can play ball or
-lawn tennis or polo with them. We can send a team to beat them at target
-shooting, and we can enter our sail-boats for prizes in the regatta; but
-I, for one, don’t care to. I’ve had quite enough of that crowd, and
-think we can see all the fun we want among ourselves.”
-
-“I think so, too,” said Tom. “I don’t care for their old canoe club, but
-I should really like to see the Toxophilites go to pieces. I’d see Joe
-Wayring happy before he should come into this club with my vote.”
-
-If Tom Bigden could have stepped across the street and up the stairs
-that led to the neatly furnished armory and drill-room in which the
-Toxophilites were at that moment sitting down to an oyster supper that
-some of the new members had provided for them, he would, perhaps, have
-been very much disappointed to discover that the organization he hated
-so cordially because he could not get into it, was not only in no danger
-of falling to pieces, but that it was stronger than it had ever been
-before. The vacancies occasioned by the resignation of Frank Noble and
-his friends, had been promptly filled by good fellows, who had waited
-long and patiently for an opportunity to send in their names. More than
-that (and this was something that made Tom and his cousins very angry
-when they found it out), the constitution had been amended so that the
-membership could be increased to a hundred. The Toxophilites were
-determined that the Mount Airy Scouts (that was the name of the new
-club), should not beat them if they could help it; but still they did
-not take in every one who applied for admission, as the Scouts did.
-
-During the winter Tom Bigden and his cousins, who grew more vindictive
-and unreasonable in their hatred as time progressed, waged a secret but
-incessant warfare upon Joe Wayring and his two chums. They coaxed Mars
-from the post-office to the drug-store, and sent him home with a tin can
-tied to his tail. They practiced with their long bows at Roy Sheldon’s
-fan-tail and tumbler pigeons as often as the birds ventured over to
-their side of the lake. They went across on their skates one night, and
-overturned the _Young Republic_, which Joe had hauled out on the beach
-and housed for the winter; and they even thought seriously of setting
-fire to his boat-house, believing that the blame would be laid upon Matt
-Coyle, who was known to be trapping somewhere in the mountains. Joe knew
-who it was that insulted Mars and shot at the pigeons and disturbed his
-sail-boat; but when he saw by the marks on the door of the boat-house
-that somebody had been trying to pull out the staple that held the hasp,
-he told his chums that he had wronged Tom and his cousins by his
-suspicions, and that the squatter was the culprit after all. Beyond a
-doubt Matt wanted to regain possession of the canvas canoe; and in order
-to save his property, Joe shouldered it one morning and took it up to
-his room.
-
-The attentive reader, if I am so fortunate as to have one, will bear in
-mind that all I have thus far written is but a repetition of the story
-the canvas canoe told me on that bright afternoon when I was first
-introduced to him and to the other merry fellows—the long bows, the
-snow-shoes and the toboggan—who found a home in Joe Wayring’s room. In
-concluding his interesting narrative the canoe said:
-
-“Now, Fly-rod, you know every thing of importance that has happened
-since Tom Bigden and his cousins first stuck their quarrelsome noses
-inside Mount Airy. As I said at the start, it was necessary that you
-should hear the story, or else you would be at a loss to account for a
-good many things that may happen to you sooner or later. I have an idea
-that you are a good sort, and hope we shall pass many pleasant hours in
-each other’s company.”
-
-I thanked the canoe for his kind wishes and for the story he had taken
-so much pains to tell me, and inquired how he had managed to live
-through the long winter that had just passed.
-
-“Oh, I did well enough,” was his reply. “In the first place, the long
-bows and I had much to talk about, and in the next, Joe often brings Roy
-and Arthur up here to spend an evening; and as they have traveled a good
-deal, they are never at a loss for some interesting topic of
-conversation. More than that, Joe and his uncle went off hunting last
-December, and when they returned, they brought with them those conceited
-things over there—the snow-shoes and toboggan—who being from another
-country, think they are a trifle better than any body else. But, after
-all, I have found them to be very companionable fellows, and if you can
-only get them started (like all Englishmen, they are inclined to be
-surly at first), they can tell you some things about shooting and
-trapping that are well worth listening to.”
-
-“Do you know what the programme is for the summer?” I asked, being
-somewhat anxious to learn what I had to look forward to. “Where are we
-going and what are we going to do?”
-
-“Well, seeing that this is April, it will not be summer for three months
-to come,” replied the canoe. “But you need not expect to remain idle any
-longer than next Saturday. You and I will probably be employed in making
-short trips about the village until school closes for the long vacation.
-Immediately after the canoe meet, which in future will be held on the
-3rd of July, so that the members of the club can have the whole of the
-vacation to themselves, you and Joe will go up to Indian Lake—”
-
-“But Matt Coyle is up there,” I interrupted.
-
-“Suppose he is!” retorted the canvas canoe. “Do you think that Joe
-Wayring is going to be kept away from his favorite fishing grounds just
-because that outlaw has chosen to take up his abode there! You don’t
-know Joe. He’ll go, you may be sure, and after he gets there, he’ll give
-you a chance to show what you can do with a five pound trout.”
-
-“Why can’t you go?” I inquired. I had already learned to like my new
-friend, who had shown himself to be so good-natured and so ready to tell
-me any thing I wanted to know, and I thought I would rather have him for
-company than any body else.
-
-“It is possible that I may go, but I haven’t heard any thing said about
-it. I should think I might be of some use to Joe and I would not be at
-all in his way.”
-
-“But what if that squatter should steal you again? I suppose you didn’t
-fare very well while you were in his hands.”
-
-“Oh, I fared well enough,” replied the canoe, who seemed to have a happy
-faculty of accommodating himself to circumstances. “But I didn’t like
-the company I was obliged to keep, I tell you. Whenever Matt Coyle or
-his boys took me out on the water, I would have been only too glad to
-spill them out if I could have done it. I felt particularly savage on
-the night Jake used me in making his raid on that old guide’s
-potato-patch and smoke-house. When I saw the skiff coming after me,
-wouldn’t I have laughed if I had possessed the power? I knew that Jake
-was going to run me on to that snag, and when I was settling to the
-bottom, I told myself that Joe would never leave me there. I wasn’t hurt
-at all. I was easily mended with rosin and tallow and a piece of canvas,
-and am just as good as I ever was; although I confess that I look like a
-boy who has been in a fight and has to wear a patch over his eye.”
-
-“How did the squatter make the journey from his shanty to the creek in
-which Joe found you?”
-
-“Well, he carried me on his back from the pond to the river. It took him
-two days to do it, for I hindered him all I could by catching hold of
-every limb and bush that came within my reach. When we got to the river,
-Matt loaded me to the water’s edge with his household goods (you will
-know how I shrank from contact with them when I tell you that the
-blankets and quilts were so begrimed with smoke and dirt that Mars could
-not be hired to sleep on them), and then one of the boys got in and
-paddled me down the stream while the squatter and the rest of his family
-stumbled along the bank. Matt was afraid to make his camp anywhere near
-Indian Lake, because he knew that the guides would be very likely to
-burn or otherwise destroy every thing he had, as they did once before;
-so he turned up the creek, and hunted around until he found a place that
-suited him. It was in a secluded glen, about a quarter of a mile from
-the creek. He set his boys to work to build a lean-to, which would
-afford them some sort of shelter until they could provide a better
-covering for their heads, and started out with his rifle to get
-something to eat. During his rambles he found a smoke-house and
-potato-patch which he thought could be easily robbed, and as soon as he
-came home, he sent Jake out on that thieving expedition which resulted
-disastrously to him, for he lost his plunder and me into the bargain. I
-assure you I was glad to find myself among friends once more. Why, have
-you any idea what that villain meant to do? He was going to make a
-pirate of me. He intended, first, to offer himself as guide for the
-hotels, and if they wouldn’t take him, he intended to follow the guests
-and their guides along the water courses, and rob every camp that he
-found unprotected. That’s the kind of fellow Matt Coyle is. He ought to
-be abolished.”
-
-“What became of the fishing-rods he stole at the time he ran off with
-you?”
-
-“Well, they had worse treatment than I did, because they were not as
-useful as I was. They have been left out in the rain and abused in
-various ways, until they don’t look much as they did when the squatter
-first got his ugly hands upon them. I doubt very much if their owners
-would have recognized them if they could have seen them the last time I
-did.”
-
-“Will our trip to Indian Lake last all summer?” I asked.
-
-“Oh, no; only about two weeks. After that, we shall be packed off on a
-long journey, either East or West, I don’t know which, and neither did
-Joe the last time I heard him say any thing about it. You see, Uncle Joe
-Wayring owns large tracks of timber land in Maine and Michigan. He wants
-to see them both, for he has learned that thieves are at work in both
-places; but he hasn’t yet made up his mind which he wants to see the
-more. When he does he will tell Joe, and then we shall find out where we
-are going.”
-
-There were a good many other questions that I wanted to ask my
-communicative friend, but before I could speak again a merry whistle
-sounded in the hall below, and somebody ascended the stairs three at a
-time. Then I knew that my master had finished his sail on the lake, and
-was coming up to his room to get ready for supper. He threw the door
-open with a bang, school-boy fashion, and walking straight up to me took
-me from my case and gave me a good looking over. He seemed as delighted
-as a youngster with his first pair of red top boots; but I was somewhat
-chagrined to learn that he did not have a very exalted opinion of my
-capabilities.
-
-“That’s a very fine rod, no doubt; but I expect to break him into a
-dozen pieces before I have had him a month. A two pound trout will give
-him more than he wants to do.”
-
-What else Joe was going to say about me I never knew; for just then the
-supper bell rang, and he made all haste to put me back in my case. After
-a hasty toilet he bolted out of the room with the same noise and racket
-he made when he came in, and I was at liberty to continue my
-conversation with the canvas canoe. As usual, that useful and talkative
-individual spoke first.
-
-“What is your opinion of a boy who can deliberately persecute a fellow
-like that?” said he.
-
-“He ought to receive the same punishment you want meted out to Matt
-Coyle; he ought to be abolished,” I replied. “But Joe doesn’t appear to
-think much of me.”
-
-“Don’t you worry about that,” said the canoe, encouragingly. “You will
-not wonder at it when you have made the acquaintance of his bait-rod—if
-you ever do; I mean the one that was stolen from him. He’s a big heavy
-fellow, and strong enough to jerk a four pound black bass from the water
-without any nonsense. You can’t do that, and Joe isn’t certain that he
-can handle you. He doesn’t distrust you any more than he distrusts
-himself. There’s one thing I forgot to tell you,” added the canoe, “and
-that is, if any misfortune befalls you, you can lay it to Tom Bigden. I
-heard enough during my short captivity to satisfy me that he was the
-chap who put it into Matt’s head to steal Joe’s property. Matt is bad
-enough, goodness knows; but the advice Tom Bigden gave him made him
-worse. That is one of the secrets of which I spoke at the beginning of
-my story, and it troubles me all the time. I am sure that if I could
-talk to Joe about five minutes, I should feel easier; but that’s
-something I can’t do.”
-
-At my request the historian then went on to tell of other interesting
-and exciting incidents in Joe Wayring’s life, but as they have no
-bearing with my own exploits and adventures I omit them now, although
-they may appear at some future period. By the time he grew weary of
-talking it was ten o’clock, and darkness had settled down over the room;
-but just as I was composing myself for the night, the door opened and
-Joe Wayring came in. Making good his boast, that if folks would let his
-property alone, he could find any thing he wanted on the darkest of
-nights and without the aid of a lamp, Joe caught up the creel with one
-hand, seized me with the other, and carrying us both down-stairs,
-deposited us on the kitchen table beside something that was covered with
-a snow-white cloth. Then he busied himself for a few minutes about the
-stove, getting kindling and light wood together so that a fire could be
-readily started; and after I had watched his movements for a while, I
-made up my mind that a campaign of some sort was in prospect. When he
-took the light and went out I said to the creel:
-
-“Do you happen to know what day this is?”
-
-“It’s Friday,” he replied. “To-morrow will be Saturday, and I should
-judge by the looks of things, that we are going to make our first trip
-after trout.”
-
-Do you know by experience how a youngster feels when he is about to be
-called up before a hundred or more critical school mates to recite his
-little piece beginning—
-
- “You’d scarce expect a boy like me
- To get up here where all can see,
- And make a speech as well as those
- Who wear the largest kind of clothes.”
-
-Do you know how he feels? Well, that’s way I felt.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XV.
-
- MY FIRST TRIP TO INDIAN LAKE.
-
-
-THE next morning, just as the clock was striking the hour of four, I was
-aroused from a reverie into which I had fallen by a hasty step, followed
-by a blinding glare of light, and Joe Wayring came hurrying into the
-kitchen. He didn’t look much as he did the last time I saw him, and if
-it hadn’t been for his curly head and blue eyes, I don’t think I should
-have recognized him. But he was a nobby looking fellow, all the same,
-dressed as he was in a neat suit of duck, dyed to a dead grass shade, a
-light helmet with a peak before and behind, and leggings and gaiters
-instead of boots. Joe was not the boy to make himself uncomfortable, or
-to go about in a ragged coat and with his hair sticking out of the top
-of his cap, just because he intended to spend the day in the woods out
-of sight of every body. He knew of anglers and hunters who affected that
-style, and they could follow it, if they wanted to, but he wouldn’t.
-Leggings and gaiters were easier to walk in than heavy boots, and whole
-clothes looked better than shabby ones.
-
-Placing the lamp on the table Joe began bustling about the kitchen, and
-in a very few minutes the fire was started and the tea-kettle filled.
-Then he threw back the cloth before spoken of, revealing a substantial
-lunch, a liberal portion of which he proceeded to pack away in the
-creel.
-
-About the time the coffee was ready, the door opened again, and Uncle
-Joe came in. He, too, was dressed for the woods, and carried a rod of
-some sort in one hand and a creel in the other. The latter must have
-been a fine looking article in his day, but now he was as weather-beaten
-as any old sailor. And that was not to be wondered at, for he had
-traveled much, and had seen many hardships. He had accompanied his
-master from one end of the country to the other. He had held captive for
-him many a nice breakfast of grayling captured in Michigan waters, and
-carried his dinner while he was fighting with the big trout in Rangeley
-Lakes. He went with him on one of his Western tours, and would certainly
-have fallen into the hands of the Utes when they arose in rebellion and
-massacred all the whites they could find, had it not been for the fact
-that he was slung over his master’s shoulder, and the latter was in too
-great a hurry to stop and throw him off. He had many thrilling
-recollections of the Indian Lake country, for he had been capsized on
-the rapids more times than he could remember. He was a good talker, and
-as full of stories as the canvas canoe.
-
-“Well, sir,” said Uncle Joe, as he deposited his rod and creel on the
-table, “what are the prospects?”
-
-“Couldn’t be better,” replied the boy. “It’s cloudy, and there is every
-sign of rain before noon.”
-
-“I hope it will stay cloudy, but I can’t say that I want to see it
-rain,” said Uncle Joe, as he drew a chair up to the table and took the
-cup of coffee his nephew poured out for him. “The bushes around the old
-spring hole are pretty thick, and I long ago ceased to see any fun in
-getting drenched for the sake of catching a mess of half-pound trout. If
-they were salmon, now, the case would be different.”
-
-Nevertheless Uncle Joe seemed to be in just as great a hurry to eat his
-breakfast and be off as his nephew was. Ten minutes sufficed to satisfy
-their appetites, and in ten minutes more we were on the outskirts of the
-village, and moving up an old log road toward the spring hole, where I
-was to make my first attempt to take a fish. I dreaded the ordeal, for I
-did not have as much confidence in myself as I would have had if my
-master had not spoken so slightingly of me.
-
-How far it was from the village to the spring hole, I am sure I don’t
-know. It seemed like a long journey to me, although it was enlivened by
-stories of travel and adventure from Uncle Joe, in which I became deeply
-interested. Presently Joe, who was leading the way, pushed aside the
-bushes in front of him, disclosing to view a small body of water fringed
-with lily-pads and surrounded on all sides by high and thickly wooded
-hills; and I knew instinctively that we had reached the end of our
-tramp, and that the time had come for me to show what I could do. There
-seemed to be abundant opportunity for me to do good work if I was
-capable of it. While I was being taken out of my case, I noticed that
-now and then there was a slight commotion in the water, just outside the
-lilies, and I knew it was occasioned by trout jumping from the water,
-even before Joe Wayring said so.
-
-“Just look at them!” he exclaimed, in great excitement. “They are having
-a high old time among themselves. I wouldn’t take a dollar for my chance
-of going home with a full creel. There! Did you see that whopper?”
-
-“Put on a white miller and a brown hackle, and give me your rod as quick
-as you can,” answered his uncle. “I saw him, and if he comes up again
-within seventy or eighty feet of us, I will make an effort to take him.”
-
-“Do you mean to say that you can throw a fly as far as that?” inquired
-Joe.
-
-“That depends upon the rod. I’d like to have the first try with it, if
-you have no objection, for I want to see whether or not you’ve got a
-good bargain.”
-
-Of course Joe had no objection. As soon as I was ready for business he
-passed me over to his uncle, and when I felt his strong fingers close
-around me, I knew that I was in the hands of one who would make me show
-off to the best possible advantage.
-
-“There he is again! Give him the flies, quick!” cried Joe, suddenly.
-
-Uncle Joe’s movements were characterized by what sportsmen are wont to
-call “deliberate quickness”. He was so very deliberate, in fact, that
-his nephew began to show unmistakable signs of impatience; but still he
-did not waste a single second of valuable time. Reeling off as much line
-as the close proximity of the bushes behind would permit him to use,
-Uncle Joe gave me a smart upward and backward fling and then struck down
-toward the water. This movement caused the line to fly through the air
-like a whip lash, only it grew in length all the while; and when the
-flies were directly over the swirl the trout had made when he went down,
-the motion of the reel was stopped by a slight pressure of the angler’s
-thumb, and the tempting lures settled upon the water as lightly as a
-couple of feathers.
-
-“I never can learn to do that,” said Joe, despondingly. “It requires
-altogether too much skill for my clumsy—Well, sir, you’ve got him as
-sure as the world.”
-
-The hook was fast to something, that was plain; but I thought at first
-that Uncle Joe had caught a snag or a lily-pad. There was a jerk that
-made me wonder, and in an instant more I was bent almost half double;
-but with all the strain that was brought to bear upon me, the thing at
-the other end of the line, whatever it was, did not give an inch. On the
-contrary, it started and ran off toward the middle of the spring hole;
-and then I began to realize that I was doing battle with a trout of the
-largest size. Now was the time to show my master that he had been much
-mistaken in me.
-
-I need not stop to go into the particulars of the fight, for every boy
-who has caught a heavy trout on a light rod will know just what
-happened; and besides, to be frank with you, I don’t remember much about
-it. Neither does Joe Wayring, who was so highly excited that he could
-not stand still. I recollect he afterward told his chums that the fish
-jumped clear out of the water two or three times, and then started from
-the middle of the spring hole and ran toward the angler at the top of
-his speed, trying to loosen the line so that the hook would drop out of
-his mouth; but the automatic reel took up the slack as fast as he made
-it, and his mad rushes about the spring hole had no other result than to
-tire him out, so that he could offer but feeble resistance when he was
-reeled in to the bank. The moment he was brought within reach Joe
-slipped a landing net under him and lifted him out.
-
-“Two pounds and three ounces,” he almost shouted, after he had weighed
-him on his pocket scales. “Now, Uncle Joe, what’s your opinion of that
-rod?”
-
-“A fair sized fish for these waters,” said Uncle Joe, as he stepped to
-the edge of the spring hole for another cast. “As for the rod—it’s as
-good a one as you need wish for. If you will take care of him, he will
-last as long as you will, barring accident.”
-
-I will not dwell upon the incidents of the day, for I must hasten on to
-tell you what happened to me during my first visit to Indian Lake. It
-will be enough to say that Joe and his uncle enjoyed themselves, as they
-always did whenever they went anywhere together, and that my master
-after an hour or two of assiduous practice, learned to make short casts
-with tolerable accuracy, and to show considerable skill in handling the
-fish he hooked. When the two went home a little before dark Joe’s creel
-was not as full as his uncle’s, but the few trout he captured with his
-light tackle, afforded him more genuine sport than twice the number of
-bass taken on a heavy bait-rod.
-
-That day was the beginning of a busy season for me. Every Saturday, rain
-or shine, found me at the spring hole or wandering along the banks of
-some of the numerous streams that ran into Mirror Lake. I caught a good
-many fish, soon got over my nervousness, and looked forward to the long
-summer vacation with as much impatience as Joe himself. It came at last,
-being ushered in by a canoe meet on the 3rd of July, and a grand parade
-on the 4th, in which the Toxophilites and Scouts both took part. There
-was a good deal of rivalry between these two organizations—so much,
-indeed, that the usual exhibition drill at the park was given by the
-military company, thus putting it out of the power of either club to
-crow over the other. But still there was considerable crowing done,
-especially by Tom Bigden and a few envious fellows like him.
-
-“Don’t you remember what vociferous applause the Toxophilites received
-last 4th?” said he, to his cousins.
-
-“Yes; and I remember how mad you were about it, too,” replied Loren.
-
-“I know it. I couldn’t bear to see them throw on so many airs, but I
-little thought that I should aid in making them take back seats at their
-next parade. I have yet to see any one who will say that the Scouts
-didn’t do just as fine marching in the procession as the Toxophilites
-did.”
-
-Of course I did not see the parade, and neither did I witness the sports
-that were held during the canoe meet, for I was shut up in Joe’s room so
-far from a window that I could not tell what was going on out-doors. But
-I heard the music of the band, and the cheers that arose whenever some
-lucky fellow carried off a prize, and the exciting and amusing incidents
-that happened during those two days of festivity, were so often talked
-of in my hearing, that I was pretty well posted after all. I was glad to
-learn that my master won the paddle race very easily, and that he pushed
-Roy and Arthur so closely in the hurry-skurry race that the referee had
-half a mind to order another contest. But Joe and Arthur said that Roy
-was ahead, and as the other boys backed them up, Roy was awarded the
-prize. There was no attempt at fouling this time. Every thing was
-conducted fairly, as it always had been previous to Tom Bigden’s arrival
-in the village, and every member of the club won or lost on his merits.
-
-The parade being over, there was nothing to keep Joe and his two chums
-at home, and on the evening of the 4th they began making preparations
-for their annual trip to Indian Lake. Shortly after supper Joe Wayring
-came into the room, and having exchanged his uniform for a suit of
-working clothes, he shouldered my friend, the canvas canoe, and carried
-him down stairs. Half an hour later he came back after the creel and me.
-He took us down to the boat-house and there we found the canoe, snugly
-tucked away in his chest like a tired boy in his little bed.
-
-“Hurrah for me!” exclaimed the canoe, after Joe had gone out locking the
-door behind him. “I am going to Indian Lake, too. Now, if Joe can only
-keep clear of Matt Coyle, we’ll see some fun before we get back. You
-think you know something about fishing; but wait until you get hold of
-one of those big lake trout, and then tell me what you think about it.”
-
-That was just what I wanted to do, but I didn’t say so, for fear that
-when the time came I might discover that I was not quite so good a rod
-as I thought I was.
-
-We were so very impatient to be off that the night was a very long one
-to us; but at the first peep of day we heard Joe’s step as he came down
-the walk toward the boat-house. He placed a basket of provisions on the
-wharf, mildly scolded Mars for making such a fuss over the coming
-separation, and then came in after us. Arthur Hastings, Jim and the
-skiff were on time, as they always were, and in half an hour more we had
-taken Roy Sheldon on board and were moving gayly down the river. We
-camped for the night at the old perch hole, where the skiff had ridden
-out that furious storm a year before, and the boys had fish for supper.
-Joe had been told that perch would rise to a red ibis, but he and I
-could not prove the truth of the assertion. Although Arthur and Roy
-pulled out the fish as fast as they could bait their hooks, Joe never
-got a bite. The reason was, the water was too deep. His uncle afterward
-told him that six feet is about as far as any fish can be relied upon to
-rise to a fly; and sometimes they are too lazy to come from that depth.
-
-On the afternoon on the fourth day we left the river and turned into a
-little creek, whose current was so swift that the boys were obliged to
-use extra exertion in order to make headway against it. About an hour
-after the sun went down we came to anchor in the mouth of a brook, and
-there I made amends for my failure at the perch hole. I captured more
-trout than both the other rods, and if I had felt so inclined, could
-have returned some of the left-handed compliments they paid me when it
-was found that I could not catch a perch in twenty feet of water; but
-being peaceably disposed I said nothing. While the tent was being put
-up, a muffled voice came from the chest in which the canvas canoe was
-packed away. The cover being shut down, I had to listen intently in
-order to catch what he said to me.
-
-“Didn’t I hear some one say something about trout?” asked the canoe.
-
-“I think it very likely,” was my reply. “There are lots of them in the
-brook; almost as many as there in the spring hole at Mount Airy.”
-
-“Then I know where we are,” said my imprisoned friend. “Did you see an
-ugly looking snag about a mile below? Well, there’s one there, and it’s
-the one Jake Coyle ran into the night I was sunk in the creek. The fight
-I told you about took place right here. Have you seen or heard any thing
-of the squatter?”
-
-“No, I haven’t; but I know that Joe and his friends are keeping a bright
-lookout for him.”
-
-“I am glad to hear it, and I hope they will not relax their vigilance
-just because Matt keeps himself out of sight. His shanty is over there
-in the woods on the right hand side of the creek. I’ll bet he is there
-now, and that he has had his eye on the skiff ever since she came into
-this part of the country. Mark my words: Joe will hear from him before
-he sees Mount Airy again.”
-
-“Oh, I hope not,” said I.
-
-“So do I,” answered the canoe. “But I became well enough acquainted with
-Matt and his family during the short time I lived with them, to know
-that they do not intend to leave here unless they are driven away, as
-they were last year when they came to our village. Why, this is the best
-place in the world for a man who is too lazy to work, and who is not
-above taking things without leave. Game and fish are abundant. All the
-guides cultivate little patches of ground, and keep a few pigs and
-chickens, and as they are away from home a good part of the time, their
-property is left to the care of their wives and children. They can’t
-stand guard day and night, and consequently it is no trouble at all for
-Matt to steal all he wants. He has a fine hiding-place now, and as he
-and his family make it a point to travel different routes every time
-they go away from the shanty or return to it, they don’t leave much of a
-trail for the guides to follow, if they should make up their minds to
-hunt them up. Another thing,” added the canoe, in a tone of anxiety,
-“Matt hates Joe and his chums for two reasons: First, because their
-fathers turned him out of Mount Airy, and second, because they gave him
-such a pelting with potatoes the last time they were up here. If he is
-here, he will try to have revenge for that; now you see if he doesn’t.”
-
-The canvas canoe spoke confidently, and his words occasioned me no
-little uneasiness; but I was greatly relieved to learn from the
-conversation, to which I listened while the boys were eating supper,
-that they were fully alive to the dangers of the situation, and that
-they did not mean to let the squatter take them off their guard. They
-were happy in the belief that Matt could not attack them, except at long
-range, because he had no boat to bring him alongside the skiff. It never
-occurred to them that he had had plenty of time to steal or build one,
-and that was where they made their mistake.
-
-Up to this time we had had pleasant weather; but this particular night
-was a rainy one. The big drops began coming down just after the tent was
-put up. Then I realized for the first time what a comfortable home it
-was that the boys had provided for themselves. The canvas canoe and I
-lay on the forward locker, with the two bait-rods, the dip-net and the
-cocker spaniel to keep us company. On the bottom of the boat in the
-cock-pit sat the three chums, on either side of a table which they had
-made by pushing the movable thwarts close together. On the table, which
-was covered with a white napkin, was an array of dishes, plates and
-cups, all of tin, which were filled to over-flowing with ham sandwiches,
-bread and butter, cake, ripe fruit of various kinds and trout, done to a
-turn. On the stern locker stood the little stove over which Arthur had
-cooked the fish and made the tea, and above it hung the jack-lamp that
-was kept burning all night. If any thing happened—if the wind arose and
-the anchor dragged, or prowlers of any sort came about—the boys wanted a
-light to work by. Over all was the tent, with the rain coming gently
-down on the top of it. One side curtain was rolled up to admit the air,
-but the other was buttoned securely to the gunwale. Joe wasn’t going to
-have the squatter slip up and send a club into the cock-pit before he
-knew it. Taken altogether it was a cozy, home-like scene, and I no
-longer wondered why it was that Joe and his friends looked forward to
-the summer vacation with such lively anticipations of pleasure.
-
-The boys slept soundly that night, lulled by the pattering of the rain
-on the roof over their heads, but the sun did not find them in bed. I
-caught more than my share of the trout they ate for breakfast, and that
-afternoon was given an opportunity to try my skill on larger game, to
-wit, a four pound black bass. I may add, too, that I got my first
-ducking, and witnessed the liveliest kind of a foot race. But I can’t
-say that I enjoyed it; there was too much depending on it.
-
-“Do you remember the last time we ate breakfast here?” said Joe, as he
-drew up the anchor while his companions shipped the oars and pulled up
-the creek toward the pond. “If my memory serves me, Matt Coyle made the
-mouth of this brook uncomfortably warm for us for a few minutes. What
-would we have done if Roy hadn’t been smart enough to keep some of the
-potatoes out of that bag? I wonder where the old chap is now?”
-
-“Probably he is a hundred miles away,” answered Arthur. “You don’t
-suppose that the people who live around the lake are going to let him
-stay here and steal them out of house and home, do you?”
-
-“I am of the opinion that he and his worthless family were driven away
-from here long ago,” said Roy. “But still I don’t believe in trusting
-any thing to luck. We needn’t go ashore unless we want to, and Matt
-can’t bother us while we are lying at anchor. He’s got no boat, and he
-isn’t foolish enough to swim off to us, for we gave him a lesson the
-last time we were here that he will remember as long as he lives.”
-
-We left the mouth of the brook at an early hour, and about four in the
-afternoon entered the pond, where I heard Joe say we would remain until
-the bread and bacon gave out, when we would go over to Indian Lake and
-lay in a fresh supply. Now Joe was sorry that he had left his bait-rod
-behind. The pond was noted for the number and fighting qualities of its
-bass, and Joe had nothing to catch them with; at least that was what he
-told his friends, adding that he was afraid to trust so heavy work to
-me.
-
-“You’d better be afraid,” assented Roy. “If you don’t want that fine rod
-of yours smashed into a thousand pieces, you had better not try to catch
-a bass with it. But I’ll tell you what you might do, if you don’t care
-to sit idly here while Art and I catch all the fish and see all the fun.
-You might go up to the little perch hole and throw a fly there. Perhaps
-you will find the perch in the pond more accommodating than they were
-back there in the river.”
-
-“How about our esteemed friend, the squatter?” said Arthur.
-
-“Oh, he can’t trouble me,” answered Joe, who was already preparing to
-act upon Roy’s suggestion. “His shanty is away off there somewhere,
-while the perch hole lies a mile or more in the opposite direction.
-There is a wide and deep river between the two, and how is Matt going to
-cross it without a boat? I am of Roy’s opinion that he was driven away
-from here long ago.”
-
-While Joe was talking in this way he had taken the canvas canoe from his
-chest, and now under his skillful hands my old friend was fast assuming
-his usual symmetrical proportions. In less than ten minutes he was
-floating gracefully alongside the skiff.
-
-“Come on, Fly-rod,” said he, “and I will show you what a canvas canoe
-can do when he is managed by some one who understands his business. You
-never took a ride with me, did you?”
-
-No, I never had, and if the truth must be told, I never wanted to take a
-second ride with him. He may have been “the boss boat” on the rapids, as
-he often boasted, but he was a very unfortunate craft all the same, and
-before the day was over I had reason to believe that Joe would have seen
-more sport during his two weeks’ outing if he had left the canoe safe in
-his room at Mount Airy. I came back to the skiff, but he didn’t.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVI.
-
- AN EXPLOIT AND A SURPRISE.
-
-
-AS I could not comply with my friend’s invitation to “come on”, I was
-obliged to wait until Joe had exchanged his heavy boots for the buckskin
-moccasins he always wore whenever he went anywhere with the canoe. This
-being done, we pushed away from the skiff, and moved leisurely up the
-pond toward the perch hole, Joe whistling merrily as he plied the
-paddle. I do not think he was quite so light-hearted when he came back.
-
-Half an hour’s paddling sufficed to bring us to our destination. If I
-hadn’t heard Joe say that the perch hole was located in the mouth of a
-creek, I should not have known it, for it looked to me more like an arm
-of the pond which set back into the land. When I was taken from my case,
-after the anchor had been dropped overboard, I took note of the fact
-that one could not see more than twenty or thirty feet up the creek, a
-high wooded point limiting the range of vision in that direction. I
-didn’t know at the time why I observed this, but I thought of it
-afterward.
-
-Joe made his first cast with a scarlet ibis, and the result was
-surprising to both of us. The fish that took the lure did not give much
-of a bite—I have known a half-pound trout to seize the bait with more
-vim than he did—but when Joe fastened the hook with a scientific twist
-of his wrist, I couldn’t have doubled up quicker if he had caught a log.
-
-“Scotland’s a burning! what’s that?” exclaimed Joe, speaking so rapidly
-that the words seemed to come out all at once. “I declare, it’s a bass,”
-he added a moment later, as the green and bronze side of the beautiful
-captive could be seen for an instant just under the surface of the
-water. “I wish he was at the bottom of the pond, for he’ll break my rod
-and I’ll have no more fishing this trip.”
-
-But Joe did not give up because he thought he was going to be worsted in
-the fight. He brought into play all the skill of which he was master,
-and after an exciting struggle of fully half an hour’s duration, caught
-up the landing net and hauled into the canoe the largest thing in the
-shape of a fish I had seen up to that time. He was killed at once, the
-pocket scales were brought into use, and the weight of the “catch” was
-written down in Joe’s note-book.
-
-“Whew?” panted the boy, pulling out his handkerchief and wiping the big
-drops of perspiration from his forehead. “If that wasn’t a tough battle
-I wouldn’t say so. I never supposed that little rod could catch a fish
-like this. Hello, here! It’s getting dark already. I know the fellows
-will laugh at me for coming back with a single fish, but I don’t believe
-they will be able to show one that will weigh more.”
-
-Joe jumped to his feet as he spoke, and made all haste to put me away in
-my case. He stood with his face to the pond while he worked, and
-consequently he did not see what I did. My attention was first called to
-it by an exclamation from the canvas canoe who said in a suppressed and
-excited whisper:
-
-“Upon my word, there’s that everlasting Matt Coyle again. He’ll gobble
-the whole of us this time.”
-
-I looked over Joe’s shoulder, and there in the bight of the bend, with
-its ugly nose just sticking around the high wooded point of which I have
-spoken, was a clumsy scow built of rough boards that had doubtless been
-stolen from some saw-mill. In the scow sat Matt Coyle and his two boys.
-I had heard them described so often that I should have recognized them
-at once, even if the canoe had not told me who they were. They held
-their paddles poised in the air, and Matt who sat in the bow, having
-raised his hand to attract the attention of his boys, was now pointing
-silently toward my master, and going through a series of contortions
-with his head and eyes that must have had a volume of meaning in them.
-At any rate Jake and Sam understood them, for they dipped their paddles
-into the water, and the scow moved around the point and turned directly
-toward us, while the squatter prepared himself for business by taking
-off his hat and pushing back his sleeves. I trembled all over with
-excitement and alarm, and so did the canoe.
-
-“Oh, why don’t Joe turn around?” cried the latter. “Matt intends to take
-him by surprise, and he’ll be alongside in half a minute more.”
-
-Just then one of the boys allowed his paddle to rub against the side of
-the scow. The noise he made was very slight, but it was loud enough to
-attract the attention of Joe Wayring, who faced about to find his
-enemies within less than twenty feet of him. He was so astonished to see
-them there, that for a few seconds he could neither move nor speak. He
-stood as motionless and silent as a wooden boy; while Matt, seeing that
-he was discovered, snatched up his paddle and raised a yell of triumph.
-
-“Now I reckon I’ll have my boat back an’ you into the bargain,” he
-shouted, swinging his paddle around his head and then shaking it
-savagely at Joe. “When I get my hands onto you, the way I’ll wear the
-hickories out on your back will extonish you wuss nor any thing you ever
-see.”
-
-“An’ won’t I punch your head though, to pay you fur hittin’ me with that
-there tater up there in the creek last summer?” chimed in Jake. “I guess
-yes.”
-
-These threatening words called Joe to his senses. He knew that he would
-not have time to pull up the anchor and escape in his canoe, for he had
-paid out a good deal of rope in order to place himself in the best
-possible position for casting, and before he could haul it in, his
-enemies would be upon him. There was but one way to elude them, and that
-was to take to the water and to trust to his powers as a swimmer. It
-looked like a slim chance, but the odds of three against one were too
-heavy to be successfully resisted, and what else could he do? As quick
-as a flash he turned again, and without releasing his hold upon me, took
-a header from the stern of the canoe.
-
-“So that there’s your game, is it?” yelled the squatter. “Wal, it suits
-us, I reckon. Never mind the boat, Jakey. She’s fast anchored, and will
-stay there till we want her. Take after the ’ristocrat whose dad won’t
-let honest folks live onto his land less’n they’ve got a pocketful of
-money to pay him fur it. Jest let me get a good whack at him with my
-paddle an’ he’ll stop, I bet you. Hold on, there, ’cause it’ll be wuss
-fur you if you don’t.”
-
-In obedience to Matt’s instructions the scow was turned toward the
-swimmer; but although Jake and Sam exerted themselves to the utmost,
-they could not cut him off from the shore. Joe made astonishing headway.
-There were but few boys, or men either, in Mount Airy who could swim as
-fast as he could, and he afterward said that he never made better time
-than he did when he was trying to get away from Matt and his boys. He
-was afraid of the lily-pads which lined the banks of the creek on both
-sides, so he swam down the stream until he was clear of them before he
-attempted to make a landing; but Matt, believing that he could do better
-on shore, dropped his own paddle into the water, turned into the lilies
-and tried to force the scow through them. That was a lucky thing for Joe
-Wayring. The strong stems of the lilies were entwined about one another
-in all sorts of ways, and the squatter stuck fast in them before he had
-made half a dozen strokes.
-
-“Back out! Back out!” shouted Matt, who was quickly made aware that he
-had committed a blunder. “Be in a hurry, or he’ll get sich a start on us
-that we can’t never ketch him. Hold up, there!” he went on, jumping to
-his feet and swinging his paddle around his head as if he were on the
-point of launching it at the object of his wrath. “Come back, or it’ll
-be wuss fur you. You hear me, I reckon.”
-
-In the meantime Joe made good his landing, and looked over his shoulder
-to see the heavy paddle coming toward him, end over end. It struck the
-ground near him, and was immediately sent back where it came from with
-all the force that the boy’s sinewy arm could give it. Flying wide of
-the mark for which it was intended, the broad blade hit Jake fairly in
-the face, giving him such a splitting headache that he could not take
-part in the pursuit that followed. This was another lucky thing for Joe.
-Jake was the best runner in the squatter’s family, and although there is
-not the slightest doubt that he would have been soundly thrashed if he
-had succeeded in overtaking Joe, he might have been able to detain him
-until his father and brother could come to his assistance, and then Joe
-would have had more on his hands than he could attend to.
-
-[Illustration: JOE IN AN AWKWARD FIX.]
-
-“That’s another thing we’ve got to pay you fur when we get our hands on
-you,” yelled Matt, who was almost beside himself. “Work lively in
-backin’ out, or he’ll have a mile the start of us before we tech the
-shore.”
-
-Jake, who had dropped his paddle and sat holding his chin in his hands,
-paid no attention to the order; but Matt and Sam worked to such good
-purpose that they finally succeeded in backing the scow out of the
-lilies into clear water. When they reached the bank, Joe Wayring was out
-of sight; but they knew which way he had gone, and at once set out in
-pursuit; while Jake stayed in the scow and howled dismally.
-
-Joe ran like a deer, and made surprising progress in spite of the logs
-and bushes that obstructed his way. He was very quiet in his movements,
-but Matt and his boy made so much noise that it was an easy matter to
-keep track of them and tell just how far they were behind. At last the
-squatter, seeing that he was not going to capture my master by following
-him on foot, thought it best to change his tactics.
-
-“Sam,” he shouted, in stentorian tones, “go back to the creek, and you
-an’ Jakey take the canoe an’ paddle down the pond so’s to cut him off
-when he tries to swim off to the skiff. You understand what I say to
-you, I reckon.”
-
-Joe understood it, whether Sam did or not and it put new speed into him.
-He ran so swiftly that he very soon left his single pursuer out of
-hearing, but he exhausted himself in the effort, and when he dashed out
-of the bushes and stopped on the bank in plain sight of the skiff, he
-was so nearly out of breath that he could not raise a shout to draw the
-attention of his chums, who were hard at work putting up the tent. But
-Jim saw him, and announced the fact by a joyful bark, followed by a
-vigorous wagging of his tail. Arthur and Roy looked toward the bank, and
-there stood Joe, swinging his arms wildly about his head. When he saw
-that he had attracted their notice, he pointed to the woods, and then up
-the pond toward the canvas canoe which was coming down with all the
-speed that Jake and Sam could give it. The boys in the skiff saw and
-understood. The anchor came up quicker than it ever did before, the oars
-were shipped, and the skiff came toward the bank with a heavy bone in
-her teeth. By this time Matt Coyle arrived within hearing again, and
-Joe, fearing that he might make his appearance before his friends could
-rescue him, stepped into the water and struck out to meet the skiff.
-Jake and Sam yelled savagely at him, and redoubled their efforts to
-place themselves between him and his friends; but they might as well
-have saved their breath and strength. The skiff came up rapidly, and Joe
-knew that he was saved. Suddenly a bright idea suggested itself to
-him—one that would have enabled him to turn the tables upon the squatter
-very neatly, if his friends had only been prompt to act upon it. Raising
-himself as far out of the water as he could, he called out:
-
-“Boys, never mind me. I’ve got my second wind now, and can swim for an
-hour. Go up there and capture my canoe, or else run over her and send
-her to the bottom. Don’t let those villains take her away from me
-again.”
-
-“All right,” replied Roy, still giving away strong on his oar. “We’ll
-get your canoe back for you, but we will take care of you first.”
-
-“No, no!” insisted Joe. “Capture or sink the canoe first, and attend to
-me afterward. I am all right, I tell you. I can easily keep afloat until
-you come back.”
-
-“Why, boy, you haven’t got a breath to spare,” said Arthur. “I know it
-by the way you talk. Come in out of the wet.”
-
-“You held fast to your fly-rod through it all, didn’t you?” said Roy, as
-he took me from Joe’s hand.
-
-“Yes. I didn’t know whether or not I could outrun them, and I wanted
-something to defend myself with in case they came up with me.”
-
-When Joe tried to climb into the skiff, he found that he was by no means
-in as good condition as he thought he was. He could scarcely help
-himself at all, and his chums were obliged to pull him in by main
-strength. The moment they let go of him he sank down against the stern
-locker and panted loudly; but he was as full of determination as ever.
-
-“Now go up and sink the canoe,” he almost gasped.
-
-But a single glance was enough to show Arthur and Roy that it was too
-late to do any thing with the canoe. Jake and his brother heard the
-order that Joe shouted at his friends while he was in the water, and
-made all haste to put themselves out of harm’s way. When Joe was hauled
-into the skiff they were so close to the shore that all attempts to
-intercept them would have been unavailing.
-
-“It’s no use, Joe,” said Arthur. “They’re too far off, and there’s Matt
-Coyle standing on the bank.”
-
-“But for Joe’s sake we will see what we can do,” exclaimed Roy.
-
-As he spoke, he opened the forward locker and took from it a stout paper
-bag. When he first put it there, Arthur and Joe supposed that it
-contained lemons; but when Roy opened it, they saw that it was filled
-with potatoes.
-
-“They helped us out of a scrape once, and why shouldn’t they do so
-again?” said Roy. “My plan is to pull into shore, drive Matt and his
-boys into the bushes, clap onto the canoe with the boat-hook and tow her
-out into the pond.”
-
-Arthur declared that that was the way to do it, but subsequent events
-proved that it wasn’t. They laid hold of their oars again, but before
-the skiff had gone far toward the shore, Joe Wayring, who had by this
-time recovered his power of speech and motion, announced that Roy’s plan
-wouldn’t work at all, and that it was useless to make any effort to sink
-or capture the canoe. And the rowers found it so when they faced about
-and looked toward the shore.
-
-The squatter and his boys had dragged the canoe from the water, and were
-now carrying her back into the bushes where they knew the boys would not
-dare go after it.
-
-Matt had not yet forgotten the tactics they used when he and his boys
-tried to club them out of their boat the year before. He was very much
-afraid of Roy, and when the latter ceased rowing and got upon his feet
-to see what had been done with the canoe, Matt and his allies ran into
-the woods like so many frightened turkeys.
-
-“I’m onto your little game,” said the squatter in a triumphant tone, as
-he looked out from behind the tree that sheltered him. “You don’t fire
-no more taters at me if I know it. Your boat is here, an’ if you want it
-wusser’n we do, come an’ get it. ’Tain’t much account nohow.”
-
-“I’m going to bust it into a million pieces to pay you fur that there
-whack you gin me with pap’s paddle a while ago,” shouted the invisible
-Jake, who would not show so much as the top of his cap to the boys in
-the skiff. “I’ve stood jest about all the poundin’ I’m goin’ to.”
-
-“What did you do to him, Joe?” inquired Arthur, as he and Roy turned the
-skiff around and pulled back toward their anchorage.
-
-“Matt threw his paddle at me when he saw that I was about to slip
-through his fingers, and I threw it back,” answered Joe. “It didn’t hit
-Matt, as I meant it should, but it came pretty near knocking Jake out of
-the scow.”
-
-“The scow?” repeated Roy. “Have they got a boat of their own, I’d like
-to know.”
-
-Joe replied that they had a boat in their possession (of course he
-didn’t know where they got it, or whether or not they had any right to
-call it their own), and then went on to tell of the exploit I had
-performed at the perch hole, and of the surprise that followed close
-upon the heels of it. He wound up his story by saying—
-
-“I didn’t have time to draw up my anchor, so I had to go overboard. I
-swam the best I knew how in order to reach the bank before Matt did;
-then I raced a mile or more through the woods in my wet clothes, and
-that was what tired me out.”
-
-“I wonder if we are to find that fellow hanging around every time we
-come into the woods?” said Roy, angrily. “Hallo, here!”
-
-A slight splashing in the water drew their attention at the moment, and
-Joe and Arthur started up in alarm, expecting to find that the squatter
-and his boys had stolen a march upon them. There was a canoe close
-alongside of them, but the broad-shouldered, brown-whiskered man who
-handled the paddle was not Matt Coyle or any body like him. He was one
-of the hotel guides who had assisted in driving the squatter out of the
-Indian Lake country, and he was looking for him now.
-
-“Hallo yourself,” he replied, good-naturedly. “Well, I swan to man, if
-there ain’t Roy Sheldon and—Why, you’re all here, ain’t you? Say! seen
-any thing of Matt Coyle since you have been hanging around?”
-
-“Mr. Swan, how are you?” exclaimed all the boys, in a breath. They knew
-the guide, and liked him, too.
-
-“You have come to the right place to learn a good deal concerning Matt
-and his doings,” continued Roy. “What has he been up to now?”
-
-“Well, you see,” answered the guide, speaking with so much deliberation
-that the impatient boys wanted to hurry him, “he came here last year
-from somewhere, and wanted to set in for a guide; but the hotels down to
-the lake wouldn’t have him, ’cause they didn’t think he was a safe man
-to trust with a boat, and Matt, he allowed that he’d fix things so’t
-there wouldn’t be no guidin’ for none of us to do. So he’s took to the
-woods, and he robs every camp he can find, if there don’t happen to be
-any body around to watch it. Leastwise we lay it to him, ’cause we know
-he’s around here, and some of us thought that we’d like to take a peep
-at his shanty, if he’s got one.”
-
-“We can’t tell you where his shanty is,” said Joe, “but we can show you
-where Matt and his boys were not ten minutes ago. He stole my canvas
-canoe and gave me a long chase through the woods. He promised that if he
-could get hold of me, he would wear a hickory out over my back.”
-
-“Sho!” exclaimed the guide. “What for?”
-
-Joe’s story was a long one, for in order to make the guide understand
-how he and his companions had incurred the enmity of the vindictive
-squatter, it was necessary that he should go back to the time when Matt
-and his family first made their appearance in Mount Airy. He described
-the fight between them and the constable and his posse, the particulars
-of which he received from eye-witnesses; told how Matt had stolen the
-canoe and six fine fishing-rods and reels, while he and his companions
-were looking for the bear they saw on the shore of Sherwin’s Pond; and
-gave a glowing account of the fight in the creek, at which the guide
-laughed heartily.
-
-“I’ll jest bet that them was my taters that you pelted him with,” said
-he; “’cause while I was out in the woods with a guest from Boston, my
-wife said that my garden and smoke-house were both robbed in one night.
-As for them fish poles—I think I can tell you where to find them.”
-
-“Good for you, Mr. Swan,” cried Arthur. “Where are they?”
-
-“Of course, I don’t know that they belong to you; I only suspect it,”
-continued the guide. “You see, one day last summer, Jake Coyle brung six
-as purty poles as you would want to look at up to the Sportsman’s Home,
-and told Mr. Hanson, the new landlord, that he got ’em in a boat trade.
-He couldn’t use ’em, fur they wasn’t the kind that he’d been in the
-habit of handlin’, and so he wanted to sell ’em. I told Hanson that I
-was as sure as any thing could be that they had been stole, and that
-mebbe the owner would come along some day looking for them; so Hanson,
-he buys ’em, reels and all, for four dollars apiece—all except one that
-Jake said had been broke by a bass, and for that he give two dollars.
-They were covered with mud and rust, but I cleaned ’em up, and now they
-look as good as new.”
-
-“They are our rods, and I know it,” exclaimed Roy. “If mine is the one
-that’s broken, I shall have the satisfaction of knowing that I paid Jake
-for it in advance by hitting him in the mouth with that potato.”
-
-“And if it’s mine, I settled with him this afternoon by slapping him in
-the face with his father’s paddle,” chimed in Joe Wayring.
-
-The guide laughed again. “You’re as plucky a lot of youngsters as I ever
-see,” said he, “and you may rest assured that them folks won’t bother
-you or any body else much longer. We are going to put ’em in jail for
-thieves when we catch ’em.”
-
-“Ah! Yes,” said Arthur; “but that’s right where you are going to see
-trouble. Our deputy sheriff and constable searched every inch of the
-ground around Sherwin’s Pond, and all they found was the place where
-Matt’s shanty once stood. He set fire to it before he left for Indian
-Lake.”
-
-“I know that the woods about here are tolerable thick, and that Matt is
-a boss hand at hiding,” replied the guide; “but he will find that
-there’s a heap of difference between dodging a couple of townies, and in
-getting away from a lot of men who have lived in the woods ever since
-they were knee high to so many ducks. Go on, Joe. What else do you know
-about Matt Coyle?”
-
-The rest of Joe’s story related solely to the events of the evening, and
-it did not take him long to describe them. When he concluded the guide
-was almost as angry as he and his chums were. The idea that that
-worthless vagabond should threaten to beat such a boy as Joe Wayring,
-simply because he had showed the courage to defend himself when he was
-assaulted! The guide made no remark, but there was a look in his eye
-that would have made the squatter uneasy if he had been there to see it.
-
-“It’s too late to do any thing to-night,” said he, at length. “I reckon
-you boys have got something good to eat in them lockers? I thought so.
-Well, suppose we go ashore and camp.”
-
-Joe and his friends readily agreed to this proposition. They had spent
-five days and nights in their boat, and they longed for a good, sound
-sleep on a bed of balsam-boughs, with the spreading branches of some
-friendly pine for shelter instead of their water-proof tent. They were
-not afraid to go into camp on shore now that they had the stalwart guide
-for company. Matt and his boys would not be likely to show themselves as
-long as they knew that he was with them; but the trouble was, they
-didn’t know it, although they were in plain sight when the boys built
-their fire on the bank, and laid their plans to pay them a visit before
-morning.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVII.
-
- A BATTLE IN THE DARK.
-
-
-AS OUR three friends and their backwoods companion were old campaigners,
-they did not spend much time in getting ready for the night. A roaring
-fire was started, the jack-lamp hung upon a neighboring tree, and by the
-aid of the light thus afforded them, Joe Wayring, who had by this time
-got into a suit of dry clothes, cleaned the fish which Arthur and Roy
-had captured during his absence; Arthur Hastings fried them and made the
-tea; Mr. Swan prepared the bacon and pancakes; and Roy cut the balsam
-boughs and arranged the beds. In less than three quarters of an hour
-after they drew their boats upon the beach, they sat down to a supper
-that would have tempted any healthy boy to eat, no matter whether he was
-hungry or not.
-
-“Now, Mr. Swan,” said Joe, when the dishes had been washed in the clear
-waters of the pond, and the tin bucket, which contained the supply of
-fish for breakfast, had been hung up by a string so that the minks that
-were sure to come around during the night could not steal them, “tell us
-a story, please.”
-
-“About what?” inquired the guide, as he filled his pipe.
-
-“Oh, about the first panther you ever shot.”
-
-“Or about the bear you killed with a club while he was running off with
-one of your pigs,” suggested Roy.
-
-Mr. Swan was always ready. After he had taken a few pulls at his
-brier-root to make sure that it was well-started he began and told not
-one story, but a dozen or more. He kept his little audience interested
-until ten o’clock, then the lamp was turned out, the fire replenished,
-and the campers sought their beds of balsam-boughs. Lulled by the
-rippling of the waves upon the beach at their feet, and by the low music
-of the breeze as it toyed with the branches over their heads, their
-slumber was deep and dreamless. Even the usually watchful Jim seemed to
-think that there was no responsibility resting upon him for this
-particular night, and that the mere presence of the guide was all the
-protection the camp needed, for he too slept soundly, and snored while
-he slept. Consequently he did not see the uncouth object which drew out
-of the darkness that covered the surface of the pond, and slowly and
-cautiously approached the camp. The object was Matt Coyle’s scow, and in
-it were the squatter and both his boys. The latter were plying their
-paddles with noiseless motion, and Matt was kneeling in the bow, waving
-first one hand and then the other to show them what course to take.
-
-It must have been long after midnight, for there was nothing left of the
-fire but a glowing bed of coals; but still there was light enough to
-enable the robber to see the outlines of the skiff, but not sufficient
-to show him the trim little canoe that had been hauled out on the bank
-and turned bottom side up. If he had seen that, he would have lost no
-time in getting away from so dangerous a neighborhood; but believing
-that the boys were alone, and that they had forgotten their usual
-caution in spite of the warning events of the afternoon, he kept on
-until he was close enough to the skiff to take hold of it. I saw the
-whole proceeding, but of course could do nothing to arouse the
-slumbering campers.
-
-“Now, turn about on your seats and give way the best you know how,” I
-heard Matt whisper to his boys. “We must pull her off into deep water
-before them fellers can wake up an’ get a holt on her.”
-
-“Say, pap,” whispered Jake, in reply. “Ain’t we goin’ ashore to give
-them a good larrupin’ before they make up?”
-
-If the guide had not been there, these words would have horrified me;
-but as it was, I did not feel at all uneasy. I knew very well that Matt
-and his boys were no match for our party, and that they would all be
-captured as surely as they put their feet on shore; but I did not want
-to see them steal that skiff. Oh, why didn’t Jim wake up and alarm his
-master!
-
-“We’ll ’tend to them after we get the skiff an’ all the nice grub an’
-things that’s into it,” said the squatter, as he tightened his grasp.
-“Now be you all ready? Then give way.”
-
-Jake and Sam laid out all their strength upon their paddles, and the bow
-of the skiff grated harshly as it moved over the sand. The noise, slight
-as it was, awoke Jim, who was on his feet in a twinkling. He took just
-one glance at the marauders, and then danced about the camp in a perfect
-ecstasy of rage, barking and yelping with all his might.
-
-His first note of angry remonstrance alarmed the boys, who were off
-their fragrant couches in less time than it takes to tell it. The moment
-they arose to a perpendicular, they were wide awake and ready to act.
-They made a simultaneous rush for the beach, and while Arthur and Joe
-seized the skiff and pulled her back where she belonged, in spite of all
-that Jake and his brother could do to prevent it, Roy caught up the
-painter and deftly took a turn with it around a convenient sapling.
-
-“Now, haul away and see how much you will make by it,” he exclaimed.
-“That’s once you got fooled.”
-
-“Wal, I’ll bet a hoss that I ain’t fooled yet,” said the squatter, in
-savage tones. “Pull ashore, Jakey, an’ we’ll get out an’ lambast them
-fellers till their own mammies won’t know ’em when they go hum. Human
-natur!” he ejaculated a moment later, as the tall form of the guide came
-between him and the smoldering fire. “Who’s that? If it ain’t Swan, I’m
-a Dutchman.”
-
-“Come on, you miserable scoundrel,” cried the guide, shaking his huge
-fist at the astonished and thoroughly frightened robber. “I have been
-looking for you, and now that I have found you, I am going to take you
-back to Indian Lake with me.”
-
-But Matt and his boys were not as anxious to go ashore now as they had
-been. Without saying a word in reply they bent to their paddles, and
-made all haste to get out of sight in the darkness.
-
-“Now, Joe,” said Mr. Swan, who never got excited even under the most
-trying circumstances, “shove off and take after them. You can go faster
-than they can, so if you will get ahead of them and keep them from
-reaching the opposite shore, I will come up on this side, and we will
-have them between two fires.”
-
-Joe and his companions were prompt to act upon this suggestion. He and
-Roy pushed the skiff into the water, and when she was fairly afloat
-Arthur sprang aboard with the jack-lamp in his hand. A moment later its
-strong light flashed out over the pond, telling the fleeing squatter in
-language as plain as words that the darkness could not conceal his
-movements.
-
-“There they are, not more than forty yards,” said Arthur, who stood
-erect on the stern locker, steadying himself with the boathook. “Roy,
-let me have that oar, and you stand here with the lamp and open fire on
-them with your potatoes.”
-
-“I can’t,” was the answer. “I took the potatoes ashore to-night and
-washed some for breakfast; and the bag is in camp at this moment.”
-
-“Then we shall have to come to close quarters with them,” said Arthur,
-“for I have no idea that they will give up when they find themselves cut
-off from shore.”
-
-“If we can only manage to detain them for two minutes, we shall have all
-the help we want,” Joe remarked. “Look behind you.”
-
-Arthur glanced over his shoulder, and was surprised to see the guide in
-less than a stone’s throw of the skiff. How he had managed to put his
-canoe into the water and get her under way with so little loss of time,
-was a mystery.
-
-“A fellow would have to look out for Mr. Swan in a hurry-skurry race,
-wouldn’t he?” said Arthur. “Just see how he makes that little craft of
-his get through the water! If you two don’t let out a section or so of
-your muscle, he will overtake the scow before we do.”
-
-Just then Matt Coyle’s hoarse voice was heard calling warningly to them.
-“Don’t come no nigher,” it said. “If you think that we are sich fules as
-to go down to Injun Lake when we want to stay here, you are the biggest
-kind of fules yourselves. I’ll break the head of the fust one of you
-that comes within reach.”
-
-“Matt has crawled back to the stern of his scow, and is standing there
-with his paddle in his hand,” said Arthur, who could see every move the
-robber made. “I wonder if he thinks that we are ‘fules’ enough to give
-him battle before Mr. Swan comes up to help us.”
-
-That was just what Matt was looking for, and he did not know what to
-make of it when the skiff dashed by his scow, keeping so far beyond
-reach that he could not have touched any of her crew with his paddle if
-he had tried, and deliberately placed herself across his path. Then his
-eyes were opened to the details of the plan that had been laid to entrap
-him, and the promptness with which he went to work to extricate himself
-was surprising. He said a few words in a low tone to his boys, then put
-his own paddle into the water, and the scow shot ahead with greatly
-increased speed, never swerving from her original course by so much as a
-hair’s breadth.
-
-“Does the old villain mean to run us down, or does he intend to come
-alongside and capture us and the skiff?” said Roy, who was alarmed as
-well as amazed by the squatter’s offensive tactics. “Back water, Joe,
-while I give way. It looks as though _we_ had got to run now.”
-
-The scow was so close to them that they had no time to get out of her
-way. They saw at a glance that all they could reasonably hope to
-accomplish was to turn their boat slightly, so that if the scow struck
-her at all, it would be a glancing blow. But they had miscalculated the
-speed of Matt’s clumsy looking craft. She seemed to glide over the top
-of the water instead of passing through it, as other boats do. On she
-came with terrific force, and although Joe and Roy worked hard to slip
-out of her way, she struck the skiff fairly in the side, ripping off two
-of her planks, smashing in as many more, and making a hole that Mars
-could have crawled through with all ease. At the same instant darkness
-settled down over the scene as if by magic. Arthur Hastings had been
-knocked off his perch on the stern locker, and he and the jack-lamp went
-into the pond together.
-
-“Whoop-ee!” yelled Matt, triumphantly. “Will you git outen our road the
-next time you see us comin’? Take that fur your imperdence in gittin’
-before your betters,” he added, making a vicious blow with his paddle at
-the place where he had last seen Joe Wayring’s head.
-
-Joe’s head was not there now, however, for he had been sharp enough to
-put it somewhere else; but Matt was speedily made aware that the boy was
-not far away, for as the blade of his paddle whistled harmlessly through
-the air, he received a punch in the ribs with an oar that brought from
-him a yell of pain, and came very near sending him into the water. At
-the same moment, a howl of agony from the unlucky Jake announced that
-Roy was taking a hand in the rumpus.
-
-The fight that followed was a very short one, but it was warm while it
-lasted, and gave Matt and his boys some idea of what a couple of brave
-young fellows could do when they were cornered. Joe, while defending
-himself against the muscular squatter, managed to get in several good
-blows; Roy pounded Sam to his heart’s content, Jake having dropped out
-of the contest at the very beginning of it; and Arthur clung to the side
-of the skiff and called lustily for Mr. Swan.
-
-“I’m coming,” replied the guide, who was doing all he could to bring
-himself alongside the scow. “Keep them there just a minute longer.”
-
-Roy and Joe would have obeyed if they could; but when Matt heard Mr.
-Swan’s voice sounding so close to him, he pushed his piratical craft
-away from the skiff, and the darkness shut him out from view. When the
-guide arrived a few minutes later, he found the boys supporting
-themselves by holding fast to the sides of their boat, which was full of
-water. They had relieved her of their weight just in time to keep her
-from going to the bottom of the pond. She would not sink now, for she
-had no cargo aboard to speak of, and besides, the air that was
-imprisoned in the lockers assisted in keeping her afloat.
