_THE YOUNG MASTER OF HYSON HALL_


[Illustration: When Phil had taken hold of the sill, Chap gave him a
lift
                                                           Page 140]




  _The Young Master of
  Hyson Hall_

  _BY_

  _FRANK R. STOCKTON_

  _Author of “Captain Chap,” “Rudder Grange,” etc._

  _With Illustrations by_

  _VIRGINIA H. DAVISSON
  and
  CHARLES H. STEPHENS_

  [Illustration]

  _PHILADELPHIA
  J. B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY
  1900_




  Copyright, 1882, by JAMES ELVERSON.

  Copyright, 1899, by J. B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY.


  ELECTROTYPED AND PRINTED BY J. B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY, PHILADELPHIA,
  U.S.A.




_PREFATORY NOTE_

(_By the Author_)


This story was originally published in a paper for boys, under the
title of “Philip Berkeley; or, the Master’s Gun.” It has recently been
thoroughly revised, and a new title, which better expresses the import
and purposes of the story, has been given to it upon this its first
appearance in book form.

Those who may remember the story as it originally appeared will find
that the master’s gun still exercises the same subtle influence over
the fortunes of the Master of Hyson Hall as it did when it enjoyed the
honor of a place in the title.




_CONTENTS_


  CHAPTER                                                           PAGE

       I.--OLD BRUDEN                                                  7

      II.--IN WHICH PHILIP IS VERY MUCH AMAZED                        15

     III.--OLD BRUDEN MAKES A MOVE                                    22

      IV.--IN WHICH CHAP SHOOTS A LITTLE AND PLANS A GREAT DEAL       32

       V.--THE MASTER’S GUN                                           40

      VI.--ARABIAN BLOOD                                              50

     VII.--WHAT JOUNCER PUT HIS FOOT INTO                             55

    VIII.--CHAP ENTERS THE FOG                                        64

      IX.--CHAP’S IRON HEEL                                           71

       X.--IN WHICH A STORY IS TOLD                                   82

      XI.--PHILIP IS BROUGHT TO A HALT                                91

     XII.--EMILE TOURON                                               99

    XIII.--OLD BRUDEN FINDS HIS MASTER                               110

     XIV.--PHŒNIX SEES HIS DUTY AND DOES IT                          119

      XV.--THE FIRE ON THE THOMAS WISTAR                             128

     XVI.--SPATTERDOCK POINT                                         137

    XVII.--IN WHICH A COUNCIL IS HELD                                148

   XVIII.--TOURON IN THE FIELD                                       156

     XIX.--PHIL AND CHAP START ON AN EXPEDITION                      167

      XX.--“ZOSE ANGEL BELLS”                                        175

     XXI.--ON SEPARATE ROADS                                         187

    XXII.--IN WHICH THERE IS A GOOD DEAL OF FAST TRAVELLING          196

   XXIII.--MR. GODFREY BERKELEY IS HEARD FROM                        206

    XXIV.--THE GROCER’S BUGGY ONCE MORE                              219

     XXV.--OLD BRUDEN MAKES AN IMPRESSION                            225

    XXVI.--MR. TOURON ATTENDS PERSONALLY TO HIS AFFAIRS              233

   XXVII.--THE LONELY SUMACH                                         241

  XXVIII.--THE RETURN OF THE RUNAWAY                                 256

    XXIX.--THE ONE FELLOW WHO WAS LEFT YET                           266

     XXX.--THE GREAT MOMENT ARRIVES                                  276




_LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS_

                                                                    PAGE

  When Phil had taken hold of the sill, Chap gave him a
    lift                                                  _Frontispiece_

  Philip could not tell whether the horse’s hoofs struck
    the man or not                                                    56

  He seemed intent upon pushing his antagonist backward              117

  With a sickening feeling of fear he put Old Bruden back
    between the mattresses                                           204

  “You had no right to look for me, sir, whoever you may be!”        248

  A column of water rose from the river, together with a mass
    of mud and timbers                                               282




[Illustration]

_THE YOUNG MASTER OF HYSON HALL_




CHAPTER I.

OLD BRUDEN.


I may as well say at once that Old Bruden was the name of a
double-barrelled shot-gun. It had originally belonged to a man by the
name of Bruden, and by him had been traded for a cow to one of his
neighbors.

From this person it had come, by purchase, into the possession of old
Mr. Berkeley, of Hyson Hall, of whom I shall speak presently.

This double-barrelled shot-gun--which was now called by the name of its
original owner--was not, at the time our story begins, a very valuable
piece of property.

The hammer of the left-hand barrel had a hitch in it, so that it could
not always be depended upon to come down when the trigger was pulled.
There was also a tradition that a piece of this left-hand barrel had
been blown out by Mr. Bruden, who, by accident, had put a double load
into it, and that a new piece had been welded in; but, as no mark of
such gunsmithery could be found on the barrel, this story was generally
disregarded, especially by the younger persons who occasionally used
the weapon.

Hyson Hall, the residence of Godfrey Berkeley, the present owner of the
gun, was a large, square house, standing about a quarter of a mile back
from the Delaware River in Pennsylvania.

It had been built by Godfrey’s father, who was engaged, for the greater
part of his life, in the Chinese tea-trade. When he retired from
business he bought an estate of two hundred acres, on which he erected
the great house, which he called Hyson Hall.

Old Mr. Berkeley was a very peculiar man, and his house was a peculiar
house. The rooms were very large,--so spacious, indeed, and with such
high ceilings, that it was sometimes almost impossible to warm them in
winter.

The halls, stairways, and outer entrance were grand and imposing, and
in some respects it looked more like a public edifice than a private
residence. The roof was flat, and was surrounded by a parapet, at
various points upon which bells had been hung, in the Chinese fashion,
which tinkled when the wind blew hard enough, and which probably
reminded the old tea-merchant of the days and nights he had passed,
when a younger man, in the land of the yellow-skinned Celestials.

But when his son, Godfrey Berkeley, came into possession of the house,
he took down all the bells. He was an odd man himself, and could excuse
a good deal of oddity, but these bells seemed ridiculous and absurd
even to him.

At the time our story begins, the present owner of the property had not
lived very long at Hyson Hall. It had been but three years since his
father died, and during that time Godfrey Berkeley, then forty years
old and a bachelor, devoted himself, as well as he knew how, to the
management and improvement of the estate. He had been very much of a
traveller ever since he was a boy, and he did not understand a great
deal about farming or gardening, or the care of cows and beehives.

A wide pasture-field sloped up from the river to the bottom of the
lawn, and there was an old-fashioned garden and some arable land behind
the house; and Mr. Berkeley took a good deal of interest in looking
after the operations of his small farm.

Some of his neighbors, however, said that he was spending a great deal
more money than he would ever get back again, and laughed a good deal
at his notions about poultry-raising and improved fertilizers.

Nothing of this kind, however, disturbed the easy-going Godfrey.
Sometimes he laughed at his mistakes, and sometimes he growled at them,
but he asked for no advice, and took very little that was offered to
him.

It is not likely, however, that Mr. Berkeley would have been satisfied
at Hyson Hall had it not been for the company of Philip Berkeley, his
only brother’s orphan son.

Philip was a boy about fifteen years old. He and his Uncle Godfrey were
great friends, and there could be no doubt about Philip’s enjoyment
of the life at Hyson Hall. During the greater part of the year he
went to school in Boontown, a small town about three miles distant,
riding there and back on a horse his uncle gave him; and during the
long summer vacation there was plenty of rowing and fishing, and
rambles with a gun through the Green Swamp, a wide extent of marshy
forest-land, about a mile from the house.

There were neighbors not very far away, and some of these neighbors had
boys; and so, sometimes with a companion or two of his own age, and
sometimes with his uncle, Philip’s days passed pleasantly enough.

Godfrey Berkeley had some very positive ideas about what a boy ought
to do and ought to learn, but there was nothing of undue strictness or
severity in his treatment of his nephew, whom he looked upon as his
adopted son.

One pleasant evening in July, Godfrey Berkeley was stretched out upon a
cane-seated lounge in the great hall, quietly smoking his after-supper
pipe, when Philip came hurriedly tramping in.

“Uncle,” he said, “won’t you lend me Old Bruden to-morrow? Chap Webster
and I want to go up the creek, and, if this weather lasts, perhaps
we’ll camp out for a night, if you’ll let us have the little tent.”

Now, Philip had a gun of his own, but it was a small gun and a
single-barrelled one; and as Chapman Webster, his best-loved friend,
always carried a double-barrelled gun when they went out on their
expeditions, Philip on such occasions generally borrowed Old Bruden.

To be sure, he seldom used the left-hand barrel, but it was always
there if he needed it and chose to take the chances of the hammer
coming down.

It might have been supposed that Mr. Godfrey Berkeley, who in former
years had done so much travelling and hunting, would have had a better
fowling-piece than Old Bruden; but as he now often wandered all day
with a gun upon his shoulder without firing a single shot, Old Bruden
would have served him very well, even if neither hammer ever came down.

Philip’s requests were generally very reasonable, and his uncle seldom
refused them, but this evening Mr. Berkeley seemed disturbed by the
boy’s words.

For a few moments he said nothing, and then he took his pipe from his
mouth and sat up.

“It seems curious, Phil,” he said, “that you should want Old Bruden
to-morrow, and should be thinking of camping out. It’s really
remarkable; you haven’t done such a thing for ever so long!”

“That’s because the weather hasn’t been good enough,” said Philip, “or
else Chap Webster couldn’t go. But if you are going to use Old Bruden
yourself, uncle, of course I don’t want it.”

“Oh, it isn’t that,” said Mr. Berkeley, laughing a little. “But I
do not want you to take the gun to-morrow, especially on any long
expedition.”

“Is anything the matter with it?” asked Phil, his eyes wide open. “Has
it cracked anywhere?”

“I don’t know, indeed,” said Mr. Berkeley, “for it is so long since I
fired Old Bruden that I can say very little about it. But I want you to
understand, my boy,” he said, more seriously, “that you should never
use a gun unless you know for yourself that it is in good condition.
You ought to be able to tell me whether or not there is anything the
matter with Old Bruden.”

“Oh, I always look it over before I take it out,” said Phil. “But I
thought you might just have found out something about the gun.”

“Not at all,” said Mr. Berkeley. “As far as I know, Old Bruden is
exactly the same clumsy shot-gun that it was when I first bought it.
But I don’t want you to go off with it to-morrow on any expedition with
Chap Webster. I can’t give you my reasons for this now, but you shall
know all about it to-morrow. That satisfies you, don’t it, my boy?”

“Oh, yes,” said Phil, trying to smile a little, though not feeling a
bit like it.

His uncle’s discipline, whenever it was exercised at all, was of a
military nature. He commanded, and Phil obeyed. The boy had learned to
take a pride in that kind of soldierly obedience, about which his uncle
talked so often, and it seldom bore very hard upon him.

He and Mr. Berkeley were generally of the same way of thinking, but
to-night his disappointment was very hard to bear.

Several days before he had planned this expedition with Chap Webster.
They had had high anticipations in regard to it, and Phil did not
suppose for a moment that his uncle would offer any objection to their
plans. But he had objected, and there was an end to the whole affair.

Philip walked to the front door and gazed out over the moonlighted
landscape.

“It will be a splendid day to-morrow,” he said to himself, “and as dry
as a chip to-night, but all that amounts to nothing.”

And he turned on his heel and went into the house.




[Illustration]

CHAPTER II.

IN WHICH PHILIP IS VERY MUCH AMAZED.


When Philip came down-stairs the next morning he found the breakfast
ready, and Susan Corson, the housekeeper, standing in the middle of
the dining-room, with a letter in her hand. Her countenance looked
troubled, and as soon as the boy entered the room she said,--

“Mr. Berkeley isn’t about anywhere, and here is a letter for you which
I found on the hall-table. I missed him a good while ago, because he
is generally up so early, and I have been up to his room and looked
through the whole house; and I blew the horn and sent the boy all over
the place, but he isn’t to be found at all, and I believe he has gone
off somewhere, and perhaps that letter tells you all about it.”

Before this speech was half over Philip had opened the letter and was
reading it. It ran thus:

  “When you read this letter, my dear Phil, I shall have run away--yes,
  actually cleared out and run away--from my good, kind nephew. It
  seems like turning things upside down for the man to run away and the
  boy to stay at home; but running away comes much more naturally to me
  than I hope it ever will to you, my very dear Philip. When about your
  age I began life by running away from home, and I have been doing the
  same thing at intervals ever since. The fact is, Phil, I have been
  so much of a rover, and a rambling life comes so natural to me, that
  I cannot any longer endure the monotonous days at Hyson Hall. It is
  true that I have enjoyed myself very much in the old house, and it is
  also true that I love you, Phil, and am delighted to be with you, and
  have you near me. But apart from the fact that I am tired of staying
  so long in one place, there are other reasons why I should go away
  for a time.

  “And now, Phil, I want you, while I am gone, to take care of Hyson
  Hall and everything belonging to it. You know just how its affairs
  are going on, and, as you have kept my accounts for me almost from
  the first day you came to live with me, you know quite as much as I
  do about the house expenses and all that sort of thing. The next time
  you go to town you must take the enclosed note to Mr. Welford, my
  banker, and he will pay to you, from time to time, the amount I have
  been in the habit of drawing for regular house expenses. You see,
  Phil, I put a great deal of trust in you, but I don’t believe I could
  have a steward who would suit me better. Don’t spend any more money
  than you can help. Take good care of Jouncer, and keep everything as
  straight as you can. Of course, I don’t expect you to stay at home
  all the time and have no fun, but you can see now why I did not want
  you to take Old Bruden and go off on a camping expedition on the
  very first day of your stewardship.

  “And now, good-by, my boy. I expect to write to you again before very
  long, and I am quite sure that until I come back you will manage the
  old place just as well as you can; and if you do that, you will fully
  satisfy
                                    “Your affectionate uncle,
                                                     “GODFREY BERKELEY.”

As Philip stood on one side of the breakfast-table reading this letter,
Susan Corson stood on the other, gazing steadfastly at him.

“Well,” said she, “where has he gone? and when is he coming back?”

“Those are two things he doesn’t mention,” said Philip. “And I haven’t
any idea what it all means.”

“Well, what does he say?” asked Susan, a little sharply. “He surely
must have told you something.”

Susan Corson was a middle-aged little woman, who thought a good deal of
Mr. Godfrey Berkeley and a good deal of herself, and who had had, so
far, no great objections to Philip, although, as a rule, she did not
take any particular interest in boys.

“I will read you the letter,” said Philip.

And he read it to her from beginning to end, omitting here and there a
passage relating to himself and his uncle’s trust in him.

For a few minutes Susan did not say a word, and Philip also stood
silent, looking down at the letter he held and thinking very hard.

“And while he is gone you are to be master here?” said the housekeeper.

“Yes,” said Philip; “that’s about the way to look at it.”

“Well, then,” said Susan, “there’s your breakfast.”

And she marched out of the room.

Philip sat down to the table, but he was still thinking so hard that he
scarcely knew what he ate or drank. When he had about half finished his
meal he heard a shout outside. He jumped up from the table and ran to
the window. Standing in the roadway, in front of the house, he saw Chap
Webster, who had just sent forth another shout. Phil ran out on the
great stone porch.

“Hello, Chap!” he cried. “Come up here and wait till I have finished my
breakfast.”

“Finished your breakfast!” exclaimed his companion. “Why, I thought we
were going to make an early start! I didn’t half finish mine.”

“I’m sorry for that,” said Phil; “but just sit down here, and I’ll be
out directly.”

If Philip had been the grown-up gentleman which he was sure to be if
he lived long enough, he would have asked his friend in to finish his
breakfast with him; but he was a boy, and did not think of it.

There was nothing mean about him, however; he stopped eating before he
was half done, so as not to keep Chap waiting.

Chap Webster was a long-legged boy, a little older than Philip. He
had light hair, and what some of his friends called a buckwheat-cake
face,--that is, it was very brown and a good deal freckled. He did not
sit down at all, but stalked up and down the porch until Phil came out.

“Are you ready now?” he cried, as soon as the latter appeared at the
hall door.

“No, I’m not ready,” said Phil; “and what is more, I am not going at
all.”

Chap opened his mouth and eyes, and jammed his hands down into his
trousers pockets.

“This is a pretty piece of business!” he exclaimed. “Here I’ve been
up ever since sunrise getting my traps ready, and mother has put up a
basket of provender, and everything is all ready for us to take up as
we pass our house. I didn’t think you were that kind of fellow, Phil.”

“I didn’t think so myself,” said his companion; “but there’s no use of
our shooting wild this way. Just you sit down and read that letter.”

Chap took a seat on a bench, and, leaning over, with his elbows on his
outspread knees, he carefully read Mr. Berkeley’s letter.