-
-“Well, if this don’t beat the world!” exclaimed Mr. Swan, as soon as he
-had taken in the situation. “Somehow or other those villains always
-manage to come out at the top of the heap, don’t they? Did you have a
-fight with them? I heard sticks a clashing and somebody yelling. I hope
-none of you ain’t hurt.”
-
-“Don’t be uneasy on that score,” replied Roy. “Joe and I had a scrimmage
-with them, but you didn’t hear either one of us yell. It was Matt and
-Jake. Sam was good grit. He never said a word, although I punched him
-with the blade of my oar the best I knew how. Arthur was standing on one
-of the lockers when the scow struck us, and he and the lamp made a
-plunge of ten feet in the clear before they touched the water.”
-
-“Do you mean to say that they ran into you a purpose?” exclaimed the
-guide.
-
-“Of course they did. We cut them off from the shore, as you directed,
-and that old scow of theirs came at us like a battering-ram. Matt heard
-Joe tell us to-night to sink the canoe, and that was what put it into
-his head to run into us.”
-
-Meanwhile Arthur Hastings had worked his way around to the bow of the
-skiff and secured the painter, one end of which he made fast to a ring
-in the stern of the canoe. The chase was over, of course. They could not
-continue the pursuit in the dark, for the squatter could easily elude
-them in a hundred different ways, and neither would it be prudent to
-follow him in the canoe. The little craft was intended to carry only one
-person, with a very limited allowance of camp equipage, and the added
-weight of one of the boys would have sunk her so deep in the water that
-no speed could be got out of her. The only thing they could do was to go
-back to camp and finish their sleep.
-
-“But what shall we do to-morrow?” was the question that Joe and his
-comrades asked themselves and one another. “Our boat is badly stove, and
-if we can’t patch her up, how are we going to get back to Mount Airy?”
-
-Mr. Swan towed the disabled skiff to the shore, her crew swimming
-alongside or trying to assist him by pushing behind, and the fire was
-started up again to aid them in making an examination of the injuries
-she had received. They were fully as severe as the boys expected to find
-them, and it was a wonder to them that she was so long in filling.
-
-“There’s plenty of guides down to the lake that can fix her up for you
-in good shape,” said Mr. Swan.
-
-“Of course,” replied Roy. “But the lake is twenty-five miles from here,
-and there’s no way to get her down there.”
-
-“Mebbe there is,” answered the guide. “For a shilling I’ll agree that
-she shall go down there, and carry you into the bargain. But we can’t do
-nothing with her to-night. You boys get on some dry clothes and go to
-bed again.”
-
-Joe and his companions were quite willing to act upon this suggestion,
-but they were in no hurry to go to sleep. Neither was Mr. Swan. They sat
-around the fire for a long time, talking over the incidents of their
-battle in the dark, and as I listened closely, I have been able to give
-you the story in the same way that it was told to Mr. Swan. The
-squatter’s extraordinary luck and the skill he exhibited in eluding
-arrest seemed to astonish them all. How I longed for the power of speech
-so that I could tell them that robbing camps and smoke-houses was not
-the only business to which Matt Coyle intended to devote himself, now
-that the offer of his service as guide and boatman had been declined by
-the managers of the Indian Lake hotels. But they found it out for
-themselves, and before long, too.
-
-It was three o’clock before the campers again sought their blankets. The
-boys slept much later than usual, but the guide was stirring at the
-first peep of day. He piled fresh fuel on the fire, put Roy’s potatoes
-into the ashes to roast, made the coffee and pancakes, and took time
-while the fish were frying to give the skiff another good looking over.
-Then he picked up Joe’s camp ax, and disappeared among the trees,
-returning a few minutes later with several large slabs of birch bark. By
-this time the fish were done, and the guide announced the fact by
-calling out—
-
-“Tumble up, you sleepy heads. You’ve just two seconds in which to take a
-dip in the pond and get ready for breakfast.”
-
-Having had as many “dips” as they wanted already, the boys contented
-themselves with washing their hands and faces; after which they sat down
-to their homely breakfast with appetites to which the dwellers in towns
-and cities are, for the most part, strangers. Of course the squatter was
-still uppermost in their minds, and he and his exploits formed the
-principal topic of their conversation.
-
-“By the way, Mr. Swan, you forgot to tell us what Matt stole at those
-camps,” said Arthur, suddenly.
-
-“Did I? Well, in my camp he took a Lefever hammerless that cost the
-owner three hundred dollars; and from a gentleman who had Bob Martin for
-a guide, he stole a Winchester worth fifty dollars. Not satisfied with
-that, he took every thing in the shape of grub that he could lay his
-hands on, and me and my employer had to live on trout while we were
-making a journey of more than a hundred and fifty miles. Trout’s good
-enough once in a while; but I swan to man, if I want it for a steady
-diet. Bob Martin said he eat so much of that kind of food that he wanted
-to snap at every fly that came near him.”
-
-“Matt and his family are always on the look-out for grub, and I should
-think that the sharp edge would be taken off their appetites after a
-while,” Arthur remarked. “Did you try to follow his trail?”
-
-“Bless you, no. There ain’t a country in Ameriky that is so well
-provided with water courses as this Indian Lake country is, and what’s
-the use of trying to follow the trail of a boat? You might as well think
-of tracking a bird through the air.”
-
-“What do you suppose Matt intends to do with those guns?” inquired Roy.
-“Of course he wouldn’t be so foolish as to offer them for sale around
-here, and they certainly will be of no use to him unless he took a big
-supply of cartridges at the same time he took the weapons.”
-
-“I’ve got my own idea about that,” replied the guide. “It’s only an
-idea, mind you, but I have good reason for holding to it. A year ago
-last spring, Matt got to acting just as he’s acting now, because the
-hotels wouldn’t send him out with their guests, and me and the rest of
-the guides tracked him down, and told him that he’d got to clear
-himself. He allowed he wouldn’t do it, and that he’d make it hot for the
-fellers that tried to make him go, so we went to work and burned up
-everything he had, except his clothes and we’pons. Then he had to dig
-out; but before he went, he sent us word that if he couldn’t do guiding
-for the hotels none of us should, for the reason that there wouldn’t be
-nobody to hire us.”
-
-“What did he mean by that?” exclaimed Joe.
-
-“You’re pretty sharp fellows,” said the guide, in reply. “What’s your
-opinion of his meaning?”
-
-“He doesn’t intend to kill off the guests as fast as they arrive, does
-he?” said Arthur.
-
-“Probably not,” said Joe. “But he means to steal them poor, and bother
-them in every way he can, so that they won’t come here to spend their
-summer vacations.”
-
-“That’s the very idea,” said the guide, approvingly. “That’s what he was
-up to, and that’s what he is trying to do now; but we ain’t going to let
-him stay. Now, then,” he added, as he arose to his feet and produced his
-ancient brier-root, “if one of you will help me while the others tend to
-things about the camp, we’ll be on our way to the lake in less’n half an
-hour by Joe’s Waterbury.”
-
-“Are you going with us?” asked Arthur, who was delighted at the prospect
-of spending the day, and perhaps another night in the company of so
-famous a story teller.
-
-“I reckon I might as well,” replied the guide. “I know where to find
-Matt’s trail now, but I can’t do nothing with him and his family all by
-myself, so I will go back and get some of the boys to help me.”
-
-“Well, see here, Mr. Swan,” said Joe. “If you have to burn him out
-again, don’t forget to save my canoe from the general destruction. I
-know it isn’t a very valuable thing, having seen its best days long ago,
-but still I shouldn’t like to think that I had lost it for good.”
-
-“I’ll bear it in mind,” said the guide. “Now, don’t let the fire go out.
-We shall need it to toast the bark.”
-
-“What do you want to toast the bark for?”
-
-“Why, to make it straighten out and stay somewhere. Don’t you see how it
-curls up in all sorts of ways? Summer bark isn’t as good as winter bark
-for this sort of work, but I reckon we can make it keep the water out of
-the skiff till we get to the lake.”
-
-Arthur and Joe made all haste to wash the breakfast dishes and collect
-their “duffle”, so that there would be no delay in loading the skiff
-when the repairs were completed, and then sat down to keep the fire
-going, and to watch the guide, in whose proceedings they were much
-interested. They wanted to learn how it was done, so that they might
-know what to do in case a similar misfortune befell them when there was
-no accommodating backwoodsman near to help them. Fortunately they never
-went into the woods without taking with them some strips of canvas, a
-supply of tallow and rosin, and a paper of copper tacks. By the aid of
-the tacks, the birch bark, after it had been toasted over the fire so
-that it would “stay somewhere”, was fastened upon the gaping wound which
-the sharp corner of Matt’s scow had made in her side, the seams were
-thickly coated with melted rosin and tallow, then the canvas was tacked
-on, and Mr. Swan declared that his task was finished.
-
-“She’ll leak a little water, of course,” said he, as he filled up for
-another smoke, “but not much after the bark has a chance to swell a
-trifle. Now I reckon we are ready to be off.”
-
-It was the work of but a few minutes to pack the provisions and cooking
-utensils away in the lockers, and as soon as that had been done, the
-boys shoved the skiff into the water and followed Mr. Swan, whose canoe
-was moving toward the creek which connected the pond with Indian Lake.
-The boat didn’t leak as much as they thought it would. Five minutes’
-bailing every half hour kept her comparatively dry.
-
-The boys camped that night within less than five miles of the lake, and
-of course had the pleasure of listening to more of the guide’s stories.
-They made an early start the next morning, Mr. Swan being impatient to
-obtain assistance and resume the pursuit of the man who had despoiled
-the camp of his employer, and at seven o’clock the two boats were run up
-on the beach in front of the Sportsman’s Home.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVIII.
-
- AN OLD ACQUAINTANCE.
-
-
-MR. SWAN and his young friends at once went ashore and set out for the
-hotel, the former to tell “the boys” that he had struck the trail of the
-man they most wanted to see, and Joe and his companions to examine the
-rods the landlord had in his possession, and to engage some one who was
-handy with tools to repair the skiff. They left me lying in my usual
-place on the stern locker, with Jim and the two bait-rods for company.
-
-I had heard so much about Indian Lake and its hotels that I had pictured
-them out to myself, and thought I could tell pretty near how they
-looked; but nevertheless I was greatly surprised by what I saw around
-me. I told myself that the boy who could not find there what he wanted
-in the way of recreation, must be hard to suit. If he was fond of gay
-company and liked such places as Saratoga and Long Branch, he would
-probably stop at the “American” on the further side of the lake; but if
-he were an angler and a lover of nature, or if he desired to get away
-somewhere and rest, he would choose the “Sportsman’s Home” every time.
-
-The house itself looked like a hunter’s camp on a grand scale, or like
-the cabins of the loggers I afterward saw in the wilds of Maine, only it
-had two stories instead of one. It was built entirely of logs, which had
-been painted with some substance that I don’t know the name of, but it
-sparkled in the bright sunlight like a covering of ice. In the groves
-that surrounded the hotel on all sides, were log houses, tents and
-shanties without number. Noisy children were running in and out among
-the trees, the clashing of croquet balls was almost incessant, sportsmen
-in dogskin jackets, leather helmets and leggings, and guides in blue
-shirts and cowhide boots were constantly going and coming, and every one
-that I saw seemed to be enjoying himself. This was one of the happy
-parties that Matt Coyle was determined to break up because the landlords
-refused to trust their guests to his care! It was no wonder Mr. Swan and
-his brother guides were anxious to rid the country of the presence of
-such a villain. While I was thinking about it I heard myself addressed
-in a faint voice; and upon looking in the direction from which it came,
-I discovered a seedy breech-loader resting against the thwart of the
-neighboring canoe.
-
-“You don’t seem to remember me,” said he, reproachfully.
-
-“I can’t say that I do,” was my reply. “I think you have made a mistake
-in the fly-rod.”
-
-“No, I haven’t,” said he, confidently. “I knew you before you left Mr.
-Brown’s store. Don’t you remember the English fowling-piece that had the
-dispute with that conceited bamboo?”
-
-So this was my old acquaintance, the “Brummagem shooting-iron,” was it?
-It was right on the point of my tongue to remind him that the bamboo had
-not showed himself to be any more conceited than he was; but I didn’t
-say it. I judged by his appearance that he had seen pretty hard times
-since he left Mr. Brown’s protecting care. He had sneeringly told me
-that I was not worth the modest price that had been set upon me, but,
-here I was, as bright as ever, while he looked as though he had been
-through half a dozen wars.
-
-“I remember you now,” said I, “but you have changed so much that I did
-not recognize you at first. Where have you been, and what have you done
-since that countryman of yours ordered you to be sent up to the Lambert
-House?”
-
-“He was no countryman of mine,” replied the double barrel, sadly. “He
-was a full-fledged Yankee who tried to pass himself off for something
-better than he really was. But he’s got all over that; the guides
-laughed him out of it.”
-
-“Did they laugh you into your present condition?” I asked, remembering
-that the double barrel had also tried to pass himself off for something
-better than he really was.
-
-“Eh? No,” he replied, indignantly. “It’s the result of abuse and
-hardship. Last year I was stolen out of camp—”
-
-“By whom?” I interrupted, excitedly.
-
-“By a vagabond who calls himself Matt Coyle,” was the reply. “His old
-shanty leaked like a sieve, and I got wet and rusty. That’s what makes
-me look so bad.”
-
-“How did your master get you back?”
-
-“I heard the story about in this way: In less than an hour after I was
-stolen, a dirty, unkempt boy made his appearance in my master’s camp,
-and told him that he had been fishing on the pond all the afternoon,
-that he knew the man who took me, and for a reward of ten dollars he
-would follow me up and steal me back again.”
-
-“Of course your master wasn’t deceived by any such shallow trick as
-that!” I exclaimed.
-
-“Well, he was. You see, he and the two young fellows who come up here
-with him every summer, never hire a guide. As they seldom venture more
-than twenty or thirty miles away from the lake, and never leave the
-water courses, there’s really no need of a guide; but if they had had
-one when that boy came into camp, he would have saved my master from
-imposition. As it was, he promised to give him the ten dollars, and
-before sunset I was brought back. But it had rained buckets during my
-absence, I was wet inside and out, my master did not know enough to take
-care of me, and that’s how I came to be in this fix. They’re coming now,
-and we are off again, I suppose.”
-
-I looked toward the hotel, and there was the young man with the gold
-eye-glasses, peaked shoes and downy upper lip—the same knowing fellow,
-who had been foolish enough to take a cheap gun that wasn’t warranted,
-with the expectation that it would do as good work as a Greener.
-
-“We’re going up to the pond, and I shall be called upon to fire heavier
-charges than I can stand at every thing in the shape of a partridge or
-squirrel that comes in my way,” added the double barrel.
-
-“You ought not to be required to shoot those birds at this time of
-year,” said I. “It’s against the law.”
-
-“Oh, I don’t hurt them any. I only shoot at them. I never killed any
-thing.”
-
-“That’s just what Mr. Brown said when he sold you,” thought I. “Have you
-a dog to guard your camp? Well, you ought to have. Matt Coyle lives up
-there, and night before last he made a daring attempt to steal this
-skiff, and then he tried to sink her. Don’t you see the hole in her
-side?”
-
-I was going on to tell the double barrel that if his master did not keep
-his eyes open he might expect another visit from the squatter, but just
-then I saw Joe Wayring and his friends coming down the bank; and as I
-was more interested in them and the rods they carried on their
-shoulders, than I was in the fortunes of the seedy-looking fowling
-piece, I had nothing more to say to him. I saw him once afterward, and
-then he was a perfect wreck of a gun. There wasn’t enough of him left to
-sell for old iron.
-
-“Haw! haw!” said Roy, as he jumped into the skiff. “We’ve got them back
-again, and only one of them is the worse for being stolen by that
-squatter.”
-
-I wondered which one that was, and found out when Arthur Hastings began
-taking his rod from its case. It was a beautiful rod, and looked strong
-enough to handle any fish that was likely to be encountered in that
-country; but the second joint was broken close to the ferrule. I looked
-pityingly at him, little dreaming that I was destined to go home in the
-same crippled condition.
-
-“I don’t believe that any bass that ever wiggled a fin could break that
-rod,” said Arthur, dolefully. “Matt or some of his vagabond band must
-have caught the hook into a log or the stem of a lily-pad. Well, it
-isn’t as bad as it might be, but I hate to think that that squatter has
-made some money out of me.”
-
-While the boys were waiting for the guide who had promised to come down
-and look at the skiff, they talked of their interview with the landlord
-of the Sportsman’s Home, and in that way I came to know just what
-happened when they went up to see the rods he had purchased of Jake
-Coyle. Of course they recognized them at once, and promptly handed over
-the money that Mr. Hanson had paid for their property, but said nothing
-about paying for the rods that belonged to Tom Bigden and his cousins.
-
-“Hadn’t you better take them all?” asked the landlord. “You say that the
-boys from whom these rods were stolen live in Mount Airy, and perhaps
-they would be grateful to you for returning them.”
-
-“I think we’d better not have any thing to do with them,” said Arthur.
-“But we’ll forward them a dispatch and let them send or come after the
-rods. They’ve nothing else to do.”
-
-There was telegraphic communication between Indian Lake and Mount Airy,
-by the way of New London, and Arthur wrote and sent off the dispatch
-before he left the hotel. If he and his chums had been able to look far
-enough into the future to see every thing that was to result from this
-simple act, they would have been greatly astonished. I know I was when I
-heard the full particulars.
-
-In a few minutes the expected guide came down to the beach and gave the
-skiff a careful examination. After he had stripped off the canvas and
-bark, so that he could see the full extent of her injuries, he remarked
-that Matt’s scow must have hit her a middling heavy crack.
-
-“I should say she did,” replied Joe, with a laugh. “When three strong
-fellows do their level best with paddles, they can make a small boat get
-through the water with considerable speed. They hit us hard enough to
-knock Arthur overboard. Who are those men, and where are they going in
-such haste?” he continued, directing the guide’s attention to a company
-of guests and boatmen who were walking rapidly toward the beach.
-
-“Two of them are the gentlemen whose camps were robbed the other day,”
-replied the guide, after he had taken a glance at the party. “They’ve
-got some friends to help them, and are going out to see if they can
-track down them varmints who have been kicking up so much fuss about
-here of late. There comes Swan. He’s going with them, but they might as
-well stay at home, the whole of them. That Matt Coyle can cover up his
-trail like an Injun. It took every guide in the country to hunt him down
-the last time we drove him away from here.”
-
-“You missed it by not putting him in jail,” said Roy.
-
-“That’s just what we wanted to do,” answered the guide. “But when we
-come to talk to some of the guests about it—there was lawyers among
-them, you know—we found that we didn’t have any evidence that would
-convict him. We suspected him, but we could not prove any thing.”
-
-“You’ll not be troubled in that way this time,” Arthur remarked. “You’ll
-have the guns for evidence.”
-
-“Don’t fool yourself,” said the guide. “Do you suppose that they will
-find that three hundred dollar scatter-gun and that fifty dollar rifle
-when they find Matt Coyle—that is, if they do find him? Not by a great
-sight. Them things is safe hid in the woods. Matt’ll sw’ar that he
-didn’t hook ’em, and there ain’t a living man that can sw’ar that he
-did. The only thing they can do is to burn him out of house and home,
-like we did last time, and force him to go off somewhere and steal a new
-outfit.”
-
-“What’s the reason we can’t go with them?” said Joe, suddenly.
-
-“I reckon you can. You know more about the woods than some of that party
-do, and you might be of some use to them.”
-
-“Well, look here, Mr. Morris: Will you fix up our boat in good shape,
-give her a coat or two of paint and take care of the things that we
-shall be obliged to leave behind us?”
-
-“I will, sartain,” answered the guide, readily.
-
-In an instant both the lockers were opened, and Joe Wayring, snatching
-up a camp basket, started post-haste for the hotel to hire a skiff and
-purchase a small supply of provisions for the trip, leaving Roy and
-Arthur to select the outfit. The tent and the most of their heavy
-cooking-utensils were to be left behind. They were very useful articles,
-of course, but they were not absolutely necessary to their existence, or
-even to their comfort. Besides, the skiff that would be provided for
-them would not carry as much “duffle” as the roomy boat they were going
-to leave in the guide’s keeping. Their bows and arrows, blankets, the
-knapsacks that contained their extra clothing, and the frying pan must
-go, of course; but every thing else was left behind.
-
-While they were awaiting Joe’s return, Mr. Swan and his party came up,
-got into their boats and pushed away from the beach. Mr. Morris pointed
-out two stalwart gentlemen in shooting costume, who, he said, were the
-owners of the stolen guns. They seemed to be in very bad humor, and the
-boys did not wonder at it.
-
-“I shouldn’t like to be in Matt’s place if those men get their hands on
-him,” said Roy, in a low tone.
-
-“Nor I,” answered the guide. “They sw’ar they’ll pound him before he
-goes to jail, and they look to me like fellers that will keep their
-word.”
-
-“Say, boys,” exclaimed Mr. Swan, as he backed water with his oars and
-brought his boat to a stand-still at the stern of the skiff, “can’t you
-stay here till we come back? We want your evidence.”
-
-“We’ll be around, you may depend upon that,” returned Roy. “But we’re
-not going to stay here, if you will let us take part in the hunt. Joe
-has gone up to the hotel after a boat.”
-
-“Oh! All right,” said Mr. Swan. “Them’s two of the lads that had the
-battle in the dark that I was telling you about,” he added, addressing
-himself to the owner of the lost “scatter-gun”, who was his employer.
-
-“Well, I must say that they are plucky fellows, and that they deserve
-better luck,” said the gentleman, returning the military salute which
-the boys gave him from sheer force of habit. “I hope their skiff can be
-easily repaired, Mr. Morris?”
-
-“No trouble about that, sir,” answered the guide. “She’ll be right and
-tight before sundown—all except the paint.”
-
-After telling Roy and his companion that if they did not overtake him
-before, they would find him encamped somewhere on the bank of the creek
-near the pond, Mr. Swan applied himself to his oars, and a fleet of
-seven boats, manned by fourteen angry and determined guides and guests,
-set out in pursuit of Matt Coyle and his thieving crew. Ten minutes
-later Joe Wayring returned, accompanied by a guide and a small party of
-ladies and gentlemen. The former was to show him what boat he could
-take, and the latter were listening with much interest to Joe’s graphic
-account of his adventures with the squatter. Joe was surprised to learn
-that Matt’s way of creeping up through the bushes and robbing unguarded
-camps, had frightened the women and children so badly that they refused
-to go into the woods until the thief had been captured and safely lodged
-in jail. That depended upon the evidence Joe could give to put him
-there.
-
-“That’s all mighty fine,” said Mr. Morris, after listening to what Joe
-had to say of his conversation with the stranger, “but they don’t give a
-thought to the hardest part of the business. Matt ain’t caught yet, and
-there’ll have to be a heap of hard work done before he is shut up so’t
-he can’t steal no more scatter-guns; you see if there ain’t. I’d like to
-take a hand in the hunt myself, but I’ve got to go out with the same man
-I guided for last year, and he’s liable to come along any day.”
-
-Their boat having been pointed out to them, Joe and his companions lost
-no time in putting their effects aboard of it. Then they bade Mr. Morris
-good-by, lifted their caps to the party on shore, and rowed down the
-lake and up the creek in pursuit of the fleet. They overtook Mr. Swan
-and his party just before they landed to eat their lunch, traveled in
-company with them during the rest of the day, and went into camp with
-them at night. I had abundant opportunity to compare notes with the
-three recovered bait-rods, who corroborated the story that was told me
-by the canvas canoe, and which I have already given to the reader in my
-own words. The squatter was fully resolved, they said, that if he
-couldn’t act as guide in those woods, nobody should; and the worst of it
-was, he seemed to be in a fair way to accomplish his object. The
-sportsmen who patronized the hotels came there for fun and recreation;
-and it wasn’t likely that they could see much of it if their wives and
-children were to be prevented from accompanying them on their fishing
-excursions through fear of this man, Matt Coyle. The owners of the
-Lefever hammerless and Winchester rifle didn’t see much fun in having
-their fine weapons stolen, and if these depredations were not stopped,
-and that speedily, it would not be long before the guests would be
-looking for some place of resort where thieves were not quite so plenty.
-
-“But even that isn’t the worst of it,” continued Joe’s bait-rod, who did
-the most of the talking. “Every thing seems to indicate that the
-squatter is going to have a bigger following now than he has been able
-to boast of in the past. He isn’t the only worthless scamp there is in
-the woods, by any means. You know, I suppose, that the State fish
-commissioners have established a hatchery at the outlet of Deer Lake, a
-few miles from here?”
-
-I replied that I had not heard of it.
-
-“Well, they have, and the superintendent wants to prohibit fishing
-there, so that he can get a supply of eggs large enough to stock all
-these waters, which will soon be stripped of trout unless there are some
-put in to take the place of the multitudes that are caught every year.
-The superintendent sets traps in the outlet to catch the fish so that he
-can get their eggs, and three or four fellows who live right there, and
-who look enough like Matt Coyle to be his brothers, go to the outlet
-every night and cut the nets. The superintendent threatened to have them
-arrested if they didn’t quit it, and they told him that they had always
-fished in that outlet, and if he wanted the hatchery buildings to stay
-there, he hadn’t better try to stop them. I heard the whole
-conversation. I was down there when old Dead Shot was broken.”
-
-“Who’s Dead Shot?” I inquired.
-
-“I am,” faintly replied Arthur Hastings’s crippled rod.
-
-“Why, that’s a queer name for you to bear,” said I. “I think it would be
-more appropriate for a shot-gun or rifle.”
-
-“Perhaps it would; but Arthur has always called me that since I caught
-his first string of yellow pike for him, and it is the name I go by. I
-never let a fish get away when I get a good grip on him—that is, when I
-have some one to handle me who knows what he is about. But Jake don’t
-know any thing about a rod, for he has always fished with a pole he cut
-in the bushes. On the day the superintendent talked so plainly to the
-vagabonds who cut his nets, Jake was fishing in the outlet, and Matt was
-hiding in one of the cabins. A little fish—I should not think he weighed
-more than a pound, judging by the bite he gave—took the hook, which was
-baited with worms, and Jake tried to yank him out by main strength, as
-he had always been in the habit of doing; but the line caught between
-two rocks, and as Jake threw back his head and surged on me with all the
-muscle he had, I broke. That’s all there was of it.”
-
-“And do you think that Matt Coyle will strike hands with those fellows
-at the outlet?” I asked, when Dead Shot had ended his story.
-
-“He has done it already, and our friends here have undertaken a bigger
-job than they bargained for,” answered the bait-rod. “Those vagabonds
-are all tarred with the same stick. They sympathize with Matt, and will
-hide him in their houses and help him in every way they can.”
-
-“Haven’t we got force enough to go into the houses and take him out?”
-
-“We’ve got the force, but not the authority. There’s not an officer or a
-search-warrant in our party.”
-
-Not being posted in law, I did not quite understand the situation, but I
-didn’t like to ask any more questions. It was enough for me to know that
-Matt Coyle seemed to have the best of the game. Indeed, he always seemed
-to have it.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIX.
-
- CONCLUSION.
-
-
-THE boats made an early start the next morning, and reached the pond at
-nine o’clock. Half an hour later they had crossed it, and were moving up
-the creek where I performed my first exploit, and Joe Wayring so
-narrowly escaped capture by Matt Coyle and his boys. It annoyed me to
-think that the squatter and his family had enjoyed so good a supper, and
-that I had unwittingly provided it for them. It would not have soothed
-my feelings much if some one had told me that, although that was the
-first meal I had caught for them, it would not be the last.
-
-“Now, then,” said Mr. Swan, after he and his party had listened to Joe’s
-description of the exciting incidents that happened in the creek on the
-evening of the previous day, “we will divide ourselves into two fleets
-and take opposite sides of the stream. As we go up, let every one of us
-keep a bright lookout for a sign. Those robbers could not have got into
-their scow or landed from it without leaving a trail, and that is what
-we want to find.”
-
-In obedience to these instructions four of the boats kept to one side of
-the creek, the remaining four pulled over to the other bank, and the
-hunt began in earnest. Every inch of the shore on both sides was closely
-scrutinized, but up to three o’clock in the afternoon nothing suspicious
-had been discovered. Mr. Swan began to believe that they had passed the
-trail long ago without seeing it, and said as much to his employer,
-adding—
-
-“That villain is sharper than two or three men have any business to be.
-He and his family, the old woman included, can go through the woods
-without leaving trail enough for a hound to follow. They never forget to
-be as careful as they know how, for they have so long lived in constant
-fear of arrest that—”
-
-The guide suddenly paused, and looked earnestly at Joe and his
-companions, whose actions seemed to indicate that they had found
-something that would bear looking into. Their boat was loitering along
-two or three rods behind the others, Roy and Arthur doing the rowing,
-while Joe was stretched out flat on the knapsacks, his chin resting on
-his arms which were supported by the gunwale, and his eyes fastened upon
-the bank. All at once he started up and said, in a low tone:
-
-“Cease rowing. Look at that.”
-
-“Look at what?” demanded Roy, after he and Arthur had run their eyes up
-and down the bank without seeing any thing that was calculated to excite
-astonishment. “At those bushes growing in the water? That’s nothing, for
-we’ve seen bushes growing in the water ever since we came into the
-creek.”
-
-“I am aware of it; but if you will look closely at these particular
-bushes, you will see that the bark is scraped off some of them, and that
-they all lean away from the creek as if some heavy body had been dragged
-over them,” answered Joe. “Back port and give way starboard. Let’s turn
-in here; and if we don’t find something or other on the opposite side, I
-shall wonder.”
-
-The rowers obeyed, without much confidence as to the result, it must be
-confessed, and when Mr. Swan and his party arrived, having all turned
-back to see what it was that had attracted the attention of the boys,
-neither they nor their boat were in sight. There was something on the
-bank, however, that instantly caught the sharp eye of one of the guides,
-who at once proceeded to take himself to task in a way that would have
-excited his ire if any one else had done it.
-
-“Hit me over the head with a paddle, somebody,” said he. “I’m going to
-throw up my position when I get back to the lake, and quit guiding. I
-ain’t no good any more. I come along here not ten minutes ago, and
-didn’t see what them boys saw at once. Look at them bushes, and then
-look at that,” he added, pulling his boat closer to the bank, and
-placing the blade of his oar in a little depression in the edge of the
-water. “Matt Coyle shoved that scow of his’n over them bushes, and
-that’s what barked them and made them bend over that way. He suspicioned
-that some of us would see it, so he come back and stood right there
-where my oar is, and tried to straighten the bushes up with a pole or
-something.”
-
-“That’s so,” said Mr. Swan, to his employer, “Didn’t I tell you that he
-was a sharp one? The tricks that that fellow don’t know ain’t worth
-knowing.”
-
-Just then a twig snapped on the bank and Joe Wayring came into view.
-“Don’t talk so loud,” he whispered, as he held up his finger warningly.
-“Matt’s scow isn’t twenty feet from here, and that’s all the proof I
-want that his camp is close at land.”
-
-Instantly seven pairs of oars were dropped into the water, and as many
-boats were forced through the bushes and into the little bay on the
-other side. There lay the piratical craft which had done her best to
-send the skiff to the bottom of the pond, but nothing was to be seen or
-heard of her crew.
-
-“Keep still, every body,” cautioned Mr. Swan, in the lowest possible
-whisper. “They’re out there in the woods, but remember that they ain’t
-caught yet, and that they won’t be if their ears tell them that we’re
-coming.”
-
-Joe afterward said that the trail that led from the scow into the bushes
-was so plain that a blind man could have followed it; so it seemed that,
-for once, Matt had forgotten to be careful. No doubt he thought that the
-bay in which his scow found a resting-place, was so effectually hidden
-by the bushes in front of it, that it would never be discovered by a
-pursuing party. We have seen that he had good reason for this belief. If
-Joe and his chums had decided to remain at the lake and enjoy themselves
-there while their skiff was being repaired, instead of joining their
-forces with Mr. Swan’s hunting party, it is probable that the squatter’s
-retreat never would have been discovered; and neither would the
-pursuers—well, I’ll wait until I get to that before I tell about it.
-
-Mr. Swan, who was the acknowledged leader of the party, at once
-shouldered his rifle and began following up the trail, the others
-falling in in single file behind him. They moved so silently that I
-could not hear a leaf rustle; and I told myself that the surprise and
-capture of the squatter and his whole shiftless tribe was a foregone
-conclusion. I afterward learned that Mr. Swan and the guides who were
-with him thought so too. Before they had gone fifty yards, the former
-suddenly stopped and whispered to the man next behind him—
-
-“We are close upon them. I smell smoke.”
-
-“And I smell coffee,” replied the man to whom the words were addressed,
-and who sniffed the air as if he were trying to locate the camp by the
-aid of his nose instead of his eyes, “and bacon.”
-
-Shaking his hand warningly at the men behind him, the guide moved
-forward again with long, noiseless strides. Presently he discovered a
-thin blue cloud of smoke rising above the bushes close in front of him.
-He looked at it a moment, and then dashed ahead at the top of his speed,
-his eager companions following at his heels.
-
-A few hasty steps brought them to the little cleared spot in a thicket
-of evergreens in which Matt Coyle had made his camp. On one side of it
-was a lean-to with a roof of boughs, and on the other was the fire, with
-a battered coffee pot simmering and sputtering beside it. Scattered
-about over the ground were several slices of half-fried bacon, which had
-been hurriedly dumped from the pan. A few broken plates and dishes that
-stood on a log close at hand, bore silent testimony to the fact that the
-squatter’s wife was just getting ready to lay the table, when news was
-brought to the camp that Mr. Swan and his party were coming. Under the
-lean-to were some worthless articles in the way of wearing apparel and
-bed-clothes, but every thing of value had disappeared. There was nothing
-like a hammerless shot gun or a Winchester rifle to be found.
-
-“The nest is warm, but where are the birds?” exclaimed Mr. Swan’s
-employer, who had jumped into the clearing with his coat off and his
-fists doubled up, all ready to carry out his threat of pounding Matt
-Coyle before he was sent to jail.
-
-“Didn’t I say that they were sharp?” replied the guide. “The birds have
-took wing.”
-
-“Then take to your heels and catch them,” exclaimed his employer. “Can’t
-you follow a trail? They can’t have been gone more than five minutes. A
-hundred dollars to the man that will capture that villain for me.”
-
-“And I will add a hundred to it,” cried the owner of the stolen
-Winchester.
-
-The guides did not need these extra inducements, for they had more at
-stake than these two strangers who spent two months out of every twelve
-in the woods, and the rest of the year in the city, following some
-lucrative business or profession. The guides’ bread and butter depended
-upon their exertions, and they were no whit more anxious to effect
-Matt’s capture now, than they were before the two hundred dollars reward
-had been offered them. At a word from Mr. Swan they separated and began
-circling around the lean-to to find the trail; but this did not take up
-two minutes of their time. They found five trails; and a short
-examination of them showed that they all led away in different
-directions.
-
-“That trick is borrowed from the plains Indians,” said Joe, when Mr.
-Swan announced this fact to his employer. “Whenever the hostiles find
-themselves hard pressed by the troops, they break up into little bands,
-and start off toward different points of the compass; but before they
-separate, they take care to have it understood where they shall come
-together again.”
-
-“That’s a fact,” assented the owner of the Winchester. “I have been
-among those copper-colored gentlemen, when I had nothing to depend on
-except the speed of my pony; but how does it come that you are so well
-posted? Have you ever hunted on the plains?”
-
-“No, sir; but I have the promise that I shall some day enjoy that
-pleasure,” answered Joe. “My uncle told me about it. He’s been there
-often. Now the question in my mind is: Did Matt, before his family
-scattered like so many quails, appoint a place of meeting? If he did,
-that’s where we ought to go.”
-
-“Young man, you are a sharp one,” said the gentleman, admiringly. “What
-do you say, Swan?”
-
-The guide appealed to could not say any thing, and neither could the
-others. Unfortunately they did not know that the squatter had made
-friends with the vagabonds living in the vicinity of the State hatchery.
-If they had known it, that was the place they would have started for
-without loss of time, but they wouldn’t have caught him if they had gone
-there.
-
-“There’s a good deal of hard sense in Joe’s head,” said Mr. Swan, after
-a short pause. “Of course, Matt and his family will come together again
-somewhere, but you see the trouble is, we don’t know what point they are
-striking for.”
-
-“Can’t you follow the trails and find out?”
-
-“Take the plainest one of them trails, and I’ll bet every thing I’ve got
-that you can’t follow it a hundred yards,” said Mr. Swan. “It is going
-to take us a good long month to hunt them down, and we’ll be lucky if we
-do it in that time.”
-
-“But we can’t wait so long,” protested one of the guests. “We must
-return to the city to-morrow. Our business demands our attention.”
-
-The guides consulted in low tones, and so did their employers. Finally
-one of the latter wrote something on a card and handed it to Mr. Swan,
-saying:
-
-“If we have done all we can, we might as well go back to the hotel; but
-before we start, we make you this offer: We will give a hundred dollars
-apiece to the man who will find our weapons, capture the thief and hold
-him so that we can come and testify against him. Or, we will give fifty
-dollars apiece for the guns without the thief, and the same amounts for
-the thief without the guns. Boys, you are included in that offer.”
-
-“Thank you, sir,” said Arthur. “It would afford us great satisfaction if
-we could be the means of restoring your property to you.”
-
-“Before we leave here we’ll fix things so that Matt won’t find much to
-comfort him if he should accidentally circle around this way after we
-are gone,” said Mr. Swan. “Pile on every thing, boys.”
-
-The “boys” understood him and went to work with a will. In less time
-than it takes to tell it, the lean-to was pulled down and thrown upon
-the fire, the bed-clothes and dishes were piled on top, the bacon was
-driven so deeply into the ground by the heels of heavy boots that a
-hungry hound could hardly have scented it—in short, every thing that
-Matt and his family had left behind in their hurried flight, was utterly
-destroyed. His scow was not forgotten. They would knock it out of all
-semblance to a boat when they went back to the creek.
-
-Having started a roaring fire, they were obliged to stay and see it burn
-itself out, for they dared not leave it for fear that it might set the
-woods aflame. So they stood around and saw it blaze, grumbling the while
-over the ill luck that had attended their efforts to capture the cunning
-squatter, and it was fully three-quarters of an hour before Mr. Swan
-thought it safe to return to the boats. This delay gave Matt Coyle
-plenty of time in which to carry out a very neat piece of villainy, some
-of which I saw, and all of which I heard.
-
-While the scenes I have just described were being enacted in the
-clearing, there were lively times in the little bay of which I have
-spoken. You know we were left in company with Matt’s scow, the boat in
-which I rode being drawn up on the bank on one side of him and Mr.
-Swan’s on the other; and no sooner had the hunting party disappeared in
-the bushes, than we began reviling him the best we knew how. The only
-reason we didn’t break him into kindling wood at once, was because we
-couldn’t. Our will was good enough.
-
-“Get away from here,” said _Wanderer_. (That was the name of Mr. Swan’s
-boat. He had always lived and worked in the company of gentlemen, and he
-did not like to occupy close quarters with so disreputable a fellow as
-the scow.)
-
-“Get away from here yourself,” was the report. “I was here first, an’
-I’m going to stay.”
-
-“I’ll bet you will,” said _Bushboy_. (That was the name of the boat Joe
-and his chums hired at Indian Lake.) “But you may be sure of one thing:
-You will stay a wreck.”
-
-“That’s so,” said I. “Joe Wayring will never go away leaving him above
-the water. He’ll break him up so completely that his thief of a master
-won’t know him if he should happen along this way again.”
-
-“He will never come this way again until he is on his road to jail,”
-said _Wanderer_. “Mr. Swan is after him, and he’s going to catch him,
-too.”
-
-“Wal, Matt’ll go to jail knowin’ that he’s done a right smart of damage
-sence he’s been layin’ around loose in the woods, an’ if I am busted up,
-I shall have the same comfortin’ knowledge. Fly-rod has seed me afore. I
-captured his friend, the canvas canoe—”
-
-“Where is he now?” I interrupted.
-
-“Out there in the bresh, hid away so snug that nobody won’t ever find
-him,” was the taunting reply. “Them guns is hid out there too, but not
-in the same place. Matt come purty near gettin’ you as well as the
-canoe. I heard him say that he almost overtook Joe while he was a
-runnin’ through the woods with you in his hand.”
-
-“Yes; and Matt would have got me over the head if he had been able to
-run a little faster.”
-
-“An’ Joe would have got a hickory over the back, I tell you,” said the
-old scow. “How do you reckon that that skiff I sent to the bottom of the
-pond feels by this time?”
-
-“You didn’t send him to the bottom of the pond,” said I, angrily. “You
-tried hard enough, but you didn’t make it.”
-
-The bait-rods and the boats took up the quarrel, and while I listened, I
-waited impatiently for the return of the hunting party. Presently I
-heard a slight rustling in the thicket at the head of the bay, but it
-was not made by the persons I wanted to see. It was Matt Coyle that
-stuck his ugly face out of the bushes, and his bleared and blood-shot
-eyes that traveled from one to another of the boats that lay before him.
-Then he turned and whispered to some one behind him and the whole family
-came and stood upon the bank. Their sudden appearance made it plain to
-all of us that the squatter and his backers, after “scattering like so
-many quails,” had run just far enough in different directions to
-bewilder their pursuers, after which they “circled around” and came back
-to the bay, intending to continue their flight in the scow, which would
-leave no trail that could be followed. It was evident, too, that there
-had been an understanding among them before they separated; otherwise
-they would not all have been there. When Matt’s gaze rested upon the
-trim little boats before him, he said in a low but distinct voice—
-
-“Whoop-ee! Jest look at all them nice skiffs, will you? Ain’t we in luck
-though? Never mind the scow. She’s done good work fur us, but we’ll
-leave her behind now an’ travel like other white folks do. Old woman,
-you go round to all them boats an’ pick up the grub what’s into ’em;
-Jakey, you an’ Sam ketch up the poles an’ cookin’ things an’ every other
-article you can get your two hands onto. Dump them that’ll sink into the
-water an’ chuck them that won’t sink as fur into the bresh as you can,
-so’t they won’t never find’ em no more. While you are doin’ that, I’ll
-pick out two of the best boats fur our own.”
-
-“Say, pap, what’s the reason we don’t carry off the things in place of
-throwin’ on ’em away or sinkin’ ’em?” asked Jake.
-
-“’Cause we can’t sell ’em, an’ we don’t want to be bothered with totin’
-’em. You will save time if you do jest as I told you. We want to get
-away from here as sudden as we can.”
-
-“An’ what’ll we do with the boats that we don’t take with us?” continued
-Jake. “Will we bust ’em up?”
-
-“Now, jest listen at the fule!” exclaimed Matt, angrily. “The noise we
-would make in bustin’ on ’em up would bring ole Swan back here a
-runnin’; an’ I don’t care to see him with all them other fellers at his
-back.”
-
-The vagabonds worked with surprising celerity, and in a very short space
-of time two of the finest boats in the lot had been pushed into the
-water, and the old woman was piling provisions into them by the armful,
-while Jake and Sam busied themselves in disposing of the other things as
-their sire had directed. I was sent whirling through the air toward the
-opposite side of the bay, and sad to relate, was stopped in my headlong
-flight by a tree, against which I struck with a sounding whack. There
-was a loud snap, and I fell to the ground helpless. My second joint was
-broken close to the ferrule.
-
-I lay for a long time where I had fallen—so long that I began to wonder
-if I was to remain there until my ferrules were all rusted to pieces and
-I became like the mold beneath me. I heard Matt and his family leave the
-bay in the stolen boats. I knew when they forced their way through the
-bushes into the creek, and was greatly astonished to know that they
-turned down stream toward the pond, the direction in which their
-pursuers would have to go when they returned to the hotel. But Matt, the
-sly old fox, had reasoned with himself on this point before he adopted
-these extraordinary tactics. It lacked only about half an hour of
-night-fall, and Mr. Swan and his party would soon be obliged to go into
-camp; while Matt knowing every crook and turn in the creek, could travel
-as well in the dark as he could by daylight. Before the sun arose, he
-would be miles away and among friends. If Mr. Swan took it for granted
-that he had gone up instead of down stream, and went that way himself in
-hope of being able to overtake him, it would give the squatter just so
-much more time in which to make good his escape. It was a very neat
-trick on Matt’s part.
-
-At last, after a long interval of waiting, I heard voices and footsteps
-on the other side of the bay. The birds having flown there was no need
-of caution, and some of the returning party were talking in their
-ordinary tones, while others were shouting back at their friends in the
-rear. My acute sense of hearing told me when they came out of the
-bushes, and I also caught the exclamations of rage and astonishment that
-fell from their lips when they saw what had been done in the bay during
-their brief absence. The guides were almost beside themselves with fury,
-but the two city sportsmen laughed uproariously.
-
-“We’re a pretty set, I must say,” I heard one of them exclaim. “If I
-hadn’t seen it with my own eyes, I never should have believed that any
-man living could play a trick like this upon us. Two of the best boats,
-all the rods, provisions and dishes, as well as the frying-pans are
-gone. I think we had better camp right where we are, start for home at
-the first peep of day and never show our faces in the woods again.”
-
-“Hallo! What’s this here?” cried one of the guides, who, for want of
-something better to do, had stepped into the skiff and shoved out into
-the bay. He looked down into the clear waters as he spoke, then seized
-the boathook, and after a little maneuvering with it, brought one of the
-frying-pans to light.
-
-“And what’s that over there on the other side?” exclaimed the familiar
-voice of Mr. Swan.
-
-“Why, it’s my unlucky bait-rod, as sure as the world,” said Arthur
-Hastings. “But he was lucky this time, wasn’t he? If he hadn’t lodged in
-the friendly branches of that evergreen, I should have thought that Matt
-Coyle had carried him off again.”
-
-These unexpected discoveries led to a thorough examination of the bay
-and of the bushes surrounding it, and the result was most satisfactory.
-Before dark every single article that Jake and Sam had thrown away, had
-been recovered. There was nothing missing now except the boats and the
-provisions; but the loss of these things did not put the party to any
-great inconvenience. There was an abundance of game in the woods, plenty
-of fish to be had for the catching, and Matt’s scow could easily carry
-the four men who had lost their skiffs.
-
-But little more remains to be told. Mr. Swan and his party camped “right
-where they were” that night, made an early start the next morning, and
-reached Indian Lake on the afternoon of the following day. The chums
-found their skiff in the best possible condition, and looking very nobby
-in her new dress, by which I mean a fresh coat of paint. They gave it
-another day in which to dry, then laid in a supply of provisions and
-fearlessly turned their faces toward the wilderness; while the two city
-sportsmen, thoroughly disgusted with their failure, and by the trick
-that Matt had so neatly played upon them, set out for home declaring
-that they would never visit Indian Lake again until their guns had been
-restored to them, and the man who stole them was safely lodged in jail.
-
-During the next few days I had nothing to do but make myself miserable
-while the other rods caught the fish that were served up three times a
-day until the boys grew tired of them. I was glad when Joe said that it
-was time to start for home, but sorry for the disappointment he met when
-he got there. Uncle Joe, who was to have taken them upon an extended
-tour, “either East or West, they didn’t know which,” had suddenly been
-called away on important business, and the probabilities were that if
-they took their contemplated trip at all it would not be until near the
-end of the vacation; and then it would have to be a very short one. But
-Joe didn’t get sulky, as some boys would have done under like
-circumstances. He wrote to his uncle, found out when he was coming home,
-and suggested an immediate return to Indian Lake. Arthur and Roy were
-delighted with the proposal, and I was at once given into the hands of a
-skilled mechanic, who in two days’ time mended my broken joint so neatly
-that no one could tell, even with the closest scrutiny, that there had
-ever been any thing the matter with it. Joe came after me on the
-afternoon of the second day, and when he carried me to his room and
-stood me in the corner where I was to stay until something that he
-called “ferrule cement” had had time to harden, whom should I see but my
-old friend, the canvas canoe, occupying his usual place in the recess,
-and looking none the worse for his forced sojourn among the Indian Lake
-vagabonds.
-
-“Well, I swan to man!” I exclaimed, unconsciously making use of an
-expression which I had heard so often that I had become quite familiar
-with it. “How in the name of all that’s wonderful did you get back?”
-
-“Glad to see you, old fellow,” replied the canoe, in his jolly, hearty
-fashion, “but sorry to hear that you got crippled. Where have you been?”
-
-“Just got back from the doctor’s shop. I am all right again, or shall be
-in a few days. When and how did you return?”
-
-“Came yesterday. Mr. Swan brought me. Found me hidden under a pile of
-brush, not more than twenty feet from the place where he and his party
-stood when they burned the squatter’s shanty. I saw and heard every
-thing that happened there.”
-
-“Well, tell us all about it. I know you must have had some adventures
-during your absence.”
-
-“Indeed I have; and I have brought a heavy load of anxiety back with me.
-How I wish I could warn Joe and his chums! The threats I heard made
-against them were enough to make even a canvas canoe shudder.”
-
-With these preliminary remarks the canoe settled himself for an
-all-night’s task. I have not space enough in this book to repeat what he
-said, and besides, the narrative of my exploits, which so far are
-neither many nor brilliant I confess, is ended for the time being; so I
-will gladly step aside and give place to my accommodating friend, who is
-a more experienced story-teller than myself, and who, in the second
-volume of this series, will describe many interesting and some exciting
-incidents which happened during his captivity. His story will be
-entitled: THE ADVENTURES OF A CANVAS CANOE.
-
-
- THE END.
-
-
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- J. T. TROWBRIDGE.
-
-
-Neither as a writer does he stand apart from the great currents of life
-and select some exceptional phase or odd combination of circumstances.
-He stands on the common level and appeals to the universal heart, and
-all that he suggests or achieves is on the plane and in the line of
-march of the great body of humanity.
-
-The Jack Hazard series of stories, published in the late _Our Young
-Folks_, and continued in the first volume of _St. Nicholas_, under the
-title of “Fast Friends,” is no doubt destined to hold a high place in
-this class of literature. The delight of the boys in them (and of their
-seniors, too) is well founded. They go to the right spot every time.
-Trowbridge knows the heart of a boy like a book, and the heart of a man,
-too, and he has laid them both open in these books in a most successful
-manner. Apart from the qualities that render the series so attractive to
-all young readers, they have great value on account of their
-portraitures of American country life and character. The drawing is
-wonderfully accurate, and as spirited as it is true. The constable,
-Sellick, is an original character, and as minor figures where will we
-find anything better than Miss Wansey, and Mr. P. Pipkin, Esq. The
-picture of Mr. Dink’s school, too, is capital, and where else in fiction
-is there a better nick-name than that the boys gave to poor little
-Stephen Treadwell, “Step Hen,” as he himself pronounced his name in an
-unfortunate moment when he saw it in print for the first time in his
-lesson in school.
-
-On the whole, these books are very satisfactory, and afford the critical
-reader the rare pleasure of the works that are just adequate, that
-easily fulfill themselves and accomplish all they set out to
-do.—_Scribner’s Monthly._
-
-
- JACK HAZARD SERIES
-
- 6 vols. BY J. T. TROWBRIDGE. $7.25
-
- Jack Hazard and His Fortunes.
- The Young Surveyor.
- Fast Friends.
- Doing His Best.
- A Chance for Himself.
- Lawrence’s Adventures.
-
- ---------------------
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- Transcriber’s Notes
-
-Text in italics is enclosed by underscores (_italics_); text in bold by
-“equal” signs (=bold=).
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-Printer, punctuation and spelling inaccuracies were silently corrected.
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-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Joe Wayring at Home, by Harry Castlemon
-
-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'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Joe Wayring at Home
- or The Adventures of a Fly-Rod
-
-Author: Harry Castlemon
-
-Release Date: October 11, 2017 [EBook #55730]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK JOE WAYRING AT HOME ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by David Edwards, Elizabeth Oscanyan and the
-Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
-(This file was produced from images generously made
-available by The Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-
-<div class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i_frontis.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p><span class='sc'>The Battle with the Squatters.</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c000' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c001'>
- <div><i>FOREST AND STREAM SERIES.</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c002' />
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<h1 class='c000'><span class='xlarge'>JOE WAYRING AT HOME;</span></h1>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div>OR THE</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c005'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Adventures of a Fly-Rod</span>.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c000'>
- <div><span class='sc'>By</span> HARRY CASTLEMON,</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c007'>
- <div>AUTHOR OF “GUNBOAT SERIES,” “ROCKY MOUNTAIN SERIES,”</div>
- <div>“SPORTSMAN CLUB SERIES,” ETC.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c003'>
- <div>THE JOHN C. WINSTON CO.,</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c009'>
- <div>PHILADELPHIA,</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c010'>
- <div>CHICAGO,&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;TORONTO.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c011'><span class='large'>FAMOUS CASTLEMON BOOKS.</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c012'><b>GUNBOAT SERIES.</b> By <span class='sc'>Harry Castlemon</span>. 6 vols. 12mo.</p>
-<div class='lg-container-l c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='sc'>Frank the Young Naturalist.</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span class='sc'>Frank in the Woods.</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span class='sc'>Frank on the Lower Mississippi.</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span class='sc'>Frank on a Gunboat.</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span class='sc'>Frank before Vicksburg.</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span class='sc'>Frank on the Prairie.</span></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'><b>ROCKY MOUNTAIN SERIES.</b> By <span class='sc'>Harry Castlemon</span>. 3 vols. 12mo. Cloth.</p>
-<div class='lg-container-l c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='sc'>Frank among the Rancheros.</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span class='sc'>Frank in the Mountains.</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span class='sc'>Frank at Don Carlos’ Ranch.</span></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'><b>SPORTSMAN’S CLUB SERIES.</b> By <span class='sc'>Harry Castlemon</span>. 3 vols. 12mo. Cloth.</p>
-<div class='lg-container-l c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='sc'>The Sportsman’s Club in the Saddle.</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span class='sc'>The Sportsman’s Club Afloat.</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span class='sc'>The Sportsman’s Club among the Trappers.</span></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'><b>FRANK NELSON SERIES.</b> By <span class='sc'>Harry Castlemon</span>. 3 vols. 12mo. Cloth.</p>
-<div class='lg-container-l c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='sc'>Snowed Up.</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span class='sc'>Frank in the Forecastle.</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span class='sc'>The Boy Traders.</span></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'><b>BOY TRAPPER SERIES.</b> By <span class='sc'>Harry Castlemon</span>. 3 vols. 12mo. Cloth.</p>
-<div class='lg-container-l c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='sc'>The Buried Treasure.</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span class='sc'>The Boy Trapper.</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span class='sc'>The Mail-Carrier.</span></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'><b>ROUGHING IT SERIES.</b> By <span class='sc'>Harry Castlemon</span>. 3 vols. 12mo. Cloth.</p>
-<div class='lg-container-l c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='sc'>George in Camp.</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span class='sc'>George at the Wheel.</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span class='sc'>George at the Fort.</span></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'><b>ROD AND GUN SERIES.</b> By <span class='sc'>Harry Castlemon</span>. 3 vols. 12mo. Cloth.</p>
-<div class='lg-container-l c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='sc'>Don Gordon’s Shooting Box.</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span class='sc'>The Young Wild Fowlers.</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span class='sc'>Rod and Gun Club.</span></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'><b>GO-AHEAD SERIES.</b> By <span class='sc'>Harry Castlemon</span>. 3 vols. 12mo. Cloth.</p>
-<div class='lg-container-l c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='sc'>Tom Newcombe.</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span class='sc'>Go-Ahead.</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span class='sc'>No Moss.</span></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'><b>FOREST AND STREAM SERIES.</b> By <span class='sc'>Harry Castlemon</span>. 3 vols. 12mo. Cloth.</p>
-<div class='lg-container-l c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='sc'>Joe Wayring.</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span class='sc'>Snagged and Sunk.</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span class='sc'>Steel Horse.</span></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'><b>WAR SERIES.</b> By <span class='sc'>Harry Castlemon</span>. 5 vols. 12mo. Cloth.</p>
-<div class='lg-container-l c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='sc'>True to his Colors.</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span class='sc'>Rodney the Overseer.</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span class='sc'>Marcy the Refugee.</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span class='sc'>Rodney the Partisan.</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span class='sc'>Marcy the Blockade-Runner.</span></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c015'>
- <div><i>Other Volumes in Preparation.</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c016' />
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c010'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Copyright, 1886, by Porter &amp; Coates.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c006' />
-</div>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_5'>5</span>
- <div class='nf-center c008'>
- <div>JOE WAYRING AT HOME;</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div>OR</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class='nf-center c005'>
- <div>THE STORY OF A FLY-ROD.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c011'>CHAPTER I. <br /> <br /><span class='small'>IN WHICH I INTRODUCE MYSELF.</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_0_5 c018'>I AM called “Old Durability”; but for
-fear my name may prove misleading, and
-cause those of my readers who are not
-acquainted with me to fall into the error of
-supposing that I am a very aged article, I
-desire to say, at the outset, that I am only four
-years old, and that I have been in active
-service just sixteen months. During that time
-I have seen a world of excitement and adventure,
-and have performed some exploits of
-which any fly-rod might be justly proud. I
-have hooked, at one cast, and successfully
-landed, two black bass, weighing together
-eight and a quarter pounds; I have so often
-been dumped in the cold waters of mountain
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_6'>6</span>lakes and streams that it is a wonder my ferrules
-were not rusted out long ago; I have been
-dragged about among snags and lily-pads, by
-enraged trout, pickerel and bass; I have been
-stolen from my lawful owner, been kept a prisoner
-by boys and tramps who either could not
-or would not take care of me, and one of my
-joints has been broken. Of course, I was skillfully
-patched up, but, like the man whose arm
-has been fractured, I am not quite as good as I
-used to be, and am reluctant to exert all my
-strength for fear that I shall break again in the
-same place. I can’t throw a fly as far as I
-could when I took my finest string of trout in
-front of the “sportsmen’s home” at Indian
-Lake, and when I am called upon to make the
-attempt, my ferrules groan and creak as if they
-were about to give away and let me fall to
-pieces. For this my master laid me up in
-ordinary (that is what sailors say of a war
-vessel when she goes out of commission, and is
-laid up in port to remain idle there until her
-services are needed again), saying, as he did so,
-that my days of usefulness were over, but that
-he would keep me for the good I had done.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'><span class='pageno' id='Page_7'>7</span>After having led an active life among the
-hills, lakes and forest streams almost ever
-since I could remember, you may be sure that
-I did not relish treatment of this sort. After
-doing my level best for my master, and landing
-more than one fish for him that he ought to
-have lost because he handled me so awkwardly—after
-going with him through some of the most
-exciting scenes of his life, and submitting to
-treatment that would have used up almost any
-other rod, must I be laid upon the shelf in a
-dark closet and left to my gloomy reflections,
-while a new favorite accompanied my master to
-the woods, caught the trout for his dinner,
-slept under his blanket, and listened to the
-thrilling and amusing stories that were told
-around the camp-fire? I resolved to prevent it,
-if I could; so when my master took me out of
-my case one day to assist him in catching a
-muskalonge he had seen in the lake back of his
-father’s house, I nerved myself to do valiant
-battle, hoping to show him that there was
-plenty of good hard work left in me, if he only
-knew how to bring it out.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>The muskalonge, which was lurking in the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_8'>8</span>edge of the lily-pads ready to pounce upon the
-first unwary fish that approached his lair, took
-the frog that was on the hook at the very first
-cast, and then began the hardest struggle of
-my life. My rheumatic joints complained
-loudly as the heavy fish darted up and down
-the lake, and then dove to the bottom in his
-mad efforts to escape, but I held on the best I
-knew how until he leaped full length out of the
-water, and tried to shake the hook from his
-mouth; then I was ready to give up the contest.
-He was the largest fish I ever saw.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Scotland’s a burning!” exclaimed Joe.
-“Isn’t he a beauty? If this old rod was as
-good as he used to be, wouldn’t I have a prize
-in a few minutes from now?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>I ought to have told you before that my
-master’s name is Joe Wayring; and a right
-good boy he is, too, as you will find before my
-story is ended. Nearly all the young fellows
-of my acquaintance, and I know some of the
-best there are in the country, have some favorite
-word or expression which always rises to
-their lips whenever they are surprised, excited
-or angry, and the words I have just quoted are
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_9'>9</span>the ones Joe always used under such circumstances.
-No matter how exasperated he was
-you never could get any thing stronger out of
-him.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>I will not dwell upon the particulars of that
-fight (my joints ache yet whenever I think of
-it), for I set out to talk about other matters. It
-will be enough to say that I held fast to the
-fish until he became exhausted and was drawn
-through the lily-pads to the bank; then the
-gaff-hook came to my assistance, and he was
-safely landed. He was a monster. I afterward
-learned that he weighed a trifle over nineteen
-pounds. Wasn’t that something of an exploit
-for an eight ounce rod who had been threatened
-with the retired list on account of supposed
-disability? I was so nearly doubled up
-by the long-continued strain that had been
-brought to bear upon me, that when my master
-threw me down on the ground while he gave his
-prize his quietus with the heavy handle of the
-gaff-hook, I could not immediately straighten
-out again, as every well-conditioned rod is
-expected to do under similar circumstances.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Why, what in the world have you got
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_10'>10</span>there?” cried Joe’s mother, as the boy entered
-the kitchen, carrying me in one hand and dragging
-the fish after him with the other. She
-seemed to be a little afraid of the young fisherman’s
-prize, and that was hardly to be wondered
-at, for his mouth was open, and it was
-full of long, sharp teeth.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“It’s the biggest muskalonge that was ever
-caught in this lake,” replied Joe, as he laid me
-down upon a chair and took both hands to
-deposit his fish upon the table. “Didn’t he
-fight, though? I say, Uncle Joe,” he added,
-addressing himself to a dignified gentleman in
-spectacles, who just then came into the
-room with the morning’s paper in his hand,
-“I shall not need that new split bamboo you
-promised me for my birthday, though I thank
-you for your kind offer, all the same. This old
-rod is good for at least one more summer on
-Indian Lake. There is plenty of back-bone left
-in him yet.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Uncle Joe was a rich old bachelor and very
-fond of his namesake, Joe Wayring, on whom
-he lavished all the affection he would have
-given to his own children, if he had had any.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_11'>11</span>He was an enthusiastic angler, a skillful and
-untiring bear and deer hunter, and he generally
-timed his trips to the woods and mountains so
-that Joe and some of his particular friends
-could go with him.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“He is the most durable rod I ever saw,”
-added my master.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Well, then, call him ‘Old Durability’,”
-suggested Uncle Joe.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>The boy said he thought that name would
-just suit me, and from that day to this I have
-been known by every one who is acquainted
-with me as “Old Durability”.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Having introduced myself, because there was
-no one to perform the ceremony for me, and
-told you how I came by my cognomen, I will
-now go back and relate how I made the
-acquaintance of my master, Joe Wayring.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>If you will review your own life, boy reader,
-you may be able to find in it some incident,
-which happened, perhaps, long before you
-were out of pinafores, and which you remember
-perfectly, while all your life previous to the
-occurrence of that particular incident is a blank
-to you. Just so it was in my own experience.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_12'>12</span>When I first came to my senses, I found myself
-snugly tied up in my case and standing in a
-corner, looking through a glass door into a
-large store in which guns of all makes and fishing
-tackle of all kinds were kept for sale. At first
-I was greatly bewildered. I felt, if I may judge
-from what I have seen during my trips to the
-woods, like a boy who has just awakened from
-a sound sleep; but after a while my wits came
-to me, and then I found that I was not alone in
-the show-case. There were a dozen or two fly
-and bait rods standing in the corner beside me,
-and a little further down, looking toward the
-back end of the store, were single and double-barreled
-shot-guns, muzzle and breech-loading
-rifles, game-bags, creels, hunting knives, dog-whips,
-and almost every thing else that a sportsman
-is supposed to need. In the show-case,
-which rested on the long counter in front of
-me, were revolvers, pen-knives, lines, leaders,
-flies and ordinary fish-hooks without number;
-and on the opposite side of the store was an
-array of barrels containing glass balls, traps for
-throwing those balls, bicycles, tricycles, rowing
-and lifting machines—in fact, I saw so many
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_13'>13</span>things that I did not then know the name or
-use of, that I became confused while I looked
-at them.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Hallo, there! Have you waked up at last?”
-cried a voice, breaking in upon my meditations.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>A short investigation showed that the voice
-came from the case that stood next on my
-right. I did not know, of course, what sort of
-a rod he was, or whether or not he would prove
-to be an agreeable acquaintance; but wishing
-to be civil, I replied that I <i>had</i> waked up, and
-that, if he could tell me, I should be glad to
-know where I was and how I came there.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Why, you are in a one-horse country town,
-a thousand miles from nowhere, and you have
-always been here,” was the answer, given as I
-thought in a tone of contempt. “I have traveled.
-I came all the way from New York.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Who are you?” I ventured to ask; for my
-new acquaintance spoke in so dignified and
-lofty a tone, that I stood somewhat in awe of
-him.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I am a split bamboo,” said he; and then I
-saw very clearly that he was disposed to throw
-on airs, and to lord it over those who were not
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_14'>14</span>as fortunate as himself. “I am a gentleman’s
-rod, and it takes the ducats to buy me. I am
-worth forty-five dollars; while I see by the
-card tied to your case, that you are valued at
-only six and a half.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Not being quick at figures at this early period
-of my life, I could not tell just how much
-difference there was between forty-five dollars
-and six and a half, but I knew by the way the
-bamboo spoke, that the gulf that separated
-him from me was a wide one. I have learned
-some things since then. I know now that the
-qualities of a fly-rod do not depend upon the
-varnish that is put on the outside of him, any
-more than a boy’s qualities of mind and heart
-depend upon the clothes he wears. The stuff
-he is made of and the company he keeps have
-much to do with the record he makes in the
-world. While I was turning the matter over
-in my mind, somebody who had been listening
-to our conversation, suddenly broke in with:</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“You are neither one of you worth the
-money you cost.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>I looked around to see who the new speaker
-was, and presently discovered him in the person
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_15'>15</span>of a handsome bird gun, who rested upon a pair
-of deer’s antlers a short distance away.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“You can’t bring a squirrel out of the top of
-the tallest hickory in the woods, or stop a
-woodcock or a grouse on the wing, but I can,”
-continued the double-barrel.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I can catch a trout, if I have some one to
-back me who understands his business, and
-that’s more than you can do,” retorted the
-bamboo, spitefully. “I can throw a line sixty
-or seventy feet; I heard the proprietor of this
-store say so.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“And I can throw shot sixty or seventy
-yards, which is three times as far as you can
-throw a line,” shouted the double-barrel.
-“You seem to think yourself of some consequence
-because you came from New York. I
-came all the way from England, and that is on
-the other side of the ocean.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“So you are an assisted immigrant, are
-you?” cried the bamboo, in tones indicative of
-the greatest contempt. “Well, that’s all I
-care to know about you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>The disputants grew more and more in
-earnest the longer they talked, and pretty soon
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_16'>16</span>there were some hard words used. I took no
-part in the controversy, for I felt rather bashful
-in the presence of those who had seen so
-much more of the world than I had, and who
-were worth so much more money, and besides
-I could not see what there was to quarrel about.
-My sympathies were with the bamboo, arrogant
-as he had showed himself to be, because he was
-an American like myself; but still the English
-fowling-piece, “assisted immigrant” though
-he was, had a right to live in this country so
-long as he behaved himself, and as he was a
-showy fellow, I had no doubt that he would get
-out of the store before either the bamboo or
-myself. And so he did. While the dispute
-was at its height the door opened and a young
-man came in—a tall young man, with very thin
-legs, peaked shoes, gold eye-glasses and a
-downy upper lip. He walked with a mincing
-step and drawled out his words when he talked.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“A dude!” whispered the bamboo.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Before I could ask what a “dude” was, the
-proprietor came up, and the talking was for a
-moment hushed. Being impatient to be
-released from the show-case so that we could
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_17'>17</span>see what was going on in the great world outside,
-each one of us cherished the secret hope
-that we might find favor in the eyes of the prospective
-purchaser. We were so inexperienced
-and foolish that we didn’t care much who
-bought us, so long as we got out.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I—aw! I want to look at a nice light bird
-gun,” said the young man; “something you
-can recommend for woodcock and the like,
-don’t yer know?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Why, that’s a countryman of mine,” exclaimed
-the double-barrel, who seemed to be
-highly excited by the discovery.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>The bamboo hastened to assure me that he
-wasn’t—that he was an American trying to ape
-English ways.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Do you want a hammerless?” asked the
-proprietor.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I—aw! They come pretty ’igh, don’t they?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Not necessarily. Here’s one worth a hundred
-and twenty-five dollars,” replied the storekeeper;
-and as he spoke, he opened the show-case
-and took from it a double-barrel who was so
-very plain in appearance, that I had not before
-taken more than a passing glance at him. “I
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_18'>18</span>judge from your speech that you are an Englishman,
-and if you are, you of course know
-more about this make of guns than I can tell
-you. It is a Greener.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>The young man seemed pleased to know that
-he had succeeded in making the proprietor believe
-that he was not an American, but he did
-not seem to appreciate the gun, nor did he
-handle it as if he were accustomed to the use
-of fire-arms. He hardly knew how to bring it
-to his face properly.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I—aw! Hit’s wery fine, no doubt,” said
-he, after he had made an awkward pretense of
-examining the gun, “but I—aw! I want something
-a little more showy and not quite so
-’igh-priced, don’t yer know? Something that
-I can take pride in exhibiting to my ’unting
-friends, don’t yer know?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“We have guns that are more showy than
-this, but they are cheap affairs, and we don’t
-recommend them. How would this one suit
-you?” said the proprietor; and as he spoke,
-he opened another door in the show-case, and
-took my bragging friend down from his place
-on the antlers.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'><span class='pageno' id='Page_19'>19</span>It may have been all imagination on my part,
-but I would have been willing to affirm that his
-nickel-plated ornaments grew a shade dimmer
-as he was taken out of the case, and I am of the
-same opinion still. By his boasting he had led
-us all to believe that he was worth at least two
-or three hundred dollars; and you can imagine
-how surprised we were when we learned that
-he was valued at a very small fraction of that
-sum.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Aw! That looks more like a gun,” said the
-customer. “That’s a piece, don’t yer know,
-that a fellah can show to his friends. Hit’ll
-shoot, I suppose?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Oh, yes, it will shoot, but it will not do as
-clean work as the one I just showed you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Hi’ll take the risk. ’Ow much for ’im?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Twenty-five dollars; and that includes a
-trunk-shaped case, loading-tools, wiping-rod
-and fifty brass-shells.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>The young man handed over the money and
-went out, after requesting that his purchase
-might be sent up to the Lambert House at
-once, as he wished to start for the woods on
-the following day. As soon as the door was
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_20'>20</span>closed behind him, the proprietor called out to
-the porter:</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Oh, Rube! Come here and take this Brummagem
-shooting-iron up to the hotel. Thank
-goodness it is the last one we have in stock,
-and I’ll never buy another.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I wonder how that boastful bird gun feels
-now,” whispered the bamboo. “His pride had
-to take a tumble, didn’t it? There’s no Brummagem
-about me, I can tell you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“What do you mean by—by—” The word
-was too hard for me, and I stumbled over it.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“By Brummagem?” said the bamboo, who
-felt so good over the discomfiture of the English
-fowling-piece that he was disposed to be
-friendly as well as civil. “Why, it’s something
-that is fine and showy, but which is not
-in reality worth any thing. A Yankee would
-say that that double-barrel was a ‘shoddy’
-article.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I feel guilty every time I sell one of those
-guns,” continued the proprietor. “They are
-made in Birmingham, England, at the cost of
-nine dollars apiece by the dozen.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“That dude will never hurt any thing with
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_21'>21</span>it,” observed the porter, who had taken a good
-look at the customer and heard all that passed
-between him and his employer.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I hope he will not hurt himself with it,”
-answered the latter. “What does he want to
-go into the woods for? He doesn’t know a
-woodcock from an ostrich.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“He goes because it is fashionable, I suppose,”
-said Rube; and I afterward found out
-that that was just the reason. I saw him in
-the wilderness a few weeks later, and had an
-opportunity to exchange a word or two with
-the Brummagem breech-loader. The latter
-looked decidedly seedy. He was covered with
-rust, his locks were out of order, and he had
-been put to such hard service that every joint
-in his make-up was loose. The second time I
-met him he could scarcely talk to me, because
-there was not much left of him except his
-stock. His ignorant owner—but we’ll wait
-until we come to that, won’t we?</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>The next customers who came into the store
-were an elderly gentleman and a young lady.
-I certainly thought my chance for freedom had
-come, for when the gentleman said that his
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_22'>22</span>daughter wanted to look at a fly-rod, something
-light enough to be managed with one
-hand, and strong enough to land a perch or
-rock-bass, the proprietor pushed open the door
-in front of me and took me out.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Aha!” exclaimed the bamboo. “Your
-fate is to be the companion and plaything of a
-little girl, who will probably set you to catching
-sunfish and minnows, and throw you down
-in the mud when she gets through with you.
-I know that I am destined for the trout streams,
-and I have an idea that I shall be taken to
-Canada to have a shy at the lordly salmon.
-Good-by; but I am sorry for you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>I did not thank the bamboo for his words of
-sympathy, because I did not believe they were
-sincere. I thought I could detect a hypocritical
-twang in them; but before I could tell him
-so, I was taken out of my case, and for the
-first time given an opportunity to see how I
-looked.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“There is a rod I can recommend. Lancewood
-throughout, nickel-plated ferrules and
-reel-seat and artistically wound with cane and
-silk,” said the proprietor, glibly. “I will
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_23'>23</span>warrant him to do good work, and if the lady
-breaks him she will not be much out of pocket—only
-six dollars and a half.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Oh, I don’t want a cheap thing like that,”
-exclaimed the young lady, who would not take
-a second look at me after she heard that I was
-worth so little money. “I want a nice rod.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>The storekeeper laid me on the show-case,
-and brought my friend the split bamboo out
-for exhibition. He was a splendid looking fellow,
-and I did not wonder that the young lady
-went into ecstasies over him, and declared at
-once that he was just the rod she had long been
-wishing for. Neither could I resist the temptation
-to say to him, as he was put back into his
-case:</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“What do you think now of your chances
-of going among the trout streams and of taking
-a shy at the lordly salmon! Good-by; but I
-am sorry for you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>The bamboo was so crest-fallen that he could
-make no response. He was carried away by
-his new owner, and I did not see him again
-until I was almost ready to be laid upon the
-shelf in my master’s closet, to enjoy a long
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_24'>24</span>winter’s rest after a season of the hardest kind
-of work. The pride and arrogance were all
-gone out of him, and he did not look much as
-he did when he left the store. If he had been
-a man, folks would have called him a tramp.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_25'>25</span>
- <h2 class='c011'>CHAPTER II. <br /> <br /><span class='small'>THE HISTORIAN OF THE WAYRING FAMILY.</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_2_0_5 c018'>THE bamboo having been disposed of I was
-returned to the show-case, where I spent
-two very lonely days. The rods around me
-were worth more money than I was, and feeling
-their importance they would scarcely speak
-to me, even to answer a civil question; so all I
-could do was to hold my peace and listen to
-their conversation. But fate had decreed that
-I should not long remain a captive. One afternoon
-there came into the store a gentleman in
-gold spectacles, accompanied by two bright
-boys about fifteen years of age. They must
-have been well known to the proprietor, for he
-shook their hands with all the cordiality which
-shopkeepers know how to assume toward their
-rich patrons, and greeted them with:</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Ah, colonel, I am glad to see you. Well,
-Joseph, have you come after that rod?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'><span class='pageno' id='Page_26'>26</span>“Yes, sir,” answered one of the boys, a
-curly-headed, blue-eyed lad, who looked so
-good-natured and jolly that I took a great
-fancy to him at once. “You remember what
-I told you the last time I was here, Mr. Brown—that
-I want something light and strong and
-inexpensive. I can’t afford to pay a high price
-for a rod that I may break at the very first
-cast. You know I never threw a fly in my life.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Yes, I know that,” said Mr. Brown, “and
-I know, too, that as a bait fisher you have
-few equals and no superiors among boys of
-your age.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I thank you for the compliment, but I am
-afraid I don’t deserve it,” said the blue-eyed
-boy, modestly.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Oh, yes, you do. Now here’s a rod that
-will suit you exactly,” answered the proprietor,
-pushing open the show-case and laying
-hold of me. “He weighs only eight ounces,
-hangs beautifully, and will answer your purpose
-as well as one worth five times the money.
-Only six and a half, and that’s cheaper than
-you could steal him, if you were in that line of
-business.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'><span class='pageno' id='Page_27'>27</span>“What do you say, Uncle Joe?” asked the
-boy after he and his companion, whom he
-addressed as Roy Sheldon, had shaken me up
-and down in the air until it was a wonder to
-me that they did not break my back.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Since Mr. Brown has recommended him,
-I say that you can’t do better than to take
-him,” was the reply, and that settled the matter.
-I had a master at last, and a good one,
-too, if there were any faith to be put in appearances.
-I took him for a restless, uneasy fellow
-who would not let me rust for want of use, and
-I found that I had not been mistaken in my
-opinion of him.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Joe, as I shall hereafter call him, next purchased,
-under his uncle’s supervision, three
-long water-proof lines, a Loomis automatic
-reel, a dozen cream-colored leaders of different
-lengths, a creel who afterward became my constant
-companion, and a fly-book filled with all
-the most tempting lures known to anglers,
-such as coachmen, white millers, red and
-brown hackles, and many other things whose
-names I did not know. With these under his arm
-and me on his shoulder he set out for home
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_28'>28</span>accompanied by Roy Sheldon, Uncle Joe taking
-leave of them at the door, saying that he
-was going to the post-office.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I wish every fellow in the world had an
-uncle like that,” said Joe, as he turned about
-and waved his hand to the gentleman with the
-gold spectacles.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“So do I,” answered Roy, “excepting, of
-course, Tom Bigden and his crowd.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I don’t except even them,” said Joe.
-“Tom pulls a lovely oar, and I never saw a
-fellow who could play short stop or train a
-spaniel like him. I have nothing against any
-of them, and should be glad to be friends with
-them if they would let me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“But haven’t you seen to your satisfaction
-that they won’t let you?” demanded Roy,
-rather sharply. “They’ve got something
-against you, and they’ll continue to make you
-suffer for it; see if they don’t.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>I wondered what it was that any one could
-have against so fine a young fellow as my
-new master appeared to be, and it was not
-many days before I found out. Tom Bigden
-and his followers <i>did</i> make Joe suffer, but it
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_29'>29</span>was principally through his friends, that
-is, through his sail-boat, his shell in which he
-used to train for his races, his canvas canoe that
-had carried him safely down the most difficult
-rapids in Indian River, and finally through me.
-In fact, I became a regular shuttle-cock of fortune,
-and was so roughly knocked about from
-pillar to post, that it is a wonder to me that I
-am as good a rod as I am.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>After a few minutes’ walk along a quiet street
-shaded on each side by grand old trees, Joe and
-his companion turned into a wide carriage-way
-which led them by a circuitous route through
-a little grove of evergreens to the house in which
-Joe lived—a fine brick mansion, with stone
-facings, a carriage-porch at the side door, and
-a croquet ground and lawn tennis court in
-front. Behind the house the grounds sloped
-gently down to the shore of a beautiful lake,
-with an island near the center, and with banks
-on each side that were thickly wooded, save
-where the trees and undergrowth had been
-cleared away to make room for the cozy summer
-residences of the visitors who came there
-every year. For Mount Airy, that was the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_30'>30</span>name of the village in which Joe Wayring
-lived, was acquiring some fame as a watering
-place. There were four springs in the vicinity,
-whose waters were supposed to possess
-some medicinal virtues, the scenery was grand,
-the drives numerous and pleasant, and the
-fishing (and the shooting, too, in the proper
-season), could not be surpassed.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>At the foot of the path that led from the
-carriage-porch to the lake, was a boat-house
-which afforded shelter to some of Joe’s friends
-whose acquaintance I was soon to make, and a
-short distance from its door his sail boat, the
-<i>Young Republic</i>, rode at her moorings. It
-was indeed a pleasant scene that was spread
-out before me; but before I had time to
-admire it sufficiently, Joe and his companion
-went up the stone steps three at a jump,
-rushed into the hall, fired their caps at the hat-rack,
-and without waiting to see whether or
-not they caught on the pegs at which they were
-aimed, ran up the wide stairs that led to the
-floor above. I held my breath in suspense and
-wondered what in the world was the matter
-now; but I afterward learned that I had no
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_31'>31</span>cause for uneasiness, and that that is the way
-boys generally conduct themselves when they
-go into a house. It saves them the trouble of
-hunting up their father and mother and telling
-them that they have got home without being
-run over by the cars, or knocked down by a
-runaway horse, or drowned in the lake.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>The room into which Joe conducted his
-friend was like the private sanctum of every
-other boy who delights in the sports of the woods
-and fields, with this exception: It was in
-perfect order, and as neat as a new pin. Joe’s
-mother wouldn’t have it any other way, and
-neither would Joe. Indeed it was a favorite
-saying of his that if folks would keep away
-and let his things alone (by “folks” he meant
-to designate old Betty, the housekeeper, who,
-according to Joe’s way of thinking, was “awful
-fussy”), he could find any thing he wanted,
-from a postage-stamp to a spoon-oar, on the
-darkest of nights, and without a lamp to aid
-him in the search.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>The room looked a good deal like a museum
-I afterward saw, only it was on a much smaller
-scale, of course, and it contained so many
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_32'>32</span>rare and curious things that Joe’s friends
-were always glad of an invitation “to step
-up for a few minutes.” Uncle Joe’s love
-for the rod and gun had led him to roam all
-over his own country, as well as to some remote
-corners of foreign lands, and during these rambles
-he never forgot the boy at home who
-thought so much of relics and souvenirs of all
-kinds, and took such good care of them. He
-gave Joe the Alpine stock which had assisted
-him in his ascent of Mount Blanc; the Indian
-saddle and bridle he had used when fleeing
-from the agency at the time the Utes rose in
-rebellion and killed Meeker and all the other
-whites who did not succeed in making good
-their escape; the head of the first bison he
-had ever shot, and which, having been mounted
-by an expert taxidermist, had been hung above
-the looking-glass over the mantle to serve as
-a resting place for the sword and pistols Uncle
-Joe carried during the war, the elk-horn bow,
-quiver of arrows, scalping knife and moccasins
-presented to him by a Sioux chief; and for the
-prize lancewood bow won by my master at a
-shooting match; for Joe was an archer, as well
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_33'>33</span>as an angler and wing shot, and he had been
-Master Bowman of the Mount Airy Toxophilites
-until he became tired of the office and gave
-it up. These articles, and a good many others
-which I did not have time to look at, were so
-neatly and artistically arranged that it did not
-seem to me that a single one of them could be
-moved without spoiling the effect of the whole.
-Nothing looked out of place, not even the
-black, uncouth object that lay in a little
-recess on the opposite side of the room. Having
-never seen any thing just like him before, I
-could not make out what he was, and I waited
-rather impatiently for his master to go out of
-the room so that I could speak to him; but Joe
-did not seem to be in any hurry to leave. He
-stood me up in a corner, and then he and Roy
-seated themselves at a table in the middle of
-the room, and proceeded to “fix up” a debate
-that was to be held at the High School on the
-afternoon of the coming Friday. The question
-was: “Ought corporal punishment in
-schools to be abolished?” No doubt it was a
-matter in which both Joe and Roy had been
-deeply interested in their younger days, but
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_34'>34</span>it did not affect me one way or the other, and
-consequently I paid very little attention to
-what they said. My time was fully taken up
-with the strange things I saw around me.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>At last, to my great satisfaction, the boys
-concluded that they could “fix up” the matter
-while sailing about the lake in the <i>Young
-Republic</i>, better than they could while sitting
-by the table, especially if they could find some
-boat to race with, so they bolted out of the room
-with much noise and racket, and left the house,
-banging the hall door loudly behind them.
-Then I turned to speak to the object that occupied
-the recess on the other side of the room,
-and found that he was quite as willing to make
-my acquaintance as I was to make his.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Hallo!” said he; and I afterward learned
-that that is the way in which school boys and
-telephones always greet each other.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Hallo!” said I, in reply. “Who are you?
-if I may be so bold as to inquire.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Oh, that’s all right,” answered my new
-acquaintance, cheerfully. “Everybody who
-sees me for the first time wants to know all
-about me. I don’t suppose I am much to look
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_35'>35</span>at—indeed, I know I am not, because I can see
-my reflection in the mirror over the mantle—but
-I am the boss boat on the rapids, and am
-worth more on a ‘carry’ than all the cedar and
-birch-bark canoes in America. I am the historian
-of the Wayring family, or, rather, of the
-youngest branch of it,” he added, with no little
-pride in his tones. “I carry secrets enough to
-sink any ordinary craft, and if I only had the
-power to communicate some of them to my
-master, perhaps he wouldn’t open his eyes! I
-am a canvas canoe, at your service.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Oh!” said I.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Yes,” said he. “And unless my judgment
-is at fault, you are a fly-rod. I heard Joe say
-that his uncle was going to get one for him.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“That is just what I am,” I made answer.
-“Nickel-plated ferrules and reel-seat, artistically
-wound with cane and silk, and lancewood
-throughout.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>My lofty speech did not have the effect I
-thought it would. The canvas canoe seemed
-to have rather an exalted opinion of himself,
-and I did not see why I should stay in the
-background for want of somebody to praise me,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_36'>36</span>and so I praised myself; and that’s a bad thing
-to do. I only succeeded in exciting the merriment
-of every occupant of the room, for I heard
-derisive laughter on all sides of me.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Don’t throw on airs, young fellow,” said
-the canvas canoe, as soon as he could speak.
-“You have come to the wrong shop for that
-sort of work. I wouldn’t boast until I had done
-something, if I were in your place. If there is
-any good in you, you will fare well in Joe’s
-hands, and he will do your bragging for you;
-but if you fail him when the pinch comes, you
-will most likely be chucked into the lake, or
-given away to the first little ragamuffin he can
-find who wants a rod that is good for nothing.
-So take a friend’s advice and hold your tongue
-until you have seen service.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>I felt somewhat abashed by this rebuke, for,
-of course, I was desirous of making a favorable
-impression upon those with whom I was to be
-associated all the days of my life. I thought I
-had made them despise me; but the next words
-uttered by the canvas canoe showed me that I
-need have no fears on that score.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“A boat and a rod generally go together,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_37'>37</span>you know,” said he; “so I suppose that you
-and I will see much of each other hereafter.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“And how about me?” piped a shrill voice
-close beside me.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>I looked down, and there was the creel. I
-had not thought of him before, and it was plain
-that the canoe hadn’t either, for he exclaimed,
-in a tone of surprise:</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Who spoke? Oh, it was you, was it?
-Well, I don’t know just what Joe will do with
-you, for he never owned a creel before. He has
-always carried his dinner in his pocket when
-he went trouting, or in a basket if he went out
-on the lake after bass, and brought his fish
-home on a string; but he will find use for you,
-you may depend upon that. He is a busy boy,
-is Joe, and he keeps every body around him
-busy, too.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I understood you to say that you are the
-historian of the Wayring family,” I ventured
-to remark, when the canoe ceased speaking.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Of the youngest branch of it—yes. I have
-been a member of this household for a long
-time. Can’t you see that I am a veteran?
-Don’t you notice my wounds? I have been
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_38'>38</span>snagged more times than I can remember, I
-have had holes punched in me by rocks, and
-some of my ribs have been fractured; but I am
-a pretty good boat yet. At least Joe thinks so,
-for he is going to take me somewhere this
-coming summer, probably up into Michigan to
-run the rapids of the Menominee; and, to tell
-you the honest truth, I am looking forward to
-that trip with fear and trembling. I have heard
-Uncle Joe say that those rapids were something
-to make a man’s hair stand on end; but if my
-master says ‘go’, I shall take him through if
-I can. I have carried him through some dangerous
-places, and whenever I have got him
-into trouble, it has been owing to his own carelessness
-or mismanagement.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I suppose he thinks a great deal of you?”
-said I.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Well, he ought to,” replied the canoe, with
-a self-satisfied air. “I have stuck to him
-through thick and thin for a good many years.
-I was the very first plaything he owned, after
-he took it into his head that he was getting too
-big to ride a rocking-horse. He used to paddle
-me around on a duck pond, where the water
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_39'>39</span>wasn’t more than a foot deep, long before it
-was thought safe to trust him with a rod or
-gun. But Joe does not seem to care much for
-a gun. He is fairly carried away by his love of
-archery, and a long bow is his favorite weapon.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Do you know who Tom Bigden is, and what
-Joe has done to incur his ill-will?” I inquired.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I have some slight acquaintance with that
-young gentleman,” answered the canoe, with a
-laugh. “It was through him that I was snagged
-and sunk in the Indian Lake country. I don’t
-know how the fuss started, and neither does
-any body except Tom Bigden himself; but I
-suppose that fellow over there and a few others
-like him, are wholly to blame for it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“What fellow? Over where?” I asked;
-for of course the canvas canoe could not point
-his finger or nod his head to tell me which way
-to look.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“This fellow up here,” said a new voice,
-which came from over the bookcase.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>I looked up, and there was another lancewood
-bow, resting on a pair of deer’s antlers.
-He was not quite as fancy as the prize bow of
-whom I have already spoken. His green plush
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_40'>40</span>handle was beginning to look threadbare, and
-that, to my mind, indicated that he had seen
-service.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“You wouldn’t think that a few insignificant
-things like that could be the means of setting
-a whole village together by the ears, would
-you?” continued the canoe.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Insignificant yourself,” retorted the long
-bow; but I was glad to notice that he did not
-speak as if he were angry. The various articles
-I saw about me all cherished the most friendly
-feelings for one another, but when they had
-nothing to do, they were like a lot of idle boys—always
-trying to “get a joke” upon some of
-their number. “You never won a prize for Joe,
-did you? Well, I have. Go and win a race
-before you brag. You can’t; you’re much too
-clumsy. One of those Shadow or Rob Roy
-canoes out there on the lake would beat you
-out of sight in going a mile.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>I cared nothing at all for this side sparring.
-I knew that I would have plenty of time in
-which to listen to it during the long winter
-months, when canoe, long bow and fly-rod
-would be laid up in ordinary, while skates,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_41'>41</span>snow-shoes and toboggans took our places in
-the affections of our master for the time being.
-For I saw snow-shoes and a toboggan there, and
-I knew what they were, because I had seen some
-like them in Mr. Brown’s store. They came
-from Canada, and were almost as full of stories
-as the canoe was. Joe had worn the snow-shoes
-while hunting caribou in Newfoundland
-in company with his uncle, and the toboggan
-had carried his master with lightning speed
-over the ice bridge at Niagara Falls. Many an
-hour that would otherwise have dragged by on
-leaden wings did they brighten for us by relating
-scraps of their personal history, and at some
-future time I may induce them to put those
-same narratives into print for your benefit;
-but just now we are interested in Tom Bigden.
-We want to know why he disliked Joe Wayring,
-and what made him take every opportunity
-he could find to annoy him.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“When you talk about racing you don’t
-want to leave me out,” observed the toboggan,
-“for I am the lad to show speed. Give me a
-fair field, and I would not be much afraid to
-try conclusions with an express train. And it
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_42'>42</span>takes as much, if not more, skill to manage me
-than it does to handle an awkward canvas
-canoe, who is always bobbing about, turning
-first one way and then another as if he were
-too contrary to hold a straight course.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I wasn’t intended for a racing boat, and I
-know I can’t compete with such flyers as you
-and a Rob Roy,” said the canvas canoe,
-modestly; and I afterward found that none of
-my new acquaintances were half as conceited
-as they pretended to be. They boasted just to
-hear themselves talk, and because they had no
-other way of passing the time when they were
-unemployed; but each was perfectly willing
-to acknowledge the superiority of the other in
-his own particular line of business. “I was
-intended for a portable craft—something that
-can be folded into a small compass and carried
-over a portage without much trouble; and in
-that respect I am far ahead of a stiff-necked
-Canuck, who, having made up his mind just
-how much space he ought to occupy in the
-world, would rather break than bend to give
-elbow-room to his betters.” “You wanted me
-to tell you something about Tom Bigden, I
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_43'>43</span>believe,” added the canoe, addressing himself
-to me. “Well, it is a long story, but you will
-have plenty of time to listen to it; for if Joe
-and Roy have gone out on the lake, they will
-not return much before dark. You ought to
-know the full history of Tom’s dealings with
-Joe, for you may become the victim of persecution
-as the rest of us are and have been ever
-since Tom came here; and if you were not
-posted, you would not know how to account
-for it. A long time ago—”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>But there! I never could learn to tell a
-story in the words of another, so I will, for a
-time, drop the personal pronoun, which I don’t
-like to use if I can help it, and give you in my
-own homely way the substance of the narrative
-to which I listened that afternoon. But please
-understand one thing before I begin: The
-historian was not a personal witness of all the
-incidents I am about to describe. He couldn’t
-have been, unless he possessed the power of
-being in half a dozen different places at the
-same time. He saw and heard some things, of
-course, but much of his information had been
-obtained from the long bow, and from Joe and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_44'>44</span>his friends, who had freely discussed matters
-in his presence; and by putting all these
-different incidents together, he was able to
-make up a story which, to me, was very
-interesting. I hope it may prove so to you.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_45'>45</span>
- <h2 class='c011'>CHAPTER III. <br /> <br /><span class='small'>SOMETHING ABOUT TOM BIGDEN AND HIS COUSINS.</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_3_0_5 c018'>MOUNT AIRY, the village in which Joe
-Wayring and Roy Sheldon lived, was
-situated a few miles away from a large city
-which, for want of a better name, we will call
-New London. It was so far distant from the
-city that it could not properly be spoken of as
-one of its suburbs, and yet the railroad brought
-the village so near to it that a good many men
-who did business in New London, Joe’s father
-and Roy’s among the number, had their homes
-there. It was a veritable “hide and seek
-town”. Sometimes, as you were approaching
-it on the cars, you would see it very plainly,
-and then again you wouldn’t. It was nestled
-in among high mountains, and in the woods
-which covered them from base to summit
-could be found an abundance of small game,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_46'>46</span>such as hares, squirrels and grouse, that
-afforded sport to the local Nimrods, and even
-received attention from the New London gunners.
-It was surrounded by a perfect network
-of babbling trout brooks, and there were
-several lakes and ponds in the vicinity in which
-some of the finest fish in the world awaited the
-lure of the skillful angler. And it required
-skill to take them, too. They were shy of
-strangers, and it wasn’t every body who could
-go out in the morning and come back at night
-with a full creel.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Nor was larger game wanting to tempt the
-hunter who plumed himself on being a good
-shot with the rifle. Visitors standing upon
-the veranda of the principal hotel in the
-village had often heard wolves howling in the
-mountains, and on more than one occasion a
-deer had been seen standing on the opposite
-shore of Mirror Lake (it was generally called
-Wayring’s Lake, because Joe’s father owned
-the land on all sides of it), regarding with much
-curiosity the evidences of civilization that had
-sprung up on the other side. More than that,
-a bear was expected to make his appearance at
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_47'>47</span>least once every season; and when word was
-passed that he was in sight, what a hubbub it
-created among the visiting sportsmen! How
-prompt they were to seize their guns and run out
-after him, and how sure they were to come back
-empty-handed! Uncle Joe used to say that he
-believed the managers of the hotels would close
-their doors against the man who was lucky
-enough to shoot that bear, for unless Bruin
-had a companion to take his place, his death
-would spoil their advertisements. For years
-the proprietor of the Mount Airy House had
-been accustomed to tell the public, through the
-New London papers, that bear could be seen
-from the piazza of his hotel, and the announcement
-had brought him many a dollar from
-sportsmen who came from all parts of the country
-to shoot that bear. Why didn’t Uncle Joe
-shoot him? He owned the hotel.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>We have said that Mount Airy was acquiring
-some fame as a watering-place; but that
-must not lead you to infer that it was like
-other places of resort—lively enough in summer,
-but very dull in winter, for such was by
-no means the case. The village was lively at all
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_48'>48</span>seasons of the year. Of course there were many
-more people there in summer than there were in
-winter, for during warm weather the hotels
-and all the boarding houses were crowded with
-visitors, and so were the cottages on the other
-side of the lake; but when these visitors went
-away, the citizens did not hibernate like so
-many woodchucks and wait for them to come
-back, because they were not dependent upon
-tourists either for their livelihood or for means
-of entertainment. Strangers were astonished
-when they found what a driving, go-ahead sort
-of people they were. They were proud of their
-village, of its churches, its hotels, its fine private
-residences, and its high-school was so well
-and favorably known that it attracted students
-from all parts of the country. It could boast
-of an efficient fire department, composed of all
-the leading men in town (the ministers and
-teachers, to a man, belonged to it), a military
-company which formed a part of the National
-Guard of the State, and a band of archers known
-as the Mount Airy Toxophilites. We ought,
-rather, to say that there were <i>two</i> bands of
-archers, one being composed of boys and girls,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_49'>49</span>and the other of their fathers, mothers and
-older brothers and sisters. They were both
-uniformed, but the boy members of the
-Toxophilites were the only ones who ever
-paraded.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>It was worth a long journey to see these
-forty young archers turn out and march
-through the streets to the music of the band.
-They looked as neat in their green and white
-suits, with short top boots, and black hats
-turned up at one side and fastened with a
-black feather, as the military company did in
-their blue uniforms and white helmets: and as
-for their marching, it was nearly perfect. They
-had a manual of arms which originated with
-Uncle Joe, who, for more than a year, acted as
-their instructor and drill-master. They were
-governed by a constitution and by-laws, and
-fines were imposed upon those who did not
-turn out regularly to the drills and parades.
-They had shooting matches at which prizes
-were distributed, also a grand annual hunt,
-followed by a dinner that was equally grand;
-and every year some of the boys spent a week
-or two camping in the mountains, taking bows
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_50'>50</span>and arrows with them instead of guns. A good
-many of the young archers were very fine shots
-with these novel weapons, and there were
-about half a dozen of them, of whom Joe and
-Roy made two, who stood ready at any time
-to meet an equal number of riflemen at the
-trap, the archers shooting at twelve yards rise
-and the riflemen at twenty.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>On the morning of July 4, 18—, a large
-party of newly-arrived visitors were seated on
-the wide veranda of the Mount Airy House,
-enjoying the refreshing breeze that came to
-them from over the lake, and congratulating
-themselves on having left the city, with all its
-dust, heat and noise, behind them for one good
-long month at least. Some of these visitors
-had never been there before, and consequently
-they knew little or nothing about the village
-and its inhabitants. Among these were Tom
-Bigden and his two cousins, Ralph and Loren
-Farnsworth, who were leaning over the railing,
-fanning their flushed faces with their
-hats, and wondering how in the world they
-were going to put in four weeks’ time in that
-desolate town. They were city boys, any body
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_51'>51</span>could see that, and they were disappointed, and
-angry as well, because their parents had
-not decided to spend a portion of the summer at
-some place convenient to salt water, so that
-they could enjoy a dip in the surf now and then.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I see a boat down there,” observed Loren.
-“I wonder if we could hire it for an hour or
-two? I think I should like to take a sail on
-that lake, it looks so cool and inviting.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Humph!” exclaimed Tom. “I’d much
-rather take a run up to Newport or over to
-Greenbush in my father’s yacht.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I wouldn’t,” answered Loren. “I can go
-down to the Sound any day, but a gem of a lake
-like this is something I haven’t feasted my eyes
-upon in a long time. I am going to see if I can
-hire a boat; and after I get tired of sailing
-around in her, I’m going to lie to under the
-shade of some tree that hangs over the water,
-and be as lazy as I know how. That’s what I
-came up here for.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Boom!” said a field-piece, from some distant
-part of the village.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“What was that?” exclaimed Ralph. “A
-cannon?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'><span class='pageno' id='Page_52'>52</span>“Naw,” replied Tom, in a tone which implied
-that he had no patience with any one who could
-ask such a question. “What would a cannon be
-doing up here in the woods? Do you think
-these greenhorns are going to try to get up a
-celebration for our benefit?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“No, I don’t; but they’ve got up one for
-their own. Do you hear that?” answered
-Ralph, as the warning roll of a drum, followed
-by the music of a band, rang out on the air.
-“The procession, or whatever it is, is coming
-this way, too. Now I shall expect to see something
-that will eclipse any thing New London
-ever thought of getting up.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>It wasn’t a celebration; it was only the annual
-review of the Mount Airy fire department,
-which was always held on the Fourth of July.
-Ralph and his cousins were fully prepared to
-make all sorts of fun of it, but when the head
-of the procession came into view around the
-corner of the street below, they were so surprised
-at the size of it that they had not a word
-to say. It took up the whole width of the
-street, and that it was determined to have all
-the room it wanted, was made plain by the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_53'>53</span>actions of a couple of mounted policemen who
-rode in front to clear the way.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“That’s good marching, boys,” said Loren,
-who had seen so much of it in New London that
-he thought himself qualified to judge. “It is
-a very creditable display for so small a place as
-this.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Every body seems to think it’s going to be
-something grand,” sneered Tom, who was really
-amazed at the rapidity with which the spacious
-veranda was filled by the guests, who came
-pouring out of the wide doors in a steady
-stream.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Why, there’s a military company in line
-with the firemen—two of them,” exclaimed
-Ralph.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Visiting companies, no doubt,” said Tom,
-“and that’s what makes every one so anxious
-to see them.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“There’s where you are wrong, Tom,” said
-Mr. Farnsworth, who, approaching them unobserved,
-had heard every word of their conversation.
-“You never saw a parade just like
-this, and I don’t believe you will ever see another
-unless your father and I carry out some
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_54'>54</span>plans we have been talking about, and come up
-here to live.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“To live?” echoed Tom.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Up here in the woods?” cried Ralph.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Among all these country greenhorns!”
-chimed in Loren.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“You will find very few country greenhorns
-in Mount Airy,” said Mr. Farnsworth, with a
-laugh. “Why, boys, those fire companies represent
-millions of New London’s business capital.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Oh!” said Tom.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Ah!” said Ralph.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“That makes the thing look different,” added
-Loren. “I supposed that they were made
-up of the same material we used to find in the
-old volunteer organizations.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“By no means. They are all rich and intelligent
-men. They own valuable property here,
-and by taking an interest in their fire department,
-they get their insurance at much lower
-rates than we do in the city.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>The near approach of the column put a stop
-to the conversation. First came the drum-major,
-a big six-footer, with a high bear-skin
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_55'>55</span>cap, which made him look a great deal taller
-than he really was, and behind him the band,
-which discoursed as fine music as any body
-wanted to hear. Then came the hook and
-ladder company, two hundred strong, marching
-four abreast and drawing their heavy truck
-after them without the least apparent exertion.
-Next came a steam fire engine, drawn by men
-instead of horses, after that a hose cart, followed
-by a small company of about twenty
-young fellows in black dress-coats and white
-trowsers and caps, who pulled along something
-that looked like a skeleton road wagon,
-loaded with Babcock fire extinguishers.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“That’s a little the queerest looking turn-out
-I ever saw,” Tom remarked. “<i>They</i> couldn’t
-do any thing toward putting out a fire. I suppose
-they are more for show than any thing
-else.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Wrong again,” said Mr. Farnsworth.
-“They have done good work, and the citizens,
-in recognition of their services, presented them
-with money enough to build an engine house
-for themselves, and furnish it in fine style.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Next came the soldiers, veterans, every one
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_56'>56</span>of them, and behind them a company of oddly
-uniformed youngsters, whose movements were
-governed by the blast of a bugle instead of the
-word of command. They must have been the
-ones the guests were waiting for, for when they
-came in sight, and, following the movements of
-the military company, executed the maneuver:
-“Platoons right front into line,” which they
-did with as much soldier-like precision as the
-veterans themselves, the gentlemen on the
-veranda cheered them lustily, while the ladies
-waved their handkerchiefs and bombarded the
-ranks with bouquets, which were deftly caught
-by the boys, and impaled upon the ends of
-their long bows.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Now, then, can any body tell me who and
-what those fellows are?” exclaimed Ralph.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“They are the Mount Airy Toxophilites,”
-replied Mr. Farnsworth.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Lovers of a bow or arrow,” said Ralph, who
-was well up in his Greek. “What do they
-do?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Oh, they have regular shooting-matches,
-drills and parades, and now and then a hunt
-and a camp in the woods.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'><span class='pageno' id='Page_57'>57</span>“They can’t hit any thing with those bows,
-of course.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Yes, I believe they can,” replied Mr.
-Farnsworth. “I am told that when they go on
-a hunt, they are as sure of coming back full-handed
-as those who use guns. After passing
-in review before the trustees, they are to have a
-drill in the park. I see that a good many of
-the guests are getting ready to go down, and if
-you would like to see it, we will go also.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Tom and his cousins had found reason to
-change some of their opinions during the last
-few minutes, and that was just what Mr.
-Farnsworth desired. He had talked with that
-very end in view—to make them see that New
-London was not the only place in the world in
-which boys could enjoy themselves, and to prepare
-them for the change which he and his
-brother-in-law, Tom’s father, intended to make
-that very summer. They were anxious to get
-their boys away from New London, for it was
-full of temptations which Tom and his cousins
-found it hard to resist. They were learning to
-think more of billiards than they did of their
-books, and they had even been known to roll
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_58'>58</span>ten-pins for soda water. Soda water wasn’t
-hurtful, and neither were ten-pins nor billiards;
-but the conditions under which the one was
-imbibed and the others played certainly were.
-In Mount Airy there was none of that sort of
-thing. Of course there were billiard rooms and
-ten-pin alleys there, but they belonged to the
-hotels, and were kept for the exclusive use of
-the guests. The men who had just marched up
-the street owned all the land for miles around,
-and they would not sell a foot of it. They
-were willing to lease it for a term of years, but
-before they did so, they wanted to know all
-about the man who applied for the lease, and
-the business he intended to follow while he
-remained in town. In that way they made the
-society of the village just what they wanted it
-to be. It is true that some objectionable characters
-now and then secured a temporary foothold
-there, but as soon as they were detected,
-they were “bounced” without ceremony.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Mr. Farnsworth and Mr. Bigden thought
-Mount Airy would be just the place for their
-boys, but the latter would have raised the most
-decided objections if the subject of a change of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_59'>59</span>residence had been broached to them before
-they witnessed that parade, and learned something
-about the men and boys who composed
-it.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I’ll tell you what’s a fact!” said Tom, as
-he and his cousins walked with Mr. Farnsworth
-toward the park where the drill was to be held.
-“Uncle Alfred was right when he said that we
-would not find many country bumpkins here.
-Those bowmen must have lots of fun. Do you
-and father really intend to come here to live?”
-he added, turning to Mr. Farnsworth.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“We have been thinking and talking about
-it for a long time,” was the answer.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“All right. I am in favor of it,” said Tom.
-“I wonder if we could get into that company
-of archers!”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Of course we could,” said Loren.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“There’s no ‘of course’ about it,” answered
-his father. “You would be balloted for the
-same as the rest; and I have been told that one
-black-ball would keep you out for a year.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Humph!” exclaimed Tom. “They
-wouldn’t black-ball <i>us</i>. I guess our folks have
-just as much money as any body here.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'><span class='pageno' id='Page_60'>60</span>“No, they haven’t; and even if they had, it
-would make no sort of difference. Money
-doesn’t rule the world up here as it does down
-in New London. I am informed that some of
-the boys in that company are so poor that the
-others had to help them buy their uniforms.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Humph!” said Tom. “Well, if that’s the
-sort of trash they take into their company, I
-don’t know that I care to belong to it, do you,
-boys? We don’t have any thing to do with
-such fellows in the city.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Couldn’t we gradually weed them out?”
-asked Loren. “That’s the way we did with
-our ball club, you know.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Yes, and what was the consequence?”
-demanded his father. “You ‘weeded out’
-your very best players, and you have been
-beaten by every club you have met since.
-Served you right, too.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Well, I would rather be beaten than be
-chums with fellows who were too mean to chip
-in two or three dollars when we wanted to get
-up a dinner,” observed Loren.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“They were not too mean; they couldn’t do
-it. The two or three dollars that you speak of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_61'>61</span>so lightly, were a large sum in the eyes of boys
-whose fathers gain a livelihood by working by
-the day, and you ought to have exercised a
-little common sense in your dealings with them.
-If it were necessary that you should have the
-dinner or starve, why did you not pay for it
-yourselves, and not ask those poor boys to
-‘chip in’, as you term it? There’s the high
-school,” said Mr. Farnsworth, pointing with
-his cane to an imposing building, standing in
-the midst of extensive and well-kept grounds
-which occupied one whole block of the village
-property.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“That’s my great objection to Mount Airy,”
-said Ralph, shaking his fist at the school house.
-“Our teacher told us one day last term that
-the binomial theorem is just the same in China
-and Brazil that it is in New London, so I suppose
-it must be the same up here. Fine scenery
-around a school house doesn’t make the lessons
-inside any easier.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“You’re right there,” growled Tom, who
-was thinking of those Orations of Cicero to
-which he would have to devote his attention
-next term, “I’d much rather go fishing.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'><span class='pageno' id='Page_62'>62</span>The boys reached the park long before the
-procession did, and took up a position near the
-pagoda in which the president of the village
-and the trustees were to stand while the line
-passed in review. When it arrived, the band
-led the way around the park until it met the
-advancing column; then it turned inside of it
-and went around again, and thus the whole
-line, with the exception of the Toxophilites,
-was wound up like a coil. The archers kept
-straight ahead, the boys in the ranks carrying
-arms, and the captain saluting by bringing his
-bow to a position that somewhat resembled the
-“secure arms” of the tactics, until they
-reached a clear space at the other end of the
-park which had been reserved on purpose for
-them. There they halted, and, when the firemen
-had broken ranks, and the soldiers had been
-brought to parade rest, their commanding officer
-put them through the manual of arms and
-some intricate evolutions in the school of the
-company, giving his orders to the bugler who
-stood beside him, and not to the company
-itself. Ralph and Loren were delighted with
-every thing they saw, and had many words of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_63'>63</span>praise to bestow upon the young bowmen; but
-Tom was silent and sullen. He didn’t like to
-hear so much cheering when none of it was
-intended for him. When he was engaged in a
-game of ball he always flew into a passion if he
-made an error, or if any of the other side made
-a play that called forth applause from the spectators.
-He was angry now; but it would have
-puzzled a sensible boy to tell what reason he
-had for it.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“That captain, or whatever you call him—”
-began Loren.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Master bowman,” said his father.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Well, he is a nobby fellow, and that bugler
-looks gorgeous in his green uniform with its
-white facings,” continued Loren. “I wonder
-who they are, any way?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Why don’t you go and inquire?” asked
-Mr. Farnsworth.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“They wouldn’t speak to you,” snarled
-Tom. “They’re little upstarts; I can tell that
-from here by the frills they throw on.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Loren and his brother didn’t care if they
-were. The signs seemed to indicate that they
-were coming to Mount Airy to live, and if that
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_64'>64</span>was the case, they wanted to know something
-about the boys they would have for their
-associates. So as soon as the drill was brought
-to an end and the ranks were broken, they set
-out to scrape an acquaintance with the
-master bowman and bugler, Tom following
-them with rather a listless, indifferent air.
-But in reality he was as eager as his cousins
-were. Would he not be willing to give something
-handsome if he could make himself the
-leader of a select band like that?</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_65'>65</span>
- <h2 class='c011'>CHAPTER IV. <br /> <br /><span class='small'>THE MOUNT AIRY TOXOPHILITES.</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_3_0_5 c018'>LOREN and Ralph Farnsworth, in spite
-of Tom’s predictions to the contrary,
-had no trouble in scraping an acquaintance
-with the first bowman they met. It was Arthur
-Hastings, the secretary of the company and one
-of the best shots in it. They drew his attention
-by touching their hats to him as he passed
-(that is, the brothers did, Tom being in too bad
-humor to be civil), and Arthur seeing that they
-desired to speak to him, stopped and opened
-the conversation himself.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I know almost every stranger here this
-summer, but I don’t remember to have seen you
-two before,” said he, pulling off his white
-gloves and extending a hand to each of them.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“We came on the early morning train,”
-replied Ralph. “We were just in time to witness
-your parade, which I assure you was
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_66'>66</span>something we did not expect to see up here in
-the woods. You bowmen are bully soldiers.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Thank you,” said Arthur, raising his hand
-to his hat in response to Tom’s very slight nod.
-“There must be something in what you say,
-for every one who comes up here tells us the
-same. The truth is, we ought to be proficient.
-We have been under the strictest kind of a
-drill-master, and have done plenty of hard
-work since our organization two years ago.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“What first put the idea into your heads?”
-inquired Loren. “You got it out of your
-history, didn’t you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“And if you did, why don’t you dress up
-like Indians and adopt their system of tactics?”
-chimed in Tom, who for the moment forgot
-that he had resolved that he would not have a
-word to say to any of the bowmen. “I have
-read that the Sioux have a drill of their own
-which is so very bewildering that our best
-troops can’t stand against it. It seems to me
-that you make hard work of something that
-might, under different management, be made
-to yield you any amount of pleasure.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“We are very well satisfied with the way
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_67'>67</span>our affairs are managed,” answered Arthur,
-who did not quite like the tone in which Tom
-uttered these words. “You must know that
-we are not copying the aborigines, but the
-Merry Bowmen of Robin Hood’s time. Of
-course we have to work, for if we didn’t we
-couldn’t give exhibition drills; but somehow
-we see plenty of fun with it all. The idea was
-suggested to us, not by our histories, but by
-an old man who lives up here in the woods,”
-added Arthur, turning to Loren, at the same
-time jerking his thumb over his shoulder and
-nodding his head toward an indefinite point of
-the compass. If he intended by these motions
-to give his auditors an idea of the direction in
-which the old man referred to lived, he failed
-completely. “He has seen better days. He
-used to belong to an archery club in his own
-country—that’s England, you know—and I tell
-you he is a boss shot. He makes a very good
-living with his bow now; but he is so much
-ashamed of the accomplishment—”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Excuse me,” interrupted Loren. “I
-don’t see why he should be ashamed of it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Neither do I,” said Arthur. “But you see,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_68'>68</span>there are very few people in this country who
-take any interest in archery, and sportsmen,
-as a general thing, look upon the long bow as a
-toy; but they always change their minds when
-they see what it can be made to do in the hands
-of an expert. Now take those two boys, for
-example,” added Arthur, directing Loren’s
-attention to the master bowman and his bugler.
-“It isn’t every rifle shot who can break as many
-glass balls in the air as they can.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Who are they?” inquired Tom. “We
-noticed them particularly during the drill.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“They are Wayring and Sheldon. Would
-you like to know them? They’re good fellows.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Arthur looked at Tom as he said this, but
-Tom didn’t act as though he heard him. He
-wasn’t anxious to make the acquaintance of
-boys who could beat him at any thing, but his
-cousins were not so mean spirited.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Certainly we would,” replied Ralph. “It
-looks now as though we were coming here to
-live; and if we do, we should like to know
-something about the boys into whose company
-we shall be thrown.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'><span class='pageno' id='Page_69'>69</span>It would seem from this that Ralph took it
-for granted that he and his brother and cousin
-would get into the company without the least
-trouble, and he was somewhat surprised because
-Arthur did not offer to take in their names at
-the very next meeting; but he did not even ask
-them what their names were. He led them to
-the place where the master bowman and his
-bugler were standing in the midst of a party of
-their friends, and, as soon as the opportunity
-was presented, introduced them as visitors who
-thought it possible that they might one day
-become permanent residents of the village.
-Then he excused himself and went off to hunt
-up one of the girls with green and white badges,
-who were carrying little buckets of lemonade
-around among the thirsty firemen and soldiers.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Tom and his cousins found the young archers
-to be very pleasant and agreeable fellows, but
-a trifle too independent to suit them. They
-did not seem to think that Tom was better than
-any other boy because his father was a banker,
-and owned a yacht in which he talked of going
-to Florida during the coming winter, and
-neither did they ask him and his cousins to step
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_70'>70</span>up to the armory when they fell into ranks and
-marched up to put away their bows and
-quivers. They left them standing in the park,
-as they did scores of others who had been talking
-to them, and that was a slight that Tom
-said he would not soon forget.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“You are altogether too touchy,” said Loren,
-with some impatience in his tones. “You
-appear to think that every boy who lives outside
-the city limits must, of necessity, be a
-greenhorn. These fellows know as much about
-New London as we do.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“When I become a member of that company,
-I shall use my best endeavors to bring about a
-different state of affairs,” said Tom, decidedly.
-“If they are taking pattern after Robin Hood,
-why don’t they pass their time as he and his
-men did, lounging about in the greenwood under
-the shade of the trees, instead of parading
-through the streets on a hot day like this? I
-don’t see any fun in that.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Nevertheless, before he had passed a week in
-Mount Airy, Tom Bigden decided that it was
-just such a place as he had always thought he
-should like to live in, and his cousins came to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_71'>71</span>the same conclusion. So did their fathers and
-mothers; and so it came about that a couple of
-Mr. Wayring’s handsome cottages, on the other
-side of the lake, were rented until such time as
-Mr. Farnsworth and his brother-in-law could
-erect houses on the grounds they had leased in
-the village.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Tom and his cousins lost no time in getting
-ready to enjoy themselves. Before another
-week had passed away, they had the finest sail
-and row boats, and the most expensive canoes
-on the lake; and in anticipation of their immediate
-admittance to the ranks of the Toxophilites,
-they sent for a supply of bows and
-arrows and ordered uniforms of their tailor.
-But the old saying, that there’s many a slip,
-held good in their case; and this was the way
-they found it out:</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>One afternoon they and their parents
-were invited to a lawn party, at which the
-Toxophilites, girls as well as boys, appeared
-in force and in uniform, the girls wearing
-white dresses, green sashes and badges,
-and light straw hats, turned up at the side
-and fastened by a tiny silver arrow, which, at
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_72'>72</span>the same time, held in place the long black
-plume of the company. Tom declared that
-they looked stunning; and when he saw how
-they sent their arrows into the target, hitting
-the gold almost as often as they missed it, and
-played croquet and skipped about the lawn
-tennis ground, he added that he had never
-been to such a party before, nor seen handsomer
-girls. He was going to apply for admission
-to the club, and he wasn’t going to waste
-any time in doing it, either. With this object
-in view, he hurried off to find Arthur Hastings.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I don’t wonder that you fellows are happy
-here,” was the way in which he began the conversation.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Yes, I suppose we see as much pleasure as
-falls to the lot of most people,” answered
-Arthur, “but we have any amount of hard
-work as well.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I never see you do any,” said Tom.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“That’s because you are not acquainted
-with us or our ways. I drilled until after ten
-o’clock last night, and spent this forenoon in
-working in the garden and wrestling with my
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_73'>73</span>geometry; getting ready for next term you
-know.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Do you study and work during vacation?”
-exclaimed Tom, who had never heard of such
-a piece of foolishness before.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Of course I do; we all do.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I’m glad that I haven’t such parents as you
-seem to have,” said Tom, rudely.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Our parents have nothing whatever to do
-with it. It’s the rule of the company.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“That you shall work during vacation?”
-cried Tom.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“That we shall keep busy at something—yes.
-We are told that an idle brain is the workshop
-of a certain old chap who shall be nameless,
-but we go further, and hold that there is no
-such thing as an idle brain. It is at work all
-the time during our waking hours, and sometimes
-when we are asleep—dreams, you know—and
-if it is not busy with good things, it is
-ready to take in bad ones. Have you seen any
-boys loafing around the corners since you have
-been here? Then you can bet your bottom
-dollar that they didn’t belong to us.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Well, when I get to be a member of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_74'>74</span>company, I shall vote down all such rules as
-that,” said Tom to himself. “A fellow needs
-a little time to be lazy, and I shall take it, too,
-without asking any body’s consent.” Then
-aloud he asked, as if the thought had just
-occurred to him: “By the way, when do you
-hold your next meeting?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Thursday night.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Well, take in our names, will you? Mine
-and my cousins’.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I should be glad to oblige you, but I can’t
-do it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“You can’t do it?” said Tom, who was angry
-in an instant. “Why not, I’d like to know?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“There are two reasons. In the first place,
-you have not been here long enough—we don’t
-know any thing about you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“If that isn’t a little ahead of any thing I
-ever heard of I wouldn’t say so!” exclaimed
-Tom, as soon as his rage would permit him to
-speak. “My father is—”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“We don’t care who or what your father is;
-we must know what <i>you</i> are. In the second
-place, our membership is limited, and the boys’
-roster is full.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'><span class='pageno' id='Page_75'>75</span>“Couldn’t you suspend the rules for
-once?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“That’s no rule. It is a part of the constitution.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Well, couldn’t you amend it?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“No, we couldn’t. It has been tried in the
-case of one of the best fellows in town—or,
-rather, he was one of the best until he found
-that he couldn’t wind eighty boys and girls
-around his finger, and then he turned against
-us and stands ready to-day to do us all the
-harm he can.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“And you will find, to your cost, that my
-cousins and I will do the same thing,” thought
-Tom, and it was all he could do to keep from
-uttering the words aloud. “Things have come
-to a pretty pass when a lot of Yahoos can make
-gentlemen knuckle to them. Who is this
-boy?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“His name is Prime; but I tell you, as a
-friend, that you must not have any thing to do
-with him if you want to get into the company.
-There are half a dozen of our fellows going
-away this fall, and then, if you feel like it, you
-can make a try for membership. Perhaps I
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_76'>76</span>shall be able to help you to the extent of one
-vote, though I can’t promise to do so.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“How about the yacht and canoe clubs?”
-said Tom, with something like a sneer in his
-tones. “No doubt they are full, too.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Oh, no, they’re not. Any good fellow who
-owns a boat or who intends to get one, can
-come in there. Are you and your cousins
-good swimmers? Then why don’t you join us
-and enter for the up-set race that will come off
-next month.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I don’t know what kind of a race that
-is.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“It’ll not take long to tell you. You see
-the contestants come out clad in some light
-stuff that won’t hold much water, and when
-they are well started in the race, a signal is
-given, generally the blast of a bugle, whereupon
-each fellow must overturn his boat, climb
-into her again and go ahead as if nothing had
-happened. The one who crosses the line first,
-is of course the winner.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Who among you is the best at that kind
-of a race?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Well,” replied Arthur, with some hesitation,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_77'>77</span>“it is nip and tuck between Wayring,
-Sheldon and me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I expected as much,” said Tom, to himself.
-“Wayring, Sheldon and Hastings are better
-than the rest at every thing. I shall enter for
-that or some other race, and if I don’t take the
-conceit out of all of you, I shall never forgive
-myself. Then it would not be of any use for
-me to try to get into the Toxophilites?” he
-said, aloud.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Not the slightest. I’ll tip you the wink
-when there is an opening, and you can apply
-or not, just as you think best. We never ask
-any body to join us.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“But you asked me to join the canoe and
-yacht clubs.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I know it, and I had a right to. The three
-organizations are governed by entirely different
-rules. There’s the bugle,” said Arthur, catching
-up his bow which lay on the rustic bench
-on which he and Tom had been sitting during
-this conversation. “I must go and shoot as
-soon as I can find my girl. Come on, and see
-us punch the gold three times out of five.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I can’t,” replied Tom. “I must hunt up
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_78'>78</span>the hostess, tell her I have had a very pleasant
-time and all that, and bid her good-by. I have
-another engagement.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>This was not quite in accordance with the
-facts of the case. Tom had no other engagement,
-but he wanted to go off by himself,
-or in company with Loren and Ralph, and give
-full vent to his feelings of disappointment and
-rage. He shook his fist at Arthur when the
-latter turned his back and hurried away, and
-it would have afforded him infinite satisfaction
-if he could have followed him up and knocked
-him down. He found his cousins after a while,
-and although they stood in the midst of a jolly
-group and were laughing gaily, and appeared
-to be enjoying themselves, Tom was well enough
-acquainted with them to tell at a glance that
-they were as angry as he was.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Sorry to break in upon so pleasant a gathering
-as this one seems to be,” said Tom, approaching
-the group, one of whom was the
-young lady in whose honor the party was given,
-“but our time is up.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Why, Mr. Bigden, you don’t mean to say
-that you are going away so soon, and before
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_79'>79</span>supper, too?” exclaimed the young lady, who
-looked so charming in her neat uniform that
-Tom had half a mind to go back and pound
-Arthur Hastings for telling him that he couldn’t
-become a Toxophilite at once.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Must—can’t be helped,” answered Tom,
-giving his cousins a look which they understood.
-“We are indebted to you for a very
-pleasant afternoon, Miss Arden.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I don’t believe you have enjoyed yourselves
-one bit,” exclaimed the fair archer. “If you
-have, why do you go away so early? The next
-time you attend one of our lawn parties, be
-sure and arrange your business so that your
-other engagements can wait.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>After a little more badinage of this sort, Tom
-and his cousins lifted their hats and walked off.
-As soon as the front gate had closed behind
-them, the expression on their faces changed as
-if by magic, and the three boys turned toward
-one another with clenched fists and flashing
-eyes. After each one had glared savagely at
-his neighbor as if he were going to strike him,
-they all put their hands in their pockets and
-moved away. Tom was the first to speak.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'><span class='pageno' id='Page_80'>80</span>“Now that I look back at it, I don’t see how
-I kept my hands off that Hastings boy while
-he was talking so insolently to me,” said Tom.