When he had finished it, and had turned over the sheet to see if there
was anything more on the last page, he looked steadfastly at Phil, then
whistled, and then lay back and laughed as if he would crack his sides.

Phil could see no cause for merriment, but the example was contagious,
and he began to laugh, too.

“I always knew your uncle was a rare customer,” said Chap, at last;
“but I never thought he’d be up to a thing like this. Why, Phil,” he
cried, starting to his feet, “I’d rather be in your place than own a
tug-boat!”

This was putting the matter very strongly, for to own a tug-boat, with
which he could make a fortune by towing vessels up and down the river,
was one of Chap Webster’s most earnest aspirations.

“Well, what would you do?” asked Philip.

“Do!” cried Chap, with sparkling eyes. “I’d do everything! I’d have
all the fellows here. I’d give the biggest kind of picnics. I’d camp
out, right here in front of the house. I’d put a mast in your uncle’s
scow, and buy a sail for her. I’d dig up the old wreck, and I’d have
fireworks every night. Do!” he added. “You’d soon see what I’d do!”

“Yes,” said Philip, laughing, “and I’d soon see you stop doing, too. A
pretty steward you’d make!”

“Phil,” said Chap, suddenly changing his manner, “how long do you think
he’s going to stay away?”

“I don’t know any more about it than you do,” said Phil. “There’s his
letter, and that’s all there is to go by.”

“Well, I’ll tell you what it is, Phil,” said Chap, very earnestly, “if
your uncle stays away long enough, there are big things ahead. You know
he said you were to have fun.”




[Illustration]

CHAPTER III.

OLD BRUDEN MAKES A MOVE.


Chap Webster did not stay very long at Hyson Hall.

“If the trip is to be given up,” he said to Phil, “I must go home and
tell mother to take the things out of my basket. There’s no use letting
them spoil, and the children might as well eat them. And, besides that,
I’ve got a lot to think about. I tell you what it is, Phil, there’s a
stack of responsibility about this thing.”

Phil could not help smiling as his long-legged friend strode rapidly
away. There was certainly a great deal of responsibility attached to
the new state of affairs, but why Chap need trouble his mind about it
he could not imagine.

However, Chap was a great speculator in plans and projects, and took
stock in such things whenever he had a chance. As for Phil, he truly
had a great deal to think about.

What should he do, and what should he do first?

He sat on the top of the broad stone steps that led up to the porch and
thought the matter out. It was one of the most uncomfortable places
he could have chosen, for the sun shone full in his face, and he was
obliged to shield his eyes with his napkin, which he had forgotten to
leave on the breakfast-table.

The establishment at Hyson Hall was not extensive, and Phil had been
such a constant companion of his uncle, and had, under Mr. Berkeley’s
direction, done so much of the daily management of the place, that,
excepting the responsibility, there was nothing very novel in the
duties of his trust.

A man and a boy were employed on the little farm, on which the only
crop of any importance was a field of wheat. Until this was ready
to cut there was nothing out of the way to be done on the farm. In
the house the domestic force consisted of Susan Corson, who was the
housekeeper and cook, a woman for general housework, and a half-grown
girl named Jenny.

Phil very properly made up his mind that in regard to the general
affairs of the establishment he would let them go on in the ordinary
way until something unusual turned up.

If he knew that his uncle intended to stay away for any considerable
time, there were some plans that he thought he could carry out with
considerable profit to the estate; but as he would not like to be
interrupted in anything of the kind when it was half done, however sure
he might feel that Mr. Berkeley would be well pleased with the result
when all was finished, he concluded, for the present, to give up such
projects.

There was enough for him to do, however, and there was no knowing what
might turn up. There was only one particular injunction his uncle had
laid upon him, and that was to take good care of Jouncer, and this was
a matter he would attend to immediately.

And so, with one side of his head pretty well scorched, he jumped up,
got his hat and ran down to the stables.

Jouncer was Mr. Godfrey Berkeley’s riding-horse, and whenever he went
to town, or to visit any of his neighbors, he rode Jouncer.

This animal was considered by Phil and some of his boy friends to
be a horse of great possibilities. It was believed, and some of the
boys considered themselves good judges of such things, that he had
Arabian blood in him, and that, if required, he could gallop with great
swiftness and leap over the highest fences.

Nothing positive, however, was known upon these points, for Mr.
Berkeley did not care to make an animal exert itself unnecessarily, and
always rode at a jog-trot.

Jouncer was found to be in comfortable circumstances, and as Phil
looked at him as he was grazing in a little paddock back of the barn,
he made up his mind that he would ride the noble beast, next day, to
town, to see Mr. Welford.

He had never mounted Jouncer, except for very short rides on the place,
and his own horse, Kit, could be brought up from the pasture just as
well as not; but it seemed to him that in order to suitably represent
his uncle, it would be the proper thing for him to ride his uncle’s
horse.

Joel, the hired man, was full of eagerness to know all about Mr.
Berkeley’s departure, of which he had already heard something in the
house, and Phil satisfied him as well as he could, endeavoring besides
to fully impress upon his mind the nature of the trust his uncle had
imposed upon himself.

Joel thought it would have been much better if Mr. Berkeley had left
the management of the place to him, but he was a cautious fellow and
said nothing.

After dinner, which, by the way, Phil did not consider quite as good a
meal as usual, he went into the parlor to think over what he should
say to Mr. Welford when he went to see him the next day.

The parlor was an immense room, very seldom used; but Phil thought it
quiet and cool, and a very suitable place in which a person in his
position might spend a little time after dinner.

He seated himself in a large arm-chair, but he had not cogitated more
than two or three minutes before he heard a heavy step on the porch,
and then a great knock at the door.

Susan was in the dining-room, and she hurried out to admit the visitor.
As she approached the front door, Phil heard her exclaim, in tones of
surprise,--

“Why, it’s Chap Webster!”

Phil was very much surprised, too, for this was the first time Chap had
ever knocked at the front door. He generally announced his coming by a
shout from some point outside of the house.

“Is the steward in?” asked Chap.

“The what?” cried Susan.

Phil laughed, and went to the parlor door.

“Come in here, Chap,” he said; “I’m in the parlor.”

Chap took off his hat, came in, and, after gazing around the spacious
apartment for a moment, seated himself on a sofa.

Susan Corson stopped a moment as she passed the door.

“In the parlor!” she ejaculated. “Upon--my--word!”

And then she walked severely down into the kitchen.

“Do you generally intend to sit in here?” asked Chap. “You never did
when your uncle was at home.”

“I could have, if I had wanted to,” said Phil.

“And of course you want to now,” remarked his friend. “Some things make
a great difference, don’t they?”

“Yes, I suppose they do,” said Phil.

“Now, I want to tell you, Phil!” cried Chap, with great animation.
“I’ve been considering this matter all the morning, and I’ve come over
to tell you what I’ve thought out. You can get eight-ounce cartridges
of giant-powder at Boontown for twenty-five cents apiece. If I were you
I’d buy five, and then we can go down and blow up the wreck the first
night after we get them. It ought to be done at night, so that the
flying timbers wouldn’t strike boats.”

Phil burst out laughing.

“You old humbug!” he cried. “Do you suppose that the first thing I am
going to do is to blow up that ancient wreck?”

“You might get thousands of dollars out of it!” exclaimed Chap; “and I
guess your uncle would be glad of that.”

“Thousands of splinters!” exclaimed Phil. “But you needn’t think I’m
going to do anything of that kind the minute I take charge of things
here.”

“Take charge of things!” repeated Chap. “That sounds large and lofty.
I suppose you feel like the lord of the manor. But I tell you what it
is, my noble potentate, you mustn’t expect to look down too much on the
neighboring barons.”

“It depends a good deal on the barons whether I do that or not,” said
Phil.

“Now, look here,” said Chap, changing his tone; “if you won’t blow up
the wreck, will you go after muskrats to-night? It’s a good moon, and
I’ll bring my gun, and you can take Old Bruden.”

After having refused his friend so much, Phil could not decline so
reasonable a proposition as this, and he consented to hunt muskrats
that night.

It is true his uncle had not wished him to go on an expedition, but
this would be on the river-bank, in front of the house.

Chap thereupon departed, and Phil was very glad to think of having
a little sport that evening. Muskrats were frequently found on the
river-bank, and their skins were sometimes a source of a little private
income to the boys, who could get twenty-five cents apiece for them in
Boontown.

In the course of the afternoon Phil went up-stairs to the gun-room to
get Old Bruden, in order to clean it, in readiness for the evening’s
expedition. The gun-room was a small one on an upper floor, the walls
of which were full of pegs and hooks for fowling-pieces, game-bags, and
all the other accoutrements of the sportsman; but the room had never
been furnished, as had been originally intended. With the exception of
Old Bruden, his own little gun, and a few flasks and pouches, there had
never been anything on the walls but pegs and hooks.

Old Mr. Berkeley had intended to be a sportsman, but before he could
carry out his purpose had become too infirm to care about it.

Phil stepped up to the two pegs on which Old Bruden had always hung
when not in use, but, to his utter amazement, the gun was not there.

He could not understand this at all. It had been one of his uncle’s
most inflexible rules that neither of the guns were ever to be left
about the house, but were always, when brought in, to be taken to this
room and hung in their places.

Could it be possible his Uncle Godfrey had taken Old Bruden with him?
He presently came to the conclusion that this must be the case, and yet
he could not imagine why in the world his uncle should want to take a
gun with him. Was he going on a long tramp over the country?

Another thing surprised him. None of the shot-pouches or powder-flasks
were missing. What was the good of a gun without ammunition?

But these questions were too puzzling for him, and he gave them up. He
took his own little gun and went down-stairs. While he was cleaning it
in the back-yard, Jenny came by from the barn with some eggs in her
apron.

“Jenny,” said Phil, “did you see my uncle go away this morning?”

Jenny stopped, and, for a moment, was silent. Then she said,--

“I can’t tell you.”

“Oh, then,” exclaimed Phil, “of course you saw him! Did he take Old
Bruden with him?”

“He didn’t tell me,” said Jenny, “not to tell that I saw him go, though
I don’t believe he wanted me to tell. But he did tell me not to say how
or when he went, and if I say he went with a gun, that would be telling
how he went, wouldn’t it?”

“I suppose so,” said Phil. “I don’t want you to disobey any orders.”

And Jenny passed on to the house.

After supper, Phil laid down on the cane-seated lounge in the hall to
await for Chap. He did not expect him early, for the moon did not rise
until after eight o’clock, and it was of no use going out at night
after muskrats until that luminary had lighted up the river-bank. He
was just dropping off into a little doze, when Jenny, coming from the
kitchen, ran to the lounge.

“I haven’t a minute to stop,” she whispered, “for Susan sent me
up-stairs to light the lamp in our room, and she is coming right after
me. I’ve found out something. I can’t say anything about it now, but
to-morrow I’ll tell you what it is, Master Phil.”

And away she ran.

Phil did not feel in the humor for guessing conundrums. He had had
enough of that sort of thing for one day, and he stretched himself out
again for another doze.

This time he dropped into a sleep, which lasted fifteen or twenty
minutes, from which he was aroused by footsteps on the porch.

“Come in,” cried Phil, jumping up.

A person entered, but he was not Chapman Webster.




[Illustration]

CHAPTER IV.

IN WHICH CHAP SHOOTS A LITTLE AND PLANS A GREAT DEAL.


The person who entered the front door of Hyson Hall when Philip cried
“Come in!” was a small, smooth-shaven man, wearing a high-crowned,
black straw hat. There was a hanging-lamp burning in the hall, and
as Phil sprang up to receive his visitor he could see his features
distinctly, but he did not recognize him. He had never seen the man
before.

“Is Mr. Berkeley in?” asked the visitor, taking off his hat.

“No, sir,” answered Philip, “he is not.”

“Can you tell me when he will be here? Do you expect him to-night?”

“No,” said Philip, “he will not be home to-night, and I can’t tell you
just when he will return.”

“That’s curious,” said the man. “I’d ’a’ thought he’d told you what
time he’d be back.”

“Is there anything I can do for you?” asked Phil, not caring to pursue
the previous subject any further.

“No,” said the man, “I don’t think there is. Is there any grown person
about the house that I can speak to?”

This remark nettled Phil.

“No,” said he, “there is no grown person here. My uncle left me in
charge of the place, and if you have anything to say, you can say it to
me.”

“I hardly think I will,” said the man, putting on his hat. “I guess
I’ll call again some time.”

“All right,” said Phil. And the person departed.

This visit perplexed Phil a good deal, and annoyed him also. If people
did not intend to recognize him as general manager of Hyson Hall, there
would be no use in his trying to go on with the business.

He wondered, too, who this man could be. He thought he knew everybody
with whom his uncle ordinarily did business, but this man was a perfect
stranger to him. He had been considering the matter but a short time
when Chap arrived.

“Who is that old fellow out there talking to your Susan?” inquired
Chap.

“Talking to Susan!” cried Phil. “Why, I thought she was in bed long
ago. And why should he be talking to her?”

And with this remark he started for the door.

“Oh, you needn’t go after him,” said Chap; “he left just as I came up.
Who was he?”

Phil gave his friend no further satisfaction about the man with the
black straw hat, except that he was a person who had come to see his
uncle. He had no disposition to talk upon the subject.

“Well,” said Chap, “are we going after muskrats? Or has that little
expedition been put off?”

“We’ll do that,” said Phil, taking his gun from a corner and putting on
his hat. “Come along.”

Phil locked the front door and put the key in his pocket, and then the
two boys, with their guns on their shoulders, walked over the lawn and
the pasture-field to the river.

It was not, perhaps, altogether wise for Phil to leave the house that
night, with nobody in it but a woman and a girl, but the man, Joel,
lived with his mother in a small cottage just back of the garden, and
Phil himself did not intend to go out of sight of the house.

The two boys had not walked very far before Chap stopped and
exclaimed,--

“Why, Phil, what are you doing with that little pop-gun?”

“Oh, this will do well enough to shoot all the muskrats we shall see,”
said Phil.

“But, why _didn’t_ you bring Old Bruden?” persisted Chap.

“Never you mind why I didn’t!” answered Phil, a little impatiently.

He was generally a good-humored fellow, but his mind had been greatly
ruffled that day.

“My Lord High Steward,” said Chap, after they had walked a little way
in silence, “I see what this thing is coming to. You are enveloping
yourself in a cloud of mystery. That may be all very well for a fellow
just starting off on a track which hasn’t been surveyed yet, and which
is to go nobody knows where, and no rails laid, but if you don’t want
me to thrust aside the cloud with my strong right arm, you’d better let
me inside the fog, I tell you, my boy.”

“You’ve got a nice lot of metaphors tangled up there,” said Phil. “If
you were to pick them out and hang them up to dry, in assorted sizes, a
fellow might find out what you’re trying to say.”

The boys did not see many muskrats that evening. After a good deal of
waiting and watching they shot two.

Chap proposed that they should go about half a mile farther down
the river, where there were some low meadow-lands, protected by
embankments, and where there were generally a good many muskrats to be
found.

These animals delight to burrow, and they sometimes made such extensive
excavations into the embankments that these gave way, and the meadows
were flooded when the tide came in.

“You know it’s doing a real service to Mr. Hamlin to shoot the muskrats
down there,” said Chap.

Phil would have been very willing to do his neighbor a service, but he
refused to go off his uncle’s place.

“Well, I will tell you what let’s do,” said Chap. “Let’s go down and
look at the wreck. That is on your place, and I’ve never seen it by
moonlight.”

“Very well,” said Phil, “we’ll go and look at it.”

The wreck, of which Chap Webster had made frequent mention, was the
remains of a good-sized vessel, which was deeply embedded in the mud of
the river, at one corner of the Hyson Hall estate.

At high tide it could not be seen at all, but when the tide was low a
number of its forward ribs stuck up out of the mud.

It was generally believed, especially by the boys of the neighborhood,
that this was the wreck of a British sloop-of-war, which, in the time
of the Revolution, had got into trouble down the river and had run up
here for safety, but had afterwards been abandoned and sunk.

It was certain that the ship had come there when this part of
the country was very thinly settled, for there was no one in the
neighborhood who was able to give the exact facts in the case; but the
story of the British war-vessel was a very good one, and was generally
believed.

Chap Webster was one of a few persons who felt sure that there was a
lot of British gold buried in this wreck.

“All war-vessels have to carry quantities of money,” he argued, “to pay
off the crew and to do ever so many other things. And then, sometimes,
they have prize-money aboard.”

The two boys walked out as far as the river-beach was firm enough to
give them footing, and gazed at the wreck.

The tide was at its lowest ebb, and as much of the sunken vessel was
visible as it was possible to see at any time.

The prospect was certainly not a hopeful one to any person who had an
idea of raising the old wreck. A few ribs stuck up in a mournful way
out of the watery mud, and that was all.