-“He told me that he didn’t care who or what
-my father was, but I couldn’t get into the
-archery club, and that was all there was about
-it. They must stick to their constitution, no
-matter if the world goes to pieces on account of
-their obstinacy. He asked me to join the canoe
-and yacht clubs, but said they never asked
-any body to apply for admission to the Toxophilites.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I guess Ralph and I know just what he
-said to you first and last,” remarked Loren,
-“for Sheldon talked to us in about the same
-way. We are going to enter for the upset
-race.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I thought you would,” answered Tom,
-“and so I made up my mind to go in too.
-We’ll make it our business to see that neither
-Sheldon nor Wayring wins that or any other
-race. If we find that we can’t beat them by
-fair means, and I have an idea that I can
-paddle a boat about as fast as the next boy,
-although I never got into one until last week,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_81'>81</span>we’ll foul them, and sink their boats so deep
-that they will never come up again.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Loren and I talked that matter over, and
-resolved upon the same thing,” said Ralph.
-“Did Hastings tell you any thing about a
-George Prime who is down on them because
-they would not take his name before the
-Toxophilites? Sheldon told us to give him a
-wide berth, but Loren and I thought we would
-do as we pleased about that.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“That’s just what I thought,” answered
-Tom. “I think it would be a good plan to
-hunt him up the very first thing we do. If he
-has reason to dislike Wayring and his friends,
-we might induce him to strike hands with us.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“That was our idea,” said Ralph. “It
-can’t be possible that Prime is the only boy in
-this village who does not like Wayring and the
-rest, and if we find them to be the right sort,
-and can raise enough of them, what’s the
-reason we can’t get up a club of our own?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“That’s another idea,” said Tom, who was
-delighted with it. “I wish I had thought to
-ask Hastings where Prime lives.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I know where his father’s drug-store is, for
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_82'>82</span>I saw the sign over the door,” said Loren.
-“Let’s go down there and get a cigar, and trust
-to our wits to learn something about him.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>The others agreeing to this proposition,
-Loren led the way to the drug-store, and the
-three stopped in front of the show-case near
-the door in which the cigars were kept.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“That’s Prime, and I know it,” whispered
-Tom, as a dashing young fellow, who was
-seated at the further end of the store reading a
-paper, came up to attend to their wants. “He
-looks to me like a chap who isn’t in the habit
-of allowing himself to be imposed upon, and
-that’s the sort we want to run with.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“See-gahs? Yes, sir,” said the clerk.
-“Being from the city, you want the best, of
-course. There you are, sir. Genuine imported.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“How do you know that we are from the
-city?” inquired Loren, as he made a selection
-from the box that was placed on the show-case.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Because I was a city boy myself, until
-father took it into his head that he wanted to
-spend a summer at Mount Airy,” replied the
-clerk. “That was a bad move for me, for we
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_83'>83</span>have been here ever since. Besides, in a little
-place like this, every body knows more about
-your business than you do yourself. I know
-who you are, and where you came from, and
-all about it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Then it was a bad change for you, was it?”
-said Ralph. “You don’t like to live here?
-Neither do we.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I don’t blame you,” said the clerk.
-“Wait until you get acquainted with some of
-these old-timers and find out what an exclusive
-lot they are, and you will dislike it worse than
-you do now. There are a few of them, especially
-the Toxophilites, as they call themselves,
-who try to monopolize all the fun there is
-going.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Why don’t you join them?” asked Tom.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Because they won’t let me—that’s why.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Then you must be George Prime.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“That’s my name, and you are Tom Bigden,
-and you two are Loren and Ralph Farnsworth.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“You’ve hit it,” answered Tom. “They
-wouldn’t take us in either. They told us so
-not more than an hour ago. Why didn’t you
-go to the party?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'><span class='pageno' id='Page_84'>84</span>“Because they didn’t invite me,” said Prime,
-angrily. “I don’t get invitations to any thing
-any more. I showed rather too much spirit to
-suit them, and so they dropped me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Probably they will do the same by us,”
-said Loren. “We have always been in the
-habit of doing as we pleased, and we don’t
-intend to change our mode of life for the sake
-of getting into an archery club that makes its
-members drill until ten o’clock when they
-might see more fun in playing billiards. There
-will be some vacancies this fall, and then we
-shall make another attempt to get in.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Is that what you have made up your minds
-to? Well, now, look here.” As Prime said
-this, he came out from behind the counter and
-stood in the open door, looking up and down
-the street. “You must begin by doing your
-smoking in secret,” he continued, as he came
-back and motioned to the boys to follow him
-toward the rear of the store.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Do you mean to say that the Toxophilites
-look with disfavor upon a good cigar?”
-demanded Tom.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I do, indeed. You mustn’t use tobacco in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_85'>85</span>any form, and you must be temperate in all
-things—in eating, drinking and talking.
-They’ll fine you if you use any language while
-you are out with your companions, that you
-wouldn’t use if your mother or sister was
-present. Now sit down here, and if you see
-any body coming, you can put your cigars out
-of sight.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“But we don’t know all the members of the
-club,” said Loren.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“No difference. Don’t let any one see you
-with a weed in your mouth. If you do, good-by
-to all your chances of being a Toxophilite.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Why, it’s the meanest little town I ever
-heard of!” exclaimed Ralph, who was greatly
-surprised as well as disgusted. “I didn’t suppose
-that there were any such boys in this
-wicked world. I thought they all lived in
-Utopia.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“So did I, until I found some of them right
-here in Mount Airy,” answered Prime. “The
-girls are at the bottom of it—you know that
-they are never easy unless they are kicking up
-a row of some kind—and if I had been a member
-of the club when it was organized, wouldn’t
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_86'>86</span>I have worked hard to keep them out? I was
-very anxious to get into it once, but I don’t
-believe I care to be one of them now.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Tom and his cousins began to feel the same
-way.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_87'>87</span>
- <h2 class='c011'>CHAPTER V. <br /> <br /><span class='small'>TOM INTERVIEWS THE SQUATTER.</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_0_5 c018'>“I DON’T believe I care to be one of them
-now,” repeated Prime, who, being a
-pretty good judge of character, knew that he
-ran no risk in speaking freely in the presence of
-the three boys before him. “I wish I could see
-their old organization knocked higher than the
-moon; or else I wish that a few more new fellows
-of the right sort would come in, so that
-we could have a club of our own.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I was about to suggest that very thing,”
-said Tom. “It can’t be possible that Wayring
-and his cronies have got every boy in town under
-their thumbs.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Not by a long shot!” exclaimed Prime.
-“There are ten or a dozen besides myself who
-do not bow to them.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“And my cousins and I add three to the
-number,” replied Tom. “That’s enough for a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_88'>88</span>hunting club. But we will talk about that
-at some future time. Do you belong to the
-other clubs?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Prime replied that he did, adding that any
-body could get into them, for there was no limit
-to the membership.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“The canoe and yacht clubs are getting large
-enough to be unwieldy,” said he. “I know of
-a good many boys who are not satisfied with
-the way things are managed, and it wouldn’t
-surprise me at all if there should be a split some
-day. There are a few of us who are talking it
-up as fast as we can. We are getting tired of
-seeing the same old tickets elected every year,
-and think it high time we had a change.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Is Wayring much of a canoeist?” asked
-Tom.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Indeed, he is. He can walk away from any
-one around here, I am sorry to say, and in fact,
-there’s hardly any thing that boy can’t do. I
-would give almost any thing to see him beaten,
-and I—say!” exclaimed Prime, a bright idea
-striking him. “Are you fellows canoeists?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“My cousins are; but I can’t say as much
-for myself,” answered Tom. “I have always
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_89'>89</span>been called a very fair sculler, and after I learn
-how to balance a canoe, I know I have muscle
-enough to make her get through the water.
-Hastings led me to believe that it was a tight
-squeak between Wayring, Sheldon and himself.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Aw!” said Prime, in a tone of disgust.
-“You let Hastings alone for shoving in a good
-word for himself as often as the opportunity
-offers. He never won the first prize in his life.
-Joe Wayring walks away with it every time.
-Suppose you fellows come in and see if you
-can’t make Joe lower his broad pennant for a
-while. If you find that you can’t beat him—and,
-although I am no friend of his, I tell you
-plainly that it will be the hardest piece of work
-you ever undertook—you might get in his way
-and let him foul you, you know. I tried my
-level best to do it last year, but he was too
-smart for me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>By this time it was plain to all the boys that
-they understood one another perfectly. The
-truth of the matter was, that Joe Wayring and
-some of his particular friends had won too
-many honors, and made themselves altogether
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_90'>90</span>too popular in the community. These boys
-were angry about it, because they wanted to be
-first in every thing themselves. Tom Bigden
-and his cousins had fully intended to take
-Mount Airy by storm, and to establish themselves
-at once as leaders among their new
-acquaintances; and their failure to accomplish
-their object bewildered as well as enraged them.
-If they had known how to go about it, they
-would have disgraced Joe Wayring before he
-saw the sun rise again. So would George
-Prime. Of course they did not say it in so
-many words, but that was what each boy told
-himself.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Before Tom and his cousins left the store they
-entered into an alliance with Prime, both offensive
-and defensive, and talked over various plans
-for annoying the boys who had unwittingly
-incurred their displeasure. If they could not
-injure Joe and his friends in any other way,
-they could put them to some trouble and
-expense, and this they resolved to do the very
-first good chance they got. They did not decide
-upon any particular course of action, but Prime
-said that if Tom and his cousins would come
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_91'>91</span>to the store the next day, he would introduce
-them to a lot of good fellows who did not like
-Joe and his “clique” any too well, and who
-would be glad to be revenged upon them for
-some real or imaginary grievance.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I see very clearly that there is a good deal of
-feeling against Wayring and his followers, and
-if we handle it rightly we can make it work to
-our advantage,” remarked Tom, as he and his
-cousins walked slowly homeward. “It is a
-wonder to me that something hasn’t been done
-to him before this time. What they lack is a
-leader—some one to propose a plan and go
-ahead with it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Well, they have found him at last—three
-of him,” said Loren. “I always was opposed
-to living in a little country town, because you
-invariably find fellows there who think they
-know more than any body else—”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“And plenty of others who are willing to
-uphold them in that belief,” chimed in Ralph.
-“I say, don’t let’s have any thing to do with the
-Toxophilites. Let’s get up a club of our own
-and manage it as we see proper.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I am in favor of that,” replied Tom.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_92'>92</span>“We’ll have no fines and drills, for one thing,
-and neither will we admit any girls who stick
-up their noses at a good cigar. But there is
-one thing we must not forget to do when we
-meet those fellows at the store to-morrow. If
-we decide upon any thing, we must be careful
-how we carry it out. If we are foolish enough
-to let Joe and the rest know that we are down
-on them, and that we intend to do them all the
-injury we can, they will make things very
-unpleasant for us. We don’t want them to
-serve us as they have served Prime, and read
-us entirely out of their good books—”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“And that is just what they will do if they
-see us in Prime’s company,” interrupted Loren.
-“Sheldon said so.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“There is no need that they should ever see
-us in his company,” replied Tom. “Our best
-plan would be to hold all our meetings in
-secret—”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“And keep our organization, if we have any,
-a secret,” chimed in Ralph.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“That’s the idea,” said Tom. “Then we
-can do as much damage as we please in the
-way of setting boats adrift, and so on, and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_93'>93</span>Joe and his followers will be at loss to know
-where the annoyance comes from. We mustn’t
-forget to speak to the fellows about that to-morrow.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Unfortunately an incident happened that
-very afternoon which made it comparatively
-easy for the three schemers to carry out the
-plans they proposed. It was, in fact, a fight
-between a squatter and the Mount Airy
-authorities, to whom he had made himself
-obnoxious. Tom and his cousins were
-witnesses of the preliminary skirmish, that is,
-the serving of the notice of ejectment, and
-when they heard a full report of the matter
-from one of the boys to whom Prime introduced
-them, their delight was almost unbounded.
-Tom danced a horn-pipe in the excess of his
-joy, and repeatedly declared that nothing
-could have happened that was so well calculated
-to further their designs. It came about
-in this way:</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Mr. Wayring’s summer cottages were all
-located on the opposite shore of the lake. The
-road that led to them ran down the hill,
-around the foot of the lake, and through a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_94'>94</span>little settlement which bore the euphonious
-name of “Stumptown.” Why this name had
-been given to it no one seemed to know. It
-certainly was not appropriate, for there was
-not a stump to be seen in any of its well-cultivated
-gardens, from which the Mount Airy
-and Lambert Houses drew their supplies of
-vegetables and small fruits.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>The male members of this little community
-were licensed guides and boatmen—the only
-ones, in fact, who had the right to serve the guests
-of the hotels in that capacity. They lived on
-Mr. Wayring’s land, and in neat little cottages
-which the liberal owner had erected for their
-especial benefit. When the season was over
-and the guests returned to their homes in the
-city, these men hunted and trapped in the
-mountains, and entertained the village boys,
-with whom they were great favorites, and who
-often invaded their humble abodes during the
-long winter evenings, with thrilling and amusing
-tales of life in the wilderness. They taught
-the boys woodcraft, and made themselves so
-useful in other ways, that the young Nimrods
-of the village had never been able to decide
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_95'>95</span>how they could manage to get on without
-them.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Into this settlement there came one day an
-unkempt man, with a red nose and a very
-forbidding face, who brought with him a large
-punt, into which he had crowded all his
-worldly treasures, including his wife and two
-stalwart sons, not one of whom was one whit
-more prepossessing than the husband and
-father. Without saying a word to any body
-the red-nosed man, who answered to the name of
-Matt Coyle, took possession of a piece of ground
-that had been cleared but not fenced in, and
-began the erection of a shanty with boards
-which formed a part of the punt’s cargo.
-While he and his sons were at work Mr. Hastings,
-who was one of the village trustees, rode
-by. He did not at all like the appearance of the
-new-comers, but he had nothing to say to them.
-There was room for more guides and boatmen,
-and Matt and his family might turn out
-better than they looked. If they proved to be
-honest, industrious people who were willing to
-work for a living, Mr. Hastings was perfectly
-willing that they should stay, and he knew
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_96'>96</span>that Mr. Wayring would provide a house and
-garden for them. If they proved to be objectionable
-in any way, it would be an easy
-matter to get rid of them.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Shortly after Mr. Hastings passed out of
-sight Matt Coyle wanted a drink; and he
-found it—not in the lake, or in the ice-cold
-spring from which the guides obtained their
-supply of water, but in a jug which he fished
-out from a lot of miscellaneous rubbish in the
-punt. After he had quenched his thirst he
-passed the jug over to his wife and boys, the
-whole proceeding being witnessed by Nat
-Clark, the oldest man and best guide and boatman
-in the settlement, who was getting his
-skiff ready to take out a fishing party from
-one of the hotels.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Look a yer, friend,” said Nat. “What you
-got into that there jug o’ your’n?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“The best kind o’ whisky,” answered Matt
-Coyle, cheerfully. “An’ I’ve got as much as
-half a bar’l more in the punt. Want a drop?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Not much,” replied Nat, emphatically.
-“An’ if you’re goin’ to stay about yer, you’d
-best knock in the head of that there bar’l an’
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_97'>97</span>smash that there jug without wastin’ no
-time.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“What fur?” demanded the red-nosed man,
-who was very much surprised.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“’Cause why, it’s agin the law fur stuff of
-that kind to be brung into these yer grounds.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Who made that there law?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“The trustees. You’d best do as I tell you,
-’cause if they find out that you’ve got it, they’ll
-spill the last drop of it fur you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“They will, eh?” exclaimed Matt. “I’d
-like to see ’em try it on. They’d better not
-try to boss me, ’cause me an’ my boys have
-got rifles into the punt, an’ we know how to
-use ’em too. Them there trustees ain’t got
-no more right to say what I shall drink than
-they have to say what I shall eat. Besides,
-how are they goin’ to find out that I have got
-it?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“<i>I</i> shan’t tell ’em, ’cause I’ve got enough to
-do without botherin’ my head with other
-folks’s business,” answered the guide, who
-knew by the tone in which they were uttered
-that there was a threat hidden under Matt
-Coyle’s last words. “But you can’t keep it
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_98'>98</span>hid from ’em, an’ they’re bound to find it
-out.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>And sure enough they did.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Having built his shanty and moved his
-household goods into it, Matt Coyle and his
-boys presented themselves before the manager
-of the Lambert House and demanded employment
-as guides and boatmen. That functionary,
-who did not know that there were any
-such disreputable looking people in town,
-gazed at them in surprise, and told them
-rather bluntly that he had nothing for them
-to do. The manager of the Mount Airy House
-told them the same thing. The hotel guides
-were neat in person and respectful in demeanor,
-and Matt and his boys were just the reverse.
-The managers would not insult their guests by
-giving them boats manned by such persons as
-they were. Matt and his boys were angry, of
-course, and after wasting the best portion of
-the day grumbling over their hard luck, they
-put the jug into the punt and started out on a
-fishing excursion. They came back with a good
-string, but the hotels and boarding-houses
-refused to purchase, because their guests, with
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_99'>99</span>the assistance of the guides, kept the tables
-well supplied.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Things went on in this way for a month,
-during which Matt and his boys had twice been
-thrust into the calaboose for attempting to
-“run the town” to suit themselves, and at the
-end of that time the trustees decided that he and
-his family were of no use in Mount Airy, and
-that they had better go somewhere else. On the
-day the lawn tennis party was held, a notice
-to Matt Coyle to pull down his shanty and
-vacate the ground of which he had taken
-unauthorized possession, was given to a constable,
-and Tom Bigden and his cousins happened
-along just as the officer had begun to read it
-to him. The boys knew that there was something
-going on in the settlement before they
-came within sight of it, for when the officer
-took the notice from his pocket the squatter
-declared that he would not have any papers
-served on him: and then followed a loud and
-angry altercation in which Matt Coyle and his
-family, the constable and half a dozen guides
-took part. Tom and his companions quickened
-their pace to a run, and arrived upon the scene
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_100'>100</span>just in time to hear the squatter say, in
-savage tones:</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I know what’s into that there paper, an’ I
-tell you agin that I won’t listen to it. Some
-of them rich fellers up there on the hill want
-me to go away from here, but I tell you I won’t
-do it. I’ve got just as much right—”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Keep still, can’t you?” shouted the officer.
-He had to shout in order to make himself heard,
-for Matt Coyle’s voice was almost as loud as
-a fog whistle. “I am going to read this
-notice whether you listen or not.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“No, I won’t listen,” roared the squatter,
-swinging his arms around his head. “I’ve
-got just as much right on this here ’arth as
-them rich folks up on the hill have. Where
-shall I go if I leave here?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I am sure I don’t care where you go,”
-replied the officer. “But you are not wanted
-in Mount Airy and you can’t stay.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“But I tell you I will stay, too,” shouted
-Matt, who was so nearly beside himself that
-Tom and his companions looked for nothing
-but to see him assault the officer. Probably he
-would have laid violent hands upon him had it
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_101'>101</span>not been for the presence of the stalwart guides,
-who stood close behind him. “I came here
-’cause I heared that there was plenty that an
-honest, hard-workin’ man could do.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“And so there is,” answered the constable,
-“but you are neither honest nor hard-working.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“They wouldn’t have me an’ my boys fur
-guides, ’cause we didn’t have no fine clothes to
-wear,” continued Matt. “An’ nuther would
-they buy the fish we ketched, ’cause—look a
-yer. You needn’t try to read that there paper
-to me, ’cause I won’t listen to it, I tell you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>But the constable, who had grown tired of
-talking, paid no attention to him. He read
-the notice, raising his voice as often as the
-squatter raised his; then Matt’s boys, and
-finally his wife came to his assistance, and
-this started the guides, who flourished their
-fists in the air and shouted until they were red
-in the face. Among them all they raised a
-fearful hubbub, and, of course, the officer’s
-voice was entirely inaudible; but he read
-calmly on, and when he had finished the document
-he walked away, followed by the guides,
-and leaving the squatter and his family in a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_102'>102</span>towering rage. Ralph and Loren were afraid
-of them now that the constable and his broad-shouldered
-backers were gone, but Tom looked
-serenely on, and could hardly resist the impulse
-to laugh outright when he saw Matt and his
-family stamping about, shaking their clenched
-hands in the air, and acting altogether as
-though they had taken leave of their senses.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Let’s get away from here,” whispered
-Loren, when Matt made a sudden and furious
-rush toward the shanty, and began trying to
-kick the side of it in with his heavy boots, just
-to show how mad he was, and to give his wife
-and boys some idea of the damage he would do
-if he only possessed the power.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“What’s your hurry?” asked Tom, indifferently.
-“Can’t you see how we can turn this
-to our advantage?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I can see that those people are in a terrible
-rage,” replied Loren, who was really alarmed,
-“and I am afraid they will turn on us
-next.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“There’s no danger of that,” answered Tom,
-confidently. “When men rant and rave in
-that way they are not to be feared for any thing
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_103'>103</span>they may do openly. They are the ones who
-work in secret.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>At this moment Matt Coyle became aware
-that he and his family were not alone—that
-there were three interested spectators close at
-hand; and as if to show Tom that he was mistaken
-in the opinions to which he had just
-given expression, Matt rushed toward him as
-if he meant to annihilate him, followed by all
-the members of his family, who shook their fists
-and shouted as if they were very angry indeed.
-Ralph and Loren shrank back, but Tom, who
-was nobody’s coward, stood his ground, looked
-squarely into Matt’s eyes, and coolly put his
-hands into his pockets.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“What you standin’ here gapin’ at?”
-demanded the squatter, fiercely. He had drawn
-back his fist with the full intention of striking
-Tom; but when he saw that the boy did not
-appear to be at all afraid of him, he thought
-better of it.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Why do you come at us in that savage
-way?” demanded Tom. “We don’t scare
-worth a cent. If you want to get even with
-any one for the shameful manner in which you
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_104'>104</span>have been treated, there’s the man you must
-go for,” he added, pointing toward the grove
-which concealed Mr. Wayring’s house from
-view. “He is entirely to blame for all the
-trouble you have had. Your cabin is on his
-land, and the trustees never would have thought
-of ordering you off if he had not complained of
-you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Matt and his family were greatly astonished.
-They thought that every one in town looked
-down on them because they were poor, but
-here was somebody who sympathized with
-them. Tom, quick to see that he had made an
-impression upon the angry squatter, went on
-to say—</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“If the people of this village should treat me
-as they have treated you, it would make a
-regular Ishmaelite of me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“What sort of a feller is that?” asked Matt.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Why, Ishmael was a hunter who lived a
-good many years ago,” answered Tom. “His
-hand was against every man, and every man’s
-hand was against him. He didn’t have a
-friend in the world.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“That’s me,” exclaimed Matt, who seemed
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_105'>105</span>pleased to know that there was, or had been,
-at least one other man in existence who knew
-what trouble was. “I ain’t got no friends
-nuther. These rich folks have tried to starve
-me since I came here, but they didn’t do it—not
-by a long shot.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Now, if I were situated as you are,” continued
-Tom, “I would draw a bee-line for
-Sherwin’s pond—”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Where’s that?” inquired Matt.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“It lies off that way, fifteen miles from the
-head of this lake,” replied Tom, indicating the
-direction with his finger, and wondering at the
-same time how Matt could have expected to
-render acceptable service as guide to the guests
-of the hotels, when he was not acquainted with
-the surrounding country. “There are about
-twelve miles of rapids in the stream that connects
-the lake with Sherwin’s pond, but your
-punt will go through easy enough if you can
-keep her clear of the rocks. As I was saying,
-I would go down there, put up my cabin and
-live in peace. I’d make more money, too,
-than I could by acting as guide and boatman.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'><span class='pageno' id='Page_106'>106</span>“How would you do it?” asked the squatter,
-whose anger was all gone now.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Simply by keeping my eyes open. You
-see those sail-boats anchored out there? Well,
-if one of them should happen to get adrift some
-stormy night, and come safely through the
-rapids into the pond and I should catch it, I
-wouldn’t give it up until I got a big reward for
-saving it, would I? Then again, the pointers,
-setters and hounds that hunt in these fields and
-woods very often get lost, and their owners are
-willing to give almost any price to get them
-back. I tell you,” exclaimed Tom, who knew
-by the gleam of intelligence that appeared on
-the swarthy faces before him that Matt and his
-family understood him perfectly, “I could
-make plenty of money by taking up my abode
-down there on the shore of that pond. If the
-things I have been talking about didn’t happen
-of themselves, I’d <i>make</i> them happen—do
-you see? Well, good-by, and remember that
-we three boys had no hand in driving you out
-of Mount Airy.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>So saying Tom walked off followed by his
-companions, while Matt and his family faced
-about and went toward their shanty.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_107'>107</span>
- <h2 class='c011'>CHAPTER VI. <br /> <br /><span class='small'>TOM’S PLANS ARE UPSET.</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_3_0_5 c018'>FOR a while the three boys walked along in
-silence, Loren and Ralph being too amazed
-to speak, and Tom pluming himself on having
-done something that would, in the end, bring
-Joe Wayring and some of the other boys he disliked
-no end of trouble. The fact that it might
-bring trouble to himself as well, never once
-entered his mind. Ralph was the first to
-speak.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I wouldn’t have had that thing happen for
-any thing,” said he.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“What thing?” demanded Tom.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Why, that interview with the squatter. I
-could see, by the expression on his face, that
-you put the very mischief into his head.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“And that was just what I meant to do,”
-replied Tom, who laughed heartily when he
-saw how troubled his cousins were over what
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_108'>108</span>he had said to Matt Coyle. “I saw he was
-thick-headed and needed help, and so I gave it
-to him.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“But don’t you know that it is dangerous to
-trust a man like that? If he gets into trouble
-through the suggestions you made to him—and
-he will just as surely as he attempts to act upon
-them—he’ll blow the whole thing.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“What in the world has he got to blow, and
-how have I trusted him?” asked Tom, rather
-sharply. “I didn’t tell him to turn the sail-boats
-adrift or to steal the guests’ hunting-dogs,
-did I? I simply told him what I should do if
-I were in his place.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“But you intended it for a suggestion, and
-hoped he would act upon it, didn’t you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Well, <i>that’s</i> a different matter,” answered
-Tom. “If he tries to revenge himself upon the
-citizens of Mount Airy for refusing to employ
-him or to buy his fish, and his efforts in that
-direction bring him into trouble, it will be his
-own fault. You and I want to see some of
-these conceited fellows, who think they know
-more and are better than any body else, brought
-down a peg or two, and if that squatter is
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_109'>109</span>accommodating enough to do the work for us—why,
-I say let him do it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Tom continued to talk in this way for a long
-time, and to such good purpose that when they
-reached home his cousins had forgotten their
-fears, and even expressed much interest and
-curiosity regarding the course of action that
-Matt Coyle might see fit to pursue. If he followed
-Tom’s suggestion and built his shanty
-on the shore of Sherwin’s pond, they might
-expect to hear from him before many days
-more had passed away.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I hope that if Matt does take it into his
-head to do any thing, he’ll run off Wayring’s
-sail-boat,” said Loren, gazing proudly at his
-own beautiful little sloop, which rode at her
-moorings in front of the boat-house. He had
-brought her up there on purpose to beat the
-<i>Young Republic</i>, which was said to be one of
-the swiftest boats on the lake; but the first time
-they came together under sail, the <i>Republic</i>
-had run away from her would-be rival with all
-ease, and it began to look as though the
-“Challenge Cup” would become Joe’s own
-property. He had won it twice, and if he won
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_110'>110</span>it again it would be his to keep. There were
-those in the village who didn’t want to see him
-get it. They had expected great things of the
-<i>Uncle Sam</i>—that was the name of Loren’s
-boat—and indeed she did look like a “flyer”;
-but when they witnessed the short race, which
-Joe Wayring purposely brought about one
-afternoon to test the <i>Uncle Sam’s</i> speed,
-they were much disappointed, and told one
-another that the cup was Joe’s for a certainty.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“If Matt will only take that boat, I’ll win
-the next regatta,” continued Loren. “If he
-does take her, Joe will never see her again, for
-she will be smashed to pieces in the rapids.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“If I could have my way, I should prefer to
-have Matt run off Joe’s Rob Roy, for then
-you and Ralph would stand a chance of winning
-some of the canoe races,” observed Tom.
-“But, of course, he couldn’t steal the canoe
-without breaking into the boat-house, and that
-would send him up for burglary.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Oh, no; he won’t do that,” exclaimed Loren.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Tom made no audible reply, but to himself
-he said:</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I don’t suppose he will; but <i>I</i> might do it,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_111'>111</span>and let Joe and the rest blame Matt Coyle for
-it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>There were still several hours of daylight left,
-and for want of some better way of passing the
-time, as well as to put themselves in trim for
-the coming canoe meet, Tom and his cousins decided
-that they would spend the rest of the afternoon
-on the water. Ever since their canoes
-came into their possession they had been assiduously
-practicing with their double paddles,
-and Tom, who was quick to learn any thing
-that required strength and skill for its execution,
-was fast becoming an expert canoeist. In
-a hurry-scurry or portage race he could beat
-either of his cousins, and on this particular
-afternoon he wanted to try an upset race, of
-which he had that day heard for the first
-time.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I saw an upset race rowed, or rather paddled,
-during the meet of the American Canoe
-Association at Lake George last summer, and I
-wonder that I didn’t think to speak of it,” said
-Ralph. “Well, better late than never. We
-will go up to the head of the lake, where no
-one will be likely to see us, and make our first
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_112'>112</span>trial. We are all good swimmers, and it seems
-to me that we ought to make good time. The
-secret lies in getting back into our canoes after
-we have upset them. If we can learn to do
-that easily and quickly, we will stand a chance
-of putting Joe Wayring to his mettle, even if
-we don’t beat him in the race.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>The boys went into the boat-house by a side
-door, and about ten minutes afterward the front
-door swung open, and two Shadow canoes
-and one Rob Roy were pushed into the water,
-and as many young fellows, dressed in light
-gymnastic suits, sprang into them and paddled
-up the lake. They met a few sailing parties,
-who waved their handkerchiefs and hats to
-them as they shot by, and at the end of half an
-hour reached a wide and deep cove near the
-head of the lake. This was their practice
-ground. They had chosen it for that purpose
-because it was a retired spot, and so effectually
-concealed by the long, wooded point at the
-entrance, that a fleet of boats might have sailed
-by without knowing that there was any one in
-the cove.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“We’ll start from this side and go across and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_113'>113</span>back, as we have done heretofore,” said Ralph,
-who led the way in his Rob Roy. “We’ll
-upset twice—once while we are going, and once
-while we are coming.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“But how does a fellow get into his canoe
-after he gets out of it?” inquired Tom.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“The rule is to climb in over the stern and
-work your way to your seat,” replied Ralph.
-“But at Lake George I saw some of the contestants
-throw themselves across the cock-pit
-and get in that way. We’ll try both plans,
-and each fellow can adopt the one that suits
-him best.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>When the boys had taken up their positions
-at safe distances from one another, Ralph gave
-a shrill whistle and away they started, the
-light Rob Roy taking the lead with Tom close
-behind. A few minutes’ work with the double
-paddles brought them to the middle of the cove,
-and then Ralph uttered another whistle. An
-instant later the three canoeists were in the
-water. The Rob Roy turned completely over
-and came right side up in a twinkling; and at
-the same moment Ralph’s head bobbed up close
-alongside. He threw himself across the cock-pit
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_114'>114</span>and climbed in with the greatest ease; and
-while bailing out the water with a tin basin
-that was tied to one of the timbers of the canoe
-so that it could not float away or fill and sink,
-he looked complacently at his companions, who
-were making desperate efforts to regain their
-seats by climbing over the sterns of their
-respective crafts.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Grab hold of the side of your canoe, draw
-yourself as far as you can out of the water,
-turn a hand-spring and land on your feet in the
-cock-pit,” shouted Ralph, addressing himself
-to no one in particular. “I saw that done at
-Lake George last summer by two or three different
-men.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Suppose you do it yourself and show us
-how,” answered Tom, who having at last succeeded
-in gaining the deck, was slowly working
-his way toward his seat; but instead of
-sitting astride of his canoe, as he ought to have
-done, he tried to make headway on his hands
-and knees in order to beat Loren, who was
-making all haste to reach the cock-pit of his
-own craft. In his eagerness Tom forgot how
-cranky his canoe was, and, neglecting to trim
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_115'>115</span>her properly, she turned over and let him down
-into the water again.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Ralph, of course, could have won the race
-very easily, but he lingered to watch the others,
-so that they all reached the turning point at
-the same moment. On the home stretch
-another upset occurred, and this time Tom and
-Loren did not waste as many minutes in getting
-back as they did before. They learned rapidly,
-and when half a dozen more races had been
-tried they became so expert that Ralph had
-little the advantage of them. By this time
-they began to think they had had enough of
-the water for one afternoon, so they pulled
-away for the boat house, Tom easily distancing
-his cousins, who tried in vain to keep up with
-him.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“This afternoon’s work has opened my eyes
-to a thing or two,” said Ralph, after they
-had changed their clothes and sponged out
-their canoes.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“So it has mine,” exclaimed Tom. “Let me
-talk first, and see how far my conclusions agree
-with yours. In the first place, you ought to win
-the upset race.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'><span class='pageno' id='Page_116'>116</span>“That’s my opinion,” said Loren. “He
-shall win it, too, if strategy is of any use.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“You are no sooner out of your canoe than
-you are back into it again,” continued Tom.
-“I am sure that neither Wayring, Hastings nor
-Sheldon can do better than that. I only wish
-you had a little more muscle.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“But I haven’t got it and can’t get it between
-this time and the race, and so you fellows will
-have to help me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Trust us for that,” answered Tom. “Then
-we’ll turn to and foul the best contestant in
-the hurry-scurry race, so that Loren can win
-that; and if you will lend me your Rob Roy,
-I’ll take my chances on carrying off the honors
-in the portage race.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“That is just the way I had planned it,”
-exclaimed Ralph. “We’ll show these fellows
-who think themselves so smart, that there are
-others in the world who are quite as smart as
-they are.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>It was a very pretty programme, no doubt,
-but it never occurred to Tom and his cousins
-that possibly the boys to whom Prime was to
-introduce them the next day, might not think
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_117'>117</span>favorably of it. There were those among them
-who had never been first in any race, although
-they were very expert canoeists; and it was not
-at all likely that they would consent to see
-these new-comers carry off the prizes for which
-they had contended ever since the club was
-organized.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Tom and his cousins were tired enough to
-rest now, and they found it lounging in their
-hammocks under the trees, and watching the
-boats that passed up and down the lake. They
-took another short run in their canoes by
-moonlight, spent the next forenoon sailing
-about in Loren’s sloop, and at one o’clock bent
-their steps toward the store where they were
-to meet George Prime and his friends. When
-they arrived at the place where Matt Coyle’s
-shanty stood the day before, they were surprised
-as well as delighted to find that it wasn’t
-there.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“He’s gone, as sure as the world,” cried
-Ralph. “Now we shall very soon know
-whether or not he has the pluck to do any
-thing to the men who would not give him a
-chance to earn an honest living.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'><span class='pageno' id='Page_118'>118</span>Tom laughed loudly.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Did you really think I was in earnest when
-I told Matt yesterday that I thought he had
-been shamefully treated?” said he, as soon as
-he could speak. “Why, Ralph, I thought
-you had more sense. I said that just to make
-him mad. If I succeeded, he will do the work
-that we would otherwise have been obliged to
-do ourselves.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>When they reached the drug-store they
-found Prime waiting for them. After he had
-treated them to a cigar apiece, he led them
-through a rear door into a store-room, where
-they discovered a dozen or more fellows perched
-upon boxes and barrels, each one puffing vigorously
-at a cigar or pipe. They were engaged in
-a very earnest conversation which they
-brought to a sudden close when the door
-opened.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Here they are,” exclaimed Prime, as the
-boys arose to their feet and took their pipes
-and cigars out of their mouths. “Tom Bigden,
-and his cousins Ralph and Loren Farnsworth,
-gentlemen. I believe you have met some of my
-friends before at lawn parties, ball matches and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_119'>119</span>the like,” added Prime, addressing himself to
-the new-comers.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I had the good fortune to meet them yesterday
-at Miss Arden’s,” said one of the boys,
-Frank Noble by name, advancing and shaking
-Tom and his cousins by the hand. “And I
-also had the pleasure of putting them to their
-speed one day last week, when I happened to
-catch them out on the lake with their canoes.
-You ought to make a good one,” he added,
-turning to Tom. “I could see by the way you
-made that Shadow spin through the water that
-you’ve got the muscle. All you want is practice.
-If you keep it up, you can go in next
-year with some hope of winning.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Tom was somewhat disconcerted by these
-words, and so were Ralph and Loren, if one
-might judge by the blank look on their faces.
-It was clear to them that there were others besides
-themselves who wanted prizes, and who
-looked to their friends to assist them in winning
-those prizes.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I thank you for your compliment and for
-your words of encouragement,” replied Tom,
-concealing his disappointment as well as he
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_120'>120</span>could, and turning to shake hands with another
-boy he had met at the lawn party on the previous
-day, “but I am going to win the portage
-race this year.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“And if I don’t come in first in the paddle
-race, it will not be because I do not try my
-level best,” added Loren.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“And I’m going to give somebody a pull for
-the upset race,” chimed in Ralph.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>It was now Noble’s turn to be astonished.
-He looked inquiringly at Prime, and Prime
-looked at Tom and his cousins. The latter saw
-very plainly that while they were laying their
-plans they had interfered with arrangements
-that had already been made by the boys by
-whom they were surrounded, but they were none
-the less determined to have their own way in
-the matter. Tom, who could hardly conceal
-the rage that had taken possession of him, resolved
-then and there that he would stick to
-his programme, no matter what promises he
-might be obliged to make to the contrary. He
-was like an Indian, in one respect: When he
-wanted a thing he wanted it with his whole
-heart, and he wanted it immediately. He
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_121'>121</span>wanted a prize to show to his city friends
-when they came to visit him, and he wanted
-the honors that prize would bring him.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Well—yes,” said Prime, who knew that
-Noble and the rest expected him to say something.
-“We’d like to have you win under
-different circumstances, but as it is, I think—you
-see—look here; I suppose you are with us
-against Wayring and the other fellows who
-have been walking off with the prizes every
-year since the club had an existence!”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Certainly I am,” answered Tom. “We all
-are, and we’re going to do the best we can to
-beat them, too. Didn’t you tell us no longer
-ago than yesterday that you wished we would
-come into the club and make Joe Wayring
-lower his broad pennant for a while?” he
-added, turning to Prime.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I did; but I have had opportunity to talk
-the matter over with my friends since then,
-and we have decided that those who have
-worked so long and so hard for the prizes,
-ought to have them in preference to any new-comers.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“All right,” said Tom, silencing by a look
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_122'>122</span>the words of indignant protest that arose to
-Ralph’s lips and Loren’s. “Who comes in for
-the paddle race?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I do,” said Noble.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“And who is put down for the upset race?”
-continued Tom.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Bob Lord said that he was; and a young
-fellow named Scott volunteered the information
-that his friends had decided that he ought to
-be allowed to win the portage race, because he
-came so near winning it fairly the year before.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Then it seems that my cousins and I are to
-be left out in the cold,” observed Tom, who
-was mad enough to break things.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“By no means,” some of the boys hastened
-to explain. “There are some handsome prizes
-offered for the sailing races, and we intend that
-you shall win them if we can make you do it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Don’t want ’em,” said Tom, gruffly.
-“Couldn’t enter for them if we did.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Why not?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Because we bought our canoes for exploring
-purposes, and not for sailing. We received
-such contradictory advice from those to whom
-we applied for information, that it was all we
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_123'>123</span>could do to make up our minds what kind of
-canoes to get; and when it came to the sails,
-we thought we would let them go until we
-could decide upon the style of rig we needed
-without asking any one’s advice. We may
-make up our minds that we don’t want any
-sails at all.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Oh, you mustn’t do that,” exclaimed Noble,
-“for if you do you will lose half the sport
-of canoeing. By the way, the club meets
-Saturday evening, and if you say so, I will
-take in your names.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I am obliged to you,” replied Tom. “But
-we had about half agreed with Wayring and
-Hastings to propose us for membership.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Ralph and Loren were greatly astonished,
-and Prime and his friends saw that they were.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I am sorry you did that,” said Noble.
-“Every one of us here present has pledged
-himself not to vote for any thing brought forward
-by Wayring and his crowd.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I did it before I knew what sort of boys
-they were,” said Tom, apologetically, “and I
-don’t like to go back from my word. Are you
-going to black-ball us for it?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'><span class='pageno' id='Page_124'>124</span>“By no means,” exclaimed all the boys, in
-a breath.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“We want you to help us carry out our programme,”
-added George Prime.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Well, all the help you will get from me
-won’t amount to much, you may be sure of
-that,” said Tom, to himself; and his cousins
-were so well acquainted with him that they
-could tell pretty nearly what he was thinking
-about.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Have you spoken to Wayring about proposing
-you for the yacht club?” asked Scott.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Tom, with unblushing mendacity, replied
-that he had.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I don’t believe the regatta will amount to
-much this year,” remarked one of the boys
-who had not spoken before. “If Matt Coyle
-carries out the threats he made yesterday,
-there won’t be any yachts to contend for the
-prizes. You heard about that, I suppose?”
-he added, turning to Tom and his cousins.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“We were present when a legal process of
-some kind was served on him yesterday, and
-we heard Matt say that he wouldn’t go away,”
-answered Loren. “But when we came around
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_125'>125</span>the foot of the lake a little while ago, we found
-that he had cleared out, taking his shanty
-with him.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“You saw the constable serve him with a
-notice to quit, did you!” exclaimed Noble.
-“Well, you missed the best part of it. You
-ought to have been there about three hours
-later, and witnessed the fight that took place
-between Matt and his family, and the officer
-and his posse. The old woman proved herself
-to be the best man in the lot. Matt evidently
-knew that an effort would be made to eject
-him by force, and his wife prepared for it by
-boiling a big kettle of water. When the constable,
-with a crowd of guides at his back, presented
-himself at the door, she opened on him
-with that hot water; and if you could have
-seen the stampede that followed, you would
-have laughed until your sides ached, as I
-did.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“You didn’t laugh much when it happened,”
-Prime remarked. “I was there, and I know
-there wasn’t a man or boy in the party who
-showed a neater pair of heels than one Frank
-Noble.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'><span class='pageno' id='Page_126'>126</span>When the burst of merriment that followed
-these words, and in which Frank joined as
-heartily as any of his companions, had somewhat
-subsided, the narrator continued:</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I am free to confess that I didn’t see any
-thing funny in the way the old woman jammed
-that long-handled dipper into the kettle and
-sent its boiling contents flying toward us, but
-it was very amusing after it was all over, and
-I woke up in the night and laughed about it.
-Of course the defiant squatters were over-powered
-after a while, but not until Matt and
-both his boys had been knocked flat, and one of
-the guides had disarmed the old woman by running
-in and kicking over her kettle of water. The
-officer was determined to arrest the last one of
-them for resisting his authority; but Mr. Hastings,
-who happened along just then, and who
-thought that neighbors so undesirable could not
-be got rid of any too quick, told the constable
-to chuck the squatter and all his belongings
-into the punt and shove them out into the lake,
-after giving them fair warning that they would
-be sent up as vagrants if they stopped this side
-of Sherwin’s pond.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'><span class='pageno' id='Page_127'>127</span>“Did he do it?” asked Ralph.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Of course he did. But before Matt put
-his oars into the water he made us a speech
-containing threats which I, for one, hope he
-will have the courage to carry out.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Here Noble stopped to light his cigar which
-had gone out while he was talking.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_128'>128</span>
- <h2 class='c011'>CHAPTER VII. <br /> <br /><span class='small'>A DOG WITH A HISTORY.</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_2_0_5 c018'>“YOU don’t want to say that out loud,
-Frank,” observed Scott.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Say what out loud?” demanded Noble,
-after he had taken a few long pulls at his cigar
-to make sure that it was going again.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“That you hope Matt Coyle will have the
-courage to carry out the threats he made
-yesterday.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Of course not. But I can express my
-honest sentiments here, for we are all friends,
-I take it. Matt’s speech was a short one,”
-said Noble, once more addressing himself to
-Tom Bigden and his cousins, “but it was to
-the point. ‘You see all them there sail-boats
-ridin’ at anchor, an’ all them fine houses up
-there on the hill?’ said Matt. ‘Wal, the
-boats’ll sink if there’s holes knocked into ’em,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_129'>129</span>an’ the houses’ll burn if there’s a match set to
-’em, I reckon. Good-by till you hear from
-me agin.’ He hasn’t got a very handsome
-face at any time, Matt hasn’t, and his intense
-rage, and the black and blue lump as big as a
-hen’s egg, which had been raised on one of
-his cheeks by a whack from a guide’s fist,
-made him look like a savage in his war-paint.
-He was in dead earnest when he uttered the
-words, and if the Mount Airy boys, and men
-too, who have incurred his enmity don’t hear
-from him again, I shall be surprised.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“And disappointed as well,” added Prime.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I didn’t say that,” replied Noble.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Of course you didn’t. Nobody said it,
-but I think we understand one another.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Ralph and Loren looked frightened, while
-Tom drew admiring applause from the boys and
-gave expression to his feelings at the same time
-by dancing a few steps of a hornpipe.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Well, we must be off,” said he, suddenly.
-“Another engagement, you know.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“What’s your hurry,” exclaimed Prime.
-“Stay and smoke another cigar.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Can’t,” replied Tom, turning a significant
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_130'>130</span>look upon Loren and Ralph, who wondered
-what new idea he had got into his head.
-“We’ll go and see Wayring according to promise,
-and then start for home.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“But we haven’t said a word about organizing
-that new archery club,” interposed Noble.
-“Prime told us that you three fellows were
-strongly in favor of it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“So we are,” was Tom’s reply; “and some
-day, when we have plenty of leisure, we’ll talk
-it over. We are happy to have met you, and
-will now say good-by until we see you again.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>So saying, Tom bowed himself out of the
-store-room followed by his cousins, who could
-hardly hold their tongues until they reached
-the street, so impatient were they to know what
-he was going to do now. They were certain of
-one thing, and that was, that Tom did not think
-as much of George Prime and his friends as he
-thought he was going to.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I am disgusted,” declared Loren, as soon as
-they were safely out of hearing.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Not with me, I hope,” said his cousin.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Yes, with you and with the fellows we have
-just left.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'><span class='pageno' id='Page_131'>131</span>Tom thrust his hands deep into his pockets,
-looked up at the clouds and laughed heartily.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I expected it,” said he; then he stopped
-laughing and scowled fiercely. His merriment
-was forced, and he was as angry as he ever got
-to be.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Are you willing that Prime and his crowd
-should lay out a programme for the races without
-saying a word to us about it?” demanded
-Ralph, who forgot that that was just the way in
-which he and his two companions had treated
-Prime.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“And did you really ask Wayring to propose
-our names at the club’s next meeting?”
-chimed in Loren.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“No, to both your questions,” replied
-Tom, emphatically. “They must be a bright
-set of boys if they think we are going to let
-them rule us. Why, that was the reason we
-decided that we did not want any thing to do
-with Wayring and his followers. But I have
-thought better of that resolution, and I’m going
-to make friends with Joe if I can.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“And cut Prime and the rest?” exclaimed
-Ralph.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'><span class='pageno' id='Page_132'>132</span>“Not directly. Look here,” said Tom, suddenly
-stopping in the middle of the sidewalk
-and facing his cousins. “We’ve got our choice
-between two cliques, both of which have showed
-a disposition to make us do as they say. Now
-which one shall we take up with? I prefer
-Joe’s. He and his friends are in the majority,
-and they are not one bit more overbearing than
-Prime and <i>his</i> friends. Besides, they will let
-us win a race if we can do it fairly, but the
-crowd we have just left want all the honors
-themselves.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“If you try to carry water on both shoulders
-you will be sure to spill some of it,” observed
-Loren.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I’ll risk that,” replied Tom, confidently.
-“I didn’t ask Joe to take our names in to the
-club, but I’m going to before I am ten minutes
-older.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Why didn’t you ask Prime or Noble to
-take them in?” inquired Ralph.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Because I didn’t want Joe to know that we
-had become intimate enough with those two
-boys to ask favors of them. Now, then, here
-we are. You know Joe invited us to call as
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_133'>133</span>often as we could, so we are sure of a welcome
-if he is at home. Stand ready to back me, if
-you think circumstances require it, but don’t
-be surprised at any thing I say.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>As Tom uttered these words he opened one
-of the wide gates that gave entrance into Mr.
-Wayring’s grounds, and the three walked up
-the carriage way toward the house, until their
-progress was stopped by the sudden appearance
-of one of Joe’s pets—a Newfoundland
-dog, which came out from among the evergreens
-and stood in their path. He was a noble-looking
-fellow, and although he was gray with
-age, the attitude of defiance he assumed
-seemed to say that he considered himself quite
-as able to keep intruders off those premises as
-he had been during his younger days.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Come on,” shouted a familiar voice.
-“Mars won’t trouble you. He don’t like
-tramps,” added Joe Wayring, leaning his
-double paddle against the side of the house,
-and coming forward to greet his visitors. “But
-fellows like you could go all over the place;
-and so long as you did not pick up any thing,
-Mars would not say a word to you. How are
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_134'>134</span>you, any way; and where are you going on
-foot? Why didn’t you come over in your
-canoes, so that we could have a little race all
-by ourselves? Come on. Sheldon and Hastings
-are down to the boat-house waiting for
-me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“We came over to ask a favor of you,”
-replied Tom, as soon as Joe gave him a chance
-to speak. “Would you mind taking in our
-names at the next meeting of the canoe
-club?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“On the contrary, I shall be pleased to do
-it,” answered Joe, readily. “You have been
-pretty sly since your canoes came to hand, but
-we know more about you than you think we
-do,” he added, as he led the way through the
-carriage-porch and down the terraced bank
-toward the boat-house.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I don’t quite understand you,” said
-Tom.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I mean that we have watched you while
-you were taking your morning and evening
-spins up and down the lake, and we have come
-to the conclusion that some of us are going to
-get beaten. I’ll say this much for you, Bigden:
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_135'>135</span>I never saw a Shadow canoe get through
-the water, until I saw yours going down the
-lake yesterday afternoon.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Thank you,” said Tom. “Do you know
-who are booked for winners this year?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Booked!” repeated Joe. “There’s nobody
-booked. The best men will win, as they always
-have done.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I am afraid you are mistaken.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Oh, no; I guess not. We don’t have any
-jockeying here, and if any member of the club
-should so far forget himself as to interfere with
-one of the contestants, he would never row
-another race on this lake.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I know some boys who are going to take
-their chances on it,” said Tom, quietly.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“On fouling the head man so that somebody
-else can win?” cried Joe.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“That’s just what I mean.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Joe could hardly believe his ears, and neither
-could Loren and Ralph believe theirs. This,
-then, was what Tom meant when he cautioned
-them against being surprised at any thing he
-might say! They <i>were</i> surprised—they couldn’t
-help it; and in order that Joe might not see
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_136'>136</span>their faces they fell behind, and allowed him
-and Tom to go on ahead.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“You know boys who are going to try to win
-by foul means!” repeated Joe. “I didn’t
-suppose that there was any one in the club who
-would be so mean. It is true that last year a
-certain canoeist persisted in keeping as close to
-me as he could, and drove the bow of his craft
-toward the stern of my own as often as he got
-the chance; but I thought it was accident,
-while some of my friends on shore declared
-that it was his intention to run into me, and
-claim the race because I got in his way. But,
-as luck would have it, I was able to paddle fast
-enough to keep out of his road. It seems to
-me that if I couldn’t win a prize fairly, I
-shouldn’t want to win it at all.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I know who that fellow was,” said Tom,
-“and I know, also, that he tried his very best
-to foul you. It was Prime. I heard all about
-it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Tom and his cousins supposed that Joe’s
-next question would be: Who told you about
-this plot, and what are the names of the boys
-who are “booked” to win by fair means or
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_137'>137</span>foul? But greatly to their surprise Joe propounded
-no such inquiry. The latter knew
-very well that if some one had not reposed confidence
-in him, Tom never would have heard of
-any plot; and Joe was too much of a gentleman
-to ask him to violate that confidence. He
-wanted to turn the conversation into another
-channel, and so he began talking about Mars,
-who was walking along the path before them.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“That fellow is the only foreigner in the
-party,” said Joe. “He was born and received
-the rudiments of his education on the bleak
-shores of Newfoundland.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Then how did you come to get hold of
-him?” inquired Tom.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I was up there two winters ago with my
-uncle, hunting caribou.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“What sort of an animal is that?” asked
-Tom. He spoke before he thought, and was
-provoked at himself for it. He did not want
-to be constantly asking information of a boy
-who never came to him for any. As Tom would
-have expressed it: “He didn’t care to make
-Joe and his friends any more conceited than
-they were already.” Joe, however, was not at
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_138'>138</span>all conceited; but if Tom Bigden had known
-as much as he did, and been as expert in all
-sorts of athletic sports, he would have thought
-himself too grand to associate with common
-fellows.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“The caribou is the American reindeer, but
-it is not broken to harness like the European
-animal of the same species,” replied Joe. “It
-is hunted as game, and Nova Scotia, New
-Brunswick and Newfoundland are the best
-places to go to find it. Uncle Joe went up
-there two years ago, taking Hastings, Sheldon
-and myself with him. We went in a little
-fishing schooner that was bound from Gloucester
-to the Bay of Fundy for swordfish.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Tom would have been glad to know where
-the Bay of Fundy was, and what the schooner’s
-crew intended to do with the swordfish after
-they caught them, but his pride would not let
-him ask. The sequel proved that it was not
-necessary, for Joe went on to explain.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“The Bay of Fundy runs up between New
-Brunswick and Nova Scotia, as you of course
-know as well as I do, and the fish are used for
-food. When they are put on the market they
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_139'>139</span>are sliced up like halibut. They are caught with
-harpoons. They are ugly, I tell you, and when
-one of them weighing four hundred pounds
-comes flopping over the rail and begins to swing
-that sword of his around like lightning, you
-may be sure that he gets all the room he
-wants.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“What do you do with the swords after
-they are taken off?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Keep them as curiosities or sell them, just
-as you please. There is great demand for
-them. I have one that I should not like to
-part with. It belonged to a two hundred
-pounder. The sailors thought they had killed
-him before they hauled him aboard; but he gave
-one expiring flop after he reached the deck,
-and the point of his sword cut a big hole in
-the leg of my trowsers. If I had been a little
-closer to him, he might have injured me very
-badly. If a man had his only weapon of
-offense and defense made fast to his nose, he
-wouldn’t do much with it, would he? But it
-just suits the swordfish, which, according to
-Captain Davis, delivers his blows so rapidly
-that he will kill half a dozen out of a school
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_140'>140</span>of albicore before they can get out of his
-reach.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“But what has all this got to do with
-Mars?” inquired Tom.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I came pretty near forgetting about him,
-didn’t I?” said Joe, with a laugh. “Well,
-we went back to Gloucester with Captain
-Davis, who, as soon as he had disposed of his
-swordfish, fitted out for the banks—for codfish,
-you know—and went with him. He was to
-land us at some little fishing hamlet, whose
-name I have forgotten, where we were to obtain
-guides and go back into the interior after caribou;
-but he managed to run the schooner
-ashore in a thick fog, and there we stuck until
-Mars brought off a line to us. That was all
-that saved us. The sailors hauled in on it, and
-finally brought aboard a larger and stronger
-line to which a hawser was made fast. We
-took a turn with that around the capstan, and
-after a good deal of hard work, succeeded in
-pulling the schooner over the bar into deeper
-water nearer the shore. We got off just in the
-nick of time, too; for that night a storm came
-up, and raised a sea that would have made
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_141'>141</span>short work with us if we had been exposed to
-its fury.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Were there men on shore opposite the
-place you struck?” inquired Tom.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Certainly. If there hadn’t been, who
-would have tied the line to the dog’s collar and
-told him to take it out to us?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I should think they would have gone to your
-assistance in their boats,” replied Tom.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“So they would, under ordinary circumstances;
-but no boat that was ever built could
-have lived a moment in the surf that was
-breaking over the bar when we ran on to it. I
-don’t understand to this day how Mars
-managed to get through it. I have seen
-him swim a good many times since that
-day, and in smooth water he doesn’t seem
-to be any better than any other dog. It is
-when the wind is blowing and the white caps
-are running that he shows what he can do.
-Uncle Joe was so well pleased with the dog’s
-performance that as soon as he could find his
-owner, he offered to buy him. Of course the
-man didn’t want to sell, but he was poor, and
-when he thought of the comforts that the hundred
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_142'>142</span>dollars which uncle counted out before
-him would buy for his wife and children, he
-came to the conclusion that we could have the
-dog. He’s mine now, for Uncle Joe gave him
-to me as soon as the bargain was struck.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Did you get any caribou?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Plenty of them, and, would you believe it?
-we had to take along a supply of food for that
-dog the same as we did for ourselves. He
-wouldn’t look at any thing except salt meat or
-codfish. I really believe he would have starved
-with a meal before him that would have made
-any other dog’s mouth water. But he is civilized
-now, and takes his rations like other white
-folks. He’s got a history, Mars has, and if his
-adventures and exploits were written out, they
-would make a good-sized book.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>A loud and hearty greeting from the two
-boys who were standing on the dock in front of
-the boat-house, put a stop to the conversation.
-Tom and his cousins expected that the first
-thing Joe Wayring did would be to acquaint
-his two friends with the fact that a plot had
-been formed to keep the best man from winning
-at the next canoe meet, and to throw the different
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_143'>143</span>races to those who could not by any possibility
-win them fairly; but again they were
-disappointed. Joe did not say a word on the
-subject, and the reason was because it was too
-serious a matter to be discussed in the presence
-of boys with whom he was so little acquainted.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“A dog that will fetch a bone will carry
-one,” was Joe’s mental comment. “Tom and
-his cousins may be friendly to us, and then
-again, if there is any truth in this report, they
-may have brought it to me on account of some
-spite they have against those from whom they
-got it. It’s best to keep on the safe side, and
-so I will hold my tongue until I have a chance
-to speak to Hastings and Sheldon in private.
-We have received warning, and if they beat us,
-it will be our own fault.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“We were just going over to ask you three
-fellows to come out and take a spin with us,”
-exclaimed Hastings. “We have had our eyes
-on you, and to tell you the truth, we don’t
-quite like the way you handle those paddles of
-yours.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Of course we don’t ask you to do your best—indeed
-we would be foolish to expect it,”
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_144'>144</span>chimed in Sheldon. “But still we should like
-to try a few short races with you, if you don’t
-mind.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“We shall be glad of the chance to see how
-much we lack of being good canoeists,” said
-Loren, readily. “We’ll walk back and go
-around the foot of the lake—”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Oh, no,” interrupted Joe. “That’s too
-hard work, and besides it would take up too
-much time. There’s my skiff. We can put
-her into the water and step the mast in a
-minute, and she’ll take you over flying. Come
-in here; I want to show you something. We
-three belong to the committee which was
-appointed to draw up a programme for the
-meet,” added Joe, taking a folded paper from
-a little writing desk that stood in one corner of
-the boat-house, “and here’s what we shall submit
-to the club at the next meeting.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Tom Bigden and the Farnsworth boys ran
-their eyes over the paper, and the only things
-they found in it that possessed any particular
-interest for them were the following:</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“<i>Portage race.</i>—Paddle a quarter of a mile,
-carry canoe twenty-five yards over a stony
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_145'>145</span>point, re-embark and paddle back to starting
-point.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“<i>Single paddling race.</i>—Half a mile and
-return.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“<i>Hurry-Skurry race.</i>—Run ten yards, swim
-twenty-five yards, paddle three hundred yards.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>These were the ones, as we know, which Tom
-and his cousins had “booked” themselves to
-win. Then there were sailing races, tandem
-races, and boys and girls’ races; and the meet
-was to wind up with a greasy pole walk.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“You fellows must certainly enter for that,”
-said Sheldon. “You have no idea how much
-sport there is in it. Some of the Mount Airy
-people say that it is the best part of the performance.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Tom replied that he did not know just what
-a greasy pole walk was, and reminded Sheldon
-that he and his cousins were not yet members
-of the club.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“But you will be members before the day
-set for the races, you may be sure of that,”
-said Joe. “I’ll propose you at the next meeting,
-and I know there will not be a dissenting
-vote.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'><span class='pageno' id='Page_146'>146</span>“I wish you could give us the same assurance
-in regard to the archery club,” said Tom.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“So do I, but I can’t,” answered Joe; and
-then, as if that were a subject that he could
-not talk about just at that time, he hastened
-to add: “I can soon tell you what a greasy
-pole walk is. Did you notice that high derrick
-built on the end of our pier? Well, a long,
-stout spar is run out from that derrick, and
-after being braced and guyed so securely that
-it will not sway about under any reasonable
-weight, it is thickly covered with slush to make
-it slippery. There is a prize of some sort at
-the outer end of it, and the boy who can walk
-along the pole and capture that prize before
-he falls off into the water, is the best
-fellow.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“What is the prize?” inquired Ralph.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Last year there were so many lucky fellows
-that we had to provide several of them,” was
-the reply. “The one that created the most
-fun was a pig in a bag. Noble captured that,
-and I tell you he had a time of it. You see,
-the pig was greased as well as the pole, and
-the bag was tied in such a way that when
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_147'>147</span>Noble dived for it—that was the only way he
-could get hold of it, you know—the mouth of
-the bag opened and the pig slipped out. Then
-the uproar began. Noble, who is a plucky fellow
-and a splendid swimmer, didn’t know that
-the pig was greased, and he tried for a long
-time to tow him ashore by one of his hind legs,
-but, of course, he couldn’t do it. At last he
-began to suspect something, and the way he
-larruped that pig over the head with the bag to
-make him turn toward the shore, was a caution.
-He finally succeeded in his object, and the
-instant the pig’s feet touched the beach, Noble
-sprung up, threw the bag over his head and
-secured him easy enough. Whatever you do,
-you mustn’t miss the greasy pole walk.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I suppose we shall be laughed at if we
-tumble off the pole into the water?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Certainly. That isn’t down in the programme,
-but it is a part of it, all the same.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“How many trials does each contestant
-have?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Only two. You see, there are so many of
-us and so much fun in trying to secure the
-prize, that if we didn’t set some limit to the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_148'>148</span>number of trials, the boys would keep on trying
-for an indefinite length of time.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>While the boys were talking in this way
-they had pushed Joe’s skiff out of the boat-house
-into the water, stepped the mast and
-unfurled the sail that was wrapped around it.
-Every thing being ready for the start, the little
-fleet set out for the opposite side of the lake,
-Tom and his cousins in the skiff, and Joe and
-his companions in their canoes. The skiff was
-made fast to Mr. Bigden’s pier, and a quarter
-of an hour later three more canoes shot out of
-the boat-house, and the trials of speed began.
-They continued nearly all the afternoon, and
-when the rival factions bade each other good-night
-and paddled off toward their respective
-boat-houses, there was a decided feeling of
-uneasiness among some of them, while the
-others were correspondingly confident and
-happy.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“It doesn’t seem possible that this is Bigden’s
-first season in a canoe,” said Sheldon, as
-soon as Tom and his cousins were out of hearing.
-“He is going to crowd the best of us this
-year, and if he keeps up his practice until the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_149'>149</span>next meet, there won’t be a boy in the club
-who can touch him with a ten-foot pole. He’s
-going to make an expert.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I’ll just tell you what’s a fact,” said Loren,
-after the canoes had been wiped out and hoisted
-in their slings, “I am not so much afraid of
-Joe and his crowd as I was. I don’t think
-there will be any need of the fouling business.
-I kept pace with Hastings in spite of all he
-could do to shake me off, and could have
-passed him if I had let out a little more
-strength.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“That shows how much you know about
-these things,” said Tom, in reply. “Do you
-suppose that Hastings did the best he could?
-I kept up with Joe without any very great
-exertion, but I don’t crow over it. They had
-plenty of speed in reserve, but you will have
-to wait till the day of the races if you want
-to see what they are capable of.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>The sequel proved that Tom was right.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_150'>150</span>
- <h2 class='c011'>CHAPTER VIII. <br /> <br /><span class='small'>RUNNING THE RAPIDS.</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_3_0_5 c018'>“NOW that we are here by ourselves,”
-continued Ralph, “I’d like to ask
-you why you told Joe that the best man was
-not to be allowed to win at the next meet. I
-never heard of such a thing before in my life.
-What do you suppose Prime and his crowd
-would say to you if they should find it out?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I don’t believe they will ever find it out,”
-replied Tom, who did not seem to think that he
-had been guilty of any thing mean. “If I have
-formed a correct estimate of Joe Wayring’s
-disposition and character, he is a boy who
-knows how to hold his tongue. I posted him
-simply to off-set the coolness and impudence
-displayed by Prime and his friends in shutting
-us out of all the races, without so much as saying
-by your leave. Since they would not give
-us a chance to win some of the prizes, I say
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_151'>151</span>that <i>they</i> shall not win <i>any</i> of them. We are
-not going to play into the hands of boys who
-work against us.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“That’s what I say,” exclaimed Loren.
-“But I thought Joe acted very indifferently.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Because he did not ask me to go into the
-particulars of the scheme, and give him the
-names of the fellows who were in it?” said
-Tom. “I thought so myself at first, but after
-turning the matter over in my mind, I came to
-the conclusion that his indifference was put on;
-and that the reason he did not ask me to go
-into details was because he was afraid I would
-say to him that I was taught not to tell names
-and tales too.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“It seems to me that that is about the size of
-it,” Loren remarked. “But look here, Tom.
-You have undertaken a pretty big contract if
-you expect to keep on the right side of both
-those crowds. One or the other of them will
-very soon have reason to suspect you, and
-then down you will go. What are you
-going to do about the races?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“My proposition is, that we keep up our regular
-exercise and training, and do the best we can
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_152'>152</span>to carry out our own programme, leaving
-Prime’s clique and Joe’s to carry out theirs, if
-they are able to do it. If we find that we stand
-no show, I would much rather see Joe and his
-friends win than Prime and <i>his</i> friends.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“So would I,” said Ralph. “Now I should
-like to have some one tell me what excuse we
-have for being down on those boys. We got
-mad at them simply because they would not
-break their rules and take us into their archery
-club.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“And wasn’t that reason enough?” cried
-Tom, hotly. “I wasn’t used to such treatment
-while I lived in the city, and I won’t
-submit to it now. I don’t think any more of
-Hastings than I did on the day he so coolly
-told me that he would not help me get into
-their club. I don’t care whether he wins or
-not. What I mean to say is, that Prime and
-the rest shall not carry off any of the prizes if
-I can help it. I intend to show them that the
-next time they want any help from me,
-they had better let me have a voice in making
-up the programme; and I shall do it in such a
-way that they can not possibly misunderstand
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_153'>153</span>me. You two can do as you please, of course;
-but if you are going to weaken, I wish you
-would say so at once, so that I may make
-my arrangements accordingly.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Ralph and Loren hastened to assure their
-cousin that they had not the slightest intention
-of going back from their original agreement,
-and that they would stick to him through thick
-and thin, no matter what happened; but still
-they wished that Tom would learn to like Joe
-Wayring, and give up his idea of being
-revenged upon him for slights which were
-wholly imaginary. Joe had a much larger
-following than Prime and Noble, through him
-they could get more invitations to parties,
-picnics and hunting and fishing excursions
-than they could in any other way, and his
-influence might eventually gain for them an
-honor which they craved above all others—a
-membership in the Toxophilites; for those
-young ladies they met at Miss Arden’s lawn
-party were handsome and stylish, that was a
-fact, and Ralph and Loren had more than once
-told themselves that they would even be willing
-to give up their cigars, if by so doing they
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_154'>154</span>could win the privilege of shooting with those
-same young ladies twice a week. If they became
-intimate with George Prime, and were often seen
-in his company, the Toxophilites would drop
-them like so many hot potatoes; and then,
-when invitations for any social gathering were
-issued, they would be left out in the cold, the
-same as George was. But whatever they
-decided to do they must keep on the right
-side of Tom, for if they did not, he would be
-sure to make things unpleasant for them. It
-looked as though Ralph and Loren would have
-to do the very thing against which they had
-cautioned their vindictive relative, that is, try
-to carry water on both shoulders and take
-their chances of spilling some of it.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Now we’ll take Joe’s skiff back and put it
-where we found it, provided the boat-house is
-open,” said Tom. “If there is any boy in the
-world who ought to be supremely happy, he is
-the fellow. He has every thing he can ask for,
-including a rich and good-natured uncle, who
-takes him off on hunting and fishing trips
-nearly every year. Why that boy, young as he is,
-has shot caribou and moose and caught salmon.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'><span class='pageno' id='Page_155'>155</span>Yes, Joe Wayring was happy, but it was
-not wholly on account of his pleasant surroundings.
-His source of happiness was within
-himself, and he knew it. He had been
-taught that lesson at the same time that he
-was being instructed in athletics and field-sports.
-He thought more of others than he
-did of Joe Wayring, and he would go into the
-dumps in a minute if he saw any of his friends
-in a disconsolate mood. If things didn’t go
-right with him—and they went wrong sometimes,
-as they do with every body—it made no
-sort of difference with Joe’s good-nature. He
-kept his troubles to himself; but Tom would
-get angry and go into the sulks and make all
-around him miserable. While going on the
-principle that whatever is worth doing at all is
-worth doing well, Joe was nevertheless perfectly
-willing to be beaten by any one who could do it
-fairly; but Tom wanted to be first at any cost.
-This was the principal difference between the
-two boys.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Tom cast off the skiff’s painter while Loren
-and Ralph stepped the mast and shook
-out the sail, and in twenty minutes more
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_156'>156</span>they found themselves in the boat-house,
-where Joe and his two friends were waiting
-for them.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I saw you coming and took the cover off
-one of my pets so that you could take a
-look at her,” said the former, directing the
-attention of his visitors to a neat cedar shell in
-which he had been wont to win honors before
-he became a convert to canoeing. “She has
-taken me first by the judges’ boat in more than
-one hotly-contested race while I was going to
-school at Dartmouth Academy. Handsome,
-isn’t she? No doubt you will be surprised to
-hear me say it, but <i>there</i> is something that I
-think more of than I do of her.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>As Joe said this, he pointed toward an ungainly
-looking object which lay on the floor at
-the further end of the boat-house. It was a
-canvas canoe, whose battered sides bore evidence
-to numerous encounters with sharp-pointed
-rocks and snags.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“It must be on account of its associations,”
-replied Loren, looking first at the clumsy
-canoe and then at the clear-cut lines of the
-shell. “If I had my choice between the two,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_157'>157</span>it would not take me long to make up my mind
-which one I wanted.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Of course not. There is as much difference
-between them as there is between a trotter and
-a plow-horse; but each one has served the purpose
-for which it was intended, and served it
-well, too. I like the canoe better, because she
-was the first thing in the shape of a boat I ever
-owned. She has carried me a good many
-hundred miles, first and last, and although she
-has often got contrary and spilled me out into
-the water when I wasn’t expecting it, I have
-had any amount of fun with her exploring
-creeks and ponds that I could not otherwise
-have reached. She is fourteen feet long, weighs
-fifty pounds fully equipped, and packs in that
-little chest you see there. I know she isn’t
-very good-looking, but when it comes to running
-the rapids she is there, every time. That’s
-the reason I took her out of the chest. We are
-going down to Sherwin’s Pond to-morrow after
-bass; will you join us?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Tom and his cousins replied that they would
-be glad to do so, and Joe went on to say:</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“You see, the fishing in the pond is better
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_158'>158</span>than it is in the lake. The people who come
-here to spend the summer do not often go
-down there, because there is no wagon road
-through the woods, and they are afraid to trust
-themselves to the rapids. Well, they are
-frightful to look at, that’s a fact, but—”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“We know that very well,” interrupted
-Ralph. “We have gone down there a dozen
-times with our minds fully made up that we
-would run those rapids, or smash our canoes in
-trying, and we have as often come back without
-making the attempt. When we reached
-the place where the water leaves the lake, and
-goes foaming and boiling over the rocks in the
-gorge below, our arms always went back on
-us.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Your arms?” repeated Sheldon.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Yes. Our hearts were brave enough for
-any thing, but our cowardly arms wouldn’t pull
-the canoes into the rapids.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Oh!” said Sheldon. “Well, your cowardly
-arms were the wisest part of you, for you
-certainly ought not to try to go through until
-you know where the channel is. Those rapids
-have been run hundreds of times, though not
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_159'>159</span>always without accident to be sure, and if you
-will follow close in our wake to-morrow, we’ll
-take you safely to the bottom.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“We must make an early start,” said Hastings,
-“for we want to reach the pond just about
-the time the first rays of the sun strike the
-water. Can you be ready at four o’clock? All
-right. Catch a good supply of minnows to-night,
-and then you won’t have to waste valuable
-time over it in the morning.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“And take the strongest and stiffest bait-rod
-you have,” added Joe. “Leave your fly-rods,
-if you have any, at home, for you will have no
-use for them. About June 1st, when the bass
-season opens, those who know how to throw a
-fly have very fine fishing among the rocks
-close to the shore; but as the weather grows
-warmer the fish gradually draw off into deep
-water, and all the bass we shall catch to-morrow
-will be near the middle of the pond where
-the springs boil up.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“And don’t forget your gun,” said Sheldon.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Nor your rubber blankets,” chimed in
-Hastings.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Do you think it will rain?” asked Ralph.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'><span class='pageno' id='Page_160'>160</span>“We hope not, and indeed there are no signs
-of it. When we reach the head of the rapids
-we will pull off our heaviest clothing, so that
-we will be ready for a swim in case we are
-unlucky enough to capsize, and the things we
-don’t wear we will wrap up in our rubber blankets
-so that they won’t get wet.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Suppose we get down all right,” said Loren.
-“How are we going to get back?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“We’ll shoulder our canoes and come up the
-portage road which has been cut through the
-woods around the rapids. For that reason we
-don’t want to take any thing with us that we
-can possibly dispense with.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>After listening to a few more hints like these,
-Tom and his cousins set out for the post-office;
-and having secured their mail they went home
-by the road that led around the foot of the
-lake, running at the top of their speed all the
-way through the woods to improve their wind.
-Their skiff, patent minnow buckets and dip
-nets were at once brought into requisition, and
-by the time the supper bell rang, they had
-caught bait enough to last them through a long
-day’s successful angling.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'><span class='pageno' id='Page_161'>161</span>Promptly at four o’clock the next morning
-Tom Bigden opened the front door of the boat-house,
-and waved his hat in response to a similar
-signal of greeting which came to him from
-over the lake. Joe Wayring and his friends
-were just putting their canoes into the water.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Splendid day,” said the former, when the
-two little fleets came together near the middle
-of the lake. “There’s going to be just wind
-enough to ripple the water, but not enough to
-raise a sea, and I wouldn’t take a dollar for my
-chance of catching the finest string of bass that
-has been seen in Mount Airy this year.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“So say we all of us,” exclaimed Sheldon;
-and this suggested the song which every school-boy
-knows, but to Tom Bigden’s ill-concealed
-disgust, it was sung to the words: “Joe Wayring
-is a jolly good fellow,” and that was a sentiment
-in which Tom did not fully concur. It
-put him in bad humor for the whole of the day,
-or, rather, until circumstances threw in his way
-an opportunity to make that jolly good fellow
-as miserable as he was himself. After that he
-felt better.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Under the steady motion of the sinewy arms
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_162'>162</span>which swung the long double paddles, the light
-canoes made quick work with the three miles
-that lay between the boat-houses and the lower
-end of the lake, and presently Arthur Hastings
-turned toward the nearest shore, looking over
-his shoulder as he did so to call out to the
-canoeists behind him:</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Let’s make believe this is a hurry-skurry
-race, and that there is a prize in the pond waiting
-for the man who reaches the bottom of the
-rapids first.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>The challenge was promptly accepted. In a
-twinkling the little crafts were going toward
-the beach with greatly increased speed, and in
-a remarkably short space of time six young
-athletes, clad only in flesh-colored tights, were
-prancing around their canoes, busily engaged
-in wrapping their clothing in their water-proof
-blankets, and lashing their rods and minnow
-buckets fast so that they would not be thrown
-out into the water by a heavy lurch, or even
-by a capsize. Tom Bigden was the first to
-shove his canoe away from the shore, but there
-he had to stop. He was not acquainted with
-the channel, and needed a guide to show him
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_163'>163</span>the way through; but he won the second place,
-and was prompt to fall into it when Arthur
-Hastings caught up his paddle and pulled away
-from the beach.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Tom and his cousins had often viewed the
-rapids from the bank while trying in vain to
-screw up courage enough to attempt their passage,
-and if they looked dangerous to them
-then, they looked ten times more frightful
-when they surveyed them from their canoes on
-this particular morning. The sight of them
-was enough to make any body’s nerves quiver.
-They looked as steep as the roof of a house,
-and the bottom of the gorge through which
-they ran, seemed to be literally covered with
-bowlders. Tom could not see a single place
-which looked wide enough to admit of the passage
-of a canoe.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“What do you think of them?” asked
-Arthur, as he and Tom backed water with their
-paddles to keep their canoes from taking the
-plunge before they were ready.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Who was the first man who went down
-here?” said Tom, in reply.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“One of the hotel guides.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'><span class='pageno' id='Page_164'>164</span>“Was he a graduate of a lunatic asylum, or
-did he go there afterward?” inquired Tom.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Arthur laughed until the woods echoed.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Neither,” he answered, as soon as he could
-speak. “He’s got a level head on his shoulders
-yet, if one may judge by the constant demands
-that are made upon his time. Some of the
-people who come here every summer like him
-so well that they begin to make bargains with
-him before the ice is out of the lake. They
-wouldn’t do that if they had any reason to
-believe he was crazy, would they? Well,
-what do you say?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I say, go ahead whenever you get ready,”
-was the response.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“All right,” said Arthur, who saw by the
-expression on Tom’s face that he had no intention
-of backing out. “Now, watch every move I
-make, and let me get at least twenty or thirty
-feet ahead of you before you start. Look out
-for both ends of your boat. You won’t run on
-to an isolated rock unless you try, because the
-water runs away from it. That has a tendency
-to throw the bow from the obstruction, and the
-stern toward it; so the minute the bow is out
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_165'>165</span>of harm’s way, drop your paddle into the
-water on the side opposite the rock, and use it
-the best you know how.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Why, that will throw me square upon the
-rock,” cried Tom.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“No, it won’t,” insisted Arthur. “It will
-throw you away from danger, and the current
-rushing around the rock will carry you still further
-away. But if you use the paddle on the
-other side, you will come up against the rock
-ker-chunk; and then you will have to swim the
-rest of the way down, because the stern of your
-canoe will, most likely, be smashed in. Understand?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Tom replied that he did; whereupon Arthur
-settled his cap more firmly on his head, took his
-paddle in both hands and with one bold stroke
-sent his frail craft into the rapids. The moment
-the current caught him in its grasp, he began
-to shoot ahead like a boy coasting down hill.
-Tom shut his teeth hard and gripped his paddle
-until the muscles on his bare arms stood out
-like a gold-beater’s; and so intent was he upon
-watching every move his guide made, that he
-forgot to look out for himself, until he was
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_166'>166</span>called to his senses by a warning shout from his
-friends behind.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Look out, there,” yelled Joe and Roy, in
-concert. “You’ll be over the brink the first
-thing you know.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Tom heard the warning, but it came too late.
-He dropped his paddle into the water and made
-desperate efforts to check his canoe, which had
-already gained rapid headway; but the swift
-current had taken firm hold of him, and finding
-that it was much stronger than he was, he
-resolved to go ahead and trust to luck to keep
-from running into Arthur Hastings, in case
-the latter met with an accident.</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i_p166.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p><span class='sc'>Shooting the Rapids.</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c019'>Tom afterward said that he did not remember
-much about that wild ride. He was lost
-in admiration of Arthur Hastings’s skill as a
-canoeist, and followed in his wake through all
-the turns he made, which were so numerous
-and bewildering that Tom did not see how one
-boy’s head could contain them all. It was a
-lucky thing for him and his cousins that they
-did not attempt to go through there without a
-guide. He did not hear the waters foaming
-and roaring around him, nor did he see a single
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_169'>169</span>one of the rocks past which he went with such
-speed that the wind whistled through his hair;
-but he did see the smooth surface of the pond
-the instant he came within sight of it, and
-when he shot into it, propelled by the momentum
-he had acquired during his descent of the
-rapids, he called out gleefully that he had not
-touched a solitary obstruction on the way.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Of course not,” answered Arthur. “If
-you had, you would not be as dry as you are
-now. There is a clearly defined channel all
-the way through the gorge, and you won’t
-touch any thing if you keep in it. What
-would happen to you if you should get out of
-it, I don’t know; but I think you would be
-fortunate if you came off with a simple
-capsize.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>It was a thrilling sight that was presented
-to their gaze as they sat there in their canoes at
-the bottom of the rapids and watched the
-others as they came down. First Joe Wayring
-dashed into view around the bend, closely followed
-by Ralph Farnsworth, who seemed to be
-quite as much at his ease as his guide was, and
-handled his paddle and managed his canoe
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_170'>170</span>quite as skillfully. By the time they reached
-the smooth water at the foot Roy and Loren
-came in sight, and in five minutes more the
-little fleet was reunited. The hearts of three of
-the canoeists beat a trifle faster than usual, but
-they had accomplished the run in perfect
-safety, and without a wetting, and they were
-ready to try it again at the very first opportunity.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Take time to learn the channel before
-attempting any thing reckless,” cautioned Joe.
-“After that you can come down by yourselves
-as often as you feel equal to the task of carrying
-your boats back over the portage.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>The boys went ashore long enough to put on
-their clothes, untie their rods, and put fresh
-water on their minnows, and then they were
-ready for the bass.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_171'>171</span>
- <h2 class='c011'>CHAPTER IX. <br /> <br /><span class='small'>THE SQUATTER TURNS UP AGAIN.</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_3_0_5 c018'>ONE fishing excursion is much like another,
-and any boy who has handled a nicely-balanced
-bait-rod when the black bass, perch,
-and yellow pike were hungry and full of fight,
-as they were on the morning of which we write,
-will have a clearer idea of the sport Tom Bigden
-and the rest enjoyed there on the pond
-than we could possibly give him. We did not
-follow them through the rapids to tell how
-they played their fish and how many they
-caught, and so we shall have but little to say
-about it. Joe Wayring affirmed that the
-twenty minutes’ fight he had with a nine pound
-pike, which began in less than half a second
-after he dropped his hook into the water, gave
-him solid comfort and enjoyment for a week
-afterward; but whether or not he found any
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_172'>172</span>comfort in something that happened when they
-went ashore to eat their lunch, is another matter
-altogether.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>About eight o’clock the fish gave notice that
-they had quit business for the day by refusing
-to notice any of the lures that were dropped
-among them, and then the boys discovered that
-their long pull before breakfast had made them
-hungry.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Did you ever eat a fish that had been
-baked in the ashes?” inquired Joe, addressing
-himself to Tom and his cousins. “Then
-you have yet one enjoyment in store for you.
-You won’t think much of house-cooking after
-you have eaten one of Roy’s dinners. We
-know a nice place on the point above, with an
-ice-cold spring handy, and we’ll—”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Excuse me for interrupting,” said Loren,
-suddenly. “But did you ever see a dog like
-that before?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>The speaker was not a little surprised by the
-effect his words produced upon some of his
-companions. They all looked in the direction
-indicated by his finger, and then Joe began
-pulling up his anchor with almost frantic haste,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_173'>173</span>while Arthur and Roy reached rather hurriedly
-for their guns.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“You can’t do any thing with him from
-here,” said Joe.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“And if we paddle for the shore he will see
-us and take to his heels,” added Roy.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Why who—what are you going to do to
-him?” stammered Ralph.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“We’d be glad to shoot him if we could,”
-replied Joe. “He’s no dog. He’s a half-grown
-bear.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Tom and his cousins, of course, asked a good
-many questions with their lips and more with
-their eyes, but Joe and his two friends were
-too busy to answer them. They made all haste
-to raise their anchors, and then pulled rapidly
-but silently toward the shore, all the while
-keeping a close watch over the movements of
-the bear, which was wandering listlessly about,
-now and then stopping to look into the water
-or to sniff at a log, as if he were hunting for
-something he had lost. Tom and his cousins
-thought he looked too small for a bear, but as
-he did not walk or act like a dog or any other
-animal they had ever seen at large, they were
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_174'>174</span>forced to conclude that he really was a bear,
-and that he was in search of his breakfast.
-They didn’t know whether to be afraid of him
-or not; but when they saw how anxious Joe
-and his two friends were to bring themselves
-within shooting distance of him, they lost no
-time in pulling up their own anchors and
-falling in behind them. The bear, however,
-was not to be taken unawares. He did not
-appear to notice their approach, but he had
-his eyes on them nevertheless, and when he
-thought they had come close enough, he left
-the beach and lumbered off into the bushes.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“There!” said Tom, who was glad to see the
-last of him. “He has taken himself safely off.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“We expected it,” said Roy, redoubling his
-exertions at the paddle. “If we only had
-Mars with us we could see more fun with him
-in half an hour than we could in a week’s
-fishing. He begged hard to be allowed to come,
-but Joe made him stay behind. You see, he
-won’t sit anywhere but in the bow, and he is
-so heavy that he makes a canoe hard to manage
-in rough water.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“He wouldn’t trail the bear, would he?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'><span class='pageno' id='Page_175'>175</span>“Of course he would, and be glad of the
-chance. If he found him, he would set up
-such a yelping that you would think there were
-a dozen dogs in the woods.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“What are you going to do now?” inquired
-Ralph, as the six canoes ran their bows upon
-the beach, one after the other.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“We are going to stretch our legs, and that
-will be a comfort after sitting in such cramped
-positions for four long hours,” replied Joe, at
-the same time catching up his double-barrel
-and springing ashore with it. “We’ll follow
-up his trail, which we can easily do for a mile
-or more, because all the ground about here is
-swampy, and when we lose it, we’ll knock over
-a few squirrels and go up to the point and eat
-our breakfast. Keep close to us, or else stay
-within sight of the beach. The woods are thick,
-and you could get lost without half trying.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Led by Arthur Hastings, the boys ran up the
-shore of the pond until they reached the place
-where the bear had turned off into the bushes,
-and then the pursuit began in earnest.
-Whether or not Loren and Ralph were as
-anxious to get a shot at the game as they pretended
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_176'>176</span>to be, it is hard to tell; but they made
-a great show of eagerness and enthusiasm, and
-Tom, not wishing to be out-done, floundered
-along the trail behind them. But he did not
-keep his companions in sight for more than five
-minutes—in fact, he didn’t mean to. He
-gradually fell to the rear, and when the bushes
-closed up behind Roy Sheldon, who was the
-last boy on the trail, Tom sat down on a log
-and thought about it.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“That bear doesn’t belong to me, and I don’t
-know that it is any concern of mine whether
-they find him or not,” said he to himself. “It
-is easier to sit here in the shade, even if one
-does have to fight musquitoes, than it is to go
-prancing about through a swamp where the
-water, in some places, is up to the tops of a
-fellow’s boots.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Tom suddenly brought his soliloquy to a
-close and jumped to his feet. There was a
-frightened expression on his face, but the
-determined manner in which he gripped his gun
-showed that he had no intention of running
-away until he had had at least one shot at the
-bear; for that it <i>was</i> the bear which occasioned
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_177'>177</span>the slight rustling in the thicket a short distance
-away, Tom had not the slightest doubt.
-Probably the animal had made a short circuit
-through the woods, and was now coming back
-to the pond to finish his breakfast. While
-these thoughts were passing through Tom’s
-mind, the bushes toward which he was gazing
-parted right and left, and a big red nose, with
-a shock of uncombed hair above and a mass of
-tangled brown whiskers below it, was cautiously
-thrust into view, being followed a moment later
-by the burly form of Matt Coyle, the squatter.
-He was as ragged and dirty as ever, and carried
-a heavy rifle on his shoulder.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>The meeting, which was entirely unexpected,
-was a surprise to both of them. To tell the
-truth, Tom was more alarmed when the squatter
-emerged from the thicket than he would have
-been if the bear had made his appearance.
-Matt Coyle was very angry at the Mount Airy
-people on account of the indignities they had
-put upon him, and who could tell but that Tom
-Bigden himself was included in the list of those
-against whom he had threatened vengeance?
-The squatter seemed to read the thoughts that
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_178'>178</span>were passing in the boy’s mind, for as soon as
-he could speak he hastened to say:</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“You needn’t be no ways skeary about
-meetin’ us. We ain’t forgot that you was the
-only one who said a kind word to us while we
-was down there”—here Matt gave his head a
-backward jerk intending, no doubt, to indicate
-the village of Mount Airy—“an’ of course we
-ain’t got nothing agin you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Tom drew a long breath of relief as he listened
-to these words. Matt wouldn’t do any thing
-to him, and neither would he injure any of his
-property.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“But as fur the rest of ’em, they had better
-watch out,” continued the man, in savage
-tones. “I shan’t forget ’em, an’ I’ll even up
-with them some day. It may be five year, an’
-it may be ten; but I’ll even up with ’em.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“What are you and your boys doing now?”
-inquired Tom. He did not like the way the
-squatter glared around him when he spoke of
-the village people, and he wanted to turn the
-conversation into another channel if he could.</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i_p176.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p><span class='sc'>Tom unexpectedly meets Matt Coyle.</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c019'>“We ain’t doin’ nothin’,” was the surly
-reply, “’cause why, we ain’t got nothin’ to do
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_181'>181</span>with. We ain’t got a bite of meat in the house,
-an’ I was after that there b’ar when you fellers
-come up an’ skeared him away. So thinks I
-to myself, I’ll jest go down to the pond where
-their boats is, an’ I’ll take the best one of ’em
-an’ cl’ar out afore they gets back. Then I’d
-have somethin’ to do with.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Where would you go?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Up to Injun Lake. I’m the bulliest kind
-of a guide fur that neck of the woods, an’ so’s
-my two boys; but you see we ain’t got no
-boats, an’ we’re too poor to buy ’em.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Why don’t you go to the hotels and hire
-out to them?” demanded Tom; and then he
-wondered if there were a landlord in the world
-who would trust a boat-load of passengers,
-ladies and children for instance, to the care of
-the walking whisky barrel he saw before him.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Didn’t I try that very thing down there”—another
-backward jerk of the head—“an’ didn’t
-they tell me that they didn’t have no use fur
-sich lookin’ fellers as me an’ my boys was?”
-exclaimed Matt Coyle, fiercely. “They did
-fur a fact. But if I had a boat of my own I
-could go up to Injun Lake where they ain’t so
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_182'>182</span>perticular about the clothes a man wears, so
-long as he understands his business, an’ I’d
-make piles of money, too; ’cause why—I’d
-work fur less’n the reg’lar hotel guides.
-See?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Yes, I see; but how long would it be before
-the regular guides would run you out, the same
-as the Mount Airy people did? They would
-make the country so hot for you that you
-couldn’t stay there.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Suppos’n they tried that little game on?”
-answered Matt, laying down his rifle long
-enough to shake both his huge fists in the air.
-“Ain’t that somethin’ that two can play at?
-I’d break up the business of guidin’ in less’n
-two seasons.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“How would you do it?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Yes, I would,” Matt went on. “If I only
-had a boat that was easy to slip around in an’
-light to tote over the carries, I’d make the
-folks who come there fur fun so sick of them
-woods that they wouldn’t never come there no
-more; then what would become of them two
-big hotels when there wasn’t no custom to
-run ’em?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'><span class='pageno' id='Page_183'>183</span>“How would you go about it?” repeated
-Tom.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Oh, there’s plenty of ways,” answered the
-squatter, shaking his head knowingly.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Give us one of them.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Wal, s’pos’n I should see a big party, with
-childern among ’em, start out from one of them
-hotels as big as life, an’ I should foller along
-after ’em, easy like, an’ some day, when there
-wasn’t no men folks about, I should slip up,
-grab one of them childern an’ run him off to the
-mountains? An’ s’pos’n one of my boys should
-happen to be loafin’ around that hotel when the
-party come back without the child, an’ should
-hear that a reward of a hunderd, mebbe two
-hunderd dollars had been offered fur his safe
-return? Couldn’t my boy easy hunt me up,
-an’ couldn’t I tote that young un back to his
-pap an’ claim them dollars? Eh?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Tom was so astounded that he could say
-nothing in reply. Matt Coyle was a great deal
-worse than he thought he was. The squatter
-saw that his solitary auditor was interested,
-and went on to tell of another way in which he
-could break up the business of guiding in the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_184'>184</span>wilderness about Indian Lake, in case the people
-living there didn’t treat him and his family
-as well as Matt thought they ought to be
-treated.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Or s’pos’n there wasn’t no childern into the
-party,” said he. “There’d be fine guns an’
-fish poles an’ lots of nice grub, in course; an’
-couldn’t I slip up to their camp when there
-wasn’t no body there to watch it, an’ tote some
-of them guns an’ things off into the bresh an’
-hide ’em? Oh, there’s plenty of ways to bust
-up guidin’ an’ them big hotels along with it.
-They would think twice before bein’ too rough
-on me, ’cause they know me up there to Injun
-Lake.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>And the man might have added that that
-was the very reason they drove him away from
-there—because they knew him.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“But the trouble is, I ain’t got no boat of
-my own to run about with. The punt, she’s
-too heavy, an’ I ain’t got no other,” continued
-Matt Coyle; and then he stopped and looked
-hard at Tom, and Tom, in return, looked hard
-at Matt. An idea came into his head; or, to
-speak more in accordance with the facts, Tom
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_185'>185</span>suddenly recalled some words which the squatter
-had let fall at the beginning of their interview.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“You said you were on your way to the
-pond to pick out a boat when you met me,”
-said Tom. “Well, why don’t you go ahead
-and get it? There is one among them that
-will just suit your purpose. It is a canvas
-canoe. It is very light, and you can pack it
-across a four mile portage without any trouble
-at all. If you don’t want to do that, you can
-take it to pieces and carry it in your hand as
-you would a grip-sack. It will hold up eight
-hundred pounds, and you can’t over-turn it by
-rocking it from side to side.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Who belongs to it?” inquired Matt, who
-had never heard of such a craft before.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Joe Wayring; and his father is one of the
-Mount Airy trustees. Your house was on his
-land, and if Mr. Wayring had said the word,
-you might have been living happily there now,
-with plenty to do in the way of boating and
-guiding and with money in your pocket,” said
-Tom, hoping that this reference to Mr. Wayring
-and the influence he might have exerted in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_186'>186</span>Matt’s behalf, if he had seen fit to do so, would
-make the squatter angry, and awaken in him a
-desire to be revenged on the son since he could
-not harm the father in any way. The plan
-succeeded admirably. Matt laid his rifle on the
-ground so that he could shake both his fists,
-and the oaths and threats he uttered when he
-had thus relieved himself of all incumbrance,
-were frightful to hear. He did not yell, as he
-would like to have done, for he knew that the
-boys who had gone in pursuit of the bear were
-not far away; but he hissed out the words
-between his clenched teeth, and kicked and
-trampled down the bushes in his rage.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I’d take the boat now, even if I knowed it
-wouldn’t be of no use to me,” said he, as
-soon as he could speak. “It’ll cost ole man
-Wayring five an’ mebbe twenty dollars to buy
-him another—”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“More than that,” said Tom. “A good
-deal more.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Wal, it’ll be jest that much out of his
-pocket whatever it is,” answered Matt Coyle.
-“Where did you say them boats was?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Right down there on the beach,” replied
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_187'>187</span>Tom, indicating the direction with his finger.
-“You know which one I mean, don’t you?
-You’re sure you can tell a canvas canoe from
-a Shadow or a Rob Roy?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Am I sure that I can tell a pipe from a shot
-gun?” retorted Matt.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Yes, I suppose you can do that, but I am
-not so positive that you can tell one canoe
-from another,” answered Tom. “Of course it
-wouldn’t be safe for me to go down to the
-beach with you, for if Joe should happen to be
-anywhere within sight, I’d be in a pretty fix.
-You may be sure I shall not so much as hint
-that I saw you here in the woods, and you
-mustn’t lisp it to a living person.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Course not,” said Matt. “Mum’s the word
-between gentlemen.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Tom could scarcely restrain an exclamation
-of disgust. It looked as though this blear-eyed
-ragamuffin considered himself quite as
-good as the boy he was talking to.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Take the canoe just as it stands,” continued
-Tom, “and you will find a good lunch as
-well as a fine fishing-rod in it. Be lively now,
-for Joe may come back at any moment. I’ll
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_188'>188</span>keep out of sight, for of course I don’t want to
-know any thing about it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I don’t care fur them new-fangled poles
-what’s got a silver windlass onto the ends of
-’em, an’ I wouldn’t tech it if I didn’t think I
-could sell it to somebody; but I’ll go fur the
-grub, I tell you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>So saying Matt Coyle went through with some
-contortions with the left side of his face which
-were, no doubt, intended for a friendly farewell
-wink, and stole off toward the beach; while
-Tom turned and walked away in the opposite
-direction. When he thought he had put a safe
-distance between himself and the pond, he sat
-down to await developments. Nor was he
-obliged to wait long. A rifle cracked away off to
-the left of his place of concealment, then a shot
-gun roared, and presently voices came to him
-from the depths of the forest. Joe and his companions
-had given up the chase, and were now on
-their way back to the pond, shooting squirrels
-as they came. Tom knew when they
-passed by within less than a hundred yards of
-him, and he knew, too, that they were surprised
-because they did not meet him in the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_189'>189</span>woods or find him on the beach, for they set up
-a series of dismal whoops as soon as they
-reached the water’s edge.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Now for it,” thought Tom, drawing his
-hand over his face and looking as innocent
-as though he had never been guilty of
-a mean act in his life. “I’ve got to meet them
-some time, and it might as well be now as an
-hour later. Whoop-pee!” he yelled in answer
-to the shouts that were sent up from the
-shore of the pond.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Tom’s ears also told him when Joe Wayring
-first discovered that his canvas canoe was missing.
-The yells suddenly ceased, and Tom
-heard no more from Joe and his companions
-until he came out of the woods and halted on
-the beach a short distance from the place where
-they were standing. They were gathered in a
-group around Roy Sheldon, who was bent over
-with his hands on his knees, and his eyes fastened
-upon a foot-print in the mud. They
-were listening so eagerly to something Roy
-was saying, that Tom walked up within reach
-of them before any of the group knew that he
-was about.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'><span class='pageno' id='Page_190'>190</span>“What have you found that is so very interesting?”
-inquired Tom, who knew that he
-ought to open the conversation in some way.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Oh, here you are,” exclaimed Hastings.
-“We could not imagine what had become of
-you. Until we heard you call out there in the
-woods, we supposed that the bear had come
-back, and that you had gone after him in Joe’s
-boat.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Not by a long shot!” cried Tom, who saw
-very plainly what Arthur was driving at. “I
-haven’t seen the bear since I lost sight of you,
-and if I had, I should have gone away from him
-and not toward him. I have no ambition to
-shine as a bear hunter, and consequently I am
-here safe and sound.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“But Joe’s canoe isn’t,” said Roy.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Tom looked, and sure enough the place
-where Joe had left his boat when he went into
-the woods was vacant. With much apparent
-anxiety and uneasiness he turned toward his
-canoe as if to satisfy himself that his own
-treasures were safe, when Roy broke out
-with—</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Oh, you’re a sufferer the same as the rest
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_191'>191</span>of us. Your lunch and your fine bait-rod
-have gone off to keep Joe’s canoe company.
-He took all our rods and his pick of the fish,
-too, and it is a great wonder to me that he was
-good enough to leave us our paddles.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Tom was really surprised now, and he was
-deeply in earnest when he said:</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“If I ever meet the man who did that I’ll have
-him arrested if I can find any one to make out
-a warrant for him.” Then suddenly recollecting
-that he was not supposed to know who the
-thief was, he added: “Do you suspect any
-body?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“No, we don’t suspect; we know,” answered
-Joe. “Look at that!”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Can you tell a man’s name by looking at
-the print of his foot in the mud?” asked
-Tom.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I can tell that man’s name, for I know how
-he was shod the last time I saw him,” replied
-Joe. “It was Matt Coyle. He made a good
-many threats before he left the village, and he
-has begun to carry them out already. He has
-put up his shanty somewhere in the vicinity
-of this pond, and will make it his business to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_192'>192</span>do some damage to every hunting and fishing
-party that comes here.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Well, what are we standing here for?”
-exclaimed Tom, who had expected before this
-time to hear somebody propose an immediate
-pursuit of the robber.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“We might as well stay here and take it
-easy, as to get wild and rush around through
-the woods for nothing,” replied Joe; and Tom
-was surprised to see how ready he was to give
-his boat up for lost. “In the first place, we
-couldn’t overtake the robber, and in the
-second, we couldn’t recover our property if we
-did. The day of reckoning will surely come,
-but we can’t do any thing to hasten it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>The idea that the squatter would disturb
-any of the things in the other canoes had never
-entered into Tom’s mind. Matt seemed to
-remember, with as much gratitude as such a
-man was capable of, that Tom was one of the
-few who sympathized with him when he was
-ordered out of Mount Airy, and yet he had
-made little distinction between his property
-and that belonging to the sons of the trustees
-who ordered him away. There was no sham
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_193'>193</span>about his rage. He was angry because his
-elegant rod and German silver bass reel had
-disappeared, and because he knew that he
-would never dare have Matt Coyle arrested for
-the theft. If the latter should go before a
-magistrate and repeat the words that had
-passed between Tom and himself not more than
-half an hour ago, wouldn’t he be in a pretty
-scrape? He was in one already, for the squatter
-had a hold upon him, and subsequent events
-proved that Matt knew how to use it to his
-own advantage.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_194'>194</span>
- <h2 class='c011'>CHAPTER X. <br /> <br /><span class='small'>FOREST COOKERY.</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_3_0_5 c018'>“HOW in the world did you manage to
-get separated from us so quickly?”
-asked Roy, addressing himself to Tom Bigden.
-“The last time I saw you, you were bringing
-up the rear all right, but when we lost the
-trail and stopped to hold a consultation, you
-were not to be seen.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Tom had been expecting this, and he was
-ready with his answer. Pointing to his boots,
-which he had purposely stuck into a mud-hole,
-shortly after his companions left him, he said:</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I got mired in the swamp, and by the time
-I could crawl out and pour the water from my
-boots, you had left me so far behind that I
-could neither see nor hear any thing of you.
-If I had come directly back to the pond instead
-of wasting time in looking for you, I might
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_195'>195</span>have been able to stop Matt Coyle’s raid on
-our canoes.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I doubt it very much,” replied Joe Wayring.
-“No doubt Matt has been watching us
-all the morning and waiting for us to come
-ashore so that he could steal something, and I
-believe he would have made his ‘raid’ if we
-had all been here to oppose him. As it was, he
-had full swing, and there are none of us hurt.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“That’s my idea,” said Arthur. “Judging
-by his countenance Matt is a bad man and a
-desperate one. Well, we have lost our rods
-and reels, which must be worth considerably
-more than a hundred dollars, but we have
-learned one thing, that we ought to profit by,
-and another that we can use to our advantage.
-To begin with, so long as Matt Coyle is allowed
-to stay about in this neck of the woods—”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“And I guess he’ll stay here as long as he
-has a mind to,” observed Roy.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Well, I guess he won’t,” retorted Arthur.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I know what you mean,” said Roy. “You
-mean that the arm of the law is strong enough
-to snatch him out of the swamp. I don’t dispute
-it. The trouble is going to be to get hold
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_196'>196</span>of him. If he finds the low lands getting too
-warm for him, he will take to the mountains;
-and you know that there are a good many
-places among them where a white man has
-never yet set his foot.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“He’ll come out, all the same,” answered
-Arthur; “but as long as he stays around,
-Sherwin’s Pond is no place for hunting and
-fishing parties, unless they bring some one
-with them to watch the camp while they are
-rambling about in the woods. We must warn
-the hotel people as soon as we get back to
-town.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“You said there was something we could
-use to our advantage,” suggested Joe.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Yes. We can see any amount of sport
-here this fall with the grouse. We flushed a
-lot of them while we were gone,” he added,
-turning to Tom, “but of course we didn’t shoot
-at them.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Why not?” inquired the latter.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Why, because the close season isn’t over
-yet, and the birds are protected by law.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Tom and his cousins had nothing to say, but
-they wondered if Arthur Hastings always
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_197'>197</span>obeyed the game laws when he was alone in the
-woods. They had not much respect for him if
-he did. They could not lay claim to any great
-skill themselves. An October grouse on the
-wing would have been as safe from harm a
-dozen yards away from the muzzles of their
-double-barrels, as though he had been on the
-other side of the globe. They always killed
-their game sitting; and they would shoot at a
-robin as soon as they would shoot at a wild
-turkey.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“We didn’t come down here to go home
-hungry,” said Joe, pointing to a bunch of
-squirrels that lay at the foot of the nearest
-tree. “We’ll have two courses to our dinner
-or breakfast, or whatever you call a meal eaten
-at this time of day, and there’s plenty of water
-in the spring to wash it down with.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>The boys were all hungry, and there was
-nothing appetizing in looking forward to a
-breakfast of meat and fish. Joe Wayring and
-his friends did not mind it, for they had eaten
-many such meals during their vacation wanderings
-in the woods; but Tom Bigden was not
-much accustomed to roughing it, and he condemned
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_198'>198</span>the squatter almost as bitterly for
-walking off with the hard-boiled eggs, sardines,
-canned fruit and bottle of cold coffee, which he
-had provided as his share of the common
-dinner, as he did for stealing his fishing-rod.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“When Matt opens my bundle and finds all
-that buttered tissue paper in it I guess he’ll
-wonder,” said Joe, as he stepped into Roy’s
-canoe and picked up one of the joints of the
-double paddle. “He won’t know what I
-intended to do with it; do you, Bigden?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>After a little reflection Tom concluded that
-he couldn’t tell what use the buttered tissue
-paper could be put to, unless Joe intended to
-start a fire with it, and the latter went on to
-explain.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“We always take a supply with us as a substitute
-for a frying-pan,” said he. “After
-cleaning the fish in good shape, we wrap him
-up in this tissue paper, and then add three or
-four thicknesses of wet brown paper. In the
-meantime, the fellow whose business it is to
-see to the fire has taken care to have a nice bed
-of coals ready. We rake these coals apart,
-put in the fish, and cover him up so quickly
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_199'>199</span>that the paper around him has no time to get
-afire, and there he stays until he is done.
-Then we poke him out, and when the paper is
-taken off the skin and scales come with it; and
-if you relish a well-cooked fish, there he is.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“But how do you know when the fish is
-done?” asked Ralph.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“A potato is as good a clock as you want to
-go by,” answered Joe.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“A potato?” repeated Ralph.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Yes. I brought several with me, intending
-to put them on the table after they had done
-duty as clocks, but they have gone off with the
-sugar, lemons and other good things I had in
-my bundle. As soon as your fish is covered
-up in the coals,” continued Joe, “put your
-potatoes in alongside of him and cover them
-up also. You can test them with a sharp stick
-at any time, and when they are done, which
-will be at the end of half an hour, if your fire
-is just right, poke them out, break them open
-and place them on a flat stone which you have
-previously washed, to cool. Then poke out
-your fish, take off the wrappings and fall to
-work. But we shall have to use boards this
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_200'>200</span>trip—there are plenty of them lying around
-loose on the point, unless Matt Coyle has carried
-them off to patch up his shanty—and
-make our noses do duty as clocks.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Tom did not understand this, either; but
-believing that he had made a sufficient airing
-of his ignorance of woodcraft for one day, at
-least, he asked no more questions.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Half an hour’s steady paddling brought the
-boys to the point, on which they landed to
-prepare their meager breakfast. That it was a
-favorite resort for parties like their own was
-evident. Beds of ashes surrounding the mossy
-bowlder from beneath which the spring bubbled
-up, marked the places where roaring camp-fires
-had once been built, and the empty fruit
-and meat cans that had been tossed into the
-bushes told what good dinners had been eaten
-there.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Joe Wayring at once set off to hunt up a
-couple of suitable boards, another started a
-fire, two more fell to work upon the fish and
-squirrels, and the rest found employment in
-gathering a supply of fuel, and providing birch-bark
-plates and platters. Although Tom and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_201'>201</span>his cousins did their full share of the work,
-they did not neglect to keep an eye on their
-more experienced companions; and they were
-astonished to see how easily one can get on
-without a good many things which the majority
-of people seem to think necessary to their
-very existence. When the fish had been
-cleaned and washed in the pond, they were
-spread out flat and fastened with wooden pins
-to the boards, which were propped up in front
-of the fire; while the squirrels were impaled
-upon forked sticks and held over the coals by
-Arthur Hastings and Roy, who turned first
-one side and then the other to the heat, until
-they were done to a delicious brown.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“If Matt Coyle had only been good enough
-to leave us the bacon, which I was careful to
-have put up with my lunch, these squirrels
-would be much better than they are going to
-be,” said Arthur, addressing himself to Ralph,
-who manifested the greatest interest in this
-rude forest cookery. “Their meat is rather
-dry, you know, and a strip of nice fat bacon
-pinned to each side of them would furnish the
-necessary grease—that isn’t a very elegant
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_202'>202</span>word, I know, but it expresses my meaning all
-the same—and give them a flavor also. It
-would make the fish more palatable, too. My
-advice to you is, always take a chunk of bacon
-with you if you are going to cook your dinner
-in the woods.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“What’s he doing?” inquired Ralph, nodding
-toward Joe Wayring, who stood around
-with his hands in his pockets, now and then
-elevating his chin and sniffing the air like a
-pointer that had struck a fresh scent.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Arthur laughed heartily.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Joe’s timing the fish,” was his reply.
-“When they smell so good that he can’t wait
-any longer, he will know they are done; and
-then dinner will be ready. It’s rather a
-novel way, I confess, but Joe hits it every
-pop.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>This was the first time that Tom and his
-cousins had ever sat down to a meal that was
-composed of nothing but fish and meat, but it
-tasted much better than they thought it would.
-Perhaps the reason was because they were
-hungry. At any rate they disposed of all that
-was placed before them, and would have asked
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_203'>203</span>for another piece of squirrel if there had been
-any more on the big slice of bark that did duty
-as a platter.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“This meal will give you an idea of what we
-could have done if that squatter had not
-stumbled on our canoes while we were after
-that bear,” said Roy, who stood holding the
-empty platter in one hand and his light bird
-gun in the other. As he spoke, he sent the
-platter flying over the pond, and broke it into
-inch pieces by the two charges of shot he put
-into it before it struck the water. “What’s
-the next thing on the programme?” he continued.
-“I don’t much like the idea of undertaking
-that long carry during the heat of the
-day, but I don’t see what else we can do unless
-we are willing to stay here and be idle for
-hours to come. We can’t fish any more, that’s
-certain. We haven’t brought our long bows
-with us, and who wants to shoot squirrels with
-a shot gun? Not I, for one.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>There was no debate upon the question Roy
-had raised. They had their choice between
-going home, and staying where they were until
-the sun sank out of sight behind the mountains;
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_204'>204</span>and they were not long in making up
-their minds what they would do. When Joe
-Wayring picked up his gun and stepped into
-Roy’s canoe (it was a Rice Laker, and not
-being decked over, it could easily accommodate
-him and its owner), the others got into
-theirs, and the fleet started toward the upper
-end of the pond.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>We have said that Mirror Lake and Sherwin’s
-Pond were fifteen miles apart, and that
-there were about twelve miles of rapids in the
-stream by which they were connected. This,
-of course, would leave three miles of still water;
-but the trouble was, it could not be made use of
-by any one going from the pond to the lake.
-At every one of the points at which the rapids
-ceased and the stretches of still water began,
-the banks were high and steep, and so
-densely covered with briers and bushes that
-the most active boy would have found it a difficult
-task to work his way to the water’s edge,
-and an impossible one if he had a canoe on his
-back. This being the case our six friends had
-a long portage (they generally called it a
-“carry”) to look forward to; but three of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_205'>205</span>them, at least, went at it as they went at every
-thing else that was hard—with the determination
-to do it at once and have it over with.
-Arthur Hastings went first with his little Rob
-Roy on his back, Joe Wayring followed close
-behind him with all the guns and paddles he
-could carry (the rest of them were lashed fast
-in the cock-pits so that they would not fall out
-when the canoes were turned bottom up), and
-they led their companions nearly a third of the
-distance before they put down their loads
-and leaned up against a tree to rest.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“This is my last visit to Sherwin’s pond
-this season,” panted Arthur, as he drew his
-handkerchief from his pocket and wiped the big
-drops of perspiration from his forehead. “It’s
-too much sugar for a cent—altogether too
-much.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Every time you come through here on a
-hot day you say the same thing,” observed Joe.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I know it; but I am in dead earnest now.
-The game isn’t worth the candle.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“What’s the matter? Are you sorry that
-you didn’t smash your canoe in the rapids?”
-asked Roy.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'><span class='pageno' id='Page_206'>206</span>“Or didn’t you catch fish enough to suit
-you?” chimed in Ralph.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Perhaps he is disgusted because he didn’t
-shoot that bear,” said Joe.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“It’s hard work,” repeated Arthur. “The
-fun of running the rapids, catching a nice
-string of bass and seeing a bear, does not
-repay one for the horrors of this fifteen mile
-carry. It is worse for me to-day than it ever
-was before, because we have been so very
-unlucky. We have used our rods for the last
-time, and Joe will never see his canvas canoe
-again.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>This was the way in which Arthur and his
-two friends referred to their losses whenever
-they referred to them at all. There was no
-unreasonable exhibition of rage, such as Tom
-Bigden would have been glad to indulge in, if
-he could have found the least excuse for so
-doing.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>If Tom had possessed even the semblance of
-a heart, it would have smote him when he saw
-how patiently Joe and his chums bore up under
-their misfortunes. If Matt Coyle had turned
-the matter over in his mind for a whole month,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_207'>207</span>he could not have hit upon anything that was so
-well calculated to render these three boys
-miserable, as was the piece of villainy which
-he had that day carried out at the suggestion
-of Tom Bigden. Tom was glad of one thing:
-His companions did not ask him any questions,
-and consequently he was not obliged to tell
-them any lies.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>The boys rested a good many times while
-they were on the carry, and when at last they
-launched their canoes on the broad bosom of the
-lake they were so weary and devoid of ambition,
-that it was a task for them to paddle down to
-the boat-houses; but, like their arduous journey
-across the portage, it was accomplished at
-last by steady and persevering effort, and when
-they separated near the middle of the lake and
-pulled away toward their respective homes,
-they told one another that the next time they
-went down to the pond they would see to it
-that Matt Coyle had no chance to spoil their
-day’s sport.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“There’s something about that business that
-don’t look just right to me,” said Ralph Farnsworth,
-as soon as Joe and his friends were out
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_208'>208</span>of hearing. “I don’t mind my own loss, but I
-am really sorry for Joe Wayring.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“So am I,” said Loren. “He prized that
-canoe very highly. I believe he would rather
-have lost his handsome breech-loader. I tell
-you we made a mistake in having any thing to
-do with George Prime. Wayring and his
-crowd are much the better lot of fellows.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>These remarks settled one thing to Tom
-Bigden’s satisfaction. Ever since his interview
-with the squatter he had been asking himself
-whether or not he ought to take his
-cousins into his confidence, and now he knew
-that he had better not. He was afraid, as well
-as ashamed, to show them how far his unreasonable
-enmity toward Joe Wayring had led
-him, and so he said nothing.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Great was the indignation among some of
-the Mount Airy people when it became known
-that Matt Coyle had turned up again when he
-was least expected, and that he had walked off
-with a hundred and fifty dollars worth of property
-that did not belong to him. But Mount
-Airy, as we have seen, was like other places in
-that it numbered among its inhabitants certain
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_209'>209</span>evil-minded and envious persons, who were
-never so happy as when they were listening to
-the story of some one’s bad luck. George
-Prime and the boys who made their head-quarters
-in his father’s store were delighted
-to hear that the squatter had begun operations
-against Joe and his chums, and hoped he
-would “keep it up” until he had stolen or
-destroyed every thing they possessed. They
-declared that they were sorry for Tom and his
-cousins, but when they came to say that much
-to them by word of mouth, as they did the next
-afternoon when Tom, Ralph and Loren dropped
-into the drug-store on their way to the
-post-office, they did it in such a way that Tom
-became disgusted, and left without buying the
-cigar he had intended to ask for.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“The more I see of those fellows, the less I
-like them,” said Tom; and then he was about
-to open his battery of abuse upon Prime and
-his friends, when he discovered several of the
-Toxophilites coming down the side-walk. “I’ll
-tell you what’s a fact, boys,” Tom added in a
-lower tone. “It’s a lucky thing for us that
-we didn’t buy those cigars. Here comes Miss
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_210'>210</span>Arden with a whole crowd of girls, and there
-isn’t a street or alley that we could slink into
-if we had a weed in our hands.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>The boys lifted their hats as the girls came
-up, and passed on rejoicing over their escape.
-If they had been caught in the act of smoking
-they might have said good-by to all their hopes
-of getting into the archery club. A little further
-on they stopped in front of the window of a
-jewelry store, where some of the prizes that
-were to be distributed at the canoe meet had
-been placed for exhibition. Their three companions
-of the previous day were there, and
-their attention was concentrated upon a beautiful
-blue silk flag, trimmed with gold fringe and
-bearing in its center the monogram of the Mount
-Airy canoe club, which occupied a conspicuous
-position among the prizes.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“That’s some of Miss Arden’s handiwork,”
-said Joe Wayring, after he had cordially
-greeted Tom and his cousins. “It is to go to
-the first one who walks the greasy pole.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Great Moses!” ejaculated Tom. “To
-what base uses—”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“That’s just what I said,” interrupted
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_211'>211</span>Arthur Hastings. “I told her, too, that it
-wouldn’t make half the fun the greasy pig did,
-and you ought to have seen her stick up her
-nose. Another thing, now that I think of it:
-Unless the wind is just right, the flag will
-wallop itself over and around the pole until it
-is all covered with grease.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“And the boy who is lucky enough to capture
-it will have to take it into the water with
-him, and there is her elegant prize ruined at
-the start,” chimed in Joe Wayring.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Don’t you think Miss Arden had wit
-enough to provide for that?” exclaimed Mr.
-Yale, the jeweler, who happened to overhear
-this remark. “Do you see that little flag
-beside the blue one? Well, that is intended
-to represent the prize. If you are fortunate
-enough to capture that, you can fly the blue
-pennant at your masthead.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Miss Arden was right when she told her
-friends that she was sure that the gallant fellows
-who belonged to the canoe club would
-work harder for her flag than they would for a
-greasy pig. Every one of the boys who stopped
-in front of Mr. Yale’s window that afternoon
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_212'>212</span>to look at the prizes, told himself that if
-he did not win that flag it would be because
-some lucky member walked off with it before
-he had a chance to try for it.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>During the next two weeks little or nothing
-happened in or about Mount Airy that is
-worthy of note. A deputy sheriff and constable
-went down to Sherwin’s Pond to arrest Matt
-Coyle, and, after a three days’ search returned
-empty-handed. They found the place where
-the squatter had built his shanty, but it was
-gone when they got there, and so were Matt
-and his family. The authorities at Indian
-Lake were requested to keep a look-out for
-him, but Matt was too old a criminal to be
-easily caught. He and his boys offered themselves
-as guides to the guests of the hotels, but
-when they were told that they were not wanted,
-they set themselves to work to carry out the
-programme of which Matt had spoken to Tom
-Bigden on the day he stole Joe Wayring’s canoe—that
-is, to break up the business of guiding
-in the region about Indian Lake, and to make
-the people who came there for recreation so
-sick of the woods that they would never
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_213'>213</span>come there again. Whether or not they
-succeeded in their object shall be told further
-on.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Tom Bigden and his cousins never knew how
-near they came to being black-balled when their
-names were brought before the canoe club at
-its next meeting. Prime and his friends were
-suspicious of Tom. The latter kept away from
-the drug-store altogether; he and his cousins
-were often seen in Joe Wayring’s company, and
-Prime said that looked as though Tom wasn’t
-in earnest when he promised to assist in carrying
-out the arrangements that had been made
-for defeating Joe and Arthur at the coming
-canoe meet.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I’ll vote for him,” said Prime, after Noble,
-Scott, and one or two others had labored with
-him for a long time, “but if he plays us false,
-as I really think he means to do, he can just
-hang up his fiddle, so far as the Toxophilites
-are concerned. I’ll take pains to let Miss Arden
-and the rest of the girls know that he and his
-cousins smoke and play billiards and cards on
-the sly, and they’ll make dough of his cake in
-short order.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'><span class='pageno' id='Page_214'>214</span>“The agony is over at last,” said Tom, after
-Joe Wayring and his inseparable companions
-Arthur and Roy, who came over in the <i>Young
-Republic</i> the next morning to announce the
-result of the ballot, had gone home again.
-“Bear in mind, now, that we are to stick to
-our original programme and win if we can. If
-we find that we have no show, and that the
-prizes must go to Wayring and his friends, or
-to Prime and his followers, we’ll stand by
-Wayring every time. We’ll teach that drug-store
-crowd that the next time they make up
-a slate they had better put our names on it if
-they expect us to help them.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>It never occurred to Tom and his cousins that
-possibly Joe Wayring, and all the other boys
-who believed that friendly trials of strength
-and skill, like those that were to come off during
-the canoe meet, should be fairly conducted,
-would not thank them for their interference.
-Joe had warned all his friends that there were
-boys in the club who had been “booked” to
-win by fair means or foul (of course he did not
-tell them where he got his information), and
-they made some pretty shrewd guesses as to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_215'>215</span>who those boys were. Being forewarned they
-were forearmed, and they did not want any
-help. Tom found it out on the day the races
-came off.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_216'>216</span>
- <h2 class='c011'>CHAPTER XI. <br /> <br /><span class='small'>THE CANOE MEET.</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_2_0_5 c018'>THE first thing the members of the canoe
-club did when they sprang out of bed on
-the morning of the second day of August, was
-to run to the window, draw aside the curtain
-and take a look at the sky and the lake. The
-one was cloudless, and the surface of the other
-was rippled by a little breeze which promised,
-by the time the sun was an hour high, to freshen
-into a capital sailing wind. For all the members
-of the club were not so deeply interested
-in the paddle, portage and hurry-skurry races
-as Joe Wayring and Tom Bigden were. A few
-of them were expert sailors, and anxious to
-show the spectators (there would be more
-strangers among them this year than ever
-before), how skillfully they could manage their
-cranky little boats when they were under canvas.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'><span class='pageno' id='Page_217'>217</span>The young athletes were all in excellent
-training, and there was not one among them
-who did not expect to win a prize of more or
-less value during the day. Some of the canoeists
-had discovered a couple of Yale college
-students among the guests at the Mount Airy
-House, and after a little urging they had consented
-to assume the management of affairs,
-one as judge and the other as referee. They
-knew all about the rules of boating, and Joe
-Wayring told himself, that Prime and his
-friends would have to be smarter than he
-thought they were if they could play any tricks
-under the watchful eyes of those two college
-men without being caught in the act.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>At an early hour Mr. Wayring’s spacious
-boat-house, which was to be used as head-quarters
-and had been handsomely decorated for the
-occasion, was thrown open, and shortly afterward
-the members of the club began to arrive.
-They drew their canoes upon the beach at the
-side of the boat-house and disappeared in the
-dressing-room, where they remained until the
-warning blast of a bugle notified them that it
-was time to begin operations. Now and then
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_218'>218</span>one of them would take a cautious peep out at
-the back door and turn around to inform his
-companions that all New London had come up
-to attend the meet; and although they knew
-that there were a good many people assembled
-to witness the sports, they were all surprised,
-and not a few of them were made nervous by
-the scene that was presented to their gaze when
-they sprang off the wharf, and ran to push
-their canoes into the water. Mr. Wayring’s
-grounds were crowded with gayly dressed spectators,
-who where lounging on the grass or sitting
-comfortably under the tents that had been
-provided for them, and the lake was covered
-with sail and row boats, all of which were flying
-as many flags as they could find places
-for.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>A mile up the lake the stake-boat was anchored.
-In it was one of the judges, who reclined
-at his ease on a couch of cushions with an awning
-over him to keep off the sun. The other
-judge was Mr. Hastings, who stood on the
-wharf to act as starter. The referee’s barge,
-propelled by six of the best oarsmen that could
-be found among the guides, lay off the wharf,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_219'>219</span>and the police-boats had already cleared the
-course.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“All you young gentlemen who are to compete
-in this race draw a number as you pass,
-and station yourselves accordingly,” said Mr.