“Why, Chap,” said Phil, “we would have to take out twenty scow-loads
of mud before we could get at the fore-part of that vessel, and then
we would not find anything worth having, anyway. All the valuables on
board a ship are kept in the officers’ quarters, near the stern, and
that is sunk in deep water.”

“Mud wouldn’t matter,” said the sanguine Chap. “We could blow all that
out at once with the giant-powder.”

“And the people all over the county would think, the next morning, that
it had been raining mud in the night,” said Phil.

“I don’t care what they’d think,” said Chap; “and I’m not at all sure
about the treasure being always in the stern; but if it is there, and
we could lower down a big, water-tight cartridge and explode it, we
might loosen things so that they would float up.”

“Money wouldn’t float,” said Phil.

“Do you know, Phil Berkeley,” cried Chap, “that if I had a tug-boat,
and could get a good hitch on to the sunken part of that ship, I
believe I could pull it up and tow it into shallow water, where we
could get at it?”

“If I wanted to get the sunken treasure, if there is any,” said Phil,
“I wouldn’t like to have to wait until that time.”

“Do you mean,” said Chap, turning sharply upon him, “that you think I
am never going to have a tug-boat?”

“Oh, no!” said Phil, “I didn’t mean that. I only meant that I didn’t
believe you could move that old wreck, or anything else that is as much
a part of this continent as that is now.”

“Oh!” said Chap; “that’s it, is it?”

Then the two boys started for home, each carrying his muskrat by the
tail.




[Illustration]

CHAPTER V.

THE MASTER’S GUN.


The next morning Philip was sitting at the breakfast-table very much
dissatisfied. He had had a poor breakfast, and he did not think that
this should be. Susan need not cook as much as when there were two at
the table, but certainly she might give him something good to eat. Even
some eggs would have made matters different, and he had seen Jenny
bringing in a lot the day before. He would have a talk with Susan on
this subject, but first there were other things to be attended to. He
must find Old Bruden.

“Jenny,” he said to the young girl who came in to clear away the
breakfast things, “do you know anything about Old Bruden, my uncle’s
double-barrelled shot-gun?”

Jenny came nearer to him, and said, in a low voice,--

“If you wait five or six minutes she’ll be gone down to Joel’s house,
then I’ve got something to tell you.”

Philip walked out on the porch. He remembered that Jenny had given
him to understand, the evening before, that she had some sort of a
mysterious communication to make, and now he supposed it was coming. He
did not fancy such things at all. His own disposition, as well as his
uncle’s teaching and example, made him averse to having controversies
or confidences with servants. He did not object so much to Jenny,
for, although she occupied a menial position, she belonged to a very
respectable family, and he knew that his uncle expected her to go to
school the next winter at Boontown.

For these and other reasons he was much more willing to hear Jenny’s
story than to scold Susan about the breakfast, or to ask her what she
knew of the man who came the night before. It was not very long before
Jenny came out on the porch.

“Master Phil,” she said, “do you know that Susan was listening to all
you said to the man last night? And when he went away she slipped down
the back stairs and headed him off at the corner of the house. I looked
out of our window, and I heard her tell him that the young boy he’d
been talking to had made a mistake when he said there was no grown
person in the house, for she was there, and if he had any message to
leave for Mr. Berkeley he might leave it with her. The man said he
supposed she was grown, though she wasn’t very large; but he guessed
he’d keep his messages and deliver them himself. And then Susan told
him that there was no knowing when Mr. Berkeley would be back, and that
she knew a great deal more about family affairs than that boy inside
did. ‘Very well,’ said the man, ‘perhaps, when I come again, I’ll ask
for you, if Mr. Berkeley isn’t here. What’s your name?’ And then she
told him her name, and he went away.”

“You’d make a good reporter,” said Phil; “but I don’t think there is
much in all that. It isn’t a nice thing, Jenny, to be listening out of
windows to what people are saying.”

“That mayn’t be much,” said Jenny, not at all disconcerted; “but I can
tell you something that is much. I can tell you where Old Bruden is.”

Phil suddenly became all animation. He had already ceased to care about
the man with the black straw hat, but the whereabouts of Old Bruden was
quite another affair.

“Where is it?” he asked, eagerly.

“It is up in our room, under Susan’s bed,” said Jenny.

“How in the world did it get there?” asked Philip, in much surprise.

“She put it there herself, but what for I don’t know.”

“Go right up-stairs and get it,” said Phil.

And away ran Jenny.

She soon reappeared, carefully holding the gun out before her with both
hands.

“Which end of it is loaded?” she said.

“Neither end, you goose,” replied Philip. “When there is a load in it,
it is about the middle.”

“I don’t know anything about guns,” said Jenny. “I meant which side of
it is loaded?”

“There isn’t any load in it now,” said Philip. “We always fire off the
guns before we bring them in.”

And he drew out the ramrod and rattled it down one of the barrels.

“Why, there _is_ a load in it!” he cried; “although there isn’t any cap
on. I’d like to know what this means, and why Susan took Old Bruden,
anyway. Just you take this gun and carry it carefully back up-stairs
and put it where you found it. You needn’t be afraid of it, for it
can’t go off; it isn’t capped. And then go to the kitchen, and as soon
as Susan comes in tell her I want to see her.”

When Susan made her appearance in the hall, where Philip was walking
up and down, her countenance wore a very stern expression.

“Is anything the matter?” she said, shortly.

“Yes, there is a good deal the matter,” said Philip. “In the first
place, do you know where my uncle’s double-barrelled gun is?”

To this question Susan made no immediate answer, but, with a cloth she
held in her hand, she began to dust the hall-table.

“Haven’t you seen it?” repeated Philip.

“You’ve got a gun of your own,” said Susan, without turning around.
“Isn’t that enough for you?”

“That is not the question. I want to know where Old Bruden is.”

“I don’t believe in boys having double-barrelled guns,” said Susan, “or
any guns at all, for that matter.”

“It makes no difference to me what you believe or what you don’t
believe,” said Philip, whose temper was gradually getting the better of
him.

He remembered, however, his Uncle Godfrey’s frequently repeated
precept, that a gentleman never quarrels with a servant, and restrained
himself.

“Susan,” said he, “you know very well where that gun is, and I want you
to get it and hang it on the pegs in the gun-room, where it belongs.”

“You talk as if you were the master of everybody here,” said Susan.

“I am head of this house until my uncle comes back,” said Philip, “and
I want you to understand it.”

“And suppose I don’t choose to understand it?” said Susan.

“Then I’ll get somebody who will!” retorted Philip, quickly.

The idea of getting any one to fill her place seemed so absurd to Susan
that she could not help giving a little laugh.

“Is that all you have to say?” she asked.

“That is all,” said Philip; “but I wish you to remember it.”

Then Susan walked off to the kitchen. Phil had intended to speak to her
in regard to the meals, but he forgot all about that.

This little contest was now over, and Philip did not know whether he
had conquered or not. He was obliged to be content to wait and see what
the result would be, and, in the mean time, there was a good deal for
him to do.

He put his uncle’s letter to Mr. Welford in his pocket and went down to
the stables.

If Joel had resisted his authority, or questioned his orders, it is
likely there would have been a serious outbreak of temper; but Joel was
a cautious man, and, although he was a good deal surprised when Philip
requested him to put the saddle and bridle on Jouncer, he immediately
stopped the work he was doing and went to the paddock. At the gate,
however, he stopped.

“If you’d rather have your own horse,” he said, “I can send Dick down
to ketch him.”

“No, I’d rather have Jouncer this morning,” said Philip.

And Jouncer was saddled and bridled.

Philip had been gone about twenty minutes, when Susan came down to the
stable-yard.

“And so he’s gone off on his uncle’s horse,” said she. “He’s getting
high and mighty! He’s just been ordering me to take that gun and hang
it on the pegs I got it from!”

“How did he know you had it?” asked Joel.

“He asked me where it was, and as I didn’t deny it, of course he knew I
had it.”

“Why don’t you put it back?” said Joel. “You don’t want it.”

“I tell you what it is, Joel Burress!” said Susan; “you are a new-comer
here, and you don’t understand things as I do!”

“I’ve been here two years,” said Joel.

“And I lived here eleven years with old Mr. Berkeley, and since then
with Mr. Godfrey. Before that I lived five or six years with old Abram
Bruden. I know all about that gun. It used to hang over old Abram’s
kitchen fireplace, and nobody ever took it down but himself. It was
always called the Master’s gun, and if any of his sons, or anybody
about the place, wanted to shoot they got some other gun, or went
without. But when his son Charlie’s wife came there to be head of the
house, and wanted a big yellow cow belonging to Silas Wingo, old Abram,
who was getting a little weak in his mind anyway, and who hadn’t much
money just then, traded off the gun to Silas for the cow. Silas Wingo
was a man who would always a great deal rather shoot than milk. Now,
just see what happened! In a precious little while after that gun left
the house nobody ever thought of old Abram as being the master there.
From that time till the day of his death he hardly ever had a word to
say about his own affairs. And after a while Silas got hard up, and
brought the gun round to old Mr. Berkeley, and sold it to him for twice
as much as it was worth, I dare say. It wasn’t long after that before
Silas was sold out of house and home; but his creditors let him live in
a little house on his own farm, where he had been a pretty hard-headed
master. Mr. Berkeley kept the gun as long as he lived, and was always
head of his house, I can tell you. And so is Mr. Godfrey, too.”

“I suppose you think,” said Joel, “that if young Phil has the gun he
will be the real master now.”

“I don’t want no boys over me,” said Susan, curtly.

“Havin’ the gun don’t make any difference,” said Joel. “All the things
you’ve told of could ’a’ happened if there’d never been a gun in the
world.”

“It’s no use talking to me like that,” said Susan. “There’s something
in these things. That gun is the Master’s gun, and always has been.”

“When do you really guess the head-master’ll come back?” asked Joel,
very willing to change the subject.

“I don’t guess anything about it,” answered Susan.

“Perhaps he’s gone to see some of his relations,” remarked Joel.

“He hasn’t got many of them,” said the housekeeper. “His brother is
dead, and this boy is the only child; and old Mr. Berkeley only had two
sons and a daughter; and she married a Frenchman, and died somewhere
out West. Godfrey was the youngest, but he got this place; though,
whether the old man ever built houses for the others I don’t know.”

Joel laughed.

“Then he hasn’t much of a family to visit, and perhaps he’ll be back
all the sooner.”

“Humph!” said Susan. “He’s gone to see no relations.”

And she went back to the house.




[Illustration]

CHAPTER VI.

ARABIAN BLOOD.


Philip made up his mind that he would ride into town in a quiet and
dignified way. To be sure, he would have been glad to find out what
Jouncer was really made of, and whether or not, if he were put to his
mettle, he would show any signs of that Arabian blood which some of the
boys believed to be coursing in his veins. But he would do nothing of
this kind to-day. He was going on a business errand, to see one of the
principal men of Boontown, and he would ride his uncle’s horse as his
uncle always rode him.

But Jouncer had not jogged along on the turnpike road more than a
quarter of a mile before the sound of rapidly-approaching wheels was
heard behind him.

“Hello, Phil!” cried the well-known voice of Chap Webster. “I didn’t
believe it at first, but it’s really true. Why, you are on Jouncer!”

Phil turned, and saw behind him a spring-wagon, drawn by a small gray
horse, and driven by a short and very stout boy, by whose side sat Chap
Webster.

“Hello, Phœnix!” said Phil. “Where are you going?”

“I am going to town after father,” said the stout boy.

This youth’s name was Phineas Poole, but his boy friends called him
Phœnix, and by that name he was generally known.

“But what are you doing on Jouncer?” cried Chap.

“Well,” said Phil, with an air as if the matter was of slight
importance, “I thought I’d ride him into town to-day. He ought to be
exercised, you know.”

“Well, why don’t you exercise him?” said Chap, very earnestly. “If I
was on his back I wouldn’t be crawlin’ along like that. If you ever
want to find out whether he has got Arabian blood in him or not, now’s
your chance.”

“What would you do?” asked Phil.

“Do!” cried Chap. “Why, I’d put him across that ditch, and over that
fence, and I’d clip it in a bee-line straight across the fields to
town!”

“Clip both your legs off,” said Phil, “and break his neck! I’m not
going to make such a fool of myself the first day I ride my uncle’s
horse.”

“Upon my word!” said Chap, in a desponding voice; then addressing
himself to Phœnix, he said, “I do believe that Phil Berkeley is nothing
but a humdrumist, after all! And to think of his opportunities! Come,
Phœnix, touch up Selim, and let’s get along to town. It will be time
enough to go at this rate when we take to riding cows.”

Selim was a resolute little horse, who, when he was touched up,
generally did his best, and so, the moment he felt the whip, he put his
head down as low as he could get it, and began to work his sturdy legs
with as much rapidity as if a heavy head of steam had just been let on
to the engine which moved his machinery, and the spring-wagon passed
rapidly by Jouncer and went rattling ahead.

Now, Phil was a boy of spirit, and did not like this treatment at all.
Without a moment’s hesitation he jammed his heels into Jouncer’s sides
and urged him forward. Jouncer, too, was a horse of spirit, and never
fancied being passed on the road, often giving his master considerable
trouble on such occasions, and it is likely, therefore, even if he had
not felt Philip’s heels, that he would have made haste to overtake
that spring-wagon, and now, having a double motive, he struck into a
gallop, and soon caught up with the vehicle.

“Hi!” shouted Chap, in great excitement, turning around, and half
standing up as he spoke; “don’t let him pass us! Whip up Selim! That
Jouncer can’t beat us into town! Good-by, Phil!”

When Selim felt the whip again--and it came down a good deal harder
this time--he put on more steam, and as he had been trotting as fast
as he could before, he now began to run. After him came Jouncer,
clattering furiously on the hard turnpike.

“It is ridiculous,” thought Phil, “for a little horse like that, with
a wagon and two boys behind him, to keep ahead of Jouncer and me,” and
with his heels and a little riding-cane he carried, he began to urge
his horse to greater speed.

Jouncer’s blood, whatever kind it was, now began to boil, and he
soon needed no urging. Turning a little to the left, he galloped so
vigorously that it seemed that he must quickly pass the wagon. But
Selim was a stanch little horse, and could run at a high speed,--for a
short distance, at any rate,--and the wagon behind him seemed to be a
matter he did not consider at all. He clattered bravely on, and still
kept the lead, Chap shouting wildly, and Phœnix bringing down the whip
every now and then with a resolute whang.

A loaded hay-wagon was now seen ahead, and it was with some difficulty
that the stout Phœnix turned his horse so as to pass on one side
without a collision.

Jouncer passed on the other side, and when the rider and the drivers
came in sight of each other again, Jouncer was ahead, and after that he
kept the lead, galloping as madly as if he were carrying the news to
Aix.

The boys in the wagon, for a short time, pushed on after him at their
best speed, but soon perceiving that they could not catch up with
Jouncer, and that they were beaten in the race, they pulled up their
panting and dripping little horse, and let him walk the rest of the way
to town.

Philip, as soon as he saw that he had won in the trial of speed, began
to pull up Jouncer, but he did no more than begin, for he found the
undertaking too much for him. Arabian blood seemed to give a hardness
to the jaw, a stiffness to the neck, and a power of leaping and
bounding to the body of a horse which he had never dreamed of. He could
not stop Jouncer at all, and so went dashing along the turnpike until
he thundered wildly into the main street of the town, which, as it was
market-day, was pretty well thronged with vehicles and people.




[Illustration]

CHAPTER VII.

WHAT JOUNCER PUT HIS FOOT INTO.


Jouncer’s hoofs made such a clatter on the hard pavements of the main
street of Boontown that the people had time to scatter to the right and
left, while the horse guided himself clear of the wagons and buggies.

Philip had no power to stop or to turn him. All he could do was to
stick on, which he did right well.

Everybody saw that it was a runaway. The boys shouted, and some of the
women screamed, and one negro man ran out into the street to stop the
horse, but his courage failed him as Jouncer approached, and he let him
pass.

The wildly galloping horse had passed more than half through the town,
when a man who was about to cross the street suddenly heard or saw
the rapidly-approaching animal, and gave a quick start backward. His
heels slipped or struck something, and he fell sprawling on his back, a
bundle he carried rolling one way and his hat another.

Jouncer passed quite close to him as he lay upon the ground, but Philip
could not tell whether the horse’s hoofs struck the man or not.

He turned his head to look back, but just at this moment Jouncer went
round a corner, and, rushing along a side street, was soon out in the
open country.

When he found himself on an uneven and dusty road, the horse seemed to
lose his taste for galloping, and very soon slackened his pace. He then
moderated the boiling of his Arabian blood to such a degree that his
rider was enabled to pull him in, and finally to stop him.