-Hastings, who held a small tin box above his
-head so that the contestants could not look into
-it and pick a number instead of taking it at
-random. “Go down as far as the leaning tree
-so as to get a good start, and fill away at the
-sound of the bugle, No. 1 taking the outside.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>The first event was a sailing race—two miles
-with a turn. Those who had entered for it
-drew a number from the box, lingered a moment
-to look at the swinging silver pitcher and
-gold-lined goblets, which, with a tray to hold
-them, were to go to the boy who sent his canoe
-first across the line on the home stretch, and
-then ran out to launch their canoes and hoist
-their sails. There were ten starters, and they
-made a pretty picture as they came up the
-lake before the fresh breeze that was then blowing,
-and dashed across the imaginary line that
-marked the beginning of the course. Another
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_220'>220</span>blast from the bugle warned them that it was
-a “go,” and the race was begun.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>The sound of the bugle seemed to
-excite every body—the people on shore
-as well as the boys in the boats, who
-crowded their cranky little crafts until it
-looked as if some of them must certainly
-go over. There were several of Prime’s
-friends among the contestants, and Joe and
-his two chums wondered if any one of them
-had been “booked” to come out ahead in this
-particular race. They saw nothing to indicate
-it. There was no attempt to foul the boy who
-seemed likely to win, and indeed there was no
-chance for any such proceeding. The referee’s
-barge easily kept abreast of the racers, and the
-man in the stake-boat kept his glass directed
-toward them from the start. There was some
-crowding and confusion at the turn, and some
-of the little vessels came dangerously near to
-one another; but their crews made desperate
-efforts to clear themselves, some because they
-knew they were closely watched, and others
-because they were determined to win fairly or
-not at all, and the race was not interrupted.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_221'>221</span>It was a close and exciting struggle, and the
-boy who brought his Rice Laker first across the
-line was fairly entitled to the silver pitcher.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“That was a splendid race,” exclaimed Joe
-Wayring, as the contestants, after beaching
-their canoes, came into the boat-house to listen
-to the congratulations, or to receive the sympathy
-of their friends. “The paddle race
-comes off now, and I hope that those of us who
-take part in it will make as good a showing as
-you did.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>While Joe was talking in this way, Ned
-Stewart, one of the boys who had just been
-defeated, drew a few of his friends around him
-in a remote corner of the boat-house by
-intimating to them in a mysterious way that
-he had something of importance to say to
-them.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Look here, Bigden,” said Ned, in an
-excited whisper. “I believe it is understood
-that some of us are to foul Wayring or any
-fellow in his crowd who stands a chance of
-winning, and give Noble a chance to carry off
-the honors of the paddle race?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I believe you did make some such arrangement
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_222'>222</span>as that,” replied Tom, indifferently.
-“But if my memory serves me, you did not
-consult me in regard to it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>These words produced the utmost consternation
-among the boys in the corner.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Are you going back from your word?”
-cried Noble, as soon as he could speak.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“What do you mean by that?” demanded
-Tom.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“You know very well what he means,”
-exclaimed Bob Lord, who, it will be remembered,
-had been “booked” to win the upset
-race. “Now, look here, Bigden: You have
-been running with Wayring a good deal, of late,
-and we might have expected this of you. You
-want Wayring to win because you think he can
-do more to get you into the archery club than
-we can; but I assure you that you are mistaken
-there. You can’t get in without our
-votes, and if you go back on us we shan’t give
-them to you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I don’t want Wayring to win,” said Tom,
-emphatically. “My Cousin Loren is going to
-come out at the top of the heap in this race.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Well, I’ll bet you a dollar he isn’t,”
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_223'>223</span>exclaimed Noble, whose flashing eyes showed
-how angry he was. “If I don’t win this race
-nobody shall.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Well, I’ll bet you two dollars that I shall
-keep pretty close to Loren, and that the boy
-who interferes with him purposely will go out
-of his canoe in less time than he can say
-‘General Jackson’ with his mouth open.
-Not only that, but I’ll thrash him the very first
-time I can catch him ashore,” replied Tom,
-returning Noble’s angry scowl with interest,
-and doubling up his fists as if he were ready
-and willing to put his threat into execution
-then and there.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Look here! Look here, boys,” whispered
-Prime, who was really afraid the two would
-come to blows. “Such work as this will never
-do. If we quarrel among ourselves, Wayring
-and his crowd will walk off with all the prizes
-as they have always done.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I have no intention of quarreling,” said
-Noble, who did not like the way Tom glared
-at him. “I only want Bigden to keep his
-promise.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“What promise?” demanded Tom.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'><span class='pageno' id='Page_224'>224</span>“Why, didn’t you say that you were down
-on Wayring and Hastings, and that you did
-not want to see them win any of the races?”
-inquired Scott.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I did.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“And didn’t you promise that you would
-help <i>us</i> win?” chimed in Frank Noble.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“No, I didn’t. When you told me what
-your programme was, I simply said: ‘All
-right.’ By that I meant that you could do as
-you pleased, and my cousins and I would do
-as <i>we</i> pleased. You were very good to yourselves
-when you picked out all the best races
-for your own men, and left us out in the cold,
-were you not? We do not consider that we
-are under obligations to abide by any such
-arrangement, and we shan’t do it. We’ve got
-a programme of our own that we mean to carry
-out if we can, and the fellow who interferes
-with us in any way may make up his mind to
-take the consequences.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>So saying Tom walked off followed by his
-cousins, leaving Prime and his companions lost
-in wonder.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Serves us just right for having any thing
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_225'>225</span>to do with such upstarts,” said Noble, who was
-the first to speak. “They have gone back on
-us fair and square; that’s easy enough to be
-seen.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Who ever heard of such impudence?”
-exclaimed Prime. “They came to Mount Airy
-with the idea that they could run the town to
-suit themselves, and because they can’t do it,
-they are mad about it. They must not be
-allowed to win a race. I would much rather
-see Wayring or Hastings come in first.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“That brings me to what I wanted to say to
-you,” said Ned Stewart. “I don’t know
-whether or not that college man in the stake-boat
-suspects any thing, but he certainly
-acted like it. He kept his eyes on us from the
-time we crossed the line until we got home.
-If you try to foul any body you must be very
-sly about it, or else you will be caught and
-ruled out.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>If Stewart had any thing else to say he did
-not have time to say it, for just then the bugle
-sounded another warning, and that put a stop
-to the conversation. It was a call to the boys
-who were to take part in the paddle race. A
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_226'>226</span>few seconds later thirteen active young fellows
-in showy uniforms sprang off the wharf one after
-the other, shoved their canoes into the water,
-and paddled away to take the positions assigned
-them by the numbers they had drawn from the
-tin box. As luck would have it, Tom Bigden
-found himself near the center of the line, with
-his Cousin Loren on one side of him and Frank
-Noble on the other. Joe Wayring was on the
-right, nearest the shore, and Arthur Hastings
-on the extreme left, near the middle of the
-lake.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“It’s a bad outlook for us,” whispered Loren,
-after he had run his eye up and down the
-line. “Joe and Arthur are so far away that
-you can’t touch them.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Never mind,” replied Tom, in the same
-cautious whisper. “They will have to come
-closer together when we get to the stake-boat,
-and then, perhaps, we can do something. Keep
-your weather eye peeled for Noble. He’ll
-spoil your chances if he can. He’s bound to
-win or kick up a row.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Are you all ready?” shouted Mr. Hastings,
-from his place on the wharf.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'><span class='pageno' id='Page_227'>227</span>There was no response in words, but each
-boy grasped his double paddle with a firmer
-hold, dipped one blade of it into the water
-and leaned forward so that he could put all
-his strength into the first stroke, which was
-given before the notes of the bugle had fairly
-died away.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>The thirteen contestants got off well together,
-and for a while it was any body’s race; but
-by the time a quarter of a mile had been
-passed over, Arthur Hastings and Roy Sheldon,
-who “made the pace”, began to draw to the
-front, while others fell behind, and when they
-rounded the stake-boat the line was very much
-broken. Tom Bigden did not try to win.
-According to the agreement this was not his
-race. He simply kept close beside his cousin—he
-had harder work to do it than he expected
-to have, for Loren sent his canoe through the
-water at an astonishing rate of speed—holding
-himself in readiness to frustrate any attempt
-at trickery on Frank Noble’s part, or to foul
-Frank if he showed speed enough to beat Loren
-fairly.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>How the struggle would have ended, had each
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_228'>228</span>boy been as determined to win or lose on his
-merits as the majority of them were, it is hard
-to tell. Arthur and Roy paddled much faster
-now than they did on the day they had those
-friendly trials with Tom and his cousin, and
-so did Loren. Frank Noble, who was by no
-means an antagonist to be despised, kept
-close company with them, while Joe Wayring
-seemed content to linger behind and save his
-wind so that he could force the pace on the
-way home; consequently he was an eye-witness
-to a piece of deliberate rascality on the part of
-Tom Bigden, which was so neatly executed
-that it might have passed for an accident, if
-Joe, when questioned by the judge, had not told
-the truth concerning it. It came about in this
-way:</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Arthur and Roy rounded the stake-boat
-together, keeping far enough away from each
-other to avoid all danger of a collision. Frank
-Noble followed in their wake, and close behind
-him came Loren Farnsworth, who having got
-his “second wind”, was plying his paddle with
-so much strength and skill that he was rapidly
-closing up the gap between himself and his
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_229'>229</span>leaders. Noble saw defeat staring him in the
-face, and believing that he could gain a few
-feet on Hastings and his companion, and throw
-Loren out of the race at the same time, he
-resorted to an expedient which drew a warning
-shout from Joe Wayring, who was contentedly
-following in Tom’s rear.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Look out there, Frank!” cried Joe.
-“You’ll be foul of somebody in a minute
-more.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I told Tom that Loren Farnsworth should
-never come out at the top of the heap in this
-race, and I meant every word of it,” said
-Frank, to himself; and paying no attention to
-Joe’s warning, he shot his canoe across Loren’s
-bow, passing so close to him that the latter was
-obliged to stop paddling and back water in
-order to escape the collision which for a second
-or two seemed inevitable.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>This was Tom Bigden’s opportunity and he
-was prompt to improve it. With a movement
-so quick and dextrous that it looked like an
-accident to the people on shore who witnessed
-it, Tom unjointed his paddle, dropped one blade
-of it overboard, and laying out all his strength
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_230'>230</span>on the other, he swung the bow of his canoe
-around and sent it crashing into the side of
-Noble’s boat, overturning it in an instant and
-throwing its occupant out into the water.
-Then, quick as a flash, Tom backed his canoe
-out of Loren’s way and sent it directly in the
-path of the other boys, who were thus given
-their choice between two courses of action:
-One was to make a wide detour in order to
-clear the three boats that lay in their way, and
-the other was to give up the race, which was
-now virtually left to Hastings, Sheldon and
-Loren Farnsworth. The most of them preferred
-to draw out of a contest in which they had no
-show of winning, and with many exclamations
-of anger and disgust turned about and paddled
-back to the starting point; while the others
-crowded up around the stake-boat to hear
-what the judge and referee would have to say
-about it.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I claim foul on that!” shouted Tom; and
-the words and the speaker’s easy assurance so
-astonished Joe Wayring, that he sat in his
-canoe with his paddle suspended in the air as
-if he did not know what to do with it.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'><span class='pageno' id='Page_231'>231</span>“I claim foul!” sputtered Noble, as soon as
-his head appeared above the surface of the
-water. “Bigden capsized me on purpose.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I say I didn’t!” cried Tom, looking very
-surprised and innocent indeed. “What business
-had you to try to cross my bows, when
-any body with half an eye could see that you
-had no chance to do it? You declared that if
-you didn’t win this race no one else should,
-and that’s why you got in my way.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“And you said that your Cousin Loren was
-booked to win, if you could make him do it,”
-retorted Noble, who had climbed into his canoe
-and was rapidly throwing out the water it had
-shipped in righting. “That’s why you capsized
-me. It is a lucky thing for you that you
-didn’t smash in the side of my boat as you
-tried to do. I would have made you pay
-roundly for it, if there is law enough in Mount
-Airy to—”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“That will do,” said the judge, in a tone of
-authority. “This is not the place to settle
-quarrels, and neither am I the one to do
-it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“My paddle got unjointed, and I couldn’t
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_232'>232</span>shift from one side to the other quick enough
-to keep clear of you,” said Tom.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Meanwhile Hastings, Sheldon and Loren
-Farnsworth were making fast time down the
-home stretch toward the starting point. To
-the surprise of every body, and to the no small
-annoyance of Arthur Hastings, who had never
-before been so closely followed by any one except
-Sheldon and Wayring, Loren was not only
-holding his own, but he was gaining at every
-stroke. There is no telling which one of the
-three would have come out ahead at the finish,
-had they been permitted to continue the struggle;
-but the referee, seeing the commotion
-among the rest of the fleet, called out: “No
-race!” and pulled up to the stake-boat to see
-what was the matter. The judge gave him his
-version of the affair, Noble and Tom Bigden
-gave theirs, and each of the two boys would
-have expressed his opinion of the other in no
-very complimentary terms, had not the referee
-interrupted them by saying—</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Hard words can’t settle disputes of this
-kind. The race will have to be tried over again,
-and Noble, I don’t think you will be allowed
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_233'>233</span>to take any part in it. You made a mistake in
-trying to cross Bigden’s bows when you did,
-because you had no room to do it without interfering
-with him. You threw him out of the
-contest, and came very near throwing Farnsworth
-out, too; consequently it will be my
-duty to bar you. I am sorry—”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“You needn’t be, for I am sure I don’t care,”
-replied Noble, rudely. He tried hard to control
-himself so that the boys around him should
-not see how very angry he was, but his efforts
-met with little success. To be ruled out of one
-contest was to be ruled out of all; and that was
-a severe blow to a boy who had confidently
-expected to carry off some of the best prizes.
-“What are you going to do with Bigden?” he
-asked, or rather demanded of the referee.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“That depends,” answered the latter, somewhat
-sharply.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“He can’t do any thing with me because I
-have violated no rule,” said Tom, defiantly.
-“You ran across my path when you had no
-business to do it, and an accident to my paddle
-made me run into you. That’s all there is
-of it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'><span class='pageno' id='Page_234'>234</span>But the referee and judge seemed to hold a
-different opinion. They conversed for a few
-minutes in tones so low that no one but the
-guides could hear what they said, and presently
-the judge appealed to Joe Wayring.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“You were close behind Bigden when this
-happened,” said he. “Do you think it was an
-accident?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“What does he know about it?” cried Tom,
-fiercely. “I don’t care what he or anybody
-else says; I know—”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“One moment, please,” interrupted the referee.
-“You have had your say, and you don’t
-help your side of the case any by showing so
-much excitement over it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Do you think Bigden unjointed his paddle
-purposely?” continued the judge, addressing
-himself to Joe.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Yes, sir,” answered the latter, promptly.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Do you think he could have kept clear of
-Noble if he had made use of ordinary skill and
-caution?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I am sure of it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“How could he have done it?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“By working his paddle on the port side of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_235'>235</span>his canoe. That would have thrown him around
-the stake-boat very neatly and given him a winning
-place in the race; but instead of that he
-used his paddle on the starboard side, and of
-course that threw the bow of his canoe plump
-into Noble’s side.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Frank and the judge nodded as if to say that
-that was about the way the thing stood, and
-after a few minutes’ reflection the referee said—</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I am perfectly satisfied and will announce
-my decision where all the members of the club
-can hear it. As we are wasting time and delaying
-the other sports by staying here, we will
-go back to head-quarters.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>It was not a very sociable company of boys
-who turned about at this command and paddled
-slowly back to the starting point, and
-neither were Noble and Tom Bigden the only
-ones among them who were mad enough to
-fight. Two of their number were so jealous of
-each other and so anxious to win prizes, that
-they had deliberately disgraced the club in the
-presence of hundreds of strangers; and it is
-hard to see how any lover of fair play could
-help being annoyed over it. Joe Wayring felt
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_236'>236</span>it very keenly; and consequently when Tom
-Bigden paddled up alongside and told him that
-he intended to get even with him some way for
-the stand he had taken, Joe was in just the
-right humor to give him as good as he sent.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Joe Wayring, you have made an enemy of
-me by this day’s work,” said Tom, in a threatening
-tone.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“By telling the truth in regard to your fouling
-of Frank Noble?” exclaimed Joe. “I
-don’t care if I have. I saw the whole proceeding,
-and I know that you meant to do it. I
-warned you that any boy who could so far forget
-himself as to deliberately interfere with
-another, would be forever ruled out of the
-club’s races, and you will find that I knew what
-I was talking about.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“You might as well expel me and be done
-with it?” exclaimed Tom, angrily. “What’s
-the use of my belonging to the club if I am not
-allowed to take part in its contests? Joe
-Wayring, there’s no honor about you. You
-have led me to believe that you were my
-friend, and then you went back on me the
-very first chance you got.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'><span class='pageno' id='Page_237'>237</span>“Do you mean that I have been sailing
-under false colors?” cried Joe, indignantly.
-“If you throw out any more insinuations of
-that sort before we reach the boat-house I’ll
-dump you in the lake. When the judge
-questioned me I told him the truth; and I
-wouldn’t have done otherwise to please any
-body.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Something must have warned Tom that
-Joe would be as good as his word, for he had
-nothing more to say to him. He gradually
-fell behind and allowed him to paddle down to
-the boat-house in peace.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_238'>238</span>
- <h2 class='c011'>CHAPTER XII. <br /> <br /><span class='small'>OFF FOR INDIAN LAKE.</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_3_0_5 c018'>WHEN Joe Wayring beached his canoe
-below the boat-house, he was immediately
-surrounded by his friends who were
-impatient to hear all about it. They knew
-there had been a foul, for some of the laggards
-in the race had seen it; but they could not tell
-how it had been brought about, or who was to
-blame for it.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“It was Noble’s fault in the first place, and
-Tom Bigden’s in the second,” said Joe, in
-response to their hurried inquiries. “It seems
-that there are three ‘cliques’ in the club, one
-of which believes in doing things fairly, while
-the other two do not. Loren Farnsworth was
-‘booked’ by one of the cliques to win the paddle
-race, while Frank Noble was the choice of the
-other. Each was determined that his opponent
-should not win, and the result was most disgraceful—a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_239'>239</span>deliberate collision at the stake-boat in
-the presence of all these strangers. What sort
-of a story will they carry back to the city about
-the Mount Airy canoe club? Noble began the
-row by putting himself in Loren’s way and
-Tom retaliated by capsizing Frank’s canoe
-and throwing him out into the water.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Do you think he meant to do it?” inquired
-Hastings, who was far in the lead at the time,
-and could not of course see what was going on
-behind him.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I know he did,” replied Joe, who then
-went on to give a circumstantial account of
-the manner in which the fouling was done.
-The boys all declared that it was a very neat
-trick, and one of them added—</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“That Tom Bigden’s cheek is something
-wonderful. As soon as he had backed out of
-Loren’s way and laid himself across the course
-so that we couldn’t get by him without losing
-more ground than we could possibly make up,
-he called out that he claimed foul on that.
-Did you ever hear of such impudence?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Please give me your attention for one
-moment, gentlemen,” shouted the president
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_240'>240</span>of the club; and Joe and his friends turned
-about to see the referee perched upon a dry-goods
-box.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Young gentlemen,” said he, as the boys
-gathered around him, “the contestants in the
-paddle race will go over the course again this
-afternoon, one hour after lunch. They will be
-the same as before, with the exception of Frank
-Noble and Thomas Bigden, whom I am compelled
-to bar out. It is exceedingly unpleasant
-to me to be obliged to render this decision,
-but the rules under which your sports are
-conducted leave me no alternative.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“What do you think of that, fellows?”
-said Arthur Hastings. “If Bigden isn’t satisfied
-now that he can’t run this club to suit his
-own ideas, I shall always think he ought to be.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Well, Noble,” said Prime. “You’re done
-for at last. You are ruled out of every thing.
-What are you going to do?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“What are <i>you</i> going to do?” asked Frank
-in reply.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I? Nothing at all. What can I do?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“You can go home with me, can’t you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Eh? Well—yes; I suppose I could, but I
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_241'>241</span>don’t want to. The fun is only just beginning.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“And are you going to stay here and enjoy
-yourself and assist in making the meet a success
-when one of your friends is barred out?”
-exclaimed Noble, indignantly. “I didn’t think
-that of you, Prime. Why didn’t you stay
-close to me so that you could put in a word to
-help me? You knew what I was going to do.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I couldn’t stay close to you. Those fellows
-in the lead made the pace so hot that I had to
-fall behind, and I didn’t see the foul when it
-occurred.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“No matter for that. You could have said
-something in my defense if you had wanted to;
-but instead of standing by me, you left me to
-fight Joe Wayring and the judge alone. Look
-there! Bigden’s cousins are not going back on
-him as you are going back on me. Tom is preparing
-to go home, and they are going with him.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>But Noble did not know what a stormy time
-Tom had with Loren and Ralph before he could
-induce them to forego all the sports and pleasures
-of the meet. Loren was particularly obstinate.
-He was satisfied now that he was a pretty
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_242'>242</span>good hand with a double paddle, and confident
-that if any of the three recognized champions
-beat him when the afternoon race came off, they
-would have to make their canoes get through
-the water faster than they ever did before.
-Then there was the upset race, which Ralph
-was almost sure he could win, and the greasy
-pole walk, with Miss Arden’s silk flag to go to
-the best man—must they give up all these
-things just because Tom had been ruled out?</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“What’s the reason I am ruled out?”
-exclaimed Tom, who was as mad as a boy ever
-gets to be. “Isn’t it because I tried my best
-to help Loren win the paddle race? I tell you
-that you don’t stand the least show of winning
-any thing; but stay if you want to.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Ralph and Loren were well enough acquainted
-with Tom to know that there was a volume of
-meaning in his last words. If they braved his
-anger they would be sure to suffer for it in the
-end, and if Tom turned against them, where
-could they look for friends and associates?
-Prime and his followers would not have any
-thing more to do with them; Joe Wayring,
-unless he was as blind as a bat, had seen quite
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_243'>243</span>enough to make him suspicious of them; and
-when they came to look at it, they found that
-they were in a very unenviable situation.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I’d give almost any thing if I could live the
-last half hour over again,” declared Loren, after
-he had taken a few minutes in which to consider
-the matter. “We’ve made Noble and
-his crowd so mad that they’ll never look at us
-again, Tom is just as good as expelled from the
-club, and we may as well give up all hope of
-being admitted to the Toxophilites. We’re at
-outs with every body, and the only thing we can
-do is to stand by one another.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Ralph thought so, too. Without wasting any
-more time in argument they put on their long
-coats to cover up the uniforms they would
-probably never wear again, shoved off their
-canoes, and set out for home; and no one
-except Frank Noble saw them go. The other
-members of the club were too much interested
-in their own affairs to pay any attention to the
-movements of a boy who had gone deliberately
-to work to mar their day’s enjoyment.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Tom’s got two fellows to stand by him, but
-I am left alone,” thought Noble, with no little
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_244'>244</span>bitterness in his heart. “Prime and the rest
-of them pretend to hate Wayring and his
-crowd, and yet they are willing to stay and
-help on the sports after I have been kicked out
-of the lists. For two cents I’d hunt up Wayring
-and tell him to look out for Scott and
-Lord.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>But he didn’t do it. He knew that such a
-proceeding would turn every body against him,
-and he had made enemies enough already.
-Without attracting attention he got into his
-canoe and paddled down to his boat-house.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>The unfortunate ending of the paddle race
-had a most depressing effect upon the members
-of the canoe club, some of whom declared that
-their organization was on the eve of falling to
-pieces. After that every thing “dragged”.
-The whole programme was duly carried out,
-but the contestants did not enter into the
-sports with their usual spirit and energy. Scott
-and Lord, who were “booked” for the sailing
-and upset races, respectively, won nothing at all.
-They could not win fairly, and the promptness
-with which Tom and Frank had been ruled out
-deterred them from attempting any tricks.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_245'>245</span>Arthur Hastings won the paddle race after a
-hard struggle; Joe Wayring, being the first to
-walk the greasy pole, carried off Miss Arden’s
-silk flag; and Roy for once went home as empty
-handed as he came, the sailing and upset races
-being won by other boys. But Roy wasn’t
-mad about it, as some of the unsuccessful ones
-were. He had come there for a “good time”,
-and he had it; and his failure to win a prize
-did not spoil his day’s sport.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>After the spectators had gone back to their
-hotels and all the members of the club had set
-out for home, the three chums sat down in the
-boat-house to compare notes.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I am glad it’s over,” said Roy, giving
-expression to the thoughts that were passing
-through the minds of his companions. “It
-was the meanest meet I ever heard of. I
-wouldn’t have had that affair at the stake-boat
-happen for any thing. Those visitors from
-New London will say that we are as bad as the
-professional oarsmen who saw their boats, and
-capsize themselves on purpose.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Well, you expected something of the kind,
-didn’t you?” said Joe. “I did. When Bigden
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_246'>246</span>told me that there were certain boys in the
-club who had been ‘booked’ to win certain
-races, I was sure that Prime had a finger in the
-pie, and that the reason Tom told me about it
-was because he had got mad at him or some
-member of his party. The events of the day
-have proved that I was right. In making up
-the slate, Prime and his friends either forgot
-or refused to give any of the races to Tom
-and his cousins, and that was what caused the
-trouble.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Well, it’s some satisfaction to know that
-they will never have a chance to cause us any
-more trouble,” said Arthur. “They will withdraw
-from the club, of course.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I think there’s no doubt about that,” said
-Joe. “I know that that is what I should do
-if I were in their place. As Tom Bigden said:
-‘What’s the use of belonging to a club if you
-are not allowed to take part in the contests?’
-I am of the opinion that they will band
-together and get up a club of their own. Now
-let’s talk about something else. To-morrow
-we start for Indian Lake.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>This was a much more agreeable topic of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_247'>247</span>conversation than the canoe meet, and they
-talked about it until the lengthening shadows
-admonished Arthur and Roy that it was time
-for them to set out for their homes.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Indian Lake was a favorite place of resort
-for the Mount Airy sportsmen, and for these
-three boys in particular. They went there regularly
-every summer. The country about the
-village was not wild enough to suit them, and
-besides the trout streams were so constantly
-fished by the New London anglers, that they
-were beginning to show signs of giving out.
-Joe and his friends were so well acquainted
-with the lake that they never thought of taking
-a guide when they went there for recreation.
-They went everywhere that a guide could take
-them, and with no fear of being lost. They
-were joint partners in a skiff, which they had
-fitted up with special reference to these annual
-trips—a strong, easy running craft, so light
-that it could be carried over the portages without
-any great outlay of strength, and so roomy
-that the boys could sleep in it without being
-crowded. It was provided with lockers fore
-and aft, in which the owners carried their extra
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_248'>248</span>clothing, provisions and camp equipage, an
-awning to keep off the sun and a water-proof
-tent which would keep them dry, no matter
-how hard the rain came down. With this boat
-a journey of a hundred miles—that was the distance
-between Mount Airy and Indian Lake,
-and there was a navigable water-course almost
-all the way—was looked upon as a pleasure
-trip. The boys would have been astonished if
-they had known what was to be the result of
-this particular visit to the lake.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>That night there were three busy young fellows
-in Mount Airy, who were packing up and
-getting ready for an early start on the following
-morning. If you could have seen their
-things after they got them together, you might
-have been surprised to see that there was not
-a single fowling-piece among them. What
-was the use of taking guns into the woods
-during the “close” season—that is, while the
-game was protected by law? But each boy
-took with him a weapon which, in his hands,
-was almost as deadly as a shot gun is in the
-hands of an ordinary marksman—a long bow
-with its accompanying quiver full of arrows.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_249'>249</span>The law permitted them to shoot loons—if they
-could. At any rate it was sport to try, and to
-see the lightning-like movements of the bird
-as it went under water at the twang of the bow-string.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“There’s one thing about your outfit that
-doesn’t look just right,” said Uncle Joe, pointing
-to the heavy bait-rod which his nephew
-placed in the corner beside his long bow.
-“The idea of catching trout with a thing like
-that, and worms for bait! Before you go into
-the woods again I will see that you have a nice
-light fly-rod.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“But I can’t throw a fly,” said Joe.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Well, you can learn, can’t you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Joe said he thought he could, and there the
-matter rested for a whole year.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>The next morning at four o’clock Joe Wayring
-was sitting on the wharf in front of the
-boat-house, watching Arthur Hastings, who was
-coming up the lake in the skiff. When he
-arrived Joe passed down to him two cases, one
-containing his long bow and quiver, the other
-his bait-rod and dip-net, a bundle of blankets,
-a soldier’s knapsack with a change of clothing
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_250'>250</span>in it, and the contents of a big market basket.
-The basket itself was left on the wharf, because
-it would have taken up too much valuable
-space in the lockers. Mars, the Newfoundlander,
-begged to go, too, and growled spitefully
-at Arthur’s little cocker spaniel, which growled
-defiantly back at him from his safe perch on
-the stern locker. Jim (that was the spaniel’s
-name), always went on these expeditions as
-body-guard and sentinel. He seemed to have a
-deep sense of the responsibility that rested
-upon him, and the arrogant and overbearing
-manner in which he conducted himself toward
-strangers, proved that he considered himself to
-be of some consequence in the world. He was
-a featherweight and took up but little room;
-while the Newfoundlander’s huge bulk would
-have been sadly in their way. They might as
-well have added another boy to the party.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Having stowed his supplies and equipments
-away in the lockers, Joe picked up an oar and
-assisted Arthur to pull the skiff up to Mr.
-Sheldon’s boat-house, where they found Roy
-waiting for them. He soon transferred himself
-and his belongings from the wharf to the cock-pit,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_251'>251</span>and then the skiff went at a rapid rate
-across the lake toward the river, the boys
-chanting a boat song as they steadily plied the
-oars. They paused a moment at the head of
-the rapids, and as they gazed at them, Arthur
-said—</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“How do you suppose Matt Coyle ever succeeded
-in getting that big heavy punt of his
-down there? I wouldn’t make the passage in
-her for all the money there is in Mount Airy.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“It’s a wonder to me that he didn’t smash
-her all to pieces,” said Joe. “She’s in Sherwin’s
-Pond now, I suppose, and there she will
-have to stay, for there is no way to get her out.
-I wonder what Matt has done with my canoe?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Oh, he has snagged and sunk her before
-this time,” replied Roy, consolingly. “I
-wonder what he has done with the rod he stole
-from me?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Some black bass has smashed it for him
-most likely,” said Arthur. “At any rate you
-will never handle it again.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>The boys had from the first given up all hope of
-ever recovering their lost property. The deputy
-sheriff and constable, stimulated to extra exertion
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_252'>252</span>by the offer of a large reward by the
-Mount Airy authorities, had scoured the woods
-in every direction in search of the thief, but
-their efforts had met with no success. They
-found the site of Matt’s shanty, as we have said,
-but the shanty itself had disappeared. So had
-Matt and his family, and the officers could not
-get upon their trail. Perhaps if we go back
-to the day on which Matt stole Joe Wayring’s
-canoe and follow his fortunes for a short time,
-we shall see what the reason was.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>When the squatter picked up Joe’s double
-paddle and shoved away from the shore, after
-taking possession of all the fishing rods and
-bundles that he could lay his hand on, he told
-himself that he had done something toward
-paying off the Mount Airy people for the
-shameful manner in which they had treated
-him and his family.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“They wouldn’t let us stay up there to the
-village an’ earn an honest livin’, like we wanted
-to do,” said Matt, with a chuckle, “an’ now
-I’ll show ’em how much they made by it. Them
-things must be wuth a power of money,” he
-went on, looking down at the elegant rods
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_253'>253</span>which he had unjointed and laid on the bottom
-of the canoe, “an’ I reckon mebbe we’ve got
-grub enough to last us fur a day or two—good
-grub, too, sich as don’t often come into our
-house less’n we hooks it. This is a powerful
-nice little boat, this canoe is, an’ now we’ll go
-up to Injun Lake, an’ me an’ the boys will set
-up fur independent guides. If they won’t
-have us there, we’ll bust up the business.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>While communing thus with himself the
-squatter did not neglect to ply his paddle vigorously,
-nor to look over his shoulder now and
-then to satisfy himself that his rascality had
-not yet been discovered. But Joe and his companions
-spent fully half an hour in roaming
-about through the woods, looking for the bear
-and shooting squirrels for their dinner, and
-when they came out, Matt was nowhere in
-sight. He had crossed the pond, and was urging
-the canoe up a narrow winding creek
-toward his habitation. With a caution which
-had become a part of his nature, he had concealed
-his place of abode so effectually that a
-fleet of canoeists might have passed up the creek
-without knowing that there was a shanty within
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_254'>254</span>less than a stone’s throw of them. The only
-visible sign that any body had ever been in the
-creek was a disreputable looking punt, with a
-stove and battered bow, which was drawn out
-upon the bank. She had had a hard time of
-it in getting through the rapids, and it was a
-mystery how Matt had saved himself from a
-capsize, and kept his miserable old craft afloat
-until he could get her up the creek. She had
-carried the squatter and all his worldly possessions
-for many a long mile on Indian Lake and
-its tributary streams, but her days of usefulness
-were over now. Her trip down the rapids
-was the last she ever made. She was in Sherwin’s
-Pond and there she must stay.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Hi, there!” yelled Matt, as he ran the bow
-of the canvas canoe upon the bank.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>An answering yelp came from the bushes, and
-presently Matt’s wife and boys came hurrying
-out. They would not have expressed the least
-surprise if the squatter had come back with as
-many turkeys or chickens as he could conveniently
-carry, because they were accustomed
-to such things; but to see him in possession of
-a nice little canoe, five silver mounted fishing
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_255'>255</span>rods and as many big bundles, excited their
-astonishment.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Where did you get ’em, old man, an’ what’s
-into them there bundles?” was the woman’s
-whispered inquiry.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I got ’em up there in the pond clost to the
-foot of the rapids,” answered Matt, gleefully.
-“I’ll learn them rich fellers up to Mount Airy
-to treat a gentleman right the next time they
-see one. We’re jest as good as they be if we
-are poor.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Course we be,” said Jake, Matt’s oldest
-boy. “What’s them there things—fish poles?
-I want one of ’em.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“All right. You an’ Sam take your pick,
-an’ we’ll sell the rest. If you see a feller that
-is needin’ a pole, you can tell him that you
-know where he can get one worth the
-money.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“About how much?” queried Jake.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Wal,” said Matt, reflectively, “them poles
-must have cost nigh onto five dollars; but
-seein’ that they’re second hand we will have
-to take a leetle less fur ’em—say two an’ a
-half.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'><span class='pageno' id='Page_256'>256</span>“An’ how much be them there things with
-the cranks onto ’em wuth?” asked Sam.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“’Bout the same. You tell the feller, when
-you find him, that he can have a pole an’ a
-windlass fur five dollars.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>This showed how much the squatter knew
-about some things. There wasn’t a rod in the
-lot that cost less than twenty dollars, or a reel
-that was worth less than thirteen. Matt would
-have thought himself rich if he had known the
-real value of the property he had in his possession.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“What’s into them there bundles?” demanded
-the old woman.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Grub,” answered Matt. “Good grub, too.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>In less time than it takes to tell it, the bundles
-had been jerked out of the canoe and
-torn open. Matt’s family was always hungry,
-and his wife and boys fairly gloated over the
-hard boiled eggs, bacon, sardines, sandwiches
-and other nice things which the boys’ thoughtful
-mothers had put up for their dinner.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Rich folks has nice grub to eat, don’t
-they?” said Jake, speaking as plainly as a
-mouthful of bread and meat would permit.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'><span class='pageno' id='Page_257'>257</span>“Yes; an’ we’ll soon be in a fix to have
-nice things, too,” said Matt, confidently.
-“I’ve got a boat of my own now, an’ I’m goin’
-to Injun Lake an’ set myself up fur a
-guide.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“But, pap, they drove us away from there
-once,” exclaimed Jake. “They was jest like
-the Mount Airy folks—they didn’t want us
-around.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Don’t I know it?” cried Matt, laying
-down his sandwich long enough to shake both
-his fists in the air. “But they won’t drive us
-away again, I bet you, ’cause it’ll be wuss for
-’em if they try it. I’ll kick up sich a rumpus
-in them woods that every body will steer cl’ar
-of ’em; then what’ll become of them big hotels
-when they ain’t got no custom to support ’em?
-I reckon we’d best be gettin’ away from here
-this very night. I’m in a hurry to get to
-guidin’ so’t I can make some money before the
-season’s over, an’ besides I kinder want to get
-outen the way of that there constable. He’ll
-be along directly, lookin’ fur these things, an’
-I don’t care to see him.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“What’ll we do with the house?” asked the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_258'>258</span>old woman. “We can’t tote it cl’ar to the
-lake on our backs.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Course not. We’ll burn it an’ the punt, too.
-They won’t never be of no more use, ’cause
-’taint no ways likely that we shall ever come here
-agin’, an’ we ain’t goin’ to leave ’em fur them
-Mount Airy fellers to use when they come to the
-pond huntin’ an’ fishin’.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>The squatter need not have borrowed trouble
-on this score. There was not a hunter or a fisherman
-in the village who could have been induced
-to occupy his shanty or use his punt, for, like
-their owners, they were things to be avoided.
-But Matt and his family seemed to think that
-they would be accommodating somebody if they
-left them there, and the order to destroy them
-by fire was carried out as soon as they had
-eaten the last of the stolen provisions.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>While his wife was engaged in removing the
-bedding and cooking utensils, and tying them
-in small bundles so that they could be easily
-carried, and the boys were at work hauling
-the punt out of the water and turning it up
-against the house so that the two would burn
-together, Matt busied himself in putting the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_259'>259</span>rods into their cases; after which he walked
-around the canvas canoe and gave it a good
-looking over. Tom Bigden had told him that
-if he didn’t want to carry the canoe on his
-back, he could take it to pieces and carry it in
-his hand as he would a gripsack; but the
-trouble was, Matt did not know how to go to
-work to take it apart. Every thing fitted
-snugly, and he could not find any place to begin.
-The only parts of it that he could move were
-the bottom boards; and when he had taken
-them out, the frame-work of the canoe was as
-solid as ever. He spent a quarter of a hour in
-unavailing efforts to start something, and then
-giving it up as a task beyond his powers, he
-decided that the only thing he could do was to
-carry it as he would carry any other canoe. A
-less experienced man would have shrunk from
-the undertaking. It was fully twenty miles to
-the river which connected the two lakes, and
-the course lay through a dense forest where
-there was not even the semblance of a path.
-But there was no other way to get the canoe to
-Indian Lake.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Meanwhile, Matt’s wife and boys had worked
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_260'>260</span>to such good purpose that every thing was
-ready for the start. Each one had a bundle to
-carry, and the boys had set fire to a quantity of
-light wood which they had piled in the middle
-of the shanty. They lingered long enough to
-see the fire fairly started, and then turned
-their faces hopefully toward Indian Lake, the
-old woman leading the way, and Matt bringing
-up the rear with the canvas canoe on his back.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_261'>261</span>
- <h2 class='c011'>CHAPTER XIII. <br /> <br /><span class='small'>SNAGGED AND SUNK.</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_3_0_5 c018'>HAVING plenty of time at their disposal,
-Joe Wayring and his friends were in no
-particular hurry to reach Indian Lake. After
-they entered the river they kept the skiff moving
-rapidly, but at the same time they did not
-neglect to keep their eyes open for “rovers”—that
-is, any objects, animate or inanimate,
-that would give them an opportunity to try
-their skill with their long bows. If a thieving
-crow, a murderous blue jay, or a piratical kingfisher
-showed himself within range, the sharp
-hiss of an arrow admonished him that there
-were enemies close at hand. Kingfishers were
-objects of especial dislike. The boys were fish
-culturists in a small way, and had stocked a
-pond on Mr. Sheldon’s grounds. On the very
-day that the “fry” were put into it, the kingfishers
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_262'>262</span>and minks made their appearance, and
-then began a contest which had been kept up
-ever since. By the aid of traps and breech-loaders
-the boys waged an incessant warfare
-upon the interlopers, and finally succeeded in
-thinning them out so that the trout were
-allowed to rest in comparative peace.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>The boys did not stop at noon, but ate their
-lunch as they floated along with the current.
-The monotony of the afternoon’s run was
-broken by an hour’s chase after an eagle, which
-they did not succeed in shooting, although one
-of Roy’s arrows ruffled the feathers on his back,
-and by a long search for an otter which swam
-across the river in advance of them. About
-four o’clock in the afternoon they reached a
-favorite camping, or rather, anchoring ground,
-a deep pool noted for its fine yellow perch,
-and there they decided to stop for the night.
-The anchor was dropped overboard just above
-the pool, and when the skiff swung to the current,
-the bait-rods they had purchased to
-replace those that Matt Coyle had stolen from
-them, were taken out of the lockers, floats
-were rigged, a box of worms which they had
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_263'>263</span>been thoughtful enough to bring with them
-was opened, and the sport commenced.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>The fish in that pool were always hungry, and
-the floats disappeared as fast as they were
-dropped into the water. A few “fingerlings”
-were put back to be caught again after they
-had had time to grow larger, but the most of
-those they captured were fine fellows, and
-heavy enough to make a stubborn resistance.
-In less than half an hour they had taken all
-they wanted for supper, and then the anchor
-was pulled up and the skiff drawn alongside the
-bank. Roy and Joe went ashore to clean the
-fish, and Arthur staid in the boat to put up
-the tent. This done, he brought out a pocket
-cooking stove which he placed on the forward
-locker, and by the time the fish were ready,
-he had an omelet browning in the frying pan.
-That, together with an ample supply of fried
-perch, bread and butter and a cup of weak tea,
-made up a supper to which they did full justice.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>There were still a few hours of daylight left,
-and as soon as the dishes had been washed and
-packed away in the locker, the boys took their
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_264'>264</span>bows and went ashore to stretch their legs and
-shoot at “rovers”. Arthur succeeded in
-bringing down a kingfisher after half an
-hour’s hard stalking, and his companions shot
-a squirrel apiece for breakfast. Just at dusk
-they met at the boat, which was hauled out into
-the stream and anchored. The jack-lamp was
-lighted and hung upon one of the poles that
-supported the tent, the rubber mattress was
-inflated, and the three friends lounged around
-and talked until they began to grow sleepy.
-Then the blankets and pillows were brought to
-light, one side of the tent was buttoned down
-to the gunwale, the other being left up to
-admit the air, and the boys laid down to sleep,
-trusting to Jim to give them notice of the
-approach of danger. He gave them notice
-before three hours had passed away.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>About midnight the spaniel, which for half
-an hour or more had been very restless, suddenly
-jumped to his feet and set up a frightful
-yelping. If some one had been pounding
-him he could not have been in greater distress.
-The boys started up in alarm to find the sky
-overcast with black clouds, the wind coming
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_265'>265</span>down the river in strong and fitful gusts and
-the anchor dragging. There was a storm coming
-up, it promised to be a severe one, too, but
-it did not find the young voyagers unprepared
-to meet it. The forward end of the tent was
-promptly rolled up, a spare anchor dropped
-into the water, and the skiff was again brought
-to a stand-still. By that time the rain was
-falling in sheets, but the boys paid no sort of
-attention to it. They buttoned the tent down
-all around and went to sleep again, fully satisfied
-with the precautions they had taken. Jim
-was satisfied too, although he thought it necessary
-to slumber lightly. Whenever a strong
-gust of wind came roaring down the river, he
-would turn his head on one side and look critically
-at the anchor ropes, which led through
-ring-bolts in the bow, and were made fast to
-cleats on the forward locker; and having made
-sure that the ground tackle was doing its full
-duty, he would go to sleep again.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>The night passed without further incident,
-the morning dawned clear and bright, and
-after a breakfast of fried perch and broiled
-squirrel, the boys resumed their journey toward
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_266'>266</span>Indian Lake. On the evening of the fifth day
-after leaving Mount Airy, they found themselves
-within a short distance of their destination;
-but instead of going on to the lake they
-turned into a creek which connected the river
-with a lonely pond that lay deep in the forest.
-They did not intend to go to Indian Lake until
-they stood in need of supplies. There were
-big hotels and a crowd of guests there, and
-they saw enough of them at home. To quote
-from Joe Wayring, their object was to get
-away from every body and be lazy.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>The sun went down long before they turned
-into the creek, and night was coming on; but
-they pushed ahead in order to reach a favorite
-anchorage in the mouth of a little brook, whose
-waters could be relied on to furnish them with
-a breakfast of trout. They laid out all their
-strength on the oars and the skiff flew swiftly
-and noiselessly up the stream, its movements
-being governed by Arthur Hastings, who
-looked over his shoulder now and then to take
-his bearings. After they had been speeding
-along for half an hour, he began keeping a
-sharp lookout for the brook; and once when
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_267'>267</span>he turned around he thought he saw a moving
-object in the creek a short distance away. He
-looked again, and a thrill of exultation and
-excitement ran all through him.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Joe,” said he, in a scarcely audible
-whisper, “there’s your canvas canoe, as sure as
-I’m a foot high.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Where?” exclaimed Joe and Roy, turning
-quickly about on their seats.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>In reply Arthur pointed silently up the
-creek. His companions looked, and then they
-too became excited. There was a canoe in
-advance of them sure enough, and dark as it
-was, they instantly recognized it as the one
-Matt Coyle had stolen from Joe Wayring.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>There was somebody in it, and he was plying
-his double paddle as if he were in a great hurry.
-He did not appear to know that there was any
-one besides himself in the creek, for he never
-once looked behind him.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“It isn’t big enough for Matt, and so it must
-be one of his boys,” whispered Roy.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Boy or man, he shall not go much further
-with that canoe.” said Joe in a resolute tone.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_268'>268</span>“That’s my boat and I’m going to have it, if
-you fellows will stand by me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Now Joe!” exclaimed Roy, reproachfully.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I didn’t mean that. Of course I know
-that you can be depended on,” said Joe, hastily.
-“Let’s take after him. If we find that
-we can’t take the canoe away from him, we’ll
-sink her. Matt Coyle shan’t have her any
-longer.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>The three oars fell into the water simultaneously,
-and the skiff shot silently up the creek
-in pursuit of the canoe, whose occupant was
-making his double paddle whirl through the air
-like the shafts of a windmill. An oar rattled
-behind him and aroused him from his reverie.
-He faced about to see the skiff close upon him.
-The night had grown so dark that he could not
-tell who the crew were, but he knew that they
-would not come at him in that fashion unless
-they had some object in view. Matt and his boys
-always had the fear of the law before their eyes,
-and Jake, believing that a constable or deputy
-sheriff was in pursuit of him, turned about and
-churned the water into foam in his desperate
-attempt to outrun the skiff. He succeeded in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_269'>269</span>getting a good deal of speed out of his clumsy
-craft, but fast as he went the pursuers gained
-at every stroke.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Hold on with that boat!” shouted Arthur.
-“We’ve got you and you might as well give
-in.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>But Jake wasn’t that sort. He redoubled
-his exertions with the paddle, but all of a sudden
-his progress was stopped so quickly that
-Jake left his seat and pitched headlong into
-the bow of the canoe. Speaking in western
-parlance he had “picked up a snag” whose
-sharp, gnarled end penetrated the canvas covering
-of the canoe, tearing a hole in it that was
-as big as Jake’s head. It did not hang there
-but floated off with the current, and began filling
-rapidly. In a few seconds she was out of
-sight, and Jake was making all haste to reach
-the shore. A moment later the skiff dashed
-up, and Roy Sheldon struck a vicious blow at
-the swimmer with his oar; but he was just out
-of reach. A few long strokes brought him to
-shallow water, two jumps took him to dry land,
-and in an instant more he was out of sight in
-the bushes.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'><span class='pageno' id='Page_270'>270</span>“What tumbled him out so suddenly?”
-exclaimed Joe.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Look out, boys! There’s a snag right under
-us,” said Roy.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Where in the world is the boat?” inquired
-Arthur.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“There she is,” answered Joe, pointing to a
-swirl in the water which marked the spot where
-the canvas canoe was quietly settling down on
-the bottom of the creek.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Sunk!” cried Roy. “So she is. She must
-have a cargo of some sort aboard, or she would
-not have gone down like that. Now, what’s to
-be done?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“We can’t do any thing to-night,” replied
-Joe. “I propose that we anchor here and wait
-until morning comes to show us how she lies.
-If the water isn’t over thirty feet deep we can
-raise her.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>The others agreeing to this proposition, the
-ground tackle was got overboard, and Roy, who
-handled the rope, encouraged Joe by assuring
-him that the water was not an inch over twelve
-feet deep.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“If that is the case,” said the latter, hopefully,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_271'>271</span>“I shall soon have my boat back again.
-It will be no trouble at all to take a line down
-twelve feet. I’d give something to know what
-she is loaded with.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Contraband goods, I’ll be bound,” said
-Arthur. “The fruits of a raid on somebody’s
-smoke-house or hen-roost. I am sorry to know
-that Matt Coyle is in the neighborhood, for we
-don’t know at what moment he may jump down
-on us and steal something.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“We mustn’t let him catch us off our guard,”
-said Roy. “It won’t be safe to leave the skiff
-alone for a minute.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>The boys’ hands were as busy as their
-tongues, and in a short time the tent was up, a
-light from the jack-lamp was streaming out
-over the water, and the appetizing odor of fried
-bacon filled the air. The knowledge that the
-thieving squatter was no great distance away,
-and that he might make his appearance at any
-moment, did not cause them to eat lighter suppers
-than usual, nor did it interfere with their
-customary sound and refreshing sleep. They
-felt safe from attack. They did not believe
-that Matt Coyle had a boat (they knew very
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_272'>272</span>well that he could not have brought the punt
-with him), and consequently there was no way
-for him to reach them unless he resorted to
-swimming; and they did not think he would
-be foolish enough to try that.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>The boys slept soundly that night, but the
-next morning’s sun found them astir. Arthur
-made a cup of coffee over the pocket cooking
-stove, after which the tent was taken down, and
-Joe Wayring made ready for business by
-divesting himself of his clothing.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>The first thing was to find out just where the
-canoe lay, and that did not take them as long
-as they thought it would. The water was as
-clear as crystal, and every thing on the bottom
-could be plainly seen by Joe and Roy, who
-leaned as far as they could over opposite sides
-of the skiff, while Arthur rowed them back and
-forth in the vicinity of the snag.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“There she is!” cried Roy, suddenly; and
-as he spoke he caught up the anchor and dropped
-it overboard. “We’re right over her, and
-there isn’t a snag or any other obstruction in
-the way.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Joe Wayring stepped upon the forward
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_273'>273</span>locker, holding in his hand one end of a rope
-which he had coiled down on the bottom of the
-skiff so that it would run out easily, and as
-soon as the boat stopped swinging he dived out
-of sight. When the commotion in the water
-occasioned by his descent had ceased, his companions
-could observe every move he made as
-he scrambled about over the sunken canoe, and
-presently they saw him coming up.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Haul away,” said Joe, as he shook the
-water from his face and climbed back into the
-skiff.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“What’s it fast to?” asked Roy.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“A bag of potatoes.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“What did I tell you?” exclaimed Arthur
-Hastings. “I knew that fellow had been on a
-plundering expedition.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“But you thought he had been robbing
-somebody’s hen-roost or smoke-house,” Roy
-reminded him.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“And so he has,” said Joe. “There’s a
-whole side of bacon down there.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>The boys pulled gently on the line, and
-presently the bag of potatoes came to the surface.
-It was seized and hauled into the skiff,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_274'>274</span>the line was unfastened and passed over to Joe,
-who was about to go down again, when his
-movements were arrested by the snapping of
-twigs and the sound of voices which came from
-the depths of the woods. They were angry
-voices, too, and rendered somewhat indistinct
-by distance and intervening bushes, but the
-boys recognized them at once.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“There comes Matt Coyle, his wife and both
-their boys,” said Joe. “Now we shall hear
-something.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I wonder what they think they are going to
-do,” said Roy. “Just listen to the noise they
-make in crashing through the brush. One
-would think there were a lot of wild cattle in
-there.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Joe Wayring did not await their appearance,
-but went down to reeve the line through a
-ring-bolt in the stern-post of the sunken canoe,
-and to bring up her painter and the side of
-bacon. When he arose to the surface Matt
-Coyle and his family were striding up and
-down the bank, shaking their fists and swearing
-lustily.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“That there is my hog-meat, too,” roared
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_275'>275</span>the squatter, as Joe tossed the bacon into the
-skiff. “I want it an’ I’m goin’ to have it, I
-tell you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“We don’t know that these provisions
-rightfully belong to you,” said Roy. “We
-have an idea that you stole them last night
-or, rather,—”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“No, I didn’t steel ’em nuther,” shouted
-Matt.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Or, rather, that one of your boys did,”
-continued Roy, while Joe hung on to the side
-of the skiff and looked over it at the angry
-party on the shore. “I am sure we don’t
-want them.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Then bring ’em ashore like we told you,”
-screamed the old woman. “You’re thieves
-yourselves if you keep ’em.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Do you see any thing green about us?”
-demanded Arthur. “I’ll tell you what we
-will do: If you will stay there on the bank in
-plain sight until we get our boat raised, we
-will go up the creek and leave the potatoes and
-bacon opposite the mouth of the trout brook, so
-that you can get them after we have gone away.
-What are you going to do with those sticks?”
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_276'>276</span>he added, addressing himself to the two boys
-who just then came out of the bushes with a
-heavy club in each hand.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“We’re goin’ to knock you out o’ that
-boat if you don’t fetch that there grub of our’n
-ashore without no more foolin’,” answered
-Jake, in threatening tones. “It’s our’n an’
-we’re goin’ to have it back.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“That’s the idee, Jakey,” exclaimed the
-old woman, approvingly. “Knock the young
-’ristocrats out o’ their boat. I reckon that’ll
-bring ’em to time.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“If you try that, I’ll lay some of you out
-flatter than so many pancakes,” returned Roy,
-defiantly; and as he spoke he tore open the
-bag containing the potatoes. Catching up one
-in each hand, his example being promptly
-followed by Arthur Hastings, he arose to his
-feet just in time to dodge one of Jake’s clubs,
-which came whirling through the air straight
-for his head. Before the missile had struck
-the water on the other side of the skiff, Roy
-launched one of his potatoes at the aggressor.
-Like most left-handed fellows Roy could throw
-like lightning; and the potato, flying true to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_277'>277</span>its aim and with terrific force, struck Jake
-fairly in the pit of the stomach, and doubled
-him up like a jack-knife.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“That’s the idee, Jakey,” yelled Joe Wayring,
-who was delighted with the accuracy of
-his chum’s shot. “Knock them young ’ristocrats
-out o’ their boat. I reckon that’ll bring
-’em to time. Throw another, Jakey.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>But Jake was in no condition to throw
-another. It was a long time before he could get
-his breath; and when he did get it, the howls
-with which he awoke the echoes of the surrounding
-woods were wonderful to hear. The squatter’s
-family, believing that Jake had been mortally
-wounded, gathered about him with expressions
-of sympathy, and Joe Wayring took advantage
-of the confusion to climb into the skiff
-and put on his clothes. If there was
-going to be a fight he wanted to take a hand in
-it.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Whoop!” shrieked the old woman, rolling
-up her sleeves and shaking a pair of huge, tan-colored
-fists at the object of her wrath. “If I
-was a man I’d swim off to that there boat an’
-maul the last one of you. Matt, why don’t
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_278'>278</span>you do it? Seems like you was afeard of them
-fellers.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Yes, Matt, why don’t you do it?” said
-Arthur, encouragingly.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Yes, Matt, show a little pluck,” chimed in
-Roy. “Come on. Swim off to us; and if I
-don’t sink you before you have got ten feet
-from the shore, I’m a Dutchman.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I don’t think we have any thing more to
-fear from them,” said Joe, in a low tone.
-“It’s a lucky thing for us that Roy thought of
-using those potatoes. If we had nothing to
-defend ourselves with they could drive us
-away from here very easily. Now let’s raise
-the canoe, and go up to the brook and catch
-our breakfast. I’m getting hungry.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>It was scarcely two minutes’ work to bring
-the wreck to the surface. It readily yielded to
-the strain that Joe and Arthur brought to bear
-upon the lines, and as soon as they could get
-hold of it, they drew it into the skiff stern
-foremost, thus compelling the water with which
-it was filled to run out at the hole in the bow.
-After that it was turned bottom upward over
-the stern locker and lashed fast. Of course
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_279'>279</span>Matt Coyle and his family had not been silent
-all this while. They had kept up a constant
-storm of threats and abuse, and the squatter
-fairly danced with rage when he saw the boat,
-with which he had expected to accomplish so
-much in the way of “independent guidin’” was
-lost to him forever. But they did not attempt
-any more violence, for Roy stood guard over his
-companions with a potato in each hand, and
-ready to open fire on them at any moment.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Now, then!” exclaimed Joe, as he pulled
-up the anchor while the other boys shipped
-their oars, “do you want these provisions, or
-don’t you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Course I want ’em,” growled Matt, in
-reply. “They’re mine, an’ we ain’t got no
-grub to eat.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“All right. I don’t suppose that you have
-the shadow of a right to them, but we will give
-them up to you if you will do as we say.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Wal, I won’t do as you say, nuther,”
-declared Matt. “I ain’t goin’ to let myself be
-bossed around by no ’ristocrats, I bet you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Then you shan’t have the potatoes,” said
-Joe, decidedly. “Give way, boys.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'><span class='pageno' id='Page_280'>280</span>“Say! Hold on, there,” exclaimed Matt,
-whose larder was empty and had been for some
-time. “What do you want me to do?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“We want you to stay right there on the
-bank until we can go up and land your provisions
-on the point opposite the mouth of the
-brook,” replied Joe. “You must keep out in
-plain sight, mind you, for if you go back into
-the woods we shall think you are up to something,
-and then you can whistle for your
-grub.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>As Joe said this he shipped an oar, and the
-skiff moved up the creek toward the point.
-The boys kept a close watch over Matt Coyle,
-but he never left the bank. He was biding his
-time, so he told his wife and boys. Joe and
-his friends had the advantage of him now, but
-there might come a day when he could catch
-them off their guard, and then they had better
-look out. If he couldn’t take vengeance on them
-this summer, he would do it next summer.
-He would follow them wherever they went;
-and if he couldn’t get a chance to steal
-every thing they had, he would make the
-country about Indian Lake so warm for them
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_281'>281</span>that they would be glad to go somewhere else
-to spend their vacations.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>As Matt remained on the bank in plain sight
-and did not attempt to approach them under
-cover of the bushes, the boys landed the provisions,
-according to promise—that is, they put
-some of them on the point; but Roy was sharp
-enough to keep out about half a peck of the
-potatoes to be used in case of emergency. This
-being done, they pulled across the creek into
-the mouth of the brook to catch a mess of
-trout, which they decided to cook over a fire on
-the bank. The breeze was so strong that the
-lamp in their little stove would not burn in the
-open air, and they knew that if they put up
-their tent, Matt and his boys would have the
-advantage if they opened a fire of clubs upon
-them when they came after their potatoes and
-bacon.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>It was well that they took these precautions,
-for when the squatter appeared on
-the opposite bank he was fierce for a fight. He
-and his backers were all armed with clubs, one
-of which was sent sailing through the air
-toward the skiff. Jim was sitting on one of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_282'>282</span>the lockers, impatiently waiting to be called to
-breakfast, and the club, after glancing from the
-side of the boat, struck him in the ribs and
-tumbled him off into the creek.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_283'>283</span>
- <h2 class='c011'>CHAPTER XIV. <br /> <br /><span class='small'>THE HISTORIAN CONCLUDES HIS NARRATIVE.</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_3_0_5 c018'>“WHOOP-EE!” yelled Matt Coyle, dancing
-about on the bank in high glee.
-“That was a good shot. Lookout! Here comes
-another that’s goin’ to send some of you to
-keep company with the purp. I reckon we’ve
-got you whar we want you this time, cause
-the taters is all on our side the creek.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>As the squatter spoke a second club left his
-hand, being thrown with so much force and
-accuracy that if the boys had not been on the
-alert, some and perhaps all of them would have
-been knocked overboard, for the missile was
-almost as long as the cock-pit, and as it came
-through the air with a rotary motion, it covered
-space enough to hit all their heads at
-once. This was the signal for a perfect shower
-of clubs. Every one of the family had two or
-more, which were thrown as rapidly as they
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_284'>284</span>could be changed from one hand to the other, and
-Joe and his chums were kept so busy dodging
-them, that they could not find opportunity to
-return the fire. But when the squatter and
-his allies had thrown all their clubs without
-effect, and thus disarmed themselves, the boys
-sprang to their feet and opened their battery.
-The first potato Roy threw took Jake square
-in the mouth, bringing forth another series
-of doleful yells from that unlucky young
-ruffian, and the second put the old woman’s
-right arm in a sling for a week. At the same
-moment Arthur wiped out the insult that had
-been put upon Jim by taking Matt a whack
-under the eye that raised a lump as large as a
-hen’s egg.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Whoop-ee!” shouted Joe Wayring, as a
-potato from his own hand struck Sam’s tattered
-cap from his head. “That was a bully shot.
-Look out! Here comes another. We ain’t
-got no taters on this side of the creek, I
-reckon.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>The fusillade that followed was a hot one, and
-the squatter and his family, finding that they
-could not stand against it, beat a hasty retreat
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_285'>285</span>into the bushes. Then Arthur turned to assist
-Jim, who had been making desperate but
-unavailing efforts to climb into the skiff. He
-wasn’t hurt at all, but he was very mad.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>The plucky boys were not called upon to
-defend themselves. Matt Coyle made an
-attempt to secure the provisions, but went back
-with an aching head and a bloody nose, and
-the three chums saw no more of him that summer.
-But they heard him. From his place of
-concealment in the bushes the squatter and his
-wife abused them roundly, and shouted at them
-threats that were enough to frighten almost
-any body.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>The boys caught a fine string of trout, cooked
-and ate breakfast in peace, and then kept on
-up the creek toward the pond. As soon as
-they were out of range, Matt and his family
-came from their hiding-places after the potatoes
-and bacon; but they made no demonstration
-beyond showing the boys their fists and swearing
-at them.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>After that things went smoothly with Joe
-and his companions. They thoroughly enjoyed
-their outing, and when it was ended they went
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_286'>286</span>home with a new lease of life, and with brains
-invigorated to such degrees that they were
-ready to grapple with any thing that might
-come before them during the school term, which
-was to begin on the following Monday.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>During the year affairs in Mount Airy moved
-along in much the same way that they do in
-every little village which can boast of a popular
-high school and rival organizations of
-almost every kind. After the canoe meet, the
-line was sharply drawn between the two
-opposing factions. They did not come to
-open warfare, but they were intensely hostile,
-and a very little thing would have precipitated
-a fight between Joe Wayring and his friends
-on one side, and Noble, Scott, Prime and Tom
-Bigden and his cousins on the other; for the
-latter did not long remain at swords’ points
-with the boys who made their head-quarters at
-the drug-store. They had a stormy time when
-they first came together, and Tom announced his
-readiness to thrash all the boys who had interfered
-with Loren during the paddle race, provided
-they would come one at a time; but Prime
-and a few others exerted themselves to bring
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_287'>287</span>order out of the confusion, and through their
-efforts Tom was elected president of the new
-canoe club which was organized at once. But
-that did not satisfy him. If he could have had
-his own way in the matter, he would have preferred
-to be a respected member of the other
-club without any office at all. Besides, Prime
-and his friends could not forget that Tom, a
-new-comer, had deliberately “booked” himself
-and his cousins for all the best races, in
-utter disregard of the rights of those who
-ought to have been allowed to win. They
-never quite forgave him for that, and there was
-not that harmony in the new club that there
-ought to have been in order to insure its prosperity.
-Tom was also elected short-stop in
-Prime’s ball-club, and in the first match game
-that was played, had the gratification of putting
-out Joe Wayring and Arthur Hastings
-every time they went to the bat. That did
-Tom more good than any thing he had accomplished
-since he came to Mount Airy, although
-he did feel rather mean when Joe and Arthur
-complimented him on his swift and accurate
-throwing.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'><span class='pageno' id='Page_288'>288</span>At the next meeting of the Toxophilites
-many vacancies were made by the resignation
-of boys who knew that they stood a fine chance
-of being expelled for what they had done at
-the canoe meet, and by the voluntary withdrawal
-of a number of others, who preferred
-Prime’s company and Noble’s to the companionship
-of fellows who were willing to be ruled
-by a lot of girls.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>In the new club, of which Loren Farnsworth
-was chosen secretary, there were no
-restrictions laid upon cribbage, cigars and
-billiards, and so very good-natured was
-the master bowman, that he did not even object
-to pipes when his men were drilling in the
-ranks. But he insisted on prompt and regular
-attendance at all the meetings, because he
-wanted his company to march in the procession
-on the next 4th of July.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Say, captain,” exclaimed Tom Bigden one
-night after the long, fatiguing drill was over.
-“We had forty men in line to-night, and I
-think we went through the school of the company
-in a very creditable way, if some of us
-are green. Couldn’t we get up a street parade
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_289'>289</span>just to show the Toxophilites that some folks
-can do things as well as others?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>The captain was Frank Noble, and a very
-good drill-master he had proved himself to be;
-although he was hardly strict enough to suit a
-veteran, seeing that he permitted his men to
-smoke in the ranks.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I have been thinking about that,” replied
-the captain, as the young archers gathered
-about him after putting their long bows away
-in the lockers. “But I think it would be better
-to wait awhile. It will not be long before
-the lake will be frozen over, and then we will
-give an exhibition drill on the ice. What’s the
-matter with that?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Nothing,” shouted all the boys. “It’s the
-very thing.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Well, then, in order to accustom ourselves
-to the movements and evolutions, let every fellow
-bring his rollers next Thursday night, and
-we will see what we can do with them.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>The boys thought it the best thing they had
-ever heard of, but Scott had a suggestion to
-make.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Why can’t we rent the rink for a few
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_290'>290</span>nights?” said he. “This armory is hardly
-large enough, and besides, the floor isn’t as
-smooth as it might be.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“We could engage the rink, of course,”
-replied the captain. “But if we do, the Toxophilites
-will find out what is going on, and
-we don’t want them to know any thing about
-it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Why, as to that, they are bound to know
-about it,” said Tom. “We can’t keep it from
-them. You know what a fearful noise rollers
-make, don’t you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Well, we can’t help that,” answered
-Frank. “If we do our drilling here, they
-can’t look through the windows and see what
-we are about, as they could if we drilled at the
-rink. Now, if you want to go into this, you
-must be on hand every night. I will promise
-to get you in fine trim by the time the ice is in
-condition, if you will only attend to business.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I wonder if we couldn’t get up a competitive
-drill with the Toxophilites?” said
-Loren.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Not much,” replied Prime, with a laugh.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_291'>291</span>“There are too many raw recruits among
-us.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“We’ll wait and give them a pull for something
-at the next canoe meet,” said Tom.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“You don’t expect to enter for any of the
-prizes next summer, do you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Of course I do,” replied Tom, “and so do
-my cousins. We have sent to New London
-for a rowing machine, and intend to keep up
-our practice all winter.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“You might as well make kindling wood of
-that rowing machine when it comes to hand,
-for it will not do you any good as far as
-winning a prize from Joe Wayring is concerned,”
-said Scott. “You can’t race with
-him.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I’ll see how that is,” answered Tom, who
-was thinking about one thing while Scott was
-thinking about another. “I was under the
-impression that when our new club was organized,
-it was the sentiment of the members that
-we were to challenge their best men for every
-thing. Before we can do that, it will be necessary
-to have a series of trial races among ourselves
-in order to determine who stand the best
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_292'>292</span>chance of winning, and I calculate to be one of
-the select few.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I believe some of the fellows did speak
-about that, but it was all talk,” said Captain
-Noble. “You see, Tom, you and I have been
-ruled out of every thing by the referee’s decision
-on the day of the meet, and you don’t suppose
-that our friends here are going to take
-part in sports that we can’t have a hand in, do
-you? Haven’t we promised to stand by one
-another?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Oh,” said Tom, “I didn’t know what
-Scott meant, but I understand the matter now.
-The others won’t compete because you and I
-can’t. I am glad to hear it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Of course we are not barred out of any
-thing except the sports that take place during
-the canoe meet,” added Prime. “We can
-play ball or lawn tennis or polo with them.
-We can send a team to beat them at target
-shooting, and we can enter our sail-boats for
-prizes in the regatta; but I, for one, don’t care
-to. I’ve had quite enough of that crowd, and
-think we can see all the fun we want among
-ourselves.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'><span class='pageno' id='Page_293'>293</span>“I think so, too,” said Tom. “I don’t care
-for their old canoe club, but I should really
-like to see the Toxophilites go to pieces. I’d
-see Joe Wayring happy before he should come
-into this club with my vote.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>If Tom Bigden could have stepped across the
-street and up the stairs that led to the neatly
-furnished armory and drill-room in which
-the Toxophilites were at that moment sitting
-down to an oyster supper that some of the new
-members had provided for them, he would, perhaps,
-have been very much disappointed to discover
-that the organization he hated so cordially
-because he could not get into it, was not only
-in no danger of falling to pieces, but that it
-was stronger than it had ever been before. The
-vacancies occasioned by the resignation of
-Frank Noble and his friends, had been
-promptly filled by good fellows, who had
-waited long and patiently for an opportunity
-to send in their names. More than that (and
-this was something that made Tom and his
-cousins very angry when they found it out), the
-constitution had been amended so that the
-membership could be increased to a hundred.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_294'>294</span>The Toxophilites were determined that the
-Mount Airy Scouts (that was the name of the
-new club), should not beat them if they could
-help it; but still they did not take in every
-one who applied for admission, as the Scouts
-did.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>During the winter Tom Bigden and his
-cousins, who grew more vindictive and unreasonable
-in their hatred as time progressed,
-waged a secret but incessant warfare upon Joe
-Wayring and his two chums. They coaxed
-Mars from the post-office to the drug-store, and
-sent him home with a tin can tied to his tail.
-They practiced with their long bows at Roy
-Sheldon’s fan-tail and tumbler pigeons as often
-as the birds ventured over to their side of the
-lake. They went across on their skates one
-night, and overturned the <i>Young Republic</i>,
-which Joe had hauled out on the beach and
-housed for the winter; and they even thought
-seriously of setting fire to his boat-house, believing
-that the blame would be laid upon Matt
-Coyle, who was known to be trapping somewhere
-in the mountains. Joe knew who it was
-that insulted Mars and shot at the pigeons and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_295'>295</span>disturbed his sail-boat; but when he saw by
-the marks on the door of the boat-house that
-somebody had been trying to pull out the staple
-that held the hasp, he told his chums that he
-had wronged Tom and his cousins by his suspicions,
-and that the squatter was the culprit
-after all. Beyond a doubt Matt wanted to regain
-possession of the canvas canoe; and in
-order to save his property, Joe shouldered it
-one morning and took it up to his room.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>The attentive reader, if I am so fortunate as
-to have one, will bear in mind that all I have
-thus far written is but a repetition of the story
-the canvas canoe told me on that bright afternoon
-when I was first introduced to him and to
-the other merry fellows—the long bows, the
-snow-shoes and the toboggan—who found
-a home in Joe Wayring’s room. In concluding
-his interesting narrative the canoe said:</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Now, Fly-rod, you know every thing of
-importance that has happened since Tom Bigden
-and his cousins first stuck their quarrelsome
-noses inside Mount Airy. As I said at
-the start, it was necessary that you should hear
-the story, or else you would be at a loss to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_296'>296</span>account for a good many things that may happen
-to you sooner or later. I have an idea
-that you are a good sort, and hope we shall pass
-many pleasant hours in each other’s company.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>I thanked the canoe for his kind wishes and
-for the story he had taken so much pains to
-tell me, and inquired how he had managed to
-live through the long winter that had just
-passed.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Oh, I did well enough,” was his reply.
-“In the first place, the long bows and I had
-much to talk about, and in the next, Joe often
-brings Roy and Arthur up here to spend an
-evening; and as they have traveled a good
-deal, they are never at a loss for some interesting
-topic of conversation. More than that, Joe
-and his uncle went off hunting last December,
-and when they returned, they brought with
-them those conceited things over there—the
-snow-shoes and toboggan—who being from
-another country, think they are a trifle better
-than any body else. But, after all, I have
-found them to be very companionable fellows,
-and if you can only get them started (like all
-Englishmen, they are inclined to be surly at
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_297'>297</span>first), they can tell you some things about shooting
-and trapping that are well worth listening
-to.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Do you know what the programme is for
-the summer?” I asked, being somewhat anxious
-to learn what I had to look forward to.
-“Where are we going and what are we going
-to do?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Well, seeing that this is April, it will not
-be summer for three months to come,” replied
-the canoe. “But you need not expect to
-remain idle any longer than next Saturday.
-You and I will probably be employed in making
-short trips about the village until school
-closes for the long vacation. Immediately
-after the canoe meet, which in future will be
-held on the 3rd of July, so that the members
-of the club can have the whole of the vacation
-to themselves, you and Joe will go up to Indian
-Lake—”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“But Matt Coyle is up there,” I interrupted.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Suppose he is!” retorted the canvas canoe.
-“Do you think that Joe Wayring is going to
-be kept away from his favorite fishing grounds
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_298'>298</span>just because that outlaw has chosen to take up
-his abode there! You don’t know Joe. He’ll
-go, you may be sure, and after he gets there,
-he’ll give you a chance to show what you can
-do with a five pound trout.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Why can’t you go?” I inquired. I had
-already learned to like my new friend, who had
-shown himself to be so good-natured and so
-ready to tell me any thing I wanted to know,
-and I thought I would rather have him for
-company than any body else.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“It is possible that I may go, but I haven’t
-heard any thing said about it. I should think
-I might be of some use to Joe and I would not
-be at all in his way.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“But what if that squatter should steal you
-again? I suppose you didn’t fare very well
-while you were in his hands.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Oh, I fared well enough,” replied the
-canoe, who seemed to have a happy faculty
-of accommodating himself to circumstances.
-“But I didn’t like the company I was obliged
-to keep, I tell you. Whenever Matt Coyle or
-his boys took me out on the water, I would
-have been only too glad to spill them out if I
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_299'>299</span>could have done it. I felt particularly savage
-on the night Jake used me in making his raid on
-that old guide’s potato-patch and smoke-house.
-When I saw the skiff coming after me, wouldn’t
-I have laughed if I had possessed the power?
-I knew that Jake was going to run me on to
-that snag, and when I was settling to the bottom,
-I told myself that Joe would never leave
-me there. I wasn’t hurt at all. I was easily
-mended with rosin and tallow and a piece of
-canvas, and am just as good as I ever was;
-although I confess that I look like a boy who
-has been in a fight and has to wear a patch over
-his eye.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“How did the squatter make the journey
-from his shanty to the creek in which Joe
-found you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Well, he carried me on his back from the
-pond to the river. It took him two days to
-do it, for I hindered him all I could by catching
-hold of every limb and bush that came
-within my reach. When we got to the river,
-Matt loaded me to the water’s edge with his
-household goods (you will know how I shrank
-from contact with them when I tell you that
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_300'>300</span>the blankets and quilts were so begrimed
-with smoke and dirt that Mars could not be
-hired to sleep on them), and then one of the
-boys got in and paddled me down the stream
-while the squatter and the rest of his family
-stumbled along the bank. Matt was afraid
-to make his camp anywhere near Indian Lake,
-because he knew that the guides would be
-very likely to burn or otherwise destroy
-every thing he had, as they did once before;
-so he turned up the creek, and hunted around
-until he found a place that suited him. It
-was in a secluded glen, about a quarter of a
-mile from the creek. He set his boys to work
-to build a lean-to, which would afford them
-some sort of shelter until they could provide
-a better covering for their heads, and started
-out with his rifle to get something to eat.
-During his rambles he found a smoke-house and
-potato-patch which he thought could be easily
-robbed, and as soon as he came home, he sent
-Jake out on that thieving expedition which
-resulted disastrously to him, for he lost his
-plunder and me into the bargain. I assure
-you I was glad to find myself among friends
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_301'>301</span>once more. Why, have you any idea what that
-villain meant to do? He was going to make a
-pirate of me. He intended, first, to offer himself
-as guide for the hotels, and if they
-wouldn’t take him, he intended to follow the
-guests and their guides along the water courses,
-and rob every camp that he found unprotected.
-That’s the kind of fellow Matt Coyle is. He
-ought to be abolished.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“What became of the fishing-rods he stole
-at the time he ran off with you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Well, they had worse treatment than I did,
-because they were not as useful as I was. They
-have been left out in the rain and abused in various
-ways, until they don’t look much as they
-did when the squatter first got his ugly hands
-upon them. I doubt very much if their owners
-would have recognized them if they could have
-seen them the last time I did.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Will our trip to Indian Lake last all summer?”
-I asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Oh, no; only about two weeks. After that,
-we shall be packed off on a long journey, either
-East or West, I don’t know which, and neither
-did Joe the last time I heard him say any
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_302'>302</span>thing about it. You see, Uncle Joe Wayring
-owns large tracks of timber land in Maine and
-Michigan. He wants to see them both, for he
-has learned that thieves are at work in both
-places; but he hasn’t yet made up his mind
-which he wants to see the more. When he
-does he will tell Joe, and then we shall find out
-where we are going.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>There were a good many other questions that
-I wanted to ask my communicative friend, but
-before I could speak again a merry whistle
-sounded in the hall below, and somebody
-ascended the stairs three at a time. Then I
-knew that my master had finished his sail on the
-lake, and was coming up to his room to get
-ready for supper. He threw the door open
-with a bang, school-boy fashion, and walking
-straight up to me took me from my case and
-gave me a good looking over. He seemed as
-delighted as a youngster with his first pair of
-red top boots; but I was somewhat chagrined
-to learn that he did not have a very exalted
-opinion of my capabilities.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“That’s a very fine rod, no doubt; but I
-expect to break him into a dozen pieces before
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_303'>303</span>I have had him a month. A two pound
-trout will give him more than he wants
-to do.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>What else Joe was going to say about me I
-never knew; for just then the supper bell rang,
-and he made all haste to put me back in my
-case. After a hasty toilet he bolted out of the
-room with the same noise and racket he made
-when he came in, and I was at liberty to continue
-my conversation with the canvas canoe.
-As usual, that useful and talkative individual
-spoke first.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“What is your opinion of a boy who can
-deliberately persecute a fellow like that?”
-said he.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“He ought to receive the same punishment
-you want meted out to Matt Coyle; he ought
-to be abolished,” I replied. “But Joe doesn’t
-appear to think much of me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Don’t you worry about that,” said the
-canoe, encouragingly. “You will not wonder
-at it when you have made the acquaintance of
-his bait-rod—if you ever do; I mean the one
-that was stolen from him. He’s a big heavy
-fellow, and strong enough to jerk a four pound
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_304'>304</span>black bass from the water without any nonsense.
-You can’t do that, and Joe isn’t certain
-that he can handle you. He doesn’t distrust
-you any more than he distrusts himself.
-There’s one thing I forgot to tell you,” added
-the canoe, “and that is, if any misfortune befalls
-you, you can lay it to Tom Bigden. I heard
-enough during my short captivity to satisfy
-me that he was the chap who put it into Matt’s
-head to steal Joe’s property. Matt is bad
-enough, goodness knows; but the advice Tom
-Bigden gave him made him worse. That is one
-of the secrets of which I spoke at the beginning
-of my story, and it troubles me all the time. I
-am sure that if I could talk to Joe about five
-minutes, I should feel easier; but that’s something
-I can’t do.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>At my request the historian then went on to tell
-of other interesting and exciting incidents in Joe
-Wayring’s life, but as they have no bearing
-with my own exploits and adventures I omit
-them now, although they may appear at
-some future period. By the time he grew
-weary of talking it was ten o’clock, and darkness
-had settled down over the room; but just
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_305'>305</span>as I was composing myself for the night, the
-door opened and Joe Wayring came in. Making
-good his boast, that if folks would let his
-property alone, he could find any thing he
-wanted on the darkest of nights and without
-the aid of a lamp, Joe caught up the creel with
-one hand, seized me with the other, and carrying
-us both down-stairs, deposited us on the kitchen
-table beside something that was covered with a
-snow-white cloth. Then he busied himself for a
-few minutes about the stove, getting kindling
-and light wood together so that a fire could be
-readily started; and after I had watched his
-movements for a while, I made up my mind that a
-campaign of some sort was in prospect. When he
-took the light and went out I said to the creel:</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Do you happen to know what day this is?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“It’s Friday,” he replied. “To-morrow
-will be Saturday, and I should judge by the
-looks of things, that we are going to make our
-first trip after trout.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Do you know by experience how a youngster
-feels when he is about to be called up before a
-hundred or more critical school mates to recite
-his little piece beginning—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_306'>306</span>“You’d scarce expect a boy like me</div>
- <div class='line'>To get up here where all can see,</div>
- <div class='line'>And make a speech as well as those</div>
- <div class='line'>Who wear the largest kind of clothes.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c019'>Do you know how he feels? Well, that’s
-way I felt.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_307'>307</span>
- <h2 class='c011'>CHAPTER XV. <br /> <br /><span class='small'>MY FIRST TRIP TO INDIAN LAKE.</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_2_0_5 c018'>THE next morning, just as the clock was
-striking the hour of four, I was aroused
-from a reverie into which I had fallen by a hasty
-step, followed by a blinding glare of light, and
-Joe Wayring came hurrying into the kitchen.
-He didn’t look much as he did the last time I
-saw him, and if it hadn’t been for his curly head
-and blue eyes, I don’t think I should have recognized
-him. But he was a nobby looking
-fellow, all the same, dressed as he was in a
-neat suit of duck, dyed to a dead grass shade,
-a light helmet with a peak before and behind,
-and leggings and gaiters instead of boots. Joe
-was not the boy to make himself uncomfortable,
-or to go about in a ragged coat and with
-his hair sticking out of the top of his cap, just
-because he intended to spend the day in the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_308'>308</span>woods out of sight of every body. He knew
-of anglers and hunters who affected that style,
-and they could follow it, if they wanted to,
-but he wouldn’t. Leggings and gaiters were
-easier to walk in than heavy boots, and whole
-clothes looked better than shabby ones.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Placing the lamp on the table Joe began
-bustling about the kitchen, and in a very few
-minutes the fire was started and the tea-kettle
-filled. Then he threw back the cloth before
-spoken of, revealing a substantial lunch, a
-liberal portion of which he proceeded to pack
-away in the creel.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>About the time the coffee was ready, the
-door opened again, and Uncle Joe came in.
-He, too, was dressed for the woods, and carried
-a rod of some sort in one hand and a creel in the
-other. The latter must have been a fine looking
-article in his day, but now he was as
-weather-beaten as any old sailor. And that
-was not to be wondered at, for he had traveled
-much, and had seen many hardships. He had
-accompanied his master from one end of
-the country to the other. He had held
-captive for him many a nice breakfast of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_309'>309</span>grayling captured in Michigan waters, and
-carried his dinner while he was fighting with
-the big trout in Rangeley Lakes. He went
-with him on one of his Western tours, and
-would certainly have fallen into the hands of
-the Utes when they arose in rebellion and
-massacred all the whites they could find, had
-it not been for the fact that he was slung over
-his master’s shoulder, and the latter was in
-too great a hurry to stop and throw him off.
-He had many thrilling recollections of the
-Indian Lake country, for he had been capsized
-on the rapids more times than he could remember.
-He was a good talker, and as full of
-stories as the canvas canoe.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Well, sir,” said Uncle Joe, as he deposited
-his rod and creel on the table, “what are the
-prospects?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Couldn’t be better,” replied the boy. “It’s
-cloudy, and there is every sign of rain before
-noon.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I hope it will stay cloudy, but I can’t say
-that I want to see it rain,” said Uncle Joe, as
-he drew a chair up to the table and took the
-cup of coffee his nephew poured out for him.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_310'>310</span>“The bushes around the old spring hole are
-pretty thick, and I long ago ceased to see any
-fun in getting drenched for the sake of catching
-a mess of half-pound trout. If they were
-salmon, now, the case would be different.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Nevertheless Uncle Joe seemed to be in just
-as great a hurry to eat his breakfast and be off
-as his nephew was. Ten minutes sufficed to
-satisfy their appetites, and in ten minutes more
-we were on the outskirts of the village, and
-moving up an old log road toward the spring
-hole, where I was to make my first attempt to
-take a fish. I dreaded the ordeal, for I did not
-have as much confidence in myself as I would
-have had if my master had not spoken so
-slightingly of me.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>How far it was from the village to the spring
-hole, I am sure I don’t know. It seemed like
-a long journey to me, although it was enlivened
-by stories of travel and adventure from Uncle
-Joe, in which I became deeply interested.
-Presently Joe, who was leading the way,
-pushed aside the bushes in front of him, disclosing
-to view a small body of water fringed
-with lily-pads and surrounded on all sides by
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_311'>311</span>high and thickly wooded hills; and I knew instinctively
-that we had reached the end of our
-tramp, and that the time had come for me to
-show what I could do. There seemed to be
-abundant opportunity for me to do good work
-if I was capable of it. While I was being taken
-out of my case, I noticed that now and then
-there was a slight commotion in the water, just
-outside the lilies, and I knew it was occasioned
-by trout jumping from the water, even before
-Joe Wayring said so.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Just look at them!” he exclaimed, in great
-excitement. “They are having a high old
-time among themselves. I wouldn’t take a
-dollar for my chance of going home with a full
-creel. There! Did you see that whopper?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Put on a white miller and a brown hackle,
-and give me your rod as quick as you can,”
-answered his uncle. “I saw him, and if he
-comes up again within seventy or eighty feet
-of us, I will make an effort to take him.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Do you mean to say that you can throw a
-fly as far as that?” inquired Joe.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“That depends upon the rod. I’d like to
-have the first try with it, if you have no objection,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_312'>312</span>for I want to see whether or not you’ve
-got a good bargain.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Of course Joe had no objection. As soon as
-I was ready for business he passed me over to
-his uncle, and when I felt his strong fingers
-close around me, I knew that I was in the hands
-of one who would make me show off to the best
-possible advantage.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“There he is again! Give him the flies,
-quick!” cried Joe, suddenly.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Uncle Joe’s movements were characterized
-by what sportsmen are wont to call “deliberate
-quickness”. He was so very deliberate, in
-fact, that his nephew began to show unmistakable
-signs of impatience; but still he did
-not waste a single second of valuable time.
-Reeling off as much line as the close proximity
-of the bushes behind would permit him to use,
-Uncle Joe gave me a smart upward and backward
-fling and then struck down toward the
-water. This movement caused the line to fly
-through the air like a whip lash, only it grew
-in length all the while; and when the flies
-were directly over the swirl the trout had made
-when he went down, the motion of the reel was
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_313'>313</span>stopped by a slight pressure of the angler’s
-thumb, and the tempting lures settled upon the
-water as lightly as a couple of feathers.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I never can learn to do that,” said Joe,
-despondingly. “It requires altogether too
-much skill for my clumsy—Well, sir, you’ve
-got him as sure as the world.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>The hook was fast to something, that was
-plain; but I thought at first that Uncle Joe
-had caught a snag or a lily-pad. There was a
-jerk that made me wonder, and in an instant
-more I was bent almost half double; but with
-all the strain that was brought to bear upon
-me, the thing at the other end of the line, whatever
-it was, did not give an inch. On the contrary,
-it started and ran off toward the middle
-of the spring hole; and then I began to realize
-that I was doing battle with a trout of the
-largest size. Now was the time to show my
-master that he had been much mistaken in me.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>I need not stop to go into the particulars of
-the fight, for every boy who has caught a heavy
-trout on a light rod will know just what happened;
-and besides, to be frank with you, I
-don’t remember much about it. Neither does
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_314'>314</span>Joe Wayring, who was so highly excited that
-he could not stand still. I recollect he afterward
-told his chums that the fish jumped clear
-out of the water two or three times, and then
-started from the middle of the spring hole and
-ran toward the angler at the top of his speed,
-trying to loosen the line so that the hook
-would drop out of his mouth; but the automatic
-reel took up the slack as fast as he made
-it, and his mad rushes about the spring hole
-had no other result than to tire him out, so that
-he could offer but feeble resistance when he was
-reeled in to the bank. The moment he was
-brought within reach Joe slipped a landing net
-under him and lifted him out.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Two pounds and three ounces,” he almost
-shouted, after he had weighed him on his
-pocket scales. “Now, Uncle Joe, what’s your
-opinion of that rod?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“A fair sized fish for these waters,” said
-Uncle Joe, as he stepped to the edge
-of the spring hole for another cast. “As
-for the rod—it’s as good a one as you need
-wish for. If you will take care of him, he will
-last as long as you will, barring accident.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'><span class='pageno' id='Page_315'>315</span>I will not dwell upon the incidents of the
-day, for I must hasten on to tell you what
-happened to me during my first visit to Indian
-Lake. It will be enough to say that Joe and
-his uncle enjoyed themselves, as they always
-did whenever they went anywhere together,
-and that my master after an hour or two of
-assiduous practice, learned to make short casts
-with tolerable accuracy, and to show considerable
-skill in handling the fish he hooked.
-When the two went home a little before dark
-Joe’s creel was not as full as his uncle’s, but
-the few trout he captured with his light
-tackle, afforded him more genuine sport than
-twice the number of bass taken on a heavy
-bait-rod.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>That day was the beginning of a busy season
-for me. Every Saturday, rain or shine, found
-me at the spring hole or wandering along the
-banks of some of the numerous streams that
-ran into Mirror Lake. I caught a good many
-fish, soon got over my nervousness, and looked
-forward to the long summer vacation with as
-much impatience as Joe himself. It came at
-last, being ushered in by a canoe meet on the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_316'>316</span>3rd of July, and a grand parade on the 4th, in
-which the Toxophilites and Scouts both took
-part. There was a good deal of rivalry between
-these two organizations—so much, indeed, that
-the usual exhibition drill at the park was
-given by the military company, thus putting
-it out of the power of either club to crow over
-the other. But still there was considerable
-crowing done, especially by Tom Bigden and a
-few envious fellows like him.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Don’t you remember what vociferous
-applause the Toxophilites received last 4th?”
-said he, to his cousins.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Yes; and I remember how mad you were
-about it, too,” replied Loren.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I know it. I couldn’t bear to see them
-throw on so many airs, but I little thought
-that I should aid in making them take back
-seats at their next parade. I have yet to see
-any one who will say that the Scouts didn’t do
-just as fine marching in the procession as the
-Toxophilites did.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Of course I did not see the parade, and neither
-did I witness the sports that were held during
-the canoe meet, for I was shut up in Joe’s
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_317'>317</span>room so far from a window that I could not
-tell what was going on out-doors. But I heard
-the music of the band, and the cheers that arose
-whenever some lucky fellow carried off a prize,
-and the exciting and amusing incidents that
-happened during those two days of festivity,
-were so often talked of in my hearing, that I
-was pretty well posted after all. I was glad to
-learn that my master won the paddle race very
-easily, and that he pushed Roy and Arthur so
-closely in the hurry-skurry race that the referee
-had half a mind to order another contest. But
-Joe and Arthur said that Roy was ahead, and
-as the other boys backed them up, Roy was
-awarded the prize. There was no attempt at
-fouling this time. Every thing was conducted
-fairly, as it always had been previous to Tom
-Bigden’s arrival in the village, and every member
-of the club won or lost on his merits.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>The parade being over, there was nothing to
-keep Joe and his two chums at home, and on
-the evening of the 4th they began making preparations
-for their annual trip to Indian Lake.
-Shortly after supper Joe Wayring came into
-the room, and having exchanged his uniform
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_318'>318</span>for a suit of working clothes, he shouldered my
-friend, the canvas canoe, and carried him down
-stairs. Half an hour later he came back after
-the creel and me. He took us down to the
-boat-house and there we found the canoe,
-snugly tucked away in his chest like a tired
-boy in his little bed.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Hurrah for me!” exclaimed the canoe,
-after Joe had gone out locking the door behind
-him. “I am going to Indian Lake, too. Now,
-if Joe can only keep clear of Matt Coyle, we’ll
-see some fun before we get back. You think you
-know something about fishing; but wait until
-you get hold of one of those big lake trout, and
-then tell me what you think about it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>That was just what I wanted to do, but I
-didn’t say so, for fear that when the time came
-I might discover that I was not quite so good a
-rod as I thought I was.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>We were so very impatient to be off that the
-night was a very long one to us; but at the
-first peep of day we heard Joe’s step as he came
-down the walk toward the boat-house. He
-placed a basket of provisions on the wharf,
-mildly scolded Mars for making such a fuss
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_319'>319</span>over the coming separation, and then came in
-after us. Arthur Hastings, Jim and the skiff
-were on time, as they always were, and in half
-an hour more we had taken Roy Sheldon
-on board and were moving gayly down the river.
-We camped for the night at the old perch hole,
-where the skiff had ridden out that furious
-storm a year before, and the boys had fish for
-supper. Joe had been told that perch would
-rise to a red ibis, but he and I could not prove
-the truth of the assertion. Although Arthur
-and Roy pulled out the fish as fast as they
-could bait their hooks, Joe never got a bite.
-The reason was, the water was too deep. His
-uncle afterward told him that six feet is about
-as far as any fish can be relied upon to rise to a
-fly; and sometimes they are too lazy to come
-from that depth.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>On the afternoon on the fourth day we left
-the river and turned into a little creek, whose
-current was so swift that the boys were obliged
-to use extra exertion in order to make headway
-against it. About an hour after the sun went
-down we came to anchor in the mouth of a
-brook, and there I made amends for my failure
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_320'>320</span>at the perch hole. I captured more trout than
-both the other rods, and if I had felt so inclined,
-could have returned some of the left-handed
-compliments they paid me when it was found
-that I could not catch a perch in twenty feet of
-water; but being peaceably disposed I said
-nothing. While the tent was being put up, a
-muffled voice came from the chest in which
-the canvas canoe was packed away. The
-cover being shut down, I had to listen intently
-in order to catch what he said to me.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Didn’t I hear some one say something
-about trout?” asked the canoe.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I think it very likely,” was my reply.
-“There are lots of them in the brook; almost
-as many as there in the spring hole at Mount
-Airy.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Then I know where we are,” said my
-imprisoned friend. “Did you see an ugly looking
-snag about a mile below? Well, there’s one
-there, and it’s the one Jake Coyle ran into the
-night I was sunk in the creek. The fight I
-told you about took place right here. Have
-you seen or heard any thing of the squatter?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'><span class='pageno' id='Page_321'>321</span>“No, I haven’t; but I know that Joe and
-his friends are keeping a bright lookout for
-him.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I am glad to hear it, and I hope they will
-not relax their vigilance just because Matt keeps
-himself out of sight. His shanty is over there
-in the woods on the right hand side of the
-creek. I’ll bet he is there now, and that he has
-had his eye on the skiff ever since she came into
-this part of the country. Mark my words:
-Joe will hear from him before he sees Mount
-Airy again.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Oh, I hope not,” said I.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“So do I,” answered the canoe. “But I
-became well enough acquainted with Matt and
-his family during the short time I lived with
-them, to know that they do not intend to leave
-here unless they are driven away, as they were
-last year when they came to our village. Why,
-this is the best place in the world for a man who
-is too lazy to work, and who is not above taking
-things without leave. Game and fish are
-abundant. All the guides cultivate little
-patches of ground, and keep a few pigs and
-chickens, and as they are away from home a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_322'>322</span>good part of the time, their property is left
-to the care of their wives and children. They
-can’t stand guard day and night, and consequently
-it is no trouble at all for Matt to steal
-all he wants. He has a fine hiding-place now,
-and as he and his family make it a point to
-travel different routes every time they go away
-from the shanty or return to it, they don’t
-leave much of a trail for the guides to follow, if
-they should make up their minds to hunt them
-up. Another thing,” added the canoe, in a
-tone of anxiety, “Matt hates Joe and his chums
-for two reasons: First, because their fathers
-turned him out of Mount Airy, and second,
-because they gave him such a pelting with
-potatoes the last time they were up here. If he
-is here, he will try to have revenge for that;
-now you see if he doesn’t.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>The canvas canoe spoke confidently, and his
-words occasioned me no little uneasiness; but
-I was greatly relieved to learn from the conversation,
-to which I listened while the boys were
-eating supper, that they were fully alive to the
-dangers of the situation, and that they did not
-mean to let the squatter take them off their
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_323'>323</span>guard. They were happy in the belief that
-Matt could not attack them, except at long
-range, because he had no boat to bring him
-alongside the skiff. It never occurred to them
-that he had had plenty of time to steal or build
-one, and that was where they made their mistake.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Up to this time we had had pleasant weather;
-but this particular night was a rainy one. The
-big drops began coming down just after the
-tent was put up. Then I realized for the first
-time what a comfortable home it was that the
-boys had provided for themselves. The canvas
-canoe and I lay on the forward locker, with
-the two bait-rods, the dip-net and the cocker
-spaniel to keep us company. On the bottom
-of the boat in the cock-pit sat the three chums,
-on either side of a table which they had made
-by pushing the movable thwarts close together.
-On the table, which was covered with a white
-napkin, was an array of dishes, plates and
-cups, all of tin, which were filled to over-flowing
-with ham sandwiches, bread and butter,
-cake, ripe fruit of various kinds and trout,
-done to a turn. On the stern locker stood the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_324'>324</span>little stove over which Arthur had cooked the
-fish and made the tea, and above it hung the
-jack-lamp that was kept burning all night. If
-any thing happened—if the wind arose and the
-anchor dragged, or prowlers of any sort came
-about—the boys wanted a light to work by.
-Over all was the tent, with the rain coming
-gently down on the top of it. One side curtain
-was rolled up to admit the air, but the other
-was buttoned securely to the gunwale. Joe
-wasn’t going to have the squatter slip up and
-send a club into the cock-pit before he knew it.
-Taken altogether it was a cozy, home-like
-scene, and I no longer wondered why it was
-that Joe and his friends looked forward to the
-summer vacation with such lively anticipations
-of pleasure.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>The boys slept soundly that night, lulled by
-the pattering of the rain on the roof over their
-heads, but the sun did not find them in bed. I
-caught more than my share of the trout they
-ate for breakfast, and that afternoon was given
-an opportunity to try my skill on larger game,
-to wit, a four pound black bass. I may add,
-too, that I got my first ducking, and witnessed
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_325'>325</span>the liveliest kind of a foot race. But I can’t
-say that I enjoyed it; there was too much depending
-on it.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Do you remember the last time we ate
-breakfast here?” said Joe, as he drew up the
-anchor while his companions shipped the oars
-and pulled up the creek toward the pond. “If
-my memory serves me, Matt Coyle made the
-mouth of this brook uncomfortably warm for
-us for a few minutes. What would we have
-done if Roy hadn’t been smart enough to keep
-some of the potatoes out of that bag? I wonder
-where the old chap is now?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Probably he is a hundred miles away,” answered
-Arthur. “You don’t suppose that the
-people who live around the lake are going to
-let him stay here and steal them out of house
-and home, do you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I am of the opinion that he and his worthless
-family were driven away from here long
-ago,” said Roy. “But still I don’t believe
-in trusting any thing to luck. We needn’t
-go ashore unless we want to, and Matt can’t
-bother us while we are lying at anchor. He’s
-got no boat, and he isn’t foolish enough to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_326'>326</span>swim off to us, for we gave him a lesson the
-last time we were here that he will remember
-as long as he lives.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>We left the mouth of the brook at an early
-hour, and about four in the afternoon entered
-the pond, where I heard Joe say we would
-remain until the bread and bacon gave out,
-when we would go over to Indian Lake and lay
-in a fresh supply. Now Joe was sorry that he
-had left his bait-rod behind. The pond was
-noted for the number and fighting qualities of
-its bass, and Joe had nothing to catch them
-with; at least that was what he told his friends,
-adding that he was afraid to trust so heavy
-work to me.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“You’d better be afraid,” assented Roy.
-“If you don’t want that fine rod of yours
-smashed into a thousand pieces, you had better
-not try to catch a bass with it. But I’ll tell you
-what you might do, if you don’t care to sit idly
-here while Art and I catch all the fish and see
-all the fun. You might go up to the little
-perch hole and throw a fly there. Perhaps you
-will find the perch in the pond more accommodating
-than they were back there in the river.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'><span class='pageno' id='Page_327'>327</span>“How about our esteemed friend, the squatter?”
-said Arthur.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Oh, he can’t trouble me,” answered Joe,
-who was already preparing to act upon Roy’s
-suggestion. “His shanty is away off there
-somewhere, while the perch hole lies a mile or
-more in the opposite direction. There is a wide
-and deep river between the two, and how is
-Matt going to cross it without a boat? I am of
-Roy’s opinion that he was driven away from
-here long ago.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>While Joe was talking in this way he had
-taken the canvas canoe from his chest, and now
-under his skillful hands my old friend was fast
-assuming his usual symmetrical proportions.
-In less than ten minutes he was floating gracefully
-alongside the skiff.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Come on, Fly-rod,” said he, “and I will
-show you what a canvas canoe can do when he
-is managed by some one who understands his
-business. You never took a ride with me, did
-you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>No, I never had, and if the truth must be
-told, I never wanted to take a second ride with
-him. He may have been “the boss boat” on
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_328'>328</span>the rapids, as he often boasted, but he was a
-very unfortunate craft all the same, and before
-the day was over I had reason to believe that
-Joe would have seen more sport during his two
-weeks’ outing if he had left the canoe safe in
-his room at Mount Airy. I came back to the
-skiff, but he didn’t.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_329'>329</span>
- <h2 class='c011'>CHAPTER XVI. <br /> <br /><span class='small'>AN EXPLOIT AND A SURPRISE.</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_4_0_5 c018'>AS I could not comply with my friend’s
-invitation to “come on”, I was obliged
-to wait until Joe had exchanged his heavy
-boots for the buckskin moccasins he always
-wore whenever he went anywhere with the
-canoe. This being done, we pushed away from
-the skiff, and moved leisurely up the pond
-toward the perch hole, Joe whistling merrily
-as he plied the paddle. I do not think he was
-quite so light-hearted when he came back.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Half an hour’s paddling sufficed to bring us
-to our destination. If I hadn’t heard Joe say
-that the perch hole was located in the mouth
-of a creek, I should not have known it, for it
-looked to me more like an arm of the pond
-which set back into the land. When I was
-taken from my case, after the anchor had been
-dropped overboard, I took note of the fact that
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_330'>330</span>one could not see more than twenty or thirty
-feet up the creek, a high wooded point limiting
-the range of vision in that direction. I didn’t
-know at the time why I observed this, but I
-thought of it afterward.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Joe made his first cast with a scarlet ibis,
-and the result was surprising to both of us.
-The fish that took the lure did not give much
-of a bite—I have known a half-pound trout to
-seize the bait with more vim than he did—but
-when Joe fastened the hook with a scientific
-twist of his wrist, I couldn’t have doubled up
-quicker if he had caught a log.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Scotland’s a burning! what’s that?”
-exclaimed Joe, speaking so rapidly that the
-words seemed to come out all at once. “I
-declare, it’s a bass,” he added a moment later,
-as the green and bronze side of the beautiful
-captive could be seen for an instant just under
-the surface of the water. “I wish he was at
-the bottom of the pond, for he’ll break my rod
-and I’ll have no more fishing this trip.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>But Joe did not give up because he thought
-he was going to be worsted in the fight. He
-brought into play all the skill of which he was
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_331'>331</span>master, and after an exciting struggle of fully
-half an hour’s duration, caught up the landing
-net and hauled into the canoe the largest
-thing in the shape of a fish I had seen up to
-that time. He was killed at once, the pocket
-scales were brought into use, and the weight
-of the “catch” was written down in Joe’s
-note-book.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Whew?” panted the boy, pulling out his
-handkerchief and wiping the big drops of perspiration
-from his forehead. “If that wasn’t
-a tough battle I wouldn’t say so. I never supposed
-that little rod could catch a fish like
-this. Hello, here! It’s getting dark already.
-I know the fellows will laugh at me for coming
-back with a single fish, but I don’t believe
-they will be able to show one that will weigh
-more.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Joe jumped to his feet as he spoke, and
-made all haste to put me away in my case. He
-stood with his face to the pond while he worked,
-and consequently he did not see what I did.
-My attention was first called to it by an
-exclamation from the canvas canoe who said
-in a suppressed and excited whisper:</p>
-
-<p class='c019'><span class='pageno' id='Page_332'>332</span>“Upon my word, there’s that everlasting
-Matt Coyle again. He’ll gobble the whole of
-us this time.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>I looked over Joe’s shoulder, and there in
-the bight of the bend, with its ugly nose just
-sticking around the high wooded point of which
-I have spoken, was a clumsy scow built of
-rough boards that had doubtless been stolen
-from some saw-mill. In the scow sat Matt
-Coyle and his two boys. I had heard them
-described so often that I should have recognized
-them at once, even if the canoe had not told
-me who they were. They held their paddles
-poised in the air, and Matt who sat in the bow,
-having raised his hand to attract the attention
-of his boys, was now pointing silently toward
-my master, and going through a series of
-contortions with his head and eyes that must
-have had a volume of meaning in them. At
-any rate Jake and Sam understood them, for
-they dipped their paddles into the water, and
-the scow moved around the point and turned
-directly toward us, while the squatter prepared
-himself for business by taking off his hat and
-pushing back his sleeves. I trembled all over
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_333'>333</span>with excitement and alarm, and so did the
-canoe.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Oh, why don’t Joe turn around?” cried
-the latter. “Matt intends to take him by
-surprise, and he’ll be alongside in half a minute
-more.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Just then one of the boys allowed his paddle
-to rub against the side of the scow. The noise
-he made was very slight, but it was loud enough
-to attract the attention of Joe Wayring, who
-faced about to find his enemies within less
-than twenty feet of him. He was so astonished
-to see them there, that for a few seconds he
-could neither move nor speak. He stood as
-motionless and silent as a wooden boy; while
-Matt, seeing that he was discovered, snatched
-up his paddle and raised a yell of triumph.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Now I reckon I’ll have my boat back an’
-you into the bargain,” he shouted, swinging
-his paddle around his head and then shaking
-it savagely at Joe. “When I get my hands
-onto you, the way I’ll wear the hickories out
-on your back will extonish you wuss nor any
-thing you ever see.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“An’ won’t I punch your head though, to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_334'>334</span>pay you fur hittin’ me with that there tater
-up there in the creek last summer?” chimed
-in Jake. “I guess yes.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>These threatening words called Joe to his
-senses. He knew that he would not have time
-to pull up the anchor and escape in his canoe,
-for he had paid out a good deal of rope in order
-to place himself in the best possible position
-for casting, and before he could haul it in, his
-enemies would be upon him. There was but
-one way to elude them, and that was to take
-to the water and to trust to his powers as a
-swimmer. It looked like a slim chance, but
-the odds of three against one were too heavy to
-be successfully resisted, and what else could he
-do? As quick as a flash he turned again, and
-without releasing his hold upon me, took a
-header from the stern of the canoe.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“So that there’s your game, is it?” yelled
-the squatter. “Wal, it suits us, I reckon.
-Never mind the boat, Jakey. She’s fast
-anchored, and will stay there till we want her.
-Take after the ’ristocrat whose dad won’t let
-honest folks live onto his land less’n they’ve
-got a pocketful of money to pay him fur it.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_335'>335</span>Jest let me get a good whack at him with my
-paddle an’ he’ll stop, I bet you. Hold on,
-there, ’cause it’ll be wuss fur you if you don’t.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>In obedience to Matt’s instructions the scow
-was turned toward the swimmer; but although
-Jake and Sam exerted themselves to the
-utmost, they could not cut him off from the
-shore. Joe made astonishing headway. There
-were but few boys, or men either, in Mount
-Airy who could swim as fast as he could, and
-he afterward said that he never made better
-time than he did when he was trying to get
-away from Matt and his boys. He was afraid
-of the lily-pads which lined the banks of the
-creek on both sides, so he swam down the
-stream until he was clear of them before he
-attempted to make a landing; but Matt, believing
-that he could do better on shore, dropped
-his own paddle into the water, turned into the
-lilies and tried to force the scow through them.
-That was a lucky thing for Joe Wayring. The
-strong stems of the lilies were entwined about
-one another in all sorts of ways, and the squatter
-stuck fast in them before he had made half
-a dozen strokes.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'><span class='pageno' id='Page_336'>336</span>“Back out! Back out!” shouted Matt,
-who was quickly made aware that he had committed
-a blunder. “Be in a hurry, or he’ll
-get sich a start on us that we can’t never ketch
-him. Hold up, there!” he went on, jumping
-to his feet and swinging his paddle around his
-head as if he were on the point of launching
-it at the object of his wrath. “Come
-back, or it’ll be wuss fur you. You hear me, I
-reckon.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>In the meantime Joe made good his landing,
-and looked over his shoulder to see the heavy
-paddle coming toward him, end over end. It
-struck the ground near him, and was immediately
-sent back where it came from with all
-the force that the boy’s sinewy arm could give
-it. Flying wide of the mark for which it was
-intended, the broad blade hit Jake fairly in the
-face, giving him such a splitting headache that
-he could not take part in the pursuit that followed.
-This was another lucky thing for Joe.
-Jake was the best runner in the squatter’s
-family, and although there is not the slightest
-doubt that he would have been soundly thrashed
-if he had succeeded in overtaking Joe, he
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_339'>339</span>might have been able to detain him until his
-father and brother could come to his assistance,
-and then Joe would have had more on his
-hands than he could attend to.</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i_p332.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p><span class='sc'>Joe in an awkward fix.</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c019'>“That’s another thing we’ve got to pay you
-fur when we get our hands on you,” yelled
-Matt, who was almost beside himself. “Work
-lively in backin’ out, or he’ll have a mile the
-start of us before we tech the shore.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Jake, who had dropped his paddle and sat
-holding his chin in his hands, paid no attention
-to the order; but Matt and Sam worked to
-such good purpose that they finally succeeded
-in backing the scow out of the lilies into clear
-water. When they reached the bank, Joe
-Wayring was out of sight; but they knew
-which way he had gone, and at once set out in
-pursuit; while Jake stayed in the scow and
-howled dismally.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Joe ran like a deer, and made surprising progress
-in spite of the logs and bushes that
-obstructed his way. He was very quiet in his
-movements, but Matt and his boy made so
-much noise that it was an easy matter to keep
-track of them and tell just how far they were
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_340'>340</span>behind. At last the squatter, seeing that he
-was not going to capture my master by following
-him on foot, thought it best to change his
-tactics.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Sam,” he shouted, in stentorian tones,
-“go back to the creek, and you an’ Jakey take
-the canoe an’ paddle down the pond so’s to
-cut him off when he tries to swim off to the
-skiff. You understand what I say to you, I
-reckon.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Joe understood it, whether Sam did or not
-and it put new speed into him. He ran so
-swiftly that he very soon left his single pursuer
-out of hearing, but he exhausted himself in the
-effort, and when he dashed out of the bushes
-and stopped on the bank in plain sight of the
-skiff, he was so nearly out of breath that he
-could not raise a shout to draw the attention
-of his chums, who were hard at work
-putting up the tent. But Jim saw him,
-and announced the fact by a joyful bark,
-followed by a vigorous wagging of his tail.
-Arthur and Roy looked toward the bank, and
-there stood Joe, swinging his arms wildly about
-his head. When he saw that he had attracted
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_341'>341</span>their notice, he pointed to the woods, and then
-up the pond toward the canvas canoe which
-was coming down with all the speed that Jake
-and Sam could give it. The boys in the skiff
-saw and understood. The anchor came up
-quicker than it ever did before, the oars were
-shipped, and the skiff came toward the bank
-with a heavy bone in her teeth. By this time
-Matt Coyle arrived within hearing again, and
-Joe, fearing that he might make his appearance
-before his friends could rescue him, stepped
-into the water and struck out to meet the skiff.
-Jake and Sam yelled savagely at him, and redoubled
-their efforts to place themselves between
-him and his friends; but they might as
-well have saved their breath and strength. The
-skiff came up rapidly, and Joe knew that he
-was saved. Suddenly a bright idea suggested
-itself to him—one that would have enabled
-him to turn the tables upon the squatter very
-neatly, if his friends had only been prompt to
-act upon it. Raising himself as far out of the
-water as he could, he called out:</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Boys, never mind me. I’ve got my second
-wind now, and can swim for an hour. Go up
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_342'>342</span>there and capture my canoe, or else run over
-her and send her to the bottom. Don’t let
-those villains take her away from me again.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“All right,” replied Roy, still giving away
-strong on his oar. “We’ll get your canoe back
-for you, but we will take care of you first.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“No, no!” insisted Joe. “Capture or sink
-the canoe first, and attend to me afterward. I
-am all right, I tell you. I can easily keep
-afloat until you come back.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Why, boy, you haven’t got a breath to
-spare,” said Arthur. “I know it by the way
-you talk. Come in out of the wet.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“You held fast to your fly-rod through it
-all, didn’t you?” said Roy, as he took me from
-Joe’s hand.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Yes. I didn’t know whether or not I could
-outrun them, and I wanted something to defend
-myself with in case they came up with me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>When Joe tried to climb into the skiff, he
-found that he was by no means in as good condition
-as he thought he was. He could scarcely
-help himself at all, and his chums were obliged
-to pull him in by main strength. The
-moment they let go of him he sank down
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_343'>343</span>against the stern locker and panted loudly;
-but he was as full of determination as ever.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Now go up and sink the canoe,” he almost
-gasped.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>But a single glance was enough to show Arthur
-and Roy that it was too late to do any thing with
-the canoe. Jake and his brother heard the
-order that Joe shouted at his friends while he
-was in the water, and made all haste to put
-themselves out of harm’s way. When Joe was
-hauled into the skiff they were so close to the
-shore that all attempts to intercept them would
-have been unavailing.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“It’s no use, Joe,” said Arthur. “They’re
-too far off, and there’s Matt Coyle standing on
-the bank.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“But for Joe’s sake we will see what we can
-do,” exclaimed Roy.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>As he spoke, he opened the forward locker
-and took from it a stout paper bag. When he
-first put it there, Arthur and Joe supposed
-that it contained lemons; but when Roy opened
-it, they saw that it was filled with potatoes.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“They helped us out of a scrape once, and
-why shouldn’t they do so again?” said Roy.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_344'>344</span>“My plan is to pull into shore, drive Matt and
-his boys into the bushes, clap onto the canoe
-with the boat-hook and tow her out into the
-pond.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Arthur declared that that was the way to do
-it, but subsequent events proved that it wasn’t.
-They laid hold of their oars again, but before
-the skiff had gone far toward the shore, Joe
-Wayring, who had by this time recovered his
-power of speech and motion, announced that
-Roy’s plan wouldn’t work at all, and that it
-was useless to make any effort to sink or capture
-the canoe. And the rowers found it so
-when they faced about and looked toward the
-shore.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>The squatter and his boys had dragged
-the canoe from the water, and were now carrying
-her back into the bushes where they knew
-the boys would not dare go after it.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Matt had not yet forgotten the tactics they
-used when he and his boys tried to club them
-out of their boat the year before. He was very
-much afraid of Roy, and when the latter
-ceased rowing and got upon his feet to see
-what had been done with the canoe, Matt and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_345'>345</span>his allies ran into the woods like so many
-frightened turkeys.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I’m onto your little game,” said the squatter
-in a triumphant tone, as he looked out
-from behind the tree that sheltered him.
-“You don’t fire no more taters at me if I
-know it. Your boat is here, an’ if you want
-it wusser’n we do, come an’ get it. ’Tain’t
-much account nohow.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I’m going to bust it into a million pieces
-to pay you fur that there whack you gin me
-with pap’s paddle a while ago,” shouted the
-invisible Jake, who would not show so much
-as the top of his cap to the boys in the skiff.
-“I’ve stood jest about all the poundin’ I’m
-goin’ to.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“What did you do to him, Joe?” inquired
-Arthur, as he and Roy turned the skiff around
-and pulled back toward their anchorage.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Matt threw his paddle at me when he saw
-that I was about to slip through his fingers,
-and I threw it back,” answered Joe. “It
-didn’t hit Matt, as I meant it should, but it came
-pretty near knocking Jake out of the
-scow.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'><span class='pageno' id='Page_346'>346</span>“The scow?” repeated Roy. “Have they
-got a boat of their own, I’d like to know.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Joe replied that they had a boat in their
-possession (of course he didn’t know where
-they got it, or whether or not they had any
-right to call it their own), and then went on to
-tell of the exploit I had performed at the perch
-hole, and of the surprise that followed close
-upon the heels of it. He wound up his story
-by saying—</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I didn’t have time to draw up my anchor,
-so I had to go overboard. I swam the best I
-knew how in order to reach the bank before
-Matt did; then I raced a mile or more through
-the woods in my wet clothes, and that was
-what tired me out.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I wonder if we are to find that fellow hanging
-around every time we come into the
-woods?” said Roy, angrily. “Hallo, here!”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>A slight splashing in the water drew their
-attention at the moment, and Joe and Arthur
-started up in alarm, expecting to find that the
-squatter and his boys had stolen a march upon
-them. There was a canoe close alongside of
-them, but the broad-shouldered, brown-whiskered
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_347'>347</span>man who handled the paddle was
-not Matt Coyle or any body like him. He was
-one of the hotel guides who had assisted in
-driving the squatter out of the Indian Lake
-country, and he was looking for him now.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Hallo yourself,” he replied, good-naturedly.
-“Well, I swan to man, if there ain’t Roy
-Sheldon and—Why, you’re all here, ain’t you?
-Say! seen any thing of Matt Coyle since you
-have been hanging around?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Mr. Swan, how are you?” exclaimed all the
-boys, in a breath. They knew the guide, and
-liked him, too.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“You have come to the right place to
-learn a good deal concerning Matt and his
-doings,” continued Roy. “What has he been
-up to now?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Well, you see,” answered the guide, speaking
-with so much deliberation that the impatient
-boys wanted to hurry him, “he came here
-last year from somewhere, and wanted to set
-in for a guide; but the hotels down to the lake
-wouldn’t have him, ’cause they didn’t think
-he was a safe man to trust with a boat, and
-Matt, he allowed that he’d fix things so’t
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_348'>348</span>there wouldn’t be no guidin’ for none of
-us to do. So he’s took to the woods, and he
-robs every camp he can find, if there don’t
-happen to be any body around to watch it.
-Leastwise we lay it to him, ’cause we know
-he’s around here, and some of us thought that
-we’d like to take a peep at his shanty, if he’s
-got one.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“We can’t tell you where his shanty is,”
-said Joe, “but we can show you where Matt
-and his boys were not ten minutes ago. He
-stole my canvas canoe and gave me a long chase
-through the woods. He promised that if he
-could get hold of me, he would wear a hickory
-out over my back.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Sho!” exclaimed the guide. “What
-for?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Joe’s story was a long one, for in order to
-make the guide understand how he and his
-companions had incurred the enmity of the
-vindictive squatter, it was necessary that he
-should go back to the time when Matt and his
-family first made their appearance in Mount
-Airy. He described the fight between them
-and the constable and his posse, the particulars
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_349'>349</span>of which he received from eye-witnesses;
-told how Matt had stolen the canoe and six fine
-fishing-rods and reels, while he and his
-companions were looking for the bear they saw
-on the shore of Sherwin’s Pond; and gave a
-glowing account of the fight in the creek, at
-which the guide laughed heartily.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I’ll jest bet that them was my taters that
-you pelted him with,” said he; “’cause while I
-was out in the woods with a guest from Boston,
-my wife said that my garden and smoke-house
-were both robbed in one night. As for them
-fish poles—I think I can tell you where to find
-them.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Good for you, Mr. Swan,” cried Arthur.
-“Where are they?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Of course, I don’t know that they belong
-to you; I only suspect it,” continued the
-guide. “You see, one day last summer, Jake
-Coyle brung six as purty poles as you would
-want to look at up to the Sportsman’s Home,
-and told Mr. Hanson, the new landlord, that he
-got ’em in a boat trade. He couldn’t use ’em,
-fur they wasn’t the kind that he’d been in the
-habit of handlin’, and so he wanted to sell ’em.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_350'>350</span>I told Hanson that I was as sure as any thing
-could be that they had been stole, and that
-mebbe the owner would come along some day
-looking for them; so Hanson, he buys ’em,
-reels and all, for four dollars apiece—all except
-one that Jake said had been broke by a bass,
-and for that he give two dollars. They were
-covered with mud and rust, but I cleaned ’em
-up, and now they look as good as new.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“They are our rods, and I know it,” exclaimed
-Roy. “If mine is the one that’s
-broken, I shall have the satisfaction of knowing
-that I paid Jake for it in advance by hitting
-him in the mouth with that potato.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“And if it’s mine, I settled with him this
-afternoon by slapping him in the face with his
-father’s paddle,” chimed in Joe Wayring.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>The guide laughed again. “You’re as
-plucky a lot of youngsters as I ever see,” said
-he, “and you may rest assured that them folks
-won’t bother you or any body else much longer.
-We are going to put ’em in jail for thieves when
-we catch ’em.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Ah! Yes,” said Arthur; “but that’s
-right where you are going to see trouble. Our
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_351'>351</span>deputy sheriff and constable searched every
-inch of the ground around Sherwin’s Pond,
-and all they found was the place where Matt’s
-shanty once stood. He set fire to it before he
-left for Indian Lake.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I know that the woods about here are tolerable
-thick, and that Matt is a boss hand at
-hiding,” replied the guide; “but he will find
-that there’s a heap of difference between dodging
-a couple of townies, and in getting away
-from a lot of men who have lived in the woods
-ever since they were knee high to so many
-ducks. Go on, Joe. What else do you know
-about Matt Coyle?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>The rest of Joe’s story related solely to the
-events of the evening, and it did not take him
-long to describe them. When he concluded
-the guide was almost as angry as he and his
-chums were. The idea that that worthless
-vagabond should threaten to beat such a boy as
-Joe Wayring, simply because he had showed
-the courage to defend himself when he was assaulted!
-The guide made no remark, but there
-was a look in his eye that would have made the
-squatter uneasy if he had been there to see it.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'><span class='pageno' id='Page_352'>352</span>“It’s too late to do any thing to-night,” said
-he, at length. “I reckon you boys have got
-something good to eat in them lockers? I
-thought so. Well, suppose we go ashore
-and camp.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Joe and his friends readily agreed to this
-proposition. They had spent five days and
-nights in their boat, and they longed for a good,
-sound sleep on a bed of balsam-boughs, with
-the spreading branches of some friendly pine
-for shelter instead of their water-proof tent.
-They were not afraid to go into camp on shore
-now that they had the stalwart guide for company.
-Matt and his boys would not be likely
-to show themselves as long as they knew that
-he was with them; but the trouble was, they
-didn’t know it, although they were in plain
-sight when the boys built their fire on the bank,
-and laid their plans to pay them a visit before
-morning.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_353'>353</span>
- <h2 class='c011'>CHAPTER XVII. <br /> <br /><span class='small'>A BATTLE IN THE DARK.</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_4_0_5 c018'>AS OUR three friends and their backwoods
-companion were old campaigners, they
-did not spend much time in getting ready for
-the night. A roaring fire was started, the jack-lamp
-hung upon a neighboring tree, and by the
-aid of the light thus afforded them, Joe Wayring,
-who had by this time got into a suit of dry
-clothes, cleaned the fish which Arthur and Roy
-had captured during his absence; Arthur
-Hastings fried them and made the tea; Mr.
-Swan prepared the bacon and pancakes; and
-Roy cut the balsam boughs and arranged the
-beds. In less than three quarters of an hour
-after they drew their boats upon the beach,
-they sat down to a supper that would have
-tempted any healthy boy to eat, no matter
-whether he was hungry or not.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Now, Mr. Swan,” said Joe, when the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_354'>354</span>dishes had been washed in the clear waters of
-the pond, and the tin bucket, which contained
-the supply of fish for breakfast, had been hung
-up by a string so that the minks that were
-sure to come around during the night could not
-steal them, “tell us a story, please.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“About what?” inquired the guide, as he
-filled his pipe.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Oh, about the first panther you ever shot.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Or about the bear you killed with a club
-while he was running off with one of your
-pigs,” suggested Roy.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Mr. Swan was always ready. After he had
-taken a few pulls at his brier-root to make
-sure that it was well-started he began and told
-not one story, but a dozen or more. He kept
-his little audience interested until ten o’clock,
-then the lamp was turned out, the fire replenished,
-and the campers sought their beds of
-balsam-boughs. Lulled by the rippling of the
-waves upon the beach at their feet, and by the
-low music of the breeze as it toyed with the
-branches over their heads, their slumber was
-deep and dreamless. Even the usually watchful
-Jim seemed to think that there was no
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_355'>355</span>responsibility resting upon him for this particular
-night, and that the mere presence of the
-guide was all the protection the camp needed,
-for he too slept soundly, and snored while he
-slept. Consequently he did not see the uncouth
-object which drew out of the darkness that
-covered the surface of the pond, and slowly and
-cautiously approached the camp. The object
-was Matt Coyle’s scow, and in it were the
-squatter and both his boys. The latter were
-plying their paddles with noiseless motion, and
-Matt was kneeling in the bow, waving first one
-hand and then the other to show them what
-course to take.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>It must have been long after midnight, for
-there was nothing left of the fire but a glowing
-bed of coals; but still there was light enough
-to enable the robber to see the outlines of the
-skiff, but not sufficient to show him the trim
-little canoe that had been hauled out on the
-bank and turned bottom side up. If he had
-seen that, he would have lost no time in getting
-away from so dangerous a neighborhood;
-but believing that the boys were alone, and
-that they had forgotten their usual caution in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_356'>356</span>spite of the warning events of the afternoon, he
-kept on until he was close enough to the skiff
-to take hold of it. I saw the whole proceeding,
-but of course could do nothing to arouse the
-slumbering campers.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Now, turn about on your seats and give
-way the best you know how,” I heard Matt
-whisper to his boys. “We must pull her off
-into deep water before them fellers can wake
-up an’ get a holt on her.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Say, pap,” whispered Jake, in reply.