Philip dismounted, and as he stood by the roadside, with the bridle in
his hand, he could not help feeling glad that neither his uncle nor
Joel were there at that moment to see Jouncer.

It was a very hot day, and the noble animal looked as if he had taken
a Russian steam-bath, and had had a little too much of it. His sides
were heaving, he was puffing hard, and every hair was dripping, but the
queerest thing about him was a black straw hat, through the crown of
which he had thrust one of his hind feet, and which was now stuck fast
above his fetlock.

[Illustration: Philip could not tell whether the horse’s hoofs struck
the man or not]

Philip made the horse lift his foot, and he pulled off the hat. Then he
exclaimed,--

“I’ve seen this hat before, and I am sure I never saw but one of the
kind. I remember now. It belonged to the man who came to see uncle last
night. I hope I haven’t hurt him, whoever he is.”

Much troubled in his mind, Philip took the hat in one hand and
Jouncer’s bridle in the other, and led the horse slowly back to town.
He would have first rubbed him down, but he had nothing to do it with.

Not caring, after his John Gilpin ride, to re-enter the main
thoroughfare of the town, he went along a side street until he reached
a shady spot, not very far from Mr. Welford’s office.

Jouncer was beginning to dry off by this time, and, having tied him
to a tree, Philip walked up the main street. He first went to the
store where his uncle generally bought groceries and other supplies,
and going up to Mr. McNeal,--one of the partners, with whom he was
acquainted,--he asked him if he had heard that anybody had been hurt by
a runaway horse a short time before.

Mr. McNeal had not heard of any accident of the kind, and rather
guessed if anything of that sort had occurred he would have known of
it, for people had been coming to the store pretty steadily all the
morning.

Philip then told him about the runaway and the man who had tumbled
down, and concluded by asking him if he might leave that hat there to
be called for.

“Very well,” said Mr. McNeal, taking the hat. “I’ll hang it up in a
safe place; but it strikes me that the owner of this had better buy a
new one.”

“It isn’t hurt much,” said Phil. “I looked at it carefully. The top of
the crown can easily be sewed on, and it is pretty fine straw, you see.”

“Yes,” said the other, “it has been a good hat, but I don’t think I
ever saw another like it, though I’ve sold a good many hats myself.
After all, if the man who wore it likes this kind of hat, I guess he’ll
want this one back again, for he’s not apt to get another like it--at
least, in this town. It must belong to a stranger, for nobody here
wears such a thing.”

The hat was then put away, and Philip, having borrowed half a sheet of
paper, wrote thereon a notice to the effect that any one having lost a
black straw hat might get it by applying at the store of Henderson &
McNeal, and describing the article.

He then went round to the post-office, near by, and stuck up this
notice by the side of the main door, in company with a great many other
notices of cows and horses for sale, articles lost, and matters of that
nature. After this he went to see Mr. Welford.

The banker was a quiet, middle-aged man, who knew Philip very well, the
boy having frequently visited his office to attend to business for his
uncle. He read Mr. Godfrey Berkeley’s note.

“It is very strange,” he remarked,--“very strange! Didn’t he tell you
when he was coming back?”

“No, sir,” answered Philip; “but I thought he might have said something
about it in your note.”

“Not a word,” said Mr. Welford. “And I am very sorry, indeed, that
I did not know that he was going away at this time. It might have
prevented a good deal of trouble. But there is nothing to be done now
but to carry out his instructions. You can draw the money you need in
the manner he mentions here, and, of course, you will be as economical
as you can in your expenditures. I hope he won’t be gone very long;
but, in the mean time, we must get on the best we can.”

He looked at Philip a moment, and then he said,--

“You are a young fellow to have charge of a house and farm, though I
suppose your uncle knew what he was about. How did you come to town?”

This question was asked as a sort of finishing remark to the
conversation, and the banker picked up some papers which lay on his
desk.

“I rode in,” said Philip, “on uncle’s horse.”

Mr. Welford turned suddenly, as if the thought had just struck him.

“Was that you,” he said, “who went tearing up the street a while ago?”

“Yes, sir,” said Philip. “The horse ran away with me.”

“I thought your uncle’s horse was a very gentle beast? At least he
always seemed so to me.”

“He is gentle, as a general thing,” said Philip; “but the fact is, I
had a little race on the road, and that got his blood up.”

“Oh!” said Mr. Welford.

And then Philip took his leave.

“I am sorry he’s that kind of boy,” said the banker to himself, as he
took up his papers again. “I hope Godfrey Berkeley will not stay away
long.”

As Philip went to get his horse he found a man holding him by the
bridle.

“Do you know,” said the man, “that there’s a fine of five dollars for
tying a horse to a tree in this town?”

Philip’s heart went right down into his boots.

“No, sir,” he said; “I didn’t know it at all.”

“Well, there is,” said the other; “and, as I had to wait for a customer
who’s going to meet me here, I untied the horse and held him. I thought
I might save somebody five dollars, before a town constable came
along. There’s only two of them, to be sure, but they’re as likely to
be in one place as another.”

Phil’s heart came out of his boots with a bound.

“I’m very much obliged to you, sir,” he said. “I didn’t know anything
about that law.”

The man was a tall and rather coarsely dressed person, wearing a linen
coat and high boots, into which his trousers were thrust.

As Phil looked up at him, he saw that he had a very pleasant and kindly
countenance.

“You’ve ridden your horse pretty hard,” said the man. “He looks as if
you had been salting him down. Did you come in town for a doctor?”

“No,” said Phil.

And then he explained how Jouncer had happened to travel so fast.

“If you want to race a horse,” said the other,--“that is, if you do
such things at all,--you ought to wait for cooler weather. It is pretty
hard on a beast to make him run on a day like this.”

“But I didn’t make him do much of it,” said Phil. “He did almost all
the hard running on his own account.”

“I tell you what it is,” said the man, with a smile, “when a horse has
a human bein’ on his back, nearly all the brains of that party is to be
found under the rider’s hat; and if them brains ain’t put to good use
there’s always a pretty fair chance of trouble.”

Phil agreed that this was so, and, mounting Jouncer, he bade the man
good-by and rode homeward.

When about half a mile out of town he overtook a boy walking in a
foot-path by the side of the turnpike.

“Hello, Phœnix!” cried Phil; “what are you doing here?”

“Going home,” said Phœnix.

“But why are you walking?” asked Phil, as he rode slowly by the side of
his sturdy friend.

“Well,” said Phœnix, “the old man was awful mad when he saw Selim. Chap
and I did think of driving the horse into the river, so that he’d get
wet even all over; but then there wasn’t any good reason for giving him
a wash, and Chap and I thought it might hurt him to drive him in when
he was so hot.”

“It would have killed him, sure!” exclaimed Phil.

“That’s what Chap and I thought,” said Phœnix, “and we didn’t do it.”

“So your father was mad, was he?” said Phil.

“Mad is no word for it,” replied his friend. “He just blazed; and when
he got through he told me that, as I had had such an extra good time
riding into town, I might walk home. Chap wanted to walk with me, but
he wouldn’t let him. But I tell you one thing, I’d a great sight rather
walk home than ride with the old man to-day.”

“I’ll take you up behind me,” said Phil, “if you say so. I don’t
believe Jouncer will mind it.”

“Much obliged,” said Phœnix, taking off his hat and wiping the
perspiration from his heated forehead, “but I guess I won’t. I rather
like walking, especially on a fine day like this.”

“A blazing fine day,” said Phil, laughing; “but if I can’t do anything
for you I’ll push on, or I’ll be late for dinner.”




[Illustration]

CHAPTER VIII.

CHAP ENTERS THE FOG.


That afternoon Phil went up into the gun-room to see if Susan had
obeyed his orders in regard to putting Old Bruden back into its proper
place, but the gun was not there.

He was a good deal annoyed at this, for he did not want to have any
further dispute with the housekeeper; but he comforted himself by
thinking that perhaps she had not yet been up-stairs, and that she
would replace the gun that night when she went to her room.

But the next morning, when he visited the gun-room, Old Bruden was not
to be seen.

Things now looked very gloomy to our young friend. He did not like
quarrelling, and hard words, whether given or taken, were equally
unpleasant to him; and yet he plainly saw that if his authority was to
be worth anything that he must have a conflict with the housekeeper,
which would be pretty sure to be a tough one.

He had already suggested an improvement in his meals, which had been
received by Susan in a very contemptuous way.

While he was trying to make up his mind as to what course he would take
to bring the housekeeper to a proper sense of his position, he saw
Chap Webster coming up to the house. It was evident from his friend’s
countenance that he had a plan on his mind.

“Hello, Phil!” cried Chap, “I’ll tell you a splendid thing for this
afternoon. We’ll take our guns and go over to the Green Swamp. We are
pretty sure to get a shot at something,--big blacksnakes, perhaps, and
I want one to stuff,--and then we may find the lonely sumach.”

Among the boy-beliefs of that neighborhood was one that in or about
the centre of the Green Swamp there stood a large and poisonous
sumach-tree, which, like the direful upas of Java, dealt out death to
all who ventured beneath its shade.

Next to owning a tug-boat and blowing up the old wreck, Chap’s dearest
desire was to find this tree. Not that he wished to venture beneath its
shade, but he wished to see it, and to go just under its outer twigs,
so that if he began to feel sick or faint, he would be pretty sure
that he would die should he go all the way under, and that this was
actually a poisonous sumach-tree, just as good as a real upas.

“Chap,” said Phil, “you are always going in for something watery. I
believe that in a former state of existence you were a stork.”

“That may be,” said Chap; “and I’m a pretty long-legged bird yet. But
what do you say to the swamp? I expect it has dried up a good deal this
hot weather, and if we are careful in stepping from one hummock of
grass to another, perhaps we won’t get into the mud and water. But you
must carry Old Bruden this time, for we may have to take two or three
shots at a blacksnake, and long shots, too.”

Phil had begun to cheer up under the influence of Chap’s animation, but
his spirits now fell again. He was silent for a moment, and then he
said,--

“Chap, let’s go down under the old chestnut-tree and have a talk. I
want to tell you something.”

He had resolved to take his friend into his confidence. This sort of
thing was too much for one boy to bear alone.

“Any time in pleasant weather, till the burrs begin to stiffen, I don’t
mind sitting under a chestnut-tree,” said Chap, as he took his seat
beside Phil, beneath the great tree at the bottom of the lawn, “but
after that I prefer some other kind of shade. Now, what have you got to
tell?”

Thereupon Phil related the facts of Susan’s insubordination and the
various other out-of-way events that had happened lately.

“It is just what I told you, Phil,” said Chap. “You are in a regular
cloud. But now that you have let me into the fog, we will go to work
and scatter it like a hurricane. I tell you it is a regular rebellion
that’s rising up here, and it’s got to be crushed out in the bud!”

“Nipped, you mean,” Philip suggested.

“Nipped, frozen, squashed! anything, so that we get our iron heel on
it! I go in for throttling her, and holding her head under water until
she blubbers!”

“Who? Susan?” asked Phil.

“Well, not exactly Susan,” said Chap, “but the whole spirit of
rebellion. I’d begin with the housekeeper. She should be reduced to
submission or crumbled into ashes. And as for Joel, if he cuts up rough
when you want Jouncer again, as you say you think he may, I’d come down
on him like a clap of thunder at the very first sign of mutiny. And the
man who came here on a secret mission, I’d settle _him_. I’d ride into
town and get his hat if he hasn’t called for it yet, and I’d put up a
notice that he must come here, to this house, for his hat; and when he
came I’d make him divulge his reasons for wearing such a hat, and tell
where he got it; and he should never cross that threshold till he laid
bare the object of his midnight visit.”

“It wasn’t midnight,” said Phil.

“Well, then, whatever time of night it was. And I’ll tell you another
thing. I don’t altogether like the way Mr. Welford acted. From what you
say, I don’t think he came up to the mark as lively as he should have
done. I’d keep my eye on him, too.”

“You wouldn’t do anything to Mr. Hamlin who lives beyond the meadows,
would you?” said Phil.

“Why, no!” exclaimed Chap, looking around in surprise. “What has he got
to do with it?”

“Oh, nothing,” said Phil. “I only supposed you might think it mean to
leave him out of the general vengeance. But I tell you, Chap, you’re
too lofty and tremendous, with your thunder-claps and your iron heel.
These people don’t need anything like that.”

“Don’t you believe a word of it!” exclaimed Chap. “It isn’t the big,
savage hen-hawks that give the most trouble and are hard to get rid
of. It’s the potato-bugs. That’s where your iron heel comes in. If you
don’t scrunch this thing in the egg it will get ahead of you. You may
just rest certain of that.”

“Well, let’s scrunch,” said Phil. “How would you begin?”

“I can’t say just exactly what I’d do first,” answered Chap; “but
suppose we divide things. I’ll take Susan and you take Joel, and then
I’ll take the man with the black straw hat, and you can have Mr.
Welford.”

“You are choosing the heavy end of the load,” said Phil.

“That suits me,” said Chap. “I like to give a good lift when I get well
under a thing with some heft in it.”

Phil did not fancy the idea of his friend undertaking to reduce Susan
to proper submission; but, as Chap seemed fairly aching for the job,
and as he had been such a frequent visitor to the house, and, being
a very social boy, was really more intimate with Susan than Philip
himself was, the latter finally consented that Chap’s arrangements
should be carried out.

“But don’t come down too heavy at first,” said Phil. “I don’t want her
annihilated--only reformed.”

“All right!” said Chap. “I’ll start in as mild as a pot of
bonny-clabber.”

“Chap,” cried Phil, as a happy idea struck him, “you come here and
stay for a few days. Your folks will let you, I know.”

“Boy,” cried Chap, springing to his feet, “you are beginning to show
signs of life! I’ll go and ask them.”

And away he went, like a pair of compasses going mad.

It was not thought strange in the Webster family that Philip Berkeley,
being left alone in the great house where he lived, should want one of
his boy friends to stay with him for a time during his uncle’s absence;
and, as Chap was not particularly needed at home, permission was given
him to go and visit Philip for a few days.

The strictest injunctions, however, were laid upon him to behave
himself in as quiet and orderly a way as if Mr. Godfrey Berkeley were
at home.

“Orderly?” said Chap to himself, as he put a few clothes into a very
large valise. “I should think so! Why, I’m going there to establish
order!”




[Illustration]

CHAPTER IX.

CHAP’S IRON HEEL.


When Chap entered Hyson Hall that afternoon, with his big valise, he
met the housekeeper at the door.

“How do you do, Susan?” he said, with his most radiant expression of
countenance.

Susan nodded as she looked, in surprise, at the valise.

“What have you got in that?” she asked.

“My dress suit,” said Chap, blandly; “or, at least, it mostly holds
the suit I dress in at night. I’ve come to stay with you for a while,
Susan,” he added, with as sweet a smile as he could call up.

“Stay awhile!” she exclaimed.

“Yes,” said Chap. “Poor Phil is so lonely! My folks were glad enough to
let me come.”

“I should think so,” cried Susan, getting very dark in the face; “and
do they suppose I’m going to cook and slave for two boys?”

“Oh, you needn’t slave at all, Susan!” said Chap, almost tenderly. “All
you have to do is to cook a little more than twice as much as you do
for Phil, and I’m content.”

“Did he ask you to come? That Philip?” said Susan.

“Oh, yes, indeed!” said Chap. “You don’t suppose that I’d go about
visiting houses, for a week at a time, without being asked? And now,
which is to be my room? I can carry my baggage up there myself.”

“You can sleep where you choose,” said Susan, “in the cellar, the
parlor, or the top of the house. This goes ahead of anything yet!”

And off she marched.

Phil was not in the house when Chap arrived; but when he came in, and
his visitor told him of his interview with the housekeeper, he laughed
heartily.

“Why, Chap,” he said, “you did begin mild, sure enough. I didn’t think
you could be as dulcet as that.”

“Oh, yes,” said Chap, “that is the way to do it. I pulled on my
heaviest woollen sock over my iron heel. But the heel is there, my
boy,--it’s there.”

“Not a very original simile,” remarked Phil.

“It’ll do for the country,” said Chap, “and a velvet glove is very
different from a woollen sock, if you happen to have cold feet.”

Chap easily gave up the expedition to the cedar swamp that day, as it
was agreed that the blacksnakes and the lonely sumach would probably
wait until proper possession of Old Bruden could be regained, and
the rest of the day was chiefly spent in laying out plans for future
operations.

Susan took no steps to prepare a sleeping apartment for the visitor,
but she gave the boys a very good supper, for, despite her anger, she
did not want Chap Webster to go home and tell his family that she did
not know how to keep house.

By Phil’s directions, however, Jenny prepared a room for Chap, and the
next morning operations were begun to put down all rebellion, actual or
expected.

Phil did not forget, however, that he had the business of the house and
farm to attend to, and to this he resolved each day to give the first
place. After breakfast, therefore, he informed Chap that he intended
to ride over to a neighbor’s farm to see about some oats which had
been bought before his uncle’s departure, but which had not yet been
delivered.

“You can come along, if you like,” said Phil. “Kit has been turned out
to grass, but I can have him caught.”

“That means you are going to ride Jouncer?” said Chap.

“Yes, I intend to ride him,” Phil replied.

“Good boy!” cried Chap. “You’ll kill two birds with one stone. You’ll
see about the oats, and you’ll have a chance to open fire on Joel, if
he shows symptoms of revolt. As for me, I don’t think I’ll go with you.
I’d rather stay home and see if I can’t get Old Bruden. I have your
lordship’s permission to do that, haven’t I? I couldn’t go ahead, you
know, without authority.”

“All right,” said Phil, “provided Susan delivers it up in a proper
manner. That is the point, you know,--she is to give it up. I don’t
want to get the gun in any underhanded way.”

“Exactly,” said Chap. “The laying down of the sword, or rather the
hanging up of the gun, is what we are aiming at. You need not be afraid
of me. I go in for high-handed--high-minded, I mean--warfare.”

Phil laughed, and, telling Chap to keep a sharp lookout on his own
defences, left him alone with his warlike ideas.

Joel had been pretty grum and cross when Philip returned from his ride
to town the day before, saying repeatedly that the horse had never
been used in that way since Mr. Berkeley bought him. Phil explained how
the thing had happened, but this did not make it appear in any better
light in Joel’s eyes. Phil left him currying the horse and growling
steadily.

Our young friend, therefore, was not surprised this morning when he
told Joel that he wanted to ride Jouncer over to the Trumbull Farm, to
see a dark cloud spread over that individual’s countenance.

“You don’t want to take that horse out again, do you?” he asked,
sharply.

“Yes,” said Philip, “I intend to take him out again. He ought to be
used, and I don’t propose to let him run away with me this time.”

“He’ll do it, if he’s a mind to,” said Joel.

“No, he won’t,” replied Phil. “I know him better now, and I won’t
let him get a start on me, as he did yesterday. Uncle left especial
directions that I was to take good care of Jouncer, and one way to take
care of him is to ride him and not let him get fat and lazy.”

“No danger of his gettin’ fat,” said Joel, “with your style of ridin’.”

“Joel,” said Phil, his face flushing a little, “I don’t want to talk
any more about this. I am going to ride Jouncer this morning, and if
you don’t choose to saddle him I’ll do it myself.”

“Oh, you’re master,” said Joel, “and if you say so the thing has got
to be done, I s’pose; and if the horse is rode to death, that’s your
lookout; but I guess I’m responsible for the saddlin’ and bridlin’ and
feedin’, ain’t I?”

“Certainly,” said Phil.

“Then I’ll attend to them things myself,” remarked Joel, as he went
into the stable.

As Philip rode away on Jouncer, he could not make up his mind about
Joel. It was true, he had done what he was told to do this time, but
whether or not he would continue to obey was a matter of doubt.

But, having been successful in his first skirmish, Philip concluded to
be satisfied for the present. Joel was not much of a person, after all.

“Susan,” said Chap, about fifteen minutes after Philip had ridden away,
“Phil said I might have Old Bruden while he was gone. I’ve been up to
the gun-room, but it isn’t there. Do you know where it is?”

“Didn’t he tell you where it was?” asked Susan, turning around and
facing him squarely.

“I know that he _hoped_ it was on its pegs,” said Chap.

“Hoped!” exclaimed Susan, derisively. “He may as well give up hoping,
as far as that gun is concerned. He knows, and you know, too, that I’ve
got it, and I intend to keep it.”

“Susan,” said Chap, a gentle smile spreading over his face like honey
over a buckwheat cake, “don’t you think you have kept up this little
joke about long enough?”

“Little joke!” repeated Susan, her eyes flashing as she spoke. “That
boy will find out before I am done that there is no joke about it; and
I’ll have his elders know, too, that I haven’t been in this family for
fourteen years to be ruled over now by a boy.”

“Phil has been in the family longer than that,” said Chap; “he is
fifteen.”

“Stuff!” said Susan, not seeing any point in this remark. “If Mr.
Berkeley had had time to think about things before he went away, he’d
’a’ left me in charge of the house. I know he intended me to have
charge of it, and he ought to have said so.”

“But, Susan,” said Chap, “all that hasn’t anything to do with the gun.
You surely haven’t any use for that.”

“I’ve a particular use for it,” said Susan.

And off she walked, as she was in the habit of doing when she had said
what she had to say, no matter whether the person she was talking to
had finished or not.

“I must pull off the woollen sock,” said Chap to himself. “Soft
stepping won’t do with her.”

A short time after this he went down into the back-yard, where Susan
was sitting under a tree, stringing beans.

“Susan,” said he, sitting down on the grass not far from her, “do you
know Mary Gurley? She’s a good cook, isn’t she?”

“She can cook,” said Susan. “All decent women can cook.”

“I mean,” said Chap, “can she make good pies and ginger-snaps and
roly-poly puddings, and all that sort of thing?”

“You mean, can she cook for a boy,” said Susan. “Do you want her? I
expect she can cook well enough for you.”

“Then she is a mighty good cook,” said Chap. “And do you think she
could run a small girl like Jenny?”

“What do you mean?” asked Susan, putting down her beans and looking
steadfastly at Chap.

“I mean,” said Chap, in his blandest tones, “that in a day or two Phil
is likely to need a new cook and housekeeper, and I think he’ll want
one rather given to pies. I’ve heard a good deal about Mary Gurley, and
I thought I’d like your opinion of her before I recommend her to Phil.”

“You impudent, outrageous boy!” cried Susan, starting to her feet and
letting her pan and beans fall together to the ground. “Do you mean
that Philip Berkeley is thinking of discharging me and getting some
one in my place?”

“Oh, yes, Susan,” said Chap, cheerfully. “Phil has been made master of
this house, and if you don’t obey him he’ll have to bounce you. You can
see that for yourself.”

“Well, just tell him this,” said the angry housekeeper, “if you’re to
be his messenger, that when he pays me the two years’ wages that’s due
me he can talk about discharging me, and not before.”

“Oh, of course,” said Chap, as he sauntered away, “he’ll square up
before he tells you to march.”

“I got a good point on her,” said Chap, while giving an account of his
morning’s work to Phil, “when she admitted that in one way she could
be discharged. But she threw up pretty heavy earthworks when she told
about that two years’ wages. It must amount to a lot of cash. I wonder
how it came to run on so long?”

Phil was furious when he heard what Susan had said. He paid no
attention to Chap’s remarks, but marched into the dining-room, where
the housekeeper was getting the table ready for dinner.

“Susan,” he said, “if you don’t put that gun back into its place, and
obey me in other things, just as you would my uncle, I’ll make you
leave this house, and I’ll go in town and get the money from Mr.
Welford to pay you everything that is owing to you.”

Susan was too enraged to answer. She merely sniffed, stiffened her
back, and went on with her work.

“Do you feel refreshed?” said Chap, when Phil returned to the porch. “I
heard what you said, but don’t you think it was something like a breach
of contract?”

“Can’t help it,” said Phil. “She’s got to knock under or go.”

“Now, look here,” said his friend. “You’ve bared your blade, and that’s
all right; but just hold your heavy hand for a while, and let me hurl
another javelin. You’ll do that, won’t you?”

“All right,” said Phil. “I’ll wait a couple of days.”

“Phil,” said Chap, that evening, after supper, “will you lend me one of
these canes in the rack?”

“They are all uncle’s canes,” said Phil, who was reading by the lamp
which stood on the hall-table; “but he’d lend you one, of course. What
are you going to do with it?”

“Oh, I’m just going to take a little walk,” said Chap, selecting the
heaviest and knottiest stick in the rack. “I’m tired of the kind of
strategic warfare I’ve been carrying on to-day, and I’d like to change
to something straight out and simple. Perhaps the man with the black
straw hat may be coming to-night on one of his nocturnal prowls; and if
he does, I’d like to meet him by moonlight alone.”

“You needn’t expect him,” said Phil, laughing. “Everybody knows now
that uncle isn’t at home.”

It so happened that the man with the black straw hat was walking that
evening towards Hyson Hall.

He had seen the notice at the post-office, had gone to Mr. McNeal’s
store, and had recovered his hat. He had asked who brought it there,
and when told it was Phil he made up his mind that perhaps that boy was
old enough to talk to; and, as no one knew when Mr. Berkeley would be
at home, he might as well go and have a little conversation with his
nephew.




[Illustration]

CHAPTER X.

IN WHICH A STORY IS TOLD.


The moon had risen quite high by the time the man with the black straw
hat had entered the grounds of Hyson Hall, but the roadway near the
house was overshadowed by large trees, making the light very dim and
uncertain.

As the man walked up this dusky avenue, he was revolving in his mind
various ways of opening his intended interview with Phil. He did not
care to explain his business to a boy, and in fact it was only with Mr.
Godfrey Berkeley that he could take any decisive steps in the matter,
but he thought it was of no use for him to stay any longer in that part
of the country, unless he could find out something in regard to the
business on which he came.

He had heard that Phil was a very sensible, straightforward fellow, who
frequently did business for his uncle. Such a boy could certainly give
him some points which would be of service in the future.

The revolutions in the man’s mind, as well as his onward progress, were
suddenly arrested by the appearance of a tall person, who stepped out
from behind a tree, and who, holding a large stick in front of him in
his right hand, cried, peremptorily,--

“Halt!”

The man halted as promptly as if he had run against a fence.

Chap stood squarely up before him, his legs spread out a little, and
his knotty stick resting carelessly on his left arm.

“Well,” said he, “here you are again.”

When Chap spoke, the man knew him to be a boy, and supposed him to be
Phil, of whom he had not taken any particular notice on the evening he
saw him.

“Yes,” he answered, “I am here again. How are you to-night?”

“Now, look here!” said Chap. “I rather suspected you’d be along again,
and I came out to have a word with you. I want you to understand one
thing. This is a free and open country, and when a man has anything to
say he ought to come out boldly and say it in broad daylight, and not
glide in under cover of the night.”

The man was about to speak here, but Chap did not allow himself to be
interrupted, and went on,--

“As I said before, this is a free country, and if a person has anything
to say, he has a right to be heard. Now, have you anything to say? If
so, I am ready to hear it. There’s no need of any mystery, or darkness,
or unusual clothes. All you have to do is to stand right up and speak
out.”

The man did not like Chap’s manner at all, but he was a prudent person,
and had taken a long walk in order to get some information that might
be of advantage to him, so he resolved not to get angry, and answered,
very politely,--

“Yes, there are some things I’d like to speak to you about.”

“All right,” said Chap; “just step with me a little farther down the
road, so as to be out of ear-shot of the house, and then you can unload
your mind.”

“That suits me,” said the man, with a smile, “but it does not agree
with what you just now said about having everything free and open, you
know.”

“Oh, what I meant,” said Chap, “was that a person should be free and
open to the one he is talking to. There is no use shouting private
affairs into servants’ ears, and having them tooted all over the
country through a horn.”

The man smiled, but made no answer. He followed his companion down
the roadway, thinking that this Philip Berkeley was certainly a very
curious fellow.

Pausing at a wooden bench, between two trees, Chap remarked,--

“We can sit down here, and if you notice any listeners, just you give
a low whistle, and I’ll pounce on them with this club. I’ll keep a
lookout, too. Now you can begin to unveil your secret mission. My
friend Phil has commissioned me to attend to you and find out the
meaning of your nocturnal errands to this place.”

“You don’t mean to say,” said the man, in surprise, “that you are not
young Philip Berkeley?”

“I mean to say that very thing,” replied Chap. “But you can tell
your secret just as freely to me as to him. I am Chapman Webster,
his particular friend. He’s pretty heavily loaded down with
responsibilities and bothers just now, and I’m taking part of them off
his shoulders.”

“And I suppose my affairs fall to your share,” said the man.

“Yes,” replied Chap, “we divided things up, and I took you. I have
the greatest fancy for working out hidden clues, and all that sort
of thing. It’s something connected with the Berkeley family you came
about, isn’t it?”

“Yes,” said the other, “it is.”

“Well, then,” said Chap, “just begin at the very beginning of your
story, and tell it straight through; and don’t leave out any of the
points. I’m just the fellow to help you straighten out things, if
you’ve got them a little crooked.”

The man reflected a few moments. He had nothing on earth to say to
Chap Webster; and yet he thought this boy might be as able to answer
the few questions he wished to put as Philip Berkeley would be, and it
was likely that he would be much more willing to do so. But Chap had
evidently prepared himself for some business of thrilling interest,
and it would not do to put him off with a few apparently unimportant
remarks.

The man took off his black straw hat, looked at it, then put it on
again. Then he began:

“About the close of the war of 1812----”

“By Jupiter!” cried Chap. “Was it about a ship?”

“Yes,” said the other, “it was a ship.”

“You don’t mean this river?” asked Chap, getting very much excited.

“Yes, I do,” said the man, “this very river. Perhaps you know the story
yourself?”

“No, I don’t,” said the boy. “At least, only part of it. All I know is
that a British ship was chased up this river, and ran aground right
down there on this bank; and that all the people on board got ashore,
and scattered, nobody knows where; and that there’s a lot of treasure
on board of her,--at least, there’s every reason to believe there
is,--and that nobody has ever come to claim it or dig it up.”

“Yes, that is the very ship,” said the man. “I see you are pretty good
in following out a clue.”

“I’ve practised it,” said Chap, with much satisfaction. “There’s
nothing like practice in these things.”

“But perhaps you did not know,” said the other, “that there were three
brothers on board.”

“No, I did not know that,” said Chap.

“Well, there were,” continued the man. “They came over from England to
found a family. You know that each of our distinguished families were
founded by three brothers, who came over from England.”

“Yes,” said Chap, “I’ve heard that; but they generally came over
sooner,--in the last century, anyway.”

“Yes,” said his companion, “but these three brothers couldn’t come any
sooner. They weren’t born early enough, for one thing, and there were
other reasons for delay. But they came as soon as they could, and they
brought with them all the wealth they possessed.”

“And did they scuttle out of that ship and leave it there?” cried Chap.

“You must have heard this story before,” said the man.

“Never,” replied Chap. “But now tell me one thing. Was one of these
brothers the ancestor of this Berkeley family?”

“Certainly he was; and not very far removed, either.”

“Why, just think of it!” cried Chap. “That treasure, or part of it,
which we have been talking about so much, actually belongs to the
Berkeleys. Why, I sometimes used to think that if we got it out, the
British crown or our government might claim it. But here it is really
the property of Phil and his uncle. This is the most splendid thing I
ever heard of! And isn’t it strange, too, that the ship should have run
ashore on the very land the Berkeleys were afterwards to own?”

“Perhaps,” said the man, in a half-whisper, “the land was bought
because the ship was known to be there.”

“Look here,” cried Chap, springing to his feet, “if you can get some
dynamite and an electric battery, I’ll go into this thing with you, and
we’ll get that money. We won’t wait for anybody else. Phil doesn’t
warm up a bit about it,--though I don’t mind his coming in if he’ll
take hold lively,--and there’s no knowing when his uncle is coming
back. I don’t want anything but the fun for my share, but I know the
family will be willing to pay you well for your secret.”

The man smiled.

“We must not be too hasty,” he said. “I shall be willing to do nothing
in this matter without the co-operation of the family.”

“You mean you want to wait till Mr. Godfrey Berkeley comes back?” said
Chap.

“Yes, I mean that,” replied the other. “You are acquainted with Mr.
Berkeley, I suppose?”

“Oh, yes,” said Chap, “I know him very well. He’s a tip-top fellow.”

“He is of a free and generous disposition, isn’t he?” asked the man.

“Yes, indeed!” replied Chap; “our folks say too much so.”

“He must possess a handsome property,” said the other.

“I expect he’s as rich as blazes,” replied Chap. “At any rate, he buys
everything he wants.”

“And yet I suppose he’d like to make more money,” said the man.

“Oh, yes,” said Chap; “I know he’s all the time trying to make more
money with improved stock and lots of other things which a good many
people laugh at. And I can tell you this, if he knew there was treasure
belonging to him in that old wreck, he’d just spend any amount of money
to get it out.”

“Now, then, Mr. Webster,” said the man, rising, “we know each other. Do
not reveal what I have told you, and when the proper moment arrives,
count on me. In the mean time, I have one thing to ask of you. As soon
as Mr. Berkeley arrives, let me know of it. Here is a postal-card with
my name and address on it. All you have to do is to write on the other
side the words, ‘He has come,’ and then mail it. Will you do this?”

“Certainly I will,” said Chap, putting the card in his pocket.

“Now we understand each other perfectly?” said the man with the black
straw hat, extending his hand.

“Perfectly,” said Chap, giving the hand a vigorous shake.

“Now good-by for the present!” said the other.

And he walked rapidly away.




[Illustration]

CHAPTER XI.

PHILIP IS BROUGHT TO A HALT.


Chap’s bosom was now filled with a tremendous secret. Phil and the
other fellows might laugh as much as they pleased when he talked about
the treasure on the sunken vessel.

Now, he _knew_ something about it, and could afford to let them sneer.
The man with the black straw hat would probably depart from Boontown as
soon as possible, and then he, Chap, would be the only person in that
part of the country who had any positive knowledge on the subject of
the wreck.

He would have been glad to tell Phil all that he had heard, but
his promise to the man--which, perhaps, he had made without proper
consideration--prevented this.

He found Phil asleep when he went into the house, and, as his friend
asked him no questions in regard to his walk, Chap did not consider
it necessary to say anything about it; and Phil went to bed without
knowing that the man with the black straw hat had been there at all.

Chap lay awake for some time, thinking about his exciting interview and
trying to make up his mind as to the extent and meaning of his promise
to the man; and he finally concluded that, while he could not tell
Philip, nor any one else, about the three brothers and the Berkeley
claim to the sunken treasure, he had promised nothing that would
prevent his going to work as soon as possible to look for the submerged
gold.

This was the thing he had intended to do all along, before he knew that
there existed a man with a black straw hat. Of course, the recovered
property could not be divided, and things could not be definitely
settled before Mr. Berkeley came back; but there was nothing to prevent
Phil and himself from making a beginning in the good work.

If they could only get out a few boxes of silver coin, that would
help wonderfully in carrying out the rest of the enterprise. He went
to sleep, so to speak, with his mind full of exploding cartridges and
flying mud.

The next day Phil rode into town to see Mr. Welford again. He did
not know what means Chap was going to take in order to bring Susan
to terms, but he had no faith whatever in his friend’s success, and
determined that he must make arrangements to pay the housekeeper her
wages and discharge her, in case she continued to rebel against his
authority.

He had looked over his uncle’s books, and had found that two years’
wages were really due to Susan. She had probably wished Mr. Berkeley to
act as her banker, and keep her money for her.

Phil rode to town on Jouncer, Joel making no objection this time, for
the horse had been brought back in excellent condition from the trip to
Trumbull’s.

But, although the day was a pleasant one, and the horse went well, Phil
did not enjoy his ride. He did not at all fancy the idea of his uncle’s
coming home and finding his old servant discharged.

On the other hand, the teachings of Godfrey Berkeley had made Phil feel
that his uncle would think very ill of him if he allowed himself to be
set at defiance and treated with contempt by a servant who owed him
obedience and respect. The thing had to be done, but Phil hated to do
it.

Mr. Welford was surprised and angry when he heard Phil’s errand.

“Three hundred dollars!” he exclaimed. “Certainly there is not that
much owing to the housekeeper! And discharge her! Why, you must be
crazy! How can you think of doing such things in your uncle’s absence?”

Phil then explained, at full, his provocations. Mr. Welford listened
sternly.

“I don’t know what you have been doing,” he said, “to make her act in
that way. I have always heard of her as a very faithful servant, not
only to your uncle, but to your grandfather.”

A thought passed through Mr. Welford’s mind, but as he looked at Phil’s
clear eye and honest countenance he refrained from expressing it. Three
hundred dollars to pay a servant seemed an absurdity, but what else
could the boy want with the money?

“There is no use talking any more about it,” said Mr. Welford. “I can
furnish you with no such sum as that. I have now in my hands very
little money belonging to your uncle. By his directions, I paid, a few
days ago, a large sum on his account, and I certainly expected to have
seen him before this time in regard to that and other matters. As it
is, I not only have not three hundred dollars belonging to him, but his
balance here is very small, scarcely enough, I imagine, to keep you
and Hyson Hall going for a couple of weeks longer. I have no doubt,
however, that your uncle will be back before that time expires. I
advise you now to go home, and get along with the housekeeper as well
as you can. If you are pleasant to her, perhaps she will be pleasant to
you. And don’t try to do any great deeds in your uncle’s absence. I see
you are not afraid to bring your horse round to the front this time,”
he said, with a grim smile, as Phil opened the door.

If Mr. Welford had been a boy, there would have been a fight, then and
there; but he was an elderly, respectable gentleman, and Phil answered
him not a word. He merely bowed, mounted his horse and rode away, the
most rueful boy in all that county.

The next day was Sunday, and Phil and Chap walked over to the Webster
farm, and went to church with the family. The boys returned there to
dinner, but Phil insisted that Chap should go home with him in the
afternoon and continue his visit, for he declared that Hyson Hall was
too doleful a place for him to live in alone.

Helen, Chap’s sister, somewhat younger, and a great deal better looking
than he, privately told her brother that she thought that Phil must
find the management of affairs at Hyson Hall a dreadful worry, for she
never saw him look so blue and moping.

“You’re right, my girl,” said Chap. “The domestic horizon over there
is pretty cloudy, and there’s what the papers would call a crisis
impending; but I’m Phil’s prime minister, and it’s my opinion that the
government party will be found firmly established when the crisis is
over.”

“Now, Chap,” said Helen, taking her brother by the hand, “don’t you go
and lead Phil into any wild tantrums.”

“Tantrums!” exclaimed Chap, impatiently. “I’d like to know why people
always think about tantrums and such things when they talk to me.
I’ve got nothing to do with tantrums. Why, Helen, I’m helping Phil to
carry out one of the most important pieces of work that anybody ever
undertook in this part of the country.”

“But, Chap,” said Helen, “that is just the kind of thing I am afraid
of.”

“Now, Helen,” said Chap, “if I could tell you all about these
affairs--which I can’t do, of course, without Phil’s permission--you’d
see that I know what I’m about, and that I’m trying to do at least two
most excellent things. You mustn’t talk, my dear sister, about matters
you don’t understand.”

Then Chap kissed his sister, and hurried on to join Phil, who had
started for home.

The previous day, while Phil was away, Chap had been down to the river,
and had made as careful an examination as was possible, under the
circumstances, of the position of the portion of the wreck which he
could see,--which, at that time, happened to be very little,--and from
this he endeavored to get an idea of the probable position of that part
of the vessel which he couldn’t see at all.

He had pretty well satisfied himself in regard to the matter; and, on
Monday morning, as he sat with Phil on the porch, after breakfast,
he laid before his friend a plan he had mentally worked out for the
recovery of the treasure.

“You see, Phil,” he said, “there’s no use fooling any more. The gold
is there, and we ought to get it. From what you told me Mr. Welford
said, I should think a little cash would be a pretty handy thing just
now; though, of course, the great bulk of it should be kept in the bank
vaults until your uncle comes back.”

Phil listened with a dull sort of interest. He had been wondering if
Chap had entirely given up the endeavor to bring Susan to terms. The
time he had allowed him had elapsed; but his lively friend was so
engrossed with the wrecking business that he appeared to have forgotten
all about his proposed domestic diplomacy.

Phil was sorry to see this, and intended to say something on the
subject, for he felt, with a good deal of wounded pride, that it was
now impossible for him to carry out his declared determination to
discharge Susan.

He was about to change the subject from wrecks to housekeepers, when a
carriage came slowly driving up the shaded road towards the house.

The boys immediately recognized the vehicle as one of the old
rattle-trap concerns belonging to the livery-stable in the town.




[Illustration]

CHAPTER XII.

EMILE TOURON.


The carriage which was approaching came slowly, although the driver,
a negro boy, continually belabored his horse with a short whip,
endeavoring, besides, by a vigorous clicking and jerking of the reins,
to make him go faster; but the horse had evidently made up his mind
that in regard to this sort of thing a line must be drawn somewhere,
and he drew it at a slow trot, as being the fastest pace that should be
expected of his old bones and stiff muscles.

“Who in the world can be coming here?” cried Phil, jumping up from his
seat. “It can’t be uncle!”

But the moment the boys got a good look at the carriage, they perceived
that the individual on the back seat was not Mr. Godfrey Berkeley. It
was a young person, apparently a boy.

When the carriage reached the front of the house, Phil went down the
steps to receive the visitor.

This person was already working at the crooked handle of the carriage
door, and, having at last succeeded in turning it, he quickly got out.

He was a well-dressed young fellow, scarcely as tall as Phil, but
apparently two or three years older. He had dark hair and eyes, and a
very small moustache, which, though not noticeable at a distance, was
quite distinct when one stood near and looked him full in the face.
This young person stepped up quickly to Phil and held out his hand.

“Is this my Cousin Phileep?” he asked, with a smile.

“I am Philip Berkeley,” said our friend, taking the hand of his
visitor, and looking very much bewildered.

“Zen you are my cousin, for I am Emile Touron. You know me now?”

Phil did not know him from Adam, but he was saved any embarrassment on
this point by the visitor turning to the carriage to help the boy pull
out a small trunk, which was stowed away in the front of the vehicle.

The driver was paid, and drove away, and Phil then took hold of one
handle of the trunk to assist his visitor in carrying it up the steps.

“One moment,” said his new-found cousin. “Let me gaze upon zis
sharming house--zese lovely plains!” And he looked over the lawn and
the pasture-field with a glistening eye, and then stepped backward to
gaze upon the house. “Ah, ze bells! ze bells!” he cried. “Where are ze
bells,--zose lovely bells which did dingle-dangle all ze time, ‘Come to
dinner! Dinner ready! Hurry up!’ I was a boy when I heard zose lovely
bells, and I did zink zey dingled in Shinese. But it was all ze same to
me. Where are zey now? Haf zey blown away?”

“I never saw them at all,” said Phil. “My uncle took them down before I
came here. He did not like them.”

The face of Monsieur Emile assumed a shocked expression.

“Not like zose bells,” he exclaimed,--“zose angel bells! I say no more!”

And taking hold of one handle of the trunk, he and Phil carried it up
the steps.

Chap, who had been gazing in silent wonderment at the visitor, was now
introduced to him. Emile Touron shook hands with the tall boy, but
apparently took little interest in him, and suggested to Phil, as they
passed into the hall, that as they now had hold of the trunk they might
as well carry it up into the room he was to occupy.

Phil’s mind was not prepared for such prompt action, but he was a quick
thinker, and of a polite and hospitable nature.

He asked to be excused a moment, and ran out into the porch and very
soon arranged with Chap that he should move into Phil’s room and let
the visitor have the one he occupied.

No further preparations being necessary, the new-comer was put into
possession of Chap’s bed-chamber, while the big valise and small amount
of clothing belonging to Master Webster were carried into Phil’s room.

Monsieur Emile desired to make some change in his toilet, and Phil left
him to himself. He found Chap in the hall, eager to know all about this
newly arrived cousin.

“All I know about him,” said Phil, “is that my aunt married a Frenchman
named Touron, but I always thought she had no children.”

“And if she had had any,” said Chap, “they wouldn’t have been French
ones.”

“That’s very true,” said Phil; “at least, not so French as this fellow.
They would always have lived in America. And, besides, he is too old to
be my aunt’s son. I remember when she was married. I was a little chap,
but I heard it talked about.”

“Then it’s all plain enough,” said Chap. “Your French uncle was
married twice, and this is one of the original children.”

“You are right, no doubt,” said Phil; “but that doesn’t make him much
of a cousin, does it?”

“He seems to be quite at home, for all that,” said Chap.

“I have often heard,” said Phil, “that my aunt and her husband spent a
good deal of time here while my grandfather was alive, and I suppose
this boy was with them.”

“That’s it, I guess,” said Chap; “but I don’t remember him. I didn’t
come here much in those days.” After a pause, he continued: “Now that
you’ve got your cousin here, I don’t suppose you want me. Things look
as if he were going to make a good deal of a stay.”

“Now, look here, Chap,” said Phil, earnestly. “I don’t want any of your
nonsense. Just you hang on where you are. It’s as likely as not I’ll
need you more than ever. I don’t wonder this French fellow wanted to
come and stay awhile with us, for if he has been here before he must
know that it’s a tip-top place in summer. If he’d come when uncle was
here, it would have been all right. But why everything should turn up
just now I can’t imagine.”

“Don’t worry about me,” said Chap. “I’ll hang on.”

At this moment Susan appeared at the door. She had not spoken to Phil
since he threatened to dismiss her; but now she saw fit to break the
silence.

“Is that young man going to stay here?” she asked.

“I suppose he’ll stay some time,” answered Phil. “He brought a trunk.”

“Well, then,” said the housekeeper, “if you are going to pay me off
and discharge me, you might as well do it now, before this house gets
filled up with boys.”

“I am not going to pay you off and discharge you, Susan,” said Phil,
coloring a little, “for I find I can’t do it, and I think it will be a
great deal better, Susan, if you’d take hold and pull along squarely
with me, as uncle intended.”

“Oh, yes, of course!” said Susan.

And, with a little toss of her head, she walked off.

It did not take long for Phil to get acquainted with Emile Touron, for
the young Frenchman made himself very much at home at Hyson Hall. He
took the greatest interest in the place, went all over the house and
farm, visited the stables and barn, and asked a great many questions,
some of which Phil did not like, as they concerned the price and value
of various things on the farm.

It was evident that Emile was a very sharp-witted and practical youth.
His knowledge frequently surprised Phil and Chap; and when he met with
anything he did not understand he was not satisfied until he found out
all that he could about it.

But his manner to Chap was not always pleasant, and he once asked Phil
how long “zis Shap” was going to stay.

“For a long time, I hope,” said Phil, quickly. “He is my best friend.”

And the subject was dropped.

Chap did not like the French boy at all. He generally called him
“Emily,” in speaking of him, though Phil would not allow him to do so
to his face.

“He has got a girl’s name,” said Chap, “and we might as well give it to
him squarely in English.”

Not only was Emile personally disagreeable to Chap, but he interfered
with his plans. Chap wanted very much to go to work on the wreck, and
if he did so now he must either conceal the undertaking from the French
boy or let him have part in it.

The first was evidently impossible, and there were many objections to
the second. The greatest of these was that Emile would lay claim to a
portion of the recovered treasure.

“But he hasn’t any right to it,” said Chap, when talking of the matter
to Phil, who had at last consented to go into the wrecking business,
although he had not been told the story of the three brothers. “A
fellow can’t inherit through his father, and then around to his
step-mother, and back to her ancestors, can he?”

Phil agreed that this could not be done, and it was finally concluded
to tell Emile about the wreck, and to let him join in the preliminary
operations. It was also agreed that Phœnix Poole should be taken into
partnership.

Phœnix was quiet, but he was a good, square fellow, and did not have
much chance for fun. Work was rather slack at the Poole farm just then,
and he could occasionally have an opportunity to get away. It would be
a mean thing, both boys agreed, not to let Phœnix in.

When Emile was told the story of the wreck and the sunken treasure, he
treated it with incredulity, and even scorn.

Phil did not care whether he believed it or not, but Chap was very much
annoyed that any one should doubt a thing so self-evident as this, in
which he took so great an interest. In his zeal to convince the French
boy he told him much more than he should have done, considering his
compact with the man with the black straw hat; but Emile shook his
head and sneered at the whole affair.

Notwithstanding this, however, he made one of a party of four boys who
went down to the river, one warm morning, to make a practical survey
of the position of the wreck, especially that part of it which was
entirely submerged.

A large, flat scow was poled out into the river, and anchored over the
spot where Chap had calculated that the stern of the vessel must lie.

The boys were all good swimmers, and the preliminary observations were
to be made by diving. Emile did not undress, but sat in the scow and
watched the other boys.

Half a dozen times each of the three swimmers stood up on the side of
the scow, and plunged to the bottom of the river, but each time they
came up with the report that they could discover nothing but mud and
mussel-shells.

Phil had just declared that they might as well give up the diving
business, for that day, at any rate, when, to the surprise of the other
boys, Emile began to get ready to go into the water.

“It’s no use to dive for ze sunken ship,” he said, “but it is so hot I
must take one little swim.”

It was evident he was an experienced swimmer, for he made a splendid
dive. He sprang as far from the scow as he could, and went down in a
slanting direction from it. He stayed under a long time,--so long,
indeed, that the other boys began to get a little troubled.

“I don’t care much for Emily,” said Chap, “but I should hate to have
him stick fast in the mud and be drowned.”

When the French boy came up he was more than forty feet from the scow,
and he puffed at a great rate as he swam to its side.

“Now, zen,” said he, “we haf all had enough of ze dive. Zis is one
horrid river. You stick fast some day, and never come up, if you don’t
take care.”

No one seemed inclined to differ from this opinion; but Phœnix now
appeared on the side of the scow, ready for another dive.

“Don’t you do zat!” cried Emile. “It is but vile folly to swim here.
Don’t I tell you you be drowned?”

“All right!” said Phœnix; and in he went.

Like Emile, he sprang far from the scow, and went down in a slanting
direction. He did not stay down as long as the French boy, and he came
up much nearer the scow.

“Now, zen,” said Emile, as Phœnix clambered on board, “I hope you is
satisfied.”

“Enough for to-day,” said Phœnix.

When the boys reached the house, Emile went up-stairs to his room.

As soon as he had disappeared, Phœnix took Phil and Chap a little way
down the road.

“Look here,” he said, in a low voice, although there was nobody near,
“when I dived that last time I found something.”

“What?” asked Chap and Phil together.

“The side of a big ship,” said Phœnix.




[Illustration]

CHAPTER XIII.

OLD BRUDEN FINDS HIS MASTER.


The assertions of Phœnix in regard to the side of a ship which he had
found when he made his last dive from the scow were very positive.

“I had an idea,” he said, “that Frenchman was studying out something.
I knew he didn’t dive in and swim ever so far under water for nothing,
and when he came out he wanted us all to go home as fast as we could.
That looked like a trick, and I thought I’d just dive in and see what
he had been after; and as sure as I’m born, there is a side of a ship
down there! I swam right up to it, and it’s straight up and down like
the wall of a house. As I came up I put my foot against it, and pushed
off towards the scow.”

This report filled Chap with joy, which was somewhat dampened by the
thought that Emile had also found the sunken ship.

“But we needn’t trouble ourselves about that,” said Phil; “he can’t dig
it up.”

“But he thinks he can,” said Chap. “If he didn’t he wouldn’t have kept
so quiet about it; giving us good advice about being drowned; trying to
pull wool over our eyes,--the bullfrog!”

The boys were of the opinion that the wreck must have parted somewhere
about the middle, and that the stern, or after-portion, which extended
out into deep water, had been gradually forced by the heavy spring
tides a short distance farther down the river.

It was agreed that surveys and examinations should be made as soon as
they could do so without the company of the French boy.

“I’m going to keep an eye on him,” said Chap, “to see that he don’t do
anything on his own account. It would be just like him to get a lot of
nitro-glycerine and an electric battery and blow the whole thing up
without letting us know anything about it.”

“I guess we’d know it when she blew up,” said Phil, “and then we could
go down and rake up the golden guineas that would be scattered along
the shore.”

“You are always making fun,” said Chap. “Now, I am in earnest about
this thing!”

“You’ll find me in earnest, too,” said Phil, “if the time ever comes to
do anything.”

The Webster family now considered it proper for Chap’s visit at Hyson
Hall to come to an end, but there was no objection to his spending as
much of his vacation time there as he chose, provided he came home to
eat and sleep.

This interfered somewhat with his intended watch over Emile, but in
spite of obstacles he kept a constant eye, if not upon the French boy,
at least upon the scene of his expected operations.

Very often, when he was at home, Chap would go out on the porch, and
with a long spy-glass carefully scan the river-shore in the vicinity of
the wreck.

Phil’s mind was too full of other things to allow him to give much
thought to the sunken ship, although he would have been delighted
to have a pile of golden guineas just at this time. He had thought
at first that it would be a capital thing to be, for a time, the
master of Hyson Hall, but now he was heartily sick of it, and wished
most earnestly that his uncle would come home and relieve him of his
anxieties and responsibilities.

Sometimes he began to think his uncle had not done right in going off
in this peculiar way, and leaving his money affairs in such a bad
condition. But Phil quickly put such ideas from his mind. He had
always known his uncle as an honorable man, and if he left but little
money behind him, it was because he had forgotten the large claim which
Mr. Welford said he had paid out of the funds in his hands.

But money affairs were not the only things which troubled Phil. Day
by day Emile Touron made himself more disagreeable. He pried into
everything that was going on, even spending a good deal of time with
Joel, endeavoring to find out from him everything he could in regard
to the probable value of the little wheat crop, which was nearly ready
to be harvested. But Joel had taken a dislike to the youth, and gave
him very little satisfaction, vexing him besides by his noncommittal
answers.

“What will be planted in zat field,” asked Emile of Phil, one
afternoon, “when ze wheat is gone?”

“We shan’t plant anything,” said Phil; “we’ll let it come up in grass.”

“No more grass is wanted,” said Emile.

At first Phil was inclined to make no answer to this remark, but as the
French boy continued to talk on the subject, Phil told him that it was
intended, in the fall, to plough up the pasture-field by the river and
to put that in wheat for the next season.

“Plough up zat beautiful plain!” cried Emile. “It zall never be done.”

“What have you got to say about it?” cried Phil, turning angrily upon
him. “You talk too much about things on this place!”

“I will talk more when it is mine,” said Emile, with a little grin.

“What do you mean by that?” cried Phil.

“What do I mean?” said Emile, turning around and staring fixedly at
Phil. “What I mean is zis. Just you listen and you will hear what I
mean! Before you know it, zis place will belong to my father, which is
ze same zing as mine. Before ze old man Berkeley died, and your good
uncle was spending ever so much, and getting nothing, he borrowed, and
borrowed, and borrowed money from my father; and when he came here, and
had all this property, he was to pay it; but he wait, and wait, and he
never pays it. And now my father he hears zat Mr. Godfrey is gone away,
nobody knows where, and everybody zinks he will never come back----”

“That is a lie!” cried Phil. “His friends all know he will come back.”

“My father does not know it. He says he will never come back, and he
sends me here to see, and I say he will never come back. We have a
mortgage on zis place, and we will have it sold, and we zall buy it,
and zall come here to live. And zose bells--zose angel bells--zall be
put once more upon ze roof to dingle-dangle in ze wind. What do you
zink of zat, Master Pheel?”

“I don’t believe one word of it!” cried Phil.

“You will believe it soon enough,” said Emile.

And turning away, he went up-stairs, leaving poor Phil in a state of
excited misery.

In spite of his effort to convince himself that what the French boy
had told him was merely an invention to annoy him, he could not help
believing that the story was true.

He now saw the meaning of Emile’s interest in the place. He had been
sent here to find out about everything, because he and his father
expected to own everything. And he, Phil, could do nothing. If his
uncle would only come back, and come quickly!

While our young friend was walking up and down the hall, torturing his
mind with thoughts of the great impending evil, Emile came down the
stairway. Phil did not speak to him, nor did he pay any attention to
him till he reached the front door, then, to his utter amazement, he
perceived that Emile carried Old Bruden under his arm. In an instant
Phil sprang towards him.

“What are you doing with that gun?” he said.

“I am going to zoot two little birds,” said Emile, quietly. “It is a
long time since I haf zoots ze little birds. Ze gun was loaded already,
but I put on two--what you call zem?--caps.”

“Put down that gun!” roared Phil. “You shall not use it! How did you
dare to take it?”

At this moment Susan appeared in the hall.

“Susan, did you give him that gun?” cried Phil.

“No, I didn’t!” exclaimed Susan, who was evidently in a state of high
excitement. “He sneaked into my room and took it. That’s the way he got
it! Catch me giving it to him! He has been prying all over the house,
and he saw it there.”

“Put that gun down instantly!” said Phil, stepping close to Emile.

The latter fell back a little.

“Very well,” said he, “I will do zat,” and walking deliberately to a
corner of the hall, he stood the gun carefully against the wall. “Now,
zen,” said he, returning to Phil, “let me say somezing. All zat is in
zis house is ze same zing as mine. If I want to use a gun, or any ozer
zing, I use it; but if you had been amiable, I would haf been amiable.
But you choose your own way. Now, zen, I say to you, Zere is zat gun.
Let me see you dare to touch it!”

In an instant Phil sprang towards the gun, but before he reached
it, Emile seized him by the shoulder and rudely pulled him back. Phil
turned savagely, but before he could strike the French boy the latter
clinched him, and a violent struggle ensued.

[Illustration: He seemed intent upon pushing his antagonist backward]

Jenny had now arrived on the scene, and she and Susan stood back,
almost dumb with terror.

“Where is Joel?” gasped Susan.

“He has gone to the woods,” replied Jenny, with tears in her eyes.

Emile was taller and stronger than Phil, and in a contest of this kind
he had greatly the advantage. His method of fighting was very peculiar.
He seemed intent upon pushing his antagonist backward and jamming him
against chairs and the corners of tables.

Two or three times it looked as if Phil’s back would be broken, but he
always managed to twist himself out of his awkward positions.

At last Emile thrust him violently away from him and sent him
staggering backward across the hall. At that moment Susan rushed
forward. Snatching Old Bruden from the corner where it stood, she ran
to Phil and put the gun in his hand.

“Here,” she cried, “take it and kill him!”

Phil mechanically took the gun, but he did not raise it nor try to
carry out Susan’s blood-thirsty instructions. Emile, however, thought
he was going to be shot.

Turning pale, he hesitated for a moment, and then dashed up-stairs,
where he rushed into his room and slammed the door after him.

“There, now,” said Susan, as Philip stood, still panting, and holding
Old Bruden in his hands, “just you keep that gun and be master of this
house!”




[Illustration]

CHAPTER XIV.

PHŒNIX SEES HIS DUTY AND DOES IT.


Strange to say, Phil felt at this moment as if he were the real master
of the house. Ten minutes before he would have supposed that such a
feeling would never come to him again.

He looked down at the gun, he looked at Susan, and then he looked at
the stairway, up which Emile had fled. He did not say anything, and
Susan stood silent. As for Jenny, she retired into the dining-room,
where, through the open door, she watched the scene.

Raising the hammers of the gun, Phil took off the caps, which he put
into his vest-pocket; then, carefully letting down the hammers again,
he handed Old Bruden to the housekeeper.

“Susan,” said he, “will you take this gun and hang it up in the
gun-room? And I would like you to lock the door and bring me the key.”

“I’ll do it,” said Susan, promptly; “and if you’ll wait here, I’ll
bring you the key in a minute.”

“Knocked under,” said Jenny, softly, to herself. “I never would have
believed it if I hadn’t seen it!”

When Susan came down-stairs and put the gun-room key into Phil’s hands,
he received it with a feeling of positive exaltation. One of his great
troubles was at an end. Putting on his hat, he walked cheerfully down
to the stables. For a time, the effect of the French boy’s story and
threat had passed from his mind.

As soon as Phil was well out of the house, Emile came cautiously
down-stairs. Seizing his hat from the rack, he clapped it on, went out
and walked down the shaded roadway.

He was very angry, not only with everybody around him, but with
himself. He had suffered himself, in a measure, to be beaten, and had
run away.

Nothing could more thoroughly exasperate a person of his nature
than to think that he had done a thing like this. He walked on for
some distance, storming inwardly and occasionally shaking his fist,
until, when he had nearly reached the outer gate, he saw Phœnix Poole
approaching.

Phœnix had come, by appointment with Chap, to talk over plans in
regard to the wreck, but Chap, that afternoon, had been detained at
home.

The sight of Phœnix still further enraged Emile. He was the boy who had
suspected the motive of his single dive from the scow, and had tried to
find out what he had been doing under water.

“What do you want here?” cried Emile, as soon as he came within
speaking distance of the other.

“What’s that to you?” asked Phœnix, a little surprised.

“You go home!” cried Emile. “Nobody wants you here.”

“I won’t go home till I’m ready,” said Phœnix.

“Zen you be ready now!” cried the excited French boy. “What you come
here for, anyhow, you little schneak?”

Phœnix turned around and walked to the side of the road. He took off
his hat and coat and laid them on the grass. Then he came back to Emile
and gave him a tremendous thrashing.

It was of no use for the French boy to struggle or resist. Phœnix Poole
was the strongest boy in that part of the country, and he did not stop
till he felt that his work was thoroughly done. Then he put on his hat
and coat and walked up to the house.

In all his life Emile had never been thoroughly thrashed before, and,
among his other sensations, that of astonishment was very strong. How
such a little fellow could whip him he could not understand. But,
although Phœnix was short, he was not little. Emile had never taken
enough interest in him to notice how thick-set and muscular he was.

The French boy, who but a short time ago had felt and acted as the
master of Hyson Hall, was now so thoroughly cowed that he was afraid to
go back to the house. He was just as angry at everybody as he had been
before, but even his temper could not give him courage enough to meet
that horrible short boy again.

Phœnix did not find Philip in the house, so he went down to the stables.

“Chap has not been here yet?” said he.

“No,” said Phil. “He isn’t keeping as good a watch over his Emily as
he used to. If he isn’t careful, that wreck will be blown up before he
knows it.”

After a short silence, in which he occupied himself examining the
points of Jouncer, who was being rubbed down by Joel, Phœnix remarked,--

“I met that French boy as I was coming here.”

“You did?” said Phil, who did not consider this statement of any
importance.

“Yes,” continued Phœnix, “and I licked him.”

At these words Phil turned round in utter amazement; Joel stopped his
work, and even Jouncer turned his head, as if to listen to what was
coming next.

Phœnix was such a very quiet, peaceable boy that no one ever thought
of his engaging in a fight. This was certainly something very
extraordinary.

“What in the world put you up to that?” cried Phil. “Did he give you
any of his impudence?”

“Well,” said Phœnix, slowly, “he did rub my hair up the wrong way.”

“He must have rubbed pretty hard,” said Phil, laughing, “to make you
fight him.”

“It wasn’t altogether what he said,” remarked Phœnix; “but from what I
had seen of him, and from what you and Chap told me, I considered it a
sort of duty to lay him out.”

Joel burst out laughing at this, and went to work with great vigor upon
Jouncer, while Phœnix, a little confused, put his hands in his pockets,
and said he guessed he’d look round and see if Chap was coming.

Chap did arrive soon, and the three boys went to the shady front porch
to talk over matters.

When Chap heard what had happened to Emile he fairly danced with glee,
and he gave Phœnix no rest until he had told the story with great
minuteness.

Phil had made up his mind that he would tell Chap of the new trouble
which threatened him, and he now concluded to take Phœnix also into his
confidence. A fellow who had done what he had deserved to know all that
was going on.

The dreadful revelation of the real object of Emile Touron’s visit, and
the mortgage held by his father, took all the cheerfulness out of Chap,
and made Phœnix look blank indeed.

At first the boys did not believe the story, but Phil was certain that
such a thing would not be trumped up without any ground whatever.

“Of course, my uncle knows what he is about,” he said, “and intends to
make everything all right: but he could have had no idea the Tourons
would come down suddenly this way. If I could only let him know what is
in the wind, he’d be back in no time, and put a stop to this foolery.”

Phil felt bound to speak as cheerfully and hopefully as he could, but
the more he talked and thought upon the subject, the more doleful he
felt. Both his friends agreed that the best thing he could do was to
see somebody as soon as he could, and they supposed the right person to
see was Mr. Welford.

Phil could not help agreeing with them; and, although he did not care
to see Mr. Welford again after the way in which he had been treated by
that gentleman in his last interview, he made up his mind to pay him a
visit early the next morning. The matter was very urgent, and there was
no one else with whom he could consult.

Joel now appeared upon the porch.

“That young French gentleman,” said he, “wants his clothes and things.
He’s going away. He asked me to pack them up in his little trunk and
bring it out to him. He says the people here haven’t been polite to
him,”--and here Joel burst into a laugh at the thought of Phœnix’s
impoliteness,--“and that he don’t care about coming to the house.”

“Where is he going?” cried Phil. “He oughtn’t to leave like this. I’ll
go and see him.”

“You’d better not,” said Joel. “He’s just white mad; and Susan’s been
telling me you’ve had one scrimmage to-day. He’s going to town, and
wants me to take him in the buggy. He’s an ugly customer, and you’d
better let him go. I suppose I can take the buggy?”

Phil thought a moment, and then concluded that, as Emile would
certainly go, it would be better to let him do so without further words.

“All right,” said he to Joel. “You can bring down his trunk, and drive
him to town.” And then, turning to the housekeeper, who was crossing
the hall, he said, “Susan, will you please go up-stairs and pack
Emile’s trunk? You can gather up all his things and put them into it,
and then Joel will come and get it when he has hitched the horse to the
buggy.”

“Certainly,” said Susan; “and I’ll be glad enough to do it.”

And she promptly went up-stairs.

No more astonished boy than Chap ever stood upon a porch. The story
of the three brothers, the account of Emile’s thrashing, even the
astounding news in regard to the Touron mortgage, had not had such an
effect upon him as this obedience on the part of Susan. He stood with
his mouth open, not knowing what question to ask first.

“You see Susan has come round all right,” said Phil, who had noticed
his friend’s amazement.

“What did you do to her?” gasped Chap. “Did you squirt kerosene into
her room--I thought of that myself, and I knew she wouldn’t be able to
stand it long--or did you pay her up?”

“I didn’t do anything,” said Phil. “She just came round naturally.”

“I didn’t believe it was in her,” said Chap, solemnly. “Upon my word,
Phil, I didn’t believe it was in her!”

“I tell you what it is, Phil,” said Phœnix, a short time afterwards,
as Joel came down-stairs with Emile’s trunk upon his shoulder, “you’d
better look out for that Frenchman. He’ll be worse now than ever. If
I’d known what a regular out-and-out scamp he was, I don’t know that
I would have licked him. It’s some satisfaction to lick a fellow with
some good in him, but it don’t help a chap like that a bit,--it only
makes him worse.”

“That’s so!” cried Chap. “A thrashing only packs his villany, and rams
down his--his--bloody intentions. We must look out for him, boys,
and consider ourselves in a regular state of siege. Every approach
must be guarded. I’ll get my folks to let me stay here now. It’s
absolutely necessary. Mother asked me to get her some summer apples
this afternoon, and I couldn’t come over as soon as I wanted to. But I
tell you I climbed that tree with a spy-glass in one hand, and I kept
a lookout on the wreck. I wasn’t going to let Emily get ahead of me
because I had to stay at home a little while. But things will be worse
now, boys, and we must stick to our posts.”




[Illustration]

CHAPTER XV.

THE FIRE ON THE THOMAS WISTAR.


When Mr. Welford heard Phil’s story the next morning he looked very
grave. He was not altogether surprised at the news, because he had
known there was a mortgage upon the property, and, as he remarked to
Phil,--

“If a man disappears suddenly and leaves affairs of that kind behind
him, he may expect trouble. I am not a lawyer, nor have I full
knowledge of your uncle’s business, but I know that for some time he
has been making arrangements to satisfy all claims against him, and,
among other things, to relieve his property of this mortgage, which was
intended to be a temporary thing, and was given to satisfy old Touron,
who insisted, as soon as your grandfather died, upon having his claim
against your uncle secured in this way. I would have expected Touron to
foreclose the mortgage if he had a legal chance, which I suppose he
has.”

“But why should he do it just at this time?” asked poor Phil.

“That shows his talent for business,” said Mr. Welford. “What he wants
is not his money, but Hyson Hall. And, having heard that your uncle is
away, he sends his son here to see if his absence is likely to continue
for any considerable time. Such a condition of affairs would be of
great advantage to him. If your uncle were here, he might pay whatever
interest or part of the principal was due, and so stop proceedings.”

“How could Mr. Touron have heard that my uncle had gone away?”

“He lives in New York, and such news could readily travel that far. Old
Touron keeps a sharp lookout on his debtors. I never met his son, but
I know he has spent most of his life in France, where, of late, he has
been acting as his father’s business agent. I’ve no doubt he is a sharp
fellow.”

“I know he is,” said Philip. “He is in town now. He left us yesterday.”

“Then I believe I saw him,” said Mr. Welford. “Has he dark hair and
eyes, and a very small moustache? And is he rather taller than you?”

“That’s like him,” said Phil.

“Then I saw him in Mr. Markle’s office, where I stopped for a moment
this morning. He is probably engaging Markle to attend to the matter.”

“That looks very badly, does it not, sir?” said Phil, with a little
huskiness in his voice.

Mr. Welford had much more sympathy for his visitor than when he came
to him in regard to the trouble with Susan. This was something of an
entirely different nature.

“It does look badly, my boy,” he said, “but you must not despair.
I have no authority to attend to this affair; but your uncle is my
friend, and I’ll take it upon myself to see a lawyer, and have the
property protected, if possible. One thing you must remember. If you
can in any way find out where your uncle is, you must do it, and let
him know how things are going on. His presence here is more important
than anything else.”

“I do wish that I had the slightest idea where he is!” exclaimed Phil.
“All that I can find out is that he walked away with a knapsack on his
back.”

“In that way he has travelled long distances,” said Mr. Welford. “But
he may be crossing the Atlantic now for all we know. Of one thing we
may be certain, your uncle has not run away from his debts. He is an
honorable man.”

“I know that,” said Phil, warmly.

“Yes,” continued Mr. Welford. “He is undoubtedly careless, and his
mind is occupied with too many things; but he is not dishonorable. And
now, my boy, go home, and make yourself as easy as you can. I’ll find
out how things are going on, and let you know. By the way, how did you
manage that affair with the housekeeper? Have you discharged her?”

“Oh, no, sir!” said Phil. “That’s all right. We’re good friends again.”

“I am very glad to hear it,” said Mr. Welford. “That looks as if you
were getting into the right way.”

And he laid his hand on Phil’s shoulder, which was a good deal for Mr.
Welford to do for any boy.

When Phil left the banker’s office he made up his mind that his great
duty was to find his uncle. This was the only thing that he could even
try to do now; but how to set about it he did not know.

As he rode away, he saw a crowd of people running down towards the
river-front of the town. He stopped a boy, and asked him what was the
matter.

“The Thomas Wistar’s afire!” said the boy, as he scampered off.

Phil knew the Thomas Wistar very well. She was a large steamboat, which
had run upon the river for many years. She was once a passenger-boat,
but lately had been used to carry freight. At any other time he would
have hurried down to the river with the crowd; but just now he felt
that this was not the time for him to be going to fires. He must hasten
home. Perhaps his uncle might be there.

He had not gone half a mile before he saw two men in a wagon driving
rapidly towards him. Just as he reached them they turned into a
crossroad which led down to the river. One of them called back to him,--

“There’s a boat on fire, floating down the river!”

Phil looked over the fields and could see the heavy black smoke in the
direction of the river. Still he did not follow the men, but pushed on
towards home faster than before.

“If she’s floating down the river,” he thought, “I can see her from our
house.”

The road from Boontown to Hyson Hall was half a mile back from the
river, and on his way Phil could get no view of the conflagration, but,
as he looked back, he sometimes saw the smoke, which never seemed to be
far behind him.

“She’s coming down pretty fast,” he thought.

“The Thomas Wistar is afire!” he said to Joel, when he dismounted at
the barn.

“There’s none of my property on board,” remarked Joel, as he took
Jouncer’s bridle and led him to the stable.

Hurrying to the house, Phil met Jenny, who told him that Chap Webster
and Phœnix Poole had been there, and had gone down to the river.

Phil ran round the house and over the fields to the water. He found
Chap and Phœnix in the scow, which they had poled to some distance from
the shore, and had anchored over the place where Phœnix had found the
side of a ship.

Apparently, they had not been diving, and were now standing in the scow
looking at the burning steamer, not half a mile away.

“What boat is it?” shouted Chap, as Phil appeared on the shore. “We
can’t make her out.”

“The Thomas Wistar,” cried Phil. “Come ashore for me!”

There was a small row-boat fastened to the scow, and into this Phœnix
jumped and ferried Phil over to the scow.

“I brought our little boat down,” said Chap, “because I didn’t know but
the scow might be aground, and I want to see what I can find out about
this thing before the war opens. I hope nobody is aboard the Wistar.
She looks as if she was bound to burn up.”

The burning steamboat, which was coming down the river with the wind
and the tide, presented a grand spectacle. Great clouds of black smoke
arose from her, which, every now and then, were lighted up by flashes
of flame.

The wind was a little behind her, on her port side, and as she floated
down, turned partly sideways to the current, it blew the heavy clouds
of smoke in front of her, sometimes almost concealing her bow and
paddle-wheels from view.

The fire, which broke out as she lay at her wharf that morning, had
got beyond control, and she had been cut loose and set adrift for fear
that, on account of the high wind, the fire might spread to other
vessels, and to the buildings on the river-front.

“I don’t believe anybody is aboard of her,” said Phil. “There must have
been time for all hands to get off. If any people were on her there’d
be boats coming down to take them off.”

“There isn’t any steamboat in town, except the old tub of a
ferry-boat,” said Chap, “and they’d be afraid to bring her anywhere
near, for fear she’d take fire herself.”

“I wonder how far she’ll float down the river,” said Phœnix, “before
she burns to the water’s edge and sinks?”

“Give it up,” said Chap. “But I tell you what it is, boys, this would
have been a gorgeous show at night. We could have seen the blaze
better then, and the sky and the water would have been lighted up for
miles. It would have gone ahead of any fireworks we ever saw.”

“If they had only known you wanted a show,” said Phœnix, “they might
have smothered the fire and put off the display till night.”

“Phœnix,” said Chap, “don’t get in the way of making fun of people.
It’s sometimes worse than thrashing ’em. But she does look grand,
doesn’t she, boys?”

The Thomas Wistar was now approaching quite near, and although she was
well out in the river, the boys fancied they could feel the heat from
her, for the wind was blowing somewhat in their direction.

When she was nearly opposite to them, they could see her stern, which
before had been obscured by the clouds of smoke which rolled in front
of her, and it was evident that so far the fire had not extended to
that portion of the vessel. The strong wind blew sparks, smoke, and
flame all forward.

“Boys,” cried Phil, “let’s row up to her! There may be somebody on
board of her!”

“There isn’t anybody on her,” said Chap, “or they’d be on deck.”

“We can go up close and shout,” said Phil. “There might be somebody
below. There isn’t any danger if we keep behind the fire. Come along!”

And he jumped into the row-boat.

Without another word the two boys tumbled in after him, and, untying
the rope which held them to the scow, Chap seized the oars and rowed
out to the burning steamboat.




[Illustration]

CHAPTER XVI.

SPATTERDOCK POINT.


The three boys in the boat soon reached the stern of the burning
steamboat. Here the wind kept them entirely free from smoke and sparks,
and they rowed several times around the stern, shouting loudly, so as
to attract the attention of any one who might be on board.

But no answer came to them, and they saw no signs of any living being
on the vessel. The tide carried them along with the steamboat, but the
wind had so much influence on the larger craft that Chap had to row
quite steadily to keep up with her.

Phil, who was forward, threw the rope of the small boat over the chain
on the rudder of the steamboat, and held fast.

“Look out!” cried Chap, as he turned around. “We don’t want to go down
with her if she sinks!”

“You needn’t be afraid of that,” replied Phil; “I’ll let go in time.”

“She’s not going to be in any hurry to sink,” said Phœnix. “The fire is
all forward and in her upper works; but there’s no use in hanging on to
her, there’s nobody on board.”

“Boys,” cried Phil, “this chain is loose at the other end! We’re
pulling it out. The pilot-house and wheel must be all burnt up.”

“Let’s pull the whole of it out!” cried Chap. “We might as well save
something from the fire. We could use the chain in our work on the
wreck.”

“We couldn’t get it loose from the rudder,” said Phil, “and it wouldn’t
be ours if we did save it.”

“It’s a great pity,” said Phœnix, “that this big steamboat should burn
up, and everything be lost. There are people on the shore on the other
side, and the folks are coming over the field on our side, but none of
them can do any good.”

“Nothing could do any good,” said Chap, “except a steamboat with a
fire-engine on board. It would be no use for any other kind of boat to
come near her.”

“If she would only drift ashore,” said Phœnix, “it would be better than
her sinking out here.”

“The current is so strong it keeps her out,” said Chap. “If the tide
wasn’t running down so hard the wind would blow her in on our side.”

“If we could get this rudder round,” said Phil, “and keep it hard up, I
believe the wind would take her in shore.”

“Yes,” said Chap; “but how are you going to do it? You couldn’t push a
rudder around and make it fast.”

“Boys,” cried Phil, “let’s go aboard! There isn’t any danger, and if we
can find a tiller up there we can ship it, and perhaps we can steer the
old Wistar in shore.”

“But how would you get up?” asked Phœnix.

“If we stand up in the bow we can reach that little window,” said Phil.
“If somebody below would give us a boost then we could throw up one
hand and get hold of the railings. After that it would all be easy
enough.”

“But who is going to boost the last fellow?” asked Chap.

“One of us ought to stay in the boat anyway,” said Phil, “to row around
and pick us up if we have to jump overboard.”

“You talk as if you were going, anyway,” said Chap.

“I’d like to,” answered Phil; “and suppose, Chap, you stay in the boat.
You can boost better than any of us, because you are so tall.”

“All right!” said Chap. “I suppose somebody ought to stay in the boat.”

“It will be a ticklish job,” remarked Phœnix, as he took off his coat.
“But I guess we’ll try it.”

Chap now stood up in the boat, balancing himself as carefully as he
could, and when Phil had taken hold of the window-sill, which he could
just reach, Chap gave him a lift which enabled him, at the first grasp,
to seize the railing of the lower deck.

For a moment he dangled there, looking into the window. He could see
nothing, for there were goods piled up inside. Then he got one foot on
the window-sill, and scrambled on board.

Phœnix found the feat more difficult. His first trouble was that he
could not reach the window-sill. Chap offered to lift him bodily, but
Phœnix objected.

“If I haven’t got hold of something above,” he said, “we’ll go over,
boat and all.”

Then Chap hauled out an old box from under the stern, and set it upon
one of the seats. On this Phœnix cautiously mounted, and reached the
window-sill. Then Chap attempted to boost him, but Phœnix was so heavy
that he found it no easy thing to do.

On his first attempt his vigorous efforts nearly upset the boat, but
he succeeded at last, and when Phœnix got hold of the railing he very
quickly hauled himself up.

He found Phil hard at work untying a tiller which had been made fast on
one side of the deck.

“Get that other end loose,” cried Phil, “and we’ll ship her in a
minute.”

The boys quickly unfastened the tiller, and then they ran it into one
of the square holes in the end of the rudder-post, which projected
above the lower deck on which they stood.

“Now, pull around!” cried Phil. “Push her over towards the wind!”

Phil had frequently been out with his uncle in a sail-boat, and had
some pretty clear ideas about navigation. The boys pushed against the
end of the tiller with all their force, and gradually it moved around.
The smoke rolled up from the forward part of the vessel, the sparks
flew far ahead; but there was no heat at the stern of the boat, and the
boys did not believe that there was any fire beneath them.

“Hurrah!” cried Chap, from below. “She’s going around a little! Stick
to her, boys, and hold her hard. If it’s too much for you, I’ll get
aboard and help.”

“Don’t you do it!” shouted Phil. “We want that boat to be ready for
us. Don’t you leave her, Chap.”

“All right!” shouted Chap. “Put her round harder yet, boys, and hold
her.”

The Thomas Wistar, now held by her rudder, was being gradually turned
by the wind, so that her bow was directed towards the Hyson Hall side
of the river. The breeze was still on one side of her, but more astern
than it had been, and it was evident that if the rudder could be held
in its present position she would, before long, be blown in shore; but
whether or not Phil and Phœnix could remain aboard long enough for this
to happen was a question both to them and to Chap, who kept an anxious
watch on them from below. Even now, for aught any of them knew, the
fire might be spreading beneath them.

“I do believe,” said Phil, “that this deck is beginning to feel hot
under my feet.”

“I guess it’s because you’re so hot yourself,” said Phœnix. “We’d see
smoke coming out of some of the cracks if the fire was getting under
us.”

There was no doubt, however, that the fire was approaching the stern
of the vessel. The wind was not blowing so hard as it had been, and
whenever there was a partial lull in it the boys would feel great puffs
of heat, and clouds of smoke would gather over them; then, when the
breeze freshened again, the heat and the smoke would be blown away,
and they could breathe freer. They could see people on shore, who were
shouting to them, but the fire made such a roaring noise they could not
hear what was said.

“Lash that tiller to the railings and come off!” shouted Chap, who kept
his boat quite near them. “The fire will spread to the stern before you
know it, and the whole thing will blaze up in a flash. Come off, I tell
you, if you don’t want to be cooked alive.”

“I wish we could find a piece of rope,” said Phil, “and we’d tie this
tiller fast, and get off.”

“I believe we chucked those bits overboard when we cut the tiller
loose,” said Phœnix, “for I can’t see them; but they weren’t strong
enough, anyway.”

“It will take a pretty stout rope to hold this tiller,” said Phil.

He was right, for every muscle of the boys was strained to keep the
rudder in its position. If it had not been for the great strength of
Phœnix, it is probable that they could not have done it.

The wind now seemed to have shifted, for a sudden cloud of smoke was
blown right over the stern of the boat. In ten seconds more the boys
would have let go the tiller and jumped overboard, but the smoke was
blown away again, and they stood to their work.

“I hate to give it up now,” said Phil. “We must be going in, for the
shore is getting nearer and nearer.”

Chap, who kept steadfastly on the windward side of the steamboat, and
as near as possible to his friends, had been about to shout when the
last puff of smoke came over them, that if they didn’t come off he
would come on board and pitch them off, but suddenly changed his tune.
He had fallen a little astern, and glancing shoreward, had pulled his
boat to the other side of the Wistar, where he could see both the shore
and her bow. Pulling back to the boys, he shouted,--

“Stick to her! Stick to her! She’s heading splendidly for Spatterdock
Point! She’ll be aground in a minute!”

This encouragement came none too soon. The air was getting decidedly
hot around the boys, and the sides of the saloon cabin, which rose
before them and prevented