-“Ain’t we goin’ ashore to give them a good larrupin’
-before they make up?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>If the guide had not been there, these words
-would have horrified me; but as it was, I did
-not feel at all uneasy. I knew very well that
-Matt and his boys were no match for our party,
-and that they would all be captured as surely
-as they put their feet on shore; but I did not
-want to see them steal that skiff. Oh, why
-didn’t Jim wake up and alarm his master!</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“We’ll ’tend to them after we get the skiff
-an’ all the nice grub an’ things that’s into it,”
-said the squatter, as he tightened his grasp.
-“Now be you all ready? Then give way.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'><span class='pageno' id='Page_357'>357</span>Jake and Sam laid out all their strength
-upon their paddles, and the bow of the skiff
-grated harshly as it moved over the sand. The
-noise, slight as it was, awoke Jim, who was on
-his feet in a twinkling. He took just one glance
-at the marauders, and then danced about the
-camp in a perfect ecstasy of rage, barking and
-yelping with all his might.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>His first note of angry remonstrance alarmed
-the boys, who were off their fragrant couches
-in less time than it takes to tell it. The moment
-they arose to a perpendicular, they were
-wide awake and ready to act. They made a
-simultaneous rush for the beach, and while
-Arthur and Joe seized the skiff and pulled her
-back where she belonged, in spite of all that
-Jake and his brother could do to prevent it,
-Roy caught up the painter and deftly took a
-turn with it around a convenient sapling.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Now, haul away and see how much you
-will make by it,” he exclaimed. “That’s
-once you got fooled.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Wal, I’ll bet a hoss that I ain’t fooled yet,”
-said the squatter, in savage tones. “Pull
-ashore, Jakey, an’ we’ll get out an’ lambast
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_358'>358</span>them fellers till their own mammies won’t know
-’em when they go hum. Human natur!” he
-ejaculated a moment later, as the tall form of
-the guide came between him and the smoldering
-fire. “Who’s that? If it ain’t Swan, I’m
-a Dutchman.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Come on, you miserable scoundrel,” cried
-the guide, shaking his huge fist at the astonished
-and thoroughly frightened robber. “I
-have been looking for you, and now that I
-have found you, I am going to take you back
-to Indian Lake with me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>But Matt and his boys were not as anxious
-to go ashore now as they had been. Without
-saying a word in reply they bent to their paddles,
-and made all haste to get out of sight in
-the darkness.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Now, Joe,” said Mr. Swan, who never got
-excited even under the most trying circumstances,
-“shove off and take after them. You can
-go faster than they can, so if you will get
-ahead of them and keep them from reaching
-the opposite shore, I will come up on this
-side, and we will have them between two fires.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Joe and his companions were prompt to act
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_359'>359</span>upon this suggestion. He and Roy pushed the
-skiff into the water, and when she was fairly
-afloat Arthur sprang aboard with the jack-lamp
-in his hand. A moment later its strong
-light flashed out over the pond, telling the fleeing
-squatter in language as plain as words that
-the darkness could not conceal his movements.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“There they are, not more than forty yards,”
-said Arthur, who stood erect on the stern
-locker, steadying himself with the boathook.
-“Roy, let me have that oar, and you stand
-here with the lamp and open fire on them with
-your potatoes.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I can’t,” was the answer. “I took the
-potatoes ashore to-night and washed some for
-breakfast; and the bag is in camp at this
-moment.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Then we shall have to come to close quarters
-with them,” said Arthur, “for I have no
-idea that they will give up when they find
-themselves cut off from shore.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“If we can only manage to detain them for
-two minutes, we shall have all the help we
-want,” Joe remarked. “Look behind you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Arthur glanced over his shoulder, and was
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_360'>360</span>surprised to see the guide in less than a stone’s
-throw of the skiff. How he had managed to
-put his canoe into the water and get her under
-way with so little loss of time, was a mystery.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“A fellow would have to look out for Mr.
-Swan in a hurry-skurry race, wouldn’t he?”
-said Arthur. “Just see how he makes that
-little craft of his get through the water! If
-you two don’t let out a section or so of your
-muscle, he will overtake the scow before we
-do.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Just then Matt Coyle’s hoarse voice was
-heard calling warningly to them. “Don’t
-come no nigher,” it said. “If you think that
-we are sich fules as to go down to Injun Lake
-when we want to stay here, you are the biggest
-kind of fules yourselves. I’ll break the head
-of the fust one of you that comes within
-reach.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Matt has crawled back to the stern of his
-scow, and is standing there with his paddle in
-his hand,” said Arthur, who could see every
-move the robber made. “I wonder if he thinks
-that we are ‘fules’ enough to give him battle
-before Mr. Swan comes up to help us.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'><span class='pageno' id='Page_361'>361</span>That was just what Matt was looking for,
-and he did not know what to make of it when
-the skiff dashed by his scow, keeping so far
-beyond reach that he could not have touched
-any of her crew with his paddle if he had tried,
-and deliberately placed herself across his path.
-Then his eyes were opened to the details of the
-plan that had been laid to entrap him, and
-the promptness with which he went to work to
-extricate himself was surprising. He said a
-few words in a low tone to his boys, then put
-his own paddle into the water, and the scow
-shot ahead with greatly increased speed, never
-swerving from her original course by so much
-as a hair’s breadth.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Does the old villain mean to run us down,
-or does he intend to come alongside and capture
-us and the skiff?” said Roy, who was alarmed
-as well as amazed by the squatter’s offensive
-tactics. “Back water, Joe, while I give way.
-It looks as though <i>we</i> had got to run now.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>The scow was so close to them that they had
-no time to get out of her way. They saw at a
-glance that all they could reasonably hope to
-accomplish was to turn their boat slightly, so
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_362'>362</span>that if the scow struck her at all, it would be a
-glancing blow. But they had miscalculated
-the speed of Matt’s clumsy looking craft. She
-seemed to glide over the top of the water
-instead of passing through it, as other boats do.
-On she came with terrific force, and although
-Joe and Roy worked hard to slip out of her
-way, she struck the skiff fairly in the side, ripping
-off two of her planks, smashing in as many
-more, and making a hole that Mars could have
-crawled through with all ease. At the same
-instant darkness settled down over the scene as
-if by magic. Arthur Hastings had been knocked
-off his perch on the stern locker, and he and
-the jack-lamp went into the pond together.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Whoop-ee!” yelled Matt, triumphantly.
-“Will you git outen our road the next time
-you see us comin’? Take that fur your imperdence
-in gittin’ before your betters,” he added,
-making a vicious blow with his paddle at the
-place where he had last seen Joe Wayring’s
-head.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Joe’s head was not there now, however, for
-he had been sharp enough to put it somewhere
-else; but Matt was speedily made aware that
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_363'>363</span>the boy was not far away, for as the blade of
-his paddle whistled harmlessly through the air,
-he received a punch in the ribs with an oar that
-brought from him a yell of pain, and came very
-near sending him into the water. At the same
-moment, a howl of agony from the unlucky
-Jake announced that Roy was taking a hand in
-the rumpus.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>The fight that followed was a very short one,
-but it was warm while it lasted, and gave Matt
-and his boys some idea of what a couple of
-brave young fellows could do when they were
-cornered. Joe, while defending himself against
-the muscular squatter, managed to get in several
-good blows; Roy pounded Sam to his
-heart’s content, Jake having dropped out of the
-contest at the very beginning of it; and Arthur
-clung to the side of the skiff and called lustily
-for Mr. Swan.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I’m coming,” replied the guide, who was
-doing all he could to bring himself alongside
-the scow. “Keep them there just a minute
-longer.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Roy and Joe would have obeyed if they could;
-but when Matt heard Mr. Swan’s voice sounding
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_364'>364</span>so close to him, he pushed his piratical
-craft away from the skiff, and the darkness
-shut him out from view. When the guide
-arrived a few minutes later, he found the boys
-supporting themselves by holding fast to the
-sides of their boat, which was full of water.
-They had relieved her of their weight just in
-time to keep her from going to the bottom of
-the pond. She would not sink now, for she
-had no cargo aboard to speak of, and besides,
-the air that was imprisoned in the lockers
-assisted in keeping her afloat.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Well, if this don’t beat the world!”
-exclaimed Mr. Swan, as soon as he had taken
-in the situation. “Somehow or other those
-villains always manage to come out at the top
-of the heap, don’t they? Did you have a fight
-with them? I heard sticks a clashing and
-somebody yelling. I hope none of you ain’t
-hurt.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Don’t be uneasy on that score,” replied
-Roy. “Joe and I had a scrimmage with them,
-but you didn’t hear either one of us yell. It
-was Matt and Jake. Sam was good grit. He
-never said a word, although I punched him
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_365'>365</span>with the blade of my oar the best I knew how.
-Arthur was standing on one of the lockers
-when the scow struck us, and he and the lamp
-made a plunge of ten feet in the clear before
-they touched the water.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Do you mean to say that they ran into you
-a purpose?” exclaimed the guide.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Of course they did. We cut them off from
-the shore, as you directed, and that old scow
-of theirs came at us like a battering-ram. Matt
-heard Joe tell us to-night to sink the canoe,
-and that was what put it into his head to run
-into us.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Meanwhile Arthur Hastings had worked his
-way around to the bow of the skiff and secured
-the painter, one end of which he made fast to
-a ring in the stern of the canoe. The chase
-was over, of course. They could not continue
-the pursuit in the dark, for the squatter could
-easily elude them in a hundred different ways,
-and neither would it be prudent to follow him
-in the canoe. The little craft was intended to
-carry only one person, with a very limited
-allowance of camp equipage, and the added
-weight of one of the boys would have sunk
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_366'>366</span>her so deep in the water that no speed could
-be got out of her. The only thing they could
-do was to go back to camp and finish their
-sleep.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“But what shall we do to-morrow?” was
-the question that Joe and his comrades asked
-themselves and one another. “Our boat is
-badly stove, and if we can’t patch her up, how
-are we going to get back to Mount Airy?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Mr. Swan towed the disabled skiff to the
-shore, her crew swimming alongside or trying
-to assist him by pushing behind, and the fire
-was started up again to aid them in making an
-examination of the injuries she had received.
-They were fully as severe as the boys expected
-to find them, and it was a wonder to them that
-she was so long in filling.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“There’s plenty of guides down to the lake
-that can fix her up for you in good shape,”
-said Mr. Swan.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Of course,” replied Roy. “But the lake
-is twenty-five miles from here, and there’s no
-way to get her down there.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Mebbe there is,” answered the guide.
-“For a shilling I’ll agree that she shall go
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_367'>367</span>down there, and carry you into the bargain.
-But we can’t do nothing with her to-night.
-You boys get on some dry clothes and go to
-bed again.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Joe and his companions were quite willing to
-act upon this suggestion, but they were in no
-hurry to go to sleep. Neither was Mr. Swan.
-They sat around the fire for a long time, talking
-over the incidents of their battle in the dark,
-and as I listened closely, I have been able to give
-you the story in the same way that it was told to
-Mr. Swan. The squatter’s extraordinary luck
-and the skill he exhibited in eluding arrest
-seemed to astonish them all. How I longed
-for the power of speech so that I could tell
-them that robbing camps and smoke-houses
-was not the only business to which Matt Coyle
-intended to devote himself, now that the offer
-of his service as guide and boatman had been
-declined by the managers of the Indian Lake
-hotels. But they found it out for themselves,
-and before long, too.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>It was three o’clock before the campers again
-sought their blankets. The boys slept much
-later than usual, but the guide was stirring at
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_368'>368</span>the first peep of day. He piled fresh fuel on
-the fire, put Roy’s potatoes into the ashes to
-roast, made the coffee and pancakes, and took
-time while the fish were frying to give the skiff
-another good looking over. Then he picked
-up Joe’s camp ax, and disappeared among
-the trees, returning a few minutes later with
-several large slabs of birch bark. By this time
-the fish were done, and the guide announced
-the fact by calling out—</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Tumble up, you sleepy heads. You’ve
-just two seconds in which to take a dip in the
-pond and get ready for breakfast.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Having had as many “dips” as they wanted
-already, the boys contented themselves with
-washing their hands and faces; after which
-they sat down to their homely breakfast with
-appetites to which the dwellers in towns and
-cities are, for the most part, strangers. Of
-course the squatter was still uppermost in their
-minds, and he and his exploits formed the
-principal topic of their conversation.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“By the way, Mr. Swan, you forgot to tell
-us what Matt stole at those camps,” said
-Arthur, suddenly.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'><span class='pageno' id='Page_369'>369</span>“Did I? Well, in my camp he took a Lefever
-hammerless that cost the owner three hundred
-dollars; and from a gentleman who had Bob
-Martin for a guide, he stole a Winchester
-worth fifty dollars. Not satisfied with that,
-he took every thing in the shape of grub that
-he could lay his hands on, and me and my
-employer had to live on trout while we were
-making a journey of more than a hundred and
-fifty miles. Trout’s good enough once in a
-while; but I swan to man, if I want it for a
-steady diet. Bob Martin said he eat so much
-of that kind of food that he wanted to snap at
-every fly that came near him.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Matt and his family are always on the look-out
-for grub, and I should think that the
-sharp edge would be taken off their appetites
-after a while,” Arthur remarked. “Did you
-try to follow his trail?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Bless you, no. There ain’t a country in
-Ameriky that is so well provided with water
-courses as this Indian Lake country is, and
-what’s the use of trying to follow the trail of a
-boat? You might as well think of tracking a
-bird through the air.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'><span class='pageno' id='Page_370'>370</span>“What do you suppose Matt intends to do
-with those guns?” inquired Roy. “Of course
-he wouldn’t be so foolish as to offer them for
-sale around here, and they certainly will be of
-no use to him unless he took a big supply of
-cartridges at the same time he took the
-weapons.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I’ve got my own idea about that,” replied
-the guide. “It’s only an idea, mind you, but
-I have good reason for holding to it. A year
-ago last spring, Matt got to acting just as he’s
-acting now, because the hotels wouldn’t send
-him out with their guests, and me and the rest
-of the guides tracked him down, and told him
-that he’d got to clear himself. He allowed he
-wouldn’t do it, and that he’d make it hot for
-the fellers that tried to make him go, so we
-went to work and burned up everything he had,
-except his clothes and we’pons. Then he had
-to dig out; but before he went, he sent us
-word that if he couldn’t do guiding for
-the hotels none of us should, for the reason
-that there wouldn’t be nobody to hire us.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“What did he mean by that?” exclaimed
-Joe.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'><span class='pageno' id='Page_371'>371</span>“You’re pretty sharp fellows,” said the
-guide, in reply. “What’s your opinion of his
-meaning?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“He doesn’t intend to kill off the guests as
-fast as they arrive, does he?” said Arthur.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Probably not,” said Joe. “But he means to
-steal them poor, and bother them in every way
-he can, so that they won’t come here to spend
-their summer vacations.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“That’s the very idea,” said the guide, approvingly.
-“That’s what he was up to, and
-that’s what he is trying to do now; but we
-ain’t going to let him stay. Now, then,” he
-added, as he arose to his feet and produced his
-ancient brier-root, “if one of you will help me
-while the others tend to things about the camp,
-we’ll be on our way to the lake in less’n half
-an hour by Joe’s Waterbury.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Are you going with us?” asked Arthur,
-who was delighted at the prospect of spending
-the day, and perhaps another night in the company
-of so famous a story teller.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I reckon I might as well,” replied the
-guide. “I know where to find Matt’s trail
-now, but I can’t do nothing with him and his
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_372'>372</span>family all by myself, so I will go back and get
-some of the boys to help me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Well, see here, Mr. Swan,” said Joe. “If
-you have to burn him out again, don’t forget to
-save my canoe from the general destruction.
-I know it isn’t a very valuable thing, having
-seen its best days long ago, but still I shouldn’t
-like to think that I had lost it for good.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I’ll bear it in mind,” said the guide.
-“Now, don’t let the fire go out. We shall
-need it to toast the bark.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“What do you want to toast the bark for?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Why, to make it straighten out and stay
-somewhere. Don’t you see how it curls up in
-all sorts of ways? Summer bark isn’t as
-good as winter bark for this sort of work, but
-I reckon we can make it keep the water out of
-the skiff till we get to the lake.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Arthur and Joe made all haste to wash the
-breakfast dishes and collect their “duffle”, so
-that there would be no delay in loading the
-skiff when the repairs were completed, and then
-sat down to keep the fire going, and to watch
-the guide, in whose proceedings they were
-much interested. They wanted to learn how it
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_373'>373</span>was done, so that they might know what to do
-in case a similar misfortune befell them when
-there was no accommodating backwoodsman
-near to help them. Fortunately they never
-went into the woods without taking with them
-some strips of canvas, a supply of tallow and
-rosin, and a paper of copper tacks. By the aid
-of the tacks, the birch bark, after it had been
-toasted over the fire so that it would “stay
-somewhere”, was fastened upon the gaping
-wound which the sharp corner of Matt’s scow
-had made in her side, the seams were thickly
-coated with melted rosin and tallow, then the
-canvas was tacked on, and Mr. Swan declared
-that his task was finished.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“She’ll leak a little water, of course,” said
-he, as he filled up for another smoke, “but not
-much after the bark has a chance to swell a
-trifle. Now I reckon we are ready to be
-off.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>It was the work of but a few minutes to pack
-the provisions and cooking utensils away in
-the lockers, and as soon as that had been done,
-the boys shoved the skiff into the water and
-followed Mr. Swan, whose canoe was moving
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_374'>374</span>toward the creek which connected the pond
-with Indian Lake. The boat didn’t leak as
-much as they thought it would. Five minutes’
-bailing every half hour kept her comparatively
-dry.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>The boys camped that night within less than
-five miles of the lake, and of course had the pleasure
-of listening to more of the guide’s stories.
-They made an early start the next morning,
-Mr. Swan being impatient to obtain assistance
-and resume the pursuit of the man who had
-despoiled the camp of his employer, and at
-seven o’clock the two boats were run up on the
-beach in front of the Sportsman’s Home.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_375'>375</span>
- <h2 class='c011'>CHAPTER XVIII. <br /> <br /><span class='small'>AN OLD ACQUAINTANCE.</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_3_0_5 c018'>MR. SWAN and his young friends at once
-went ashore and set out for the
-hotel, the former to tell “the boys” that he
-had struck the trail of the man they most
-wanted to see, and Joe and his companions to
-examine the rods the landlord had in his possession,
-and to engage some one who was handy
-with tools to repair the skiff. They left me
-lying in my usual place on the stern locker,
-with Jim and the two bait-rods for company.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>I had heard so much about Indian Lake and
-its hotels that I had pictured them out to myself,
-and thought I could tell pretty near how
-they looked; but nevertheless I was greatly
-surprised by what I saw around me. I told
-myself that the boy who could not find there
-what he wanted in the way of recreation, must
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_376'>376</span>be hard to suit. If he was fond of gay company
-and liked such places as Saratoga and
-Long Branch, he would probably stop at the
-“American” on the further side of the lake;
-but if he were an angler and a lover of nature,
-or if he desired to get away somewhere and
-rest, he would choose the “Sportsman’s Home”
-every time.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>The house itself looked like a hunter’s camp
-on a grand scale, or like the cabins of the
-loggers I afterward saw in the wilds of Maine,
-only it had two stories instead of one. It was
-built entirely of logs, which had been painted
-with some substance that I don’t know the
-name of, but it sparkled in the bright sunlight
-like a covering of ice. In the groves that surrounded
-the hotel on all sides, were log houses,
-tents and shanties without number. Noisy
-children were running in and out among the
-trees, the clashing of croquet balls was almost
-incessant, sportsmen in dogskin jackets, leather
-helmets and leggings, and guides in blue shirts
-and cowhide boots were constantly going and
-coming, and every one that I saw seemed to be
-enjoying himself. This was one of the happy
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_377'>377</span>parties that Matt Coyle was determined to
-break up because the landlords refused to trust
-their guests to his care! It was no wonder
-Mr. Swan and his brother guides were anxious
-to rid the country of the presence of such a
-villain. While I was thinking about it I heard
-myself addressed in a faint voice; and upon
-looking in the direction from which it came, I
-discovered a seedy breech-loader resting
-against the thwart of the neighboring canoe.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“You don’t seem to remember me,” said he,
-reproachfully.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I can’t say that I do,” was my reply.
-“I think you have made a mistake in the fly-rod.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“No, I haven’t,” said he, confidently. “I
-knew you before you left Mr. Brown’s store.
-Don’t you remember the English fowling-piece
-that had the dispute with that conceited
-bamboo?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>So this was my old acquaintance, the
-“Brummagem shooting-iron,” was it? It was
-right on the point of my tongue to remind him
-that the bamboo had not showed himself to be
-any more conceited than he was; but I didn’t
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_378'>378</span>say it. I judged by his appearance that he had
-seen pretty hard times since he left Mr. Brown’s
-protecting care. He had sneeringly told me
-that I was not worth the modest price that had
-been set upon me, but, here I was, as bright as
-ever, while he looked as though he had been
-through half a dozen wars.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I remember you now,” said I, “but you
-have changed so much that I did not recognize
-you at first. Where have you been, and what
-have you done since that countryman of yours
-ordered you to be sent up to the Lambert
-House?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“He was no countryman of mine,” replied
-the double barrel, sadly. “He was a full-fledged
-Yankee who tried to pass himself off
-for something better than he really was. But
-he’s got all over that; the guides laughed him
-out of it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Did they laugh you into your present condition?”
-I asked, remembering that the
-double barrel had also tried to pass himself
-off for something better than he really
-was.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Eh? No,” he replied, indignantly. “It’s
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_379'>379</span>the result of abuse and hardship. Last year I
-was stolen out of camp—”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“By whom?” I interrupted, excitedly.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“By a vagabond who calls himself Matt
-Coyle,” was the reply. “His old shanty leaked
-like a sieve, and I got wet and rusty. That’s
-what makes me look so bad.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“How did your master get you back?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I heard the story about in this way: In
-less than an hour after I was stolen, a dirty,
-unkempt boy made his appearance in my
-master’s camp, and told him that he had been
-fishing on the pond all the afternoon, that he
-knew the man who took me, and for a reward
-of ten dollars he would follow me up and steal
-me back again.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Of course your master wasn’t deceived by
-any such shallow trick as that!” I exclaimed.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Well, he was. You see, he and the two
-young fellows who come up here with him
-every summer, never hire a guide. As they
-seldom venture more than twenty or thirty
-miles away from the lake, and never leave the
-water courses, there’s really no need of a guide;
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_380'>380</span>but if they had had one when that boy came
-into camp, he would have saved my master
-from imposition. As it was, he promised to
-give him the ten dollars, and before sunset I
-was brought back. But it had rained buckets
-during my absence, I was wet inside and out,
-my master did not know enough to take care of
-me, and that’s how I came to be in this fix.
-They’re coming now, and we are off again, I
-suppose.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>I looked toward the hotel, and there was the
-young man with the gold eye-glasses, peaked
-shoes and downy upper lip—the same knowing
-fellow, who had been foolish enough to take a
-cheap gun that wasn’t warranted, with the
-expectation that it would do as good work as a
-Greener.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“We’re going up to the pond, and I shall be
-called upon to fire heavier charges than I can
-stand at every thing in the shape of a partridge
-or squirrel that comes in my way,” added the
-double barrel.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“You ought not to be required to shoot those
-birds at this time of year,” said I. “It’s
-against the law.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'><span class='pageno' id='Page_381'>381</span>“Oh, I don’t hurt them any. I only shoot
-at them. I never killed any thing.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“That’s just what Mr. Brown said when he
-sold you,” thought I. “Have you a dog to
-guard your camp? Well, you ought to have.
-Matt Coyle lives up there, and night before
-last he made a daring attempt to steal this
-skiff, and then he tried to sink her. Don’t you
-see the hole in her side?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>I was going on to tell the double barrel that
-if his master did not keep his eyes open he
-might expect another visit from the squatter,
-but just then I saw Joe Wayring and his
-friends coming down the bank; and as I was
-more interested in them and the rods they carried
-on their shoulders, than I was in the fortunes
-of the seedy-looking fowling piece, I had
-nothing more to say to him. I saw him once
-afterward, and then he was a perfect wreck of
-a gun. There wasn’t enough of him left to sell
-for old iron.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Haw! haw!” said Roy, as he jumped into
-the skiff. “We’ve got them back again, and
-only one of them is the worse for being stolen
-by that squatter.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'><span class='pageno' id='Page_382'>382</span>I wondered which one that was, and found
-out when Arthur Hastings began taking his
-rod from its case. It was a beautiful rod, and
-looked strong enough to handle any fish that
-was likely to be encountered in that country;
-but the second joint was broken close to the
-ferrule. I looked pityingly at him, little
-dreaming that I was destined to go home in the
-same crippled condition.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I don’t believe that any bass that ever
-wiggled a fin could break that rod,” said
-Arthur, dolefully. “Matt or some of his
-vagabond band must have caught the hook
-into a log or the stem of a lily-pad. Well, it
-isn’t as bad as it might be, but I hate to think
-that that squatter has made some money out
-of me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>While the boys were waiting for the guide
-who had promised to come down and look at
-the skiff, they talked of their interview with
-the landlord of the Sportsman’s Home, and in
-that way I came to know just what happened
-when they went up to see the rods he had purchased
-of Jake Coyle. Of course they recognized
-them at once, and promptly handed over
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_383'>383</span>the money that Mr. Hanson had paid for their
-property, but said nothing about paying for
-the rods that belonged to Tom Bigden and his
-cousins.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Hadn’t you better take them all?” asked
-the landlord. “You say that the boys from
-whom these rods were stolen live in Mount
-Airy, and perhaps they would be grateful to
-you for returning them.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I think we’d better not have any thing to
-do with them,” said Arthur. “But we’ll forward
-them a dispatch and let them send or
-come after the rods. They’ve nothing else
-to do.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>There was telegraphic communication between
-Indian Lake and Mount Airy, by the way of
-New London, and Arthur wrote and sent off
-the dispatch before he left the hotel. If he
-and his chums had been able to look far enough
-into the future to see every thing that was to
-result from this simple act, they would have
-been greatly astonished. I know I was when I
-heard the full particulars.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>In a few minutes the expected guide came
-down to the beach and gave the skiff a careful
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_384'>384</span>examination. After he had stripped off the
-canvas and bark, so that he could see the full
-extent of her injuries, he remarked that Matt’s
-scow must have hit her a middling heavy crack.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I should say she did,” replied Joe, with a
-laugh. “When three strong fellows do their
-level best with paddles, they can make a small
-boat get through the water with considerable
-speed. They hit us hard enough to knock
-Arthur overboard. Who are those men, and
-where are they going in such haste?” he continued,
-directing the guide’s attention to a
-company of guests and boatmen who were
-walking rapidly toward the beach.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Two of them are the gentlemen whose
-camps were robbed the other day,” replied the
-guide, after he had taken a glance at the party.
-“They’ve got some friends to help them, and
-are going out to see if they can track down
-them varmints who have been kicking up so
-much fuss about here of late. There comes
-Swan. He’s going with them, but they might
-as well stay at home, the whole of them. That
-Matt Coyle can cover up his trail like an Injun.
-It took every guide in the country to hunt him
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_385'>385</span>down the last time we drove him away from
-here.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“You missed it by not putting him in jail,”
-said Roy.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“That’s just what we wanted to do,”
-answered the guide. “But when we come to
-talk to some of the guests about it—there was
-lawyers among them, you know—we found that
-we didn’t have any evidence that would convict
-him. We suspected him, but we could not
-prove any thing.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“You’ll not be troubled in that way this
-time,” Arthur remarked. “You’ll have the
-guns for evidence.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Don’t fool yourself,” said the guide. “Do
-you suppose that they will find that three
-hundred dollar scatter-gun and that fifty dollar
-rifle when they find Matt Coyle—that is, if
-they do find him? Not by a great sight. Them
-things is safe hid in the woods. Matt’ll sw’ar
-that he didn’t hook ’em, and there ain’t a
-living man that can sw’ar that he did. The
-only thing they can do is to burn him out of
-house and home, like we did last time, and force
-him to go off somewhere and steal a new outfit.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'><span class='pageno' id='Page_386'>386</span>“What’s the reason we can’t go with them?”
-said Joe, suddenly.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I reckon you can. You know more about
-the woods than some of that party do, and you
-might be of some use to them.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Well, look here, Mr. Morris: Will you fix
-up our boat in good shape, give her a coat or
-two of paint and take care of the things that
-we shall be obliged to leave behind us?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I will, sartain,” answered the guide, readily.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>In an instant both the lockers were opened,
-and Joe Wayring, snatching up a camp basket,
-started post-haste for the hotel to hire a skiff
-and purchase a small supply of provisions for
-the trip, leaving Roy and Arthur to select the
-outfit. The tent and the most of their heavy
-cooking-utensils were to be left behind. They
-were very useful articles, of course, but they
-were not absolutely necessary to their existence,
-or even to their comfort. Besides, the skiff
-that would be provided for them would not
-carry as much “duffle” as the roomy boat
-they were going to leave in the guide’s keeping.
-Their bows and arrows, blankets, the
-knapsacks that contained their extra clothing,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_387'>387</span>and the frying pan must go, of course; but
-every thing else was left behind.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>While they were awaiting Joe’s return, Mr.
-Swan and his party came up, got into their
-boats and pushed away from the beach. Mr.
-Morris pointed out two stalwart gentlemen in
-shooting costume, who, he said, were the
-owners of the stolen guns. They seemed to be
-in very bad humor, and the boys did not wonder
-at it.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I shouldn’t like to be in Matt’s place if
-those men get their hands on him,” said Roy,
-in a low tone.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Nor I,” answered the guide. “They sw’ar
-they’ll pound him before he goes to jail, and
-they look to me like fellers that will keep
-their word.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Say, boys,” exclaimed Mr. Swan, as he
-backed water with his oars and brought his
-boat to a stand-still at the stern of the skiff,
-“can’t you stay here till we come back? We
-want your evidence.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“We’ll be around, you may depend upon
-that,” returned Roy. “But we’re not going
-to stay here, if you will let us take part in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_388'>388</span>the hunt. Joe has gone up to the hotel after
-a boat.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Oh! All right,” said Mr. Swan. “Them’s
-two of the lads that had the battle in the dark
-that I was telling you about,” he added,
-addressing himself to the owner of the lost
-“scatter-gun”, who was his employer.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Well, I must say that they are plucky
-fellows, and that they deserve better luck,”
-said the gentleman, returning the military
-salute which the boys gave him from sheer
-force of habit. “I hope their skiff can be
-easily repaired, Mr. Morris?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“No trouble about that, sir,” answered the
-guide. “She’ll be right and tight before sundown—all
-except the paint.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>After telling Roy and his companion that if
-they did not overtake him before, they would
-find him encamped somewhere on the bank of
-the creek near the pond, Mr. Swan applied
-himself to his oars, and a fleet of seven boats,
-manned by fourteen angry and determined
-guides and guests, set out in pursuit of Matt
-Coyle and his thieving crew. Ten minutes
-later Joe Wayring returned, accompanied by
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_389'>389</span>a guide and a small party of ladies and gentlemen.
-The former was to show him what boat
-he could take, and the latter were listening
-with much interest to Joe’s graphic account
-of his adventures with the squatter. Joe was
-surprised to learn that Matt’s way of creeping
-up through the bushes and robbing unguarded
-camps, had frightened the women and children
-so badly that they refused to go into the
-woods until the thief had been captured and
-safely lodged in jail. That depended upon
-the evidence Joe could give to put him there.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“That’s all mighty fine,” said Mr. Morris,
-after listening to what Joe had to say of his
-conversation with the stranger, “but they
-don’t give a thought to the hardest part of the
-business. Matt ain’t caught yet, and there’ll
-have to be a heap of hard work done before he
-is shut up so’t he can’t steal no more scatter-guns;
-you see if there ain’t. I’d like to take
-a hand in the hunt myself, but I’ve got to go
-out with the same man I guided for last year,
-and he’s liable to come along any day.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Their boat having been pointed out to them,
-Joe and his companions lost no time in putting
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_390'>390</span>their effects aboard of it. Then they bade Mr.
-Morris good-by, lifted their caps to the party
-on shore, and rowed down the lake and up the
-creek in pursuit of the fleet. They overtook Mr.
-Swan and his party just before they landed to eat
-their lunch, traveled in company with them during
-the rest of the day, and went into camp with
-them at night. I had abundant opportunity
-to compare notes with the three recovered bait-rods,
-who corroborated the story that was told
-me by the canvas canoe, and which I
-have already given to the reader in my
-own words. The squatter was fully resolved,
-they said, that if he couldn’t act as guide in
-those woods, nobody should; and the worst of
-it was, he seemed to be in a fair way to accomplish
-his object. The sportsmen who patronized
-the hotels came there for fun and recreation;
-and it wasn’t likely that they could see
-much of it if their wives and children were to
-be prevented from accompanying them on their
-fishing excursions through fear of this man,
-Matt Coyle. The owners of the Lefever hammerless
-and Winchester rifle didn’t see much
-fun in having their fine weapons stolen, and if
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_391'>391</span>these depredations were not stopped, and that
-speedily, it would not be long before the guests
-would be looking for some place of resort where
-thieves were not quite so plenty.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“But even that isn’t the worst of it,” continued
-Joe’s bait-rod, who did the most of the
-talking. “Every thing seems to indicate that
-the squatter is going to have a bigger following
-now than he has been able to boast of in the past.
-He isn’t the only worthless scamp there is in
-the woods, by any means. You know, I suppose,
-that the State fish commissioners have
-established a hatchery at the outlet of Deer
-Lake, a few miles from here?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>I replied that I had not heard of it.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Well, they have, and the superintendent
-wants to prohibit fishing there, so that he can
-get a supply of eggs large enough to stock all
-these waters, which will soon be stripped of
-trout unless there are some put in to take the
-place of the multitudes that are caught every
-year. The superintendent sets traps in the
-outlet to catch the fish so that he can get their
-eggs, and three or four fellows who live right
-there, and who look enough like Matt Coyle to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_392'>392</span>be his brothers, go to the outlet every night
-and cut the nets. The superintendent threatened
-to have them arrested if they didn’t quit
-it, and they told him that they had always
-fished in that outlet, and if he wanted the
-hatchery buildings to stay there, he hadn’t better
-try to stop them. I heard the whole conversation.
-I was down there when old Dead
-Shot was broken.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Who’s Dead Shot?” I inquired.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I am,” faintly replied Arthur Hastings’s
-crippled rod.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Why, that’s a queer name for you to bear,”
-said I. “I think it would be more appropriate
-for a shot-gun or rifle.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Perhaps it would; but Arthur has always
-called me that since I caught his first string of
-yellow pike for him, and it is the name I go by.
-I never let a fish get away when I get a good
-grip on him—that is, when I have some one to
-handle me who knows what he is about. But
-Jake don’t know any thing about a rod, for he
-has always fished with a pole he cut in the
-bushes. On the day the superintendent talked
-so plainly to the vagabonds who cut his nets,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_393'>393</span>Jake was fishing in the outlet, and Matt was
-hiding in one of the cabins. A little fish—I
-should not think he weighed more than a
-pound, judging by the bite he gave—took the
-hook, which was baited with worms, and Jake
-tried to yank him out by main strength, as he
-had always been in the habit of doing; but the
-line caught between two rocks, and as Jake
-threw back his head and surged on me with all
-the muscle he had, I broke. That’s all there
-was of it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“And do you think that Matt Coyle will
-strike hands with those fellows at the outlet?”
-I asked, when Dead Shot had ended
-his story.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“He has done it already, and our friends
-here have undertaken a bigger job than they
-bargained for,” answered the bait-rod. “Those
-vagabonds are all tarred with the same stick.
-They sympathize with Matt, and will hide him
-in their houses and help him in every way
-they can.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Haven’t we got force enough to go into the
-houses and take him out?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“We’ve got the force, but not the authority.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_394'>394</span>There’s not an officer or a search-warrant in our
-party.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Not being posted in law, I did not quite understand
-the situation, but I didn’t like to ask
-any more questions. It was enough for me to
-know that Matt Coyle seemed to have the best
-of the game. Indeed, he always seemed to
-have it.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_395'>395</span>
- <h2 class='c011'>CHAPTER XIX. <br /> <br /><span class='small'>CONCLUSION.</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_2_0_5 c018'>THE boats made an early start the next
-morning, and reached the pond at nine
-o’clock. Half an hour later they had crossed
-it, and were moving up the creek where I performed
-my first exploit, and Joe Wayring so
-narrowly escaped capture by Matt Coyle and his
-boys. It annoyed me to think that the squatter
-and his family had enjoyed so good a supper,
-and that I had unwittingly provided it for
-them. It would not have soothed my feelings
-much if some one had told me that, although
-that was the first meal I had caught for them,
-it would not be the last.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Now, then,” said Mr. Swan, after he and
-his party had listened to Joe’s description of the
-exciting incidents that happened in the creek
-on the evening of the previous day, “we will
-divide ourselves into two fleets and take
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_396'>396</span>opposite sides of the stream. As we go up,
-let every one of us keep a bright lookout for a
-sign. Those robbers could not have got into
-their scow or landed from it without leaving a
-trail, and that is what we want to find.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>In obedience to these instructions four of the
-boats kept to one side of the creek, the remaining
-four pulled over to the other bank, and the
-hunt began in earnest. Every inch of the shore
-on both sides was closely scrutinized, but up
-to three o’clock in the afternoon nothing suspicious
-had been discovered. Mr. Swan began
-to believe that they had passed the trail long
-ago without seeing it, and said as much to his
-employer, adding—</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“That villain is sharper than two or three
-men have any business to be. He and his
-family, the old woman included, can go
-through the woods without leaving trail enough
-for a hound to follow. They never forget to
-be as careful as they know how, for they have
-so long lived in constant fear of arrest that—”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>The guide suddenly paused, and looked
-earnestly at Joe and his companions, whose
-actions seemed to indicate that they had found
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_397'>397</span>something that would bear looking into.
-Their boat was loitering along two or three
-rods behind the others, Roy and Arthur doing
-the rowing, while Joe was stretched out flat on
-the knapsacks, his chin resting on his arms
-which were supported by the gunwale, and his
-eyes fastened upon the bank. All at once he
-started up and said, in a low tone:</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Cease rowing. Look at that.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Look at what?” demanded Roy, after he
-and Arthur had run their eyes up and down
-the bank without seeing any thing that was
-calculated to excite astonishment. “At those
-bushes growing in the water? That’s nothing,
-for we’ve seen bushes growing in the water
-ever since we came into the creek.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I am aware of it; but if you will look
-closely at these particular bushes, you will see
-that the bark is scraped off some of them, and
-that they all lean away from the creek as if
-some heavy body had been dragged over them,”
-answered Joe. “Back port and give way starboard.
-Let’s turn in here; and if we don’t
-find something or other on the opposite side, I
-shall wonder.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'><span class='pageno' id='Page_398'>398</span>The rowers obeyed, without much confidence
-as to the result, it must be confessed, and
-when Mr. Swan and his party arrived, having
-all turned back to see what it was that had
-attracted the attention of the boys, neither they
-nor their boat were in sight. There was something
-on the bank, however, that instantly
-caught the sharp eye of one of the guides, who
-at once proceeded to take himself to task in a
-way that would have excited his ire if any one
-else had done it.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Hit me over the head with a paddle, somebody,”
-said he. “I’m going to throw up my
-position when I get back to the lake, and quit
-guiding. I ain’t no good any more. I come
-along here not ten minutes ago, and didn’t see
-what them boys saw at once. Look at them
-bushes, and then look at that,” he added, pulling
-his boat closer to the bank, and placing
-the blade of his oar in a little depression in the
-edge of the water. “Matt Coyle shoved that
-scow of his’n over them bushes, and that’s
-what barked them and made them bend over
-that way. He suspicioned that some of us
-would see it, so he come back and stood right
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_399'>399</span>there where my oar is, and tried to straighten
-the bushes up with a pole or something.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“That’s so,” said Mr. Swan, to his employer,
-“Didn’t I tell you that he was a sharp one?
-The tricks that that fellow don’t know ain’t
-worth knowing.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Just then a twig snapped on the bank and
-Joe Wayring came into view. “Don’t talk so
-loud,” he whispered, as he held up his finger
-warningly. “Matt’s scow isn’t twenty feet
-from here, and that’s all the proof I want that
-his camp is close at land.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Instantly seven pairs of oars were dropped
-into the water, and as many boats were forced
-through the bushes and into the little bay on
-the other side. There lay the piratical craft
-which had done her best to send the skiff to
-the bottom of the pond, but nothing was to be
-seen or heard of her crew.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Keep still, every body,” cautioned Mr.
-Swan, in the lowest possible whisper. “They’re
-out there in the woods, but remember that they
-ain’t caught yet, and that they won’t be if their
-ears tell them that we’re coming.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Joe afterward said that the trail that led
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_400'>400</span>from the scow into the bushes was so plain that
-a blind man could have followed it; so it
-seemed that, for once, Matt had forgotten to
-be careful. No doubt he thought that the bay
-in which his scow found a resting-place, was so
-effectually hidden by the bushes in front of it,
-that it would never be discovered by a pursuing
-party. We have seen that he had good reason
-for this belief. If Joe and his chums had
-decided to remain at the lake and enjoy themselves
-there while their skiff was being repaired,
-instead of joining their forces with Mr. Swan’s
-hunting party, it is probable that the squatter’s
-retreat never would have been discovered; and
-neither would the pursuers—well, I’ll wait
-until I get to that before I tell about it.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Mr. Swan, who was the acknowledged leader
-of the party, at once shouldered his rifle and
-began following up the trail, the others falling
-in in single file behind him. They moved so
-silently that I could not hear a leaf rustle; and
-I told myself that the surprise and capture of
-the squatter and his whole shiftless tribe was a
-foregone conclusion. I afterward learned that
-Mr. Swan and the guides who were with him
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_401'>401</span>thought so too. Before they had gone fifty
-yards, the former suddenly stopped and whispered
-to the man next behind him—</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“We are close upon them. I smell smoke.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“And I smell coffee,” replied the man to
-whom the words were addressed, and who
-sniffed the air as if he were trying to locate the
-camp by the aid of his nose instead of his eyes,
-“and bacon.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Shaking his hand warningly at the men
-behind him, the guide moved forward again
-with long, noiseless strides. Presently he discovered
-a thin blue cloud of smoke rising above
-the bushes close in front of him. He looked at
-it a moment, and then dashed ahead at the top
-of his speed, his eager companions following at
-his heels.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>A few hasty steps brought them to the little
-cleared spot in a thicket of evergreens in which
-Matt Coyle had made his camp. On one side
-of it was a lean-to with a roof of boughs, and
-on the other was the fire, with a battered
-coffee pot simmering and sputtering beside it.
-Scattered about over the ground were several
-slices of half-fried bacon, which had been hurriedly
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_402'>402</span>dumped from the pan. A few broken
-plates and dishes that stood on a log close at
-hand, bore silent testimony to the fact that the
-squatter’s wife was just getting ready to lay
-the table, when news was brought to the camp
-that Mr. Swan and his party were coming.
-Under the lean-to were some worthless articles
-in the way of wearing apparel and bed-clothes,
-but every thing of value had disappeared.
-There was nothing like a hammerless shot gun
-or a Winchester rifle to be found.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“The nest is warm, but where are the birds?”
-exclaimed Mr. Swan’s employer, who had
-jumped into the clearing with his coat off and
-his fists doubled up, all ready to carry out his
-threat of pounding Matt Coyle before he was
-sent to jail.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Didn’t I say that they were sharp?”
-replied the guide. “The birds have took
-wing.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Then take to your heels and catch them,”
-exclaimed his employer. “Can’t you follow
-a trail? They can’t have been gone more than
-five minutes. A hundred dollars to the man
-that will capture that villain for me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'><span class='pageno' id='Page_403'>403</span>“And I will add a hundred to it,” cried the
-owner of the stolen Winchester.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>The guides did not need these extra inducements,
-for they had more at stake than these
-two strangers who spent two months out of
-every twelve in the woods, and the rest of the
-year in the city, following some lucrative business
-or profession. The guides’ bread and
-butter depended upon their exertions, and they
-were no whit more anxious to effect Matt’s
-capture now, than they were before the two
-hundred dollars reward had been offered them.
-At a word from Mr. Swan they separated and
-began circling around the lean-to to find the
-trail; but this did not take up two minutes of
-their time. They found five trails; and a
-short examination of them showed that they
-all led away in different directions.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“That trick is borrowed from the plains
-Indians,” said Joe, when Mr. Swan announced
-this fact to his employer. “Whenever the
-hostiles find themselves hard pressed by the
-troops, they break up into little bands, and
-start off toward different points of the compass;
-but before they separate, they take care
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_404'>404</span>to have it understood where they shall come
-together again.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“That’s a fact,” assented the owner of the
-Winchester. “I have been among those copper-colored
-gentlemen, when I had nothing to
-depend on except the speed of my pony; but
-how does it come that you are so well posted?
-Have you ever hunted on the plains?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“No, sir; but I have the promise that I shall
-some day enjoy that pleasure,” answered Joe.
-“My uncle told me about it. He’s been there
-often. Now the question in my mind is: Did
-Matt, before his family scattered like so many
-quails, appoint a place of meeting? If he did,
-that’s where we ought to go.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Young man, you are a sharp one,” said
-the gentleman, admiringly. “What do you
-say, Swan?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>The guide appealed to could not say any
-thing, and neither could the others. Unfortunately
-they did not know that the squatter had
-made friends with the vagabonds living in the
-vicinity of the State hatchery. If they had
-known it, that was the place they would have
-started for without loss of time, but they
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_405'>405</span>wouldn’t have caught him if they had gone
-there.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“There’s a good deal of hard sense in Joe’s
-head,” said Mr. Swan, after a short pause.
-“Of course, Matt and his family will come
-together again somewhere, but you see the
-trouble is, we don’t know what point they are
-striking for.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Can’t you follow the trails and find out?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Take the plainest one of them trails, and
-I’ll bet every thing I’ve got that you can’t
-follow it a hundred yards,” said Mr. Swan.
-“It is going to take us a good long month to
-hunt them down, and we’ll be lucky if we do
-it in that time.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“But we can’t wait so long,” protested one
-of the guests. “We must return to the city
-to-morrow. Our business demands our attention.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>The guides consulted in low tones, and so
-did their employers. Finally one of the latter
-wrote something on a card and handed it to
-Mr. Swan, saying:</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“If we have done all we can, we might as
-well go back to the hotel; but before we start,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_406'>406</span>we make you this offer: We will give a hundred
-dollars apiece to the man who will find our
-weapons, capture the thief and hold him so that
-we can come and testify against him. Or, we
-will give fifty dollars apiece for the guns without
-the thief, and the same amounts for the
-thief without the guns. Boys, you are included
-in that offer.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Thank you, sir,” said Arthur. “It would
-afford us great satisfaction if we could be the
-means of restoring your property to you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Before we leave here we’ll fix things so that
-Matt won’t find much to comfort him if he
-should accidentally circle around this way
-after we are gone,” said Mr. Swan. “Pile on
-every thing, boys.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>The “boys” understood him and went to
-work with a will. In less time than it takes to
-tell it, the lean-to was pulled down and thrown
-upon the fire, the bed-clothes and dishes were
-piled on top, the bacon was driven so deeply
-into the ground by the heels of heavy boots
-that a hungry hound could hardly have scented
-it—in short, every thing that Matt and his
-family had left behind in their hurried flight,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_407'>407</span>was utterly destroyed. His scow was not forgotten.
-They would knock it out of all semblance
-to a boat when they went back to the
-creek.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Having started a roaring fire, they were
-obliged to stay and see it burn itself out, for
-they dared not leave it for fear that it might
-set the woods aflame. So they stood around
-and saw it blaze, grumbling the while over
-the ill luck that had attended their efforts to
-capture the cunning squatter, and it was fully
-three-quarters of an hour before Mr. Swan
-thought it safe to return to the boats. This
-delay gave Matt Coyle plenty of time in which
-to carry out a very neat piece of villainy, some
-of which I saw, and all of which I heard.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>While the scenes I have just described were
-being enacted in the clearing, there were lively
-times in the little bay of which I have spoken. You
-know we were left in company with Matt’s
-scow, the boat in which I rode being drawn
-up on the bank on one side of him and Mr.
-Swan’s on the other; and no sooner had the
-hunting party disappeared in the bushes, than
-we began reviling him the best we knew how.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_408'>408</span>The only reason we didn’t break him into
-kindling wood at once, was because we couldn’t.
-Our will was good enough.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Get away from here,” said <i>Wanderer</i>.
-(That was the name of Mr. Swan’s boat. He
-had always lived and worked in the company
-of gentlemen, and he did not like to occupy
-close quarters with so disreputable a fellow as
-the scow.)</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Get away from here yourself,” was the
-report. “I was here first, an’ I’m going to
-stay.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“I’ll bet you will,” said <i>Bushboy</i>. (That
-was the name of the boat Joe and his chums
-hired at Indian Lake.) “But you may be
-sure of one thing: You will stay a wreck.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“That’s so,” said I. “Joe Wayring will
-never go away leaving him above the water.
-He’ll break him up so completely that his thief
-of a master won’t know him if he should happen
-along this way again.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“He will never come this way again until he
-is on his road to jail,” said <i>Wanderer</i>. “Mr.
-Swan is after him, and he’s going to catch
-him, too.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'><span class='pageno' id='Page_409'>409</span>“Wal, Matt’ll go to jail knowin’ that he’s
-done a right smart of damage sence he’s been
-layin’ around loose in the woods, an’ if I am
-busted up, I shall have the same comfortin’
-knowledge. Fly-rod has seed me afore. I
-captured his friend, the canvas canoe—”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Where is he now?” I interrupted.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Out there in the bresh, hid away so snug
-that nobody won’t ever find him,” was the
-taunting reply. “Them guns is hid out there
-too, but not in the same place. Matt come
-purty near gettin’ you as well as the canoe. I
-heard him say that he almost overtook Joe
-while he was a runnin’ through the woods with
-you in his hand.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Yes; and Matt would have got me over
-the head if he had been able to run a little
-faster.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“An’ Joe would have got a hickory over the
-back, I tell you,” said the old scow. “How
-do you reckon that that skiff I sent to the
-bottom of the pond feels by this time?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“You didn’t send him to the bottom of the
-pond,” said I, angrily. “You tried hard
-enough, but you didn’t make it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'><span class='pageno' id='Page_410'>410</span>The bait-rods and the boats took up the
-quarrel, and while I listened, I waited impatiently
-for the return of the hunting party.
-Presently I heard a slight rustling in the thicket
-at the head of the bay, but it was not made by
-the persons I wanted to see. It was Matt Coyle
-that stuck his ugly face out of the bushes, and
-his bleared and blood-shot eyes that traveled
-from one to another of the boats that lay before
-him. Then he turned and whispered to some one
-behind him and the whole family came and stood
-upon the bank. Their sudden appearance made
-it plain to all of us that the squatter and his
-backers, after “scattering like so many quails,”
-had run just far enough in different directions
-to bewilder their pursuers, after which they
-“circled around” and came back to the bay,
-intending to continue their flight in the scow,
-which would leave no trail that could be followed.
-It was evident, too, that there had
-been an understanding among them before they
-separated; otherwise they would not all have
-been there. When Matt’s gaze rested upon the
-trim little boats before him, he said in a low but
-distinct voice—</p>
-
-<p class='c019'><span class='pageno' id='Page_411'>411</span>“Whoop-ee! Jest look at all them nice
-skiffs, will you? Ain’t we in luck though?
-Never mind the scow. She’s done good work
-fur us, but we’ll leave her behind now an’
-travel like other white folks do. Old woman,
-you go round to all them boats an’ pick up the
-grub what’s into ’em; Jakey, you an’ Sam
-ketch up the poles an’ cookin’ things an’ every
-other article you can get your two hands onto.
-Dump them that’ll sink into the water an’
-chuck them that won’t sink as fur into the
-bresh as you can, so’t they won’t never find’ em
-no more. While you are doin’ that, I’ll pick
-out two of the best boats fur our own.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Say, pap, what’s the reason we don’t carry
-off the things in place of throwin’ on ’em away
-or sinkin’ ’em?” asked Jake.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“’Cause we can’t sell ’em, an’ we don’t
-want to be bothered with totin’ ’em. You will
-save time if you do jest as I told you. We
-want to get away from here as sudden as we
-can.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“An’ what’ll we do with the boats that we
-don’t take with us?” continued Jake. “Will
-we bust ’em up?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'><span class='pageno' id='Page_412'>412</span>“Now, jest listen at the fule!” exclaimed
-Matt, angrily. “The noise we would make in
-bustin’ on ’em up would bring ole Swan back
-here a runnin’; an’ I don’t care to see him
-with all them other fellers at his back.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>The vagabonds worked with surprising celerity,
-and in a very short space of time two of
-the finest boats in the lot had been pushed into
-the water, and the old woman was piling provisions
-into them by the armful, while Jake
-and Sam busied themselves in disposing of the
-other things as their sire had directed. I was
-sent whirling through the air toward the opposite
-side of the bay, and sad to relate, was
-stopped in my headlong flight by a tree, against
-which I struck with a sounding whack. There
-was a loud snap, and I fell to the ground helpless.
-My second joint was broken close to the
-ferrule.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>I lay for a long time where I had fallen—so
-long that I began to wonder if I was to remain
-there until my ferrules were all rusted to pieces
-and I became like the mold beneath me. I
-heard Matt and his family leave the bay in the
-stolen boats. I knew when they forced their
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_413'>413</span>way through the bushes into the creek, and
-was greatly astonished to know that they
-turned down stream toward the pond, the direction
-in which their pursuers would have to
-go when they returned to the hotel. But Matt,
-the sly old fox, had reasoned with himself on
-this point before he adopted these extraordinary
-tactics. It lacked only about half an hour
-of night-fall, and Mr. Swan and his party would
-soon be obliged to go into camp; while Matt
-knowing every crook and turn in the creek,
-could travel as well in the dark as he could by
-daylight. Before the sun arose, he would be
-miles away and among friends. If Mr. Swan
-took it for granted that he had gone up instead
-of down stream, and went that way himself in
-hope of being able to overtake him, it would
-give the squatter just so much more time in
-which to make good his escape. It was a very
-neat trick on Matt’s part.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>At last, after a long interval of waiting, I
-heard voices and footsteps on the other side of
-the bay. The birds having flown there was no
-need of caution, and some of the returning
-party were talking in their ordinary tones,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_414'>414</span>while others were shouting back at their
-friends in the rear. My acute sense of hearing
-told me when they came out of the bushes, and
-I also caught the exclamations of rage and
-astonishment that fell from their lips when
-they saw what had been done in the bay during
-their brief absence. The guides were almost
-beside themselves with fury, but the two city
-sportsmen laughed uproariously.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“We’re a pretty set, I must say,” I heard
-one of them exclaim. “If I hadn’t seen it with
-my own eyes, I never should have believed that
-any man living could play a trick like this
-upon us. Two of the best boats, all the rods,
-provisions and dishes, as well as the frying-pans
-are gone. I think we had better camp
-right where we are, start for home at the first
-peep of day and never show our faces in the
-woods again.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Hallo! What’s this here?” cried one of
-the guides, who, for want of something better
-to do, had stepped into the skiff and shoved
-out into the bay. He looked down into the
-clear waters as he spoke, then seized the
-boathook, and after a little maneuvering
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_415'>415</span>with it, brought one of the frying-pans to
-light.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“And what’s that over there on the other
-side?” exclaimed the familiar voice of Mr.
-Swan.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Why, it’s my unlucky bait-rod, as sure as
-the world,” said Arthur Hastings. “But he
-was lucky this time, wasn’t he? If he hadn’t
-lodged in the friendly branches of that evergreen,
-I should have thought that Matt Coyle
-had carried him off again.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>These unexpected discoveries led to a thorough
-examination of the bay and of the bushes surrounding
-it, and the result was most satisfactory.
-Before dark every single article that Jake
-and Sam had thrown away, had been recovered.
-There was nothing missing now except the boats
-and the provisions; but the loss of these things
-did not put the party to any great inconvenience.
-There was an abundance of game in
-the woods, plenty of fish to be had for the
-catching, and Matt’s scow could easily carry
-the four men who had lost their skiffs.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>But little more remains to be told. Mr.
-Swan and his party camped “right where they
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_416'>416</span>were” that night, made an early start the next
-morning, and reached Indian Lake on the afternoon
-of the following day. The chums found
-their skiff in the best possible condition, and
-looking very nobby in her new dress, by which
-I mean a fresh coat of paint. They gave it
-another day in which to dry, then laid in a
-supply of provisions and fearlessly turned
-their faces toward the wilderness; while the
-two city sportsmen, thoroughly disgusted with
-their failure, and by the trick that Matt had
-so neatly played upon them, set out for home
-declaring that they would never visit Indian
-Lake again until their guns had been restored
-to them, and the man who stole them was
-safely lodged in jail.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>During the next few days I had nothing to
-do but make myself miserable while the other
-rods caught the fish that were served up three
-times a day until the boys grew tired of them.
-I was glad when Joe said that it was time to
-start for home, but sorry for the disappointment
-he met when he got there. Uncle Joe,
-who was to have taken them upon an extended
-tour, “either East or West, they didn’t know
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_417'>417</span>which,” had suddenly been called away on
-important business, and the probabilities were
-that if they took their contemplated trip at all
-it would not be until near the end of the vacation;
-and then it would have to be a very short
-one. But Joe didn’t get sulky, as some boys
-would have done under like circumstances.
-He wrote to his uncle, found out when he was
-coming home, and suggested an immediate
-return to Indian Lake. Arthur and Roy were
-delighted with the proposal, and I was at once
-given into the hands of a skilled mechanic, who
-in two days’ time mended my broken joint so
-neatly that no one could tell, even with the
-closest scrutiny, that there had ever been any
-thing the matter with it. Joe came after me
-on the afternoon of the second day, and when
-he carried me to his room and stood me in the
-corner where I was to stay until something
-that he called “ferrule cement” had had time
-to harden, whom should I see but my old friend,
-the canvas canoe, occupying his usual place in
-the recess, and looking none the worse for his
-forced sojourn among the Indian Lake vagabonds.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'><span class='pageno' id='Page_418'>418</span>“Well, I swan to man!” I exclaimed,
-unconsciously making use of an expression
-which I had heard so often that I had
-become quite familiar with it. “How in the
-name of all that’s wonderful did you get
-back?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Glad to see you, old fellow,” replied the
-canoe, in his jolly, hearty fashion, “but sorry
-to hear that you got crippled. Where have
-you been?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Just got back from the doctor’s shop. I
-am all right again, or shall be in a few days.
-When and how did you return?”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Came yesterday. Mr. Swan brought me.
-Found me hidden under a pile of brush, not
-more than twenty feet from the place where he
-and his party stood when they burned the
-squatter’s shanty. I saw and heard every thing
-that happened there.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Well, tell us all about it. I know you must
-have had some adventures during your
-absence.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Indeed I have; and I have brought a heavy
-load of anxiety back with me. How I wish I
-could warn Joe and his chums! The threats I
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_419'>419</span>heard made against them were enough to make
-even a canvas canoe shudder.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>With these preliminary remarks the canoe
-settled himself for an all-night’s task. I have
-not space enough in this book to repeat what
-he said, and besides, the narrative of my
-exploits, which so far are neither many nor
-brilliant I confess, is ended for the time being;
-so I will gladly step aside and give place to my
-accommodating friend, who is a more experienced
-story-teller than myself, and who, in the
-second volume of this series, will describe
-many interesting and some exciting incidents
-which happened during his captivity. His
-story will be entitled: <span class='sc'>The Adventures of A
-Canvas Canoe</span>.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c000'>
- <div><span class='sc'>The End.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c011'>J. T. TROWBRIDGE.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c020'>Neither as a writer does he stand apart from the great
-currents of life and select some exceptional phase or odd
-combination of circumstances. He stands on the common
-level and appeals to the universal heart, and all that he suggests
-or achieves is on the plane and in the line of march of
-the great body of humanity.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>The Jack Hazard series of stories, published in the late
-<i>Our Young Folks</i>, and continued in the first volume of <i>St.
-Nicholas</i>, under the title of “Fast Friends,” is no doubt
-destined to hold a high place in this class of literature. The
-delight of the boys in them (and of their seniors, too) is
-well founded. They go to the right spot every time. Trowbridge
-knows the heart of a boy like a book, and the heart
-of a man, too, and he has laid them both open in these books
-in a most successful manner. Apart from the qualities that
-render the series so attractive to all young readers, they
-have great value on account of their portraitures of American
-country life and character. The drawing is wonderfully
-accurate, and as spirited as it is true. The constable, Sellick,
-is an original character, and as minor figures where will
-we find anything better than Miss Wansey, and Mr. P. Pipkin,
-Esq. The picture of Mr. Dink’s school, too, is capital,
-and where else in fiction is there a better nick-name than
-that the boys gave to poor little Stephen Treadwell, “Step
-Hen,” as he himself pronounced his name in an unfortunate
-moment when he saw it in print for the first time in his lesson
-in school.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>On the whole, these books are very satisfactory, and
-afford the critical reader the rare pleasure of the works that
-are just adequate, that easily fulfill themselves and accomplish
-all they set out to do.—<i>Scribner’s Monthly.</i></p>
-
-<h3 class='c021'><b>JACK HAZARD SERIES</b></h3>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c006'>
- <div>6 vols.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<span class='sc'>By J. T. Trowbridge.</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;$7.25</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l c022'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Jack Hazard and His Fortunes.</div>
- <div class='line'>The Young Surveyor.</div>
- <div class='line'>Fast Friends.</div>
- <div class='line'>Doing His Best.</div>
- <div class='line'>A Chance for Himself.</div>
- <div class='line'>Lawrence’s Adventures.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c023' />
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
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- </div>
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-
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- <hr class='pb c006' />
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c017'>Transcriber's Notes</h3>
-
-<p class='c026'>Printer, punctuation and spelling inaccuracies were silently corrected.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Archaic and variable spelling has been preserved.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Variations in hyphenation and compound words have been preserved.</p>
-
-
-
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-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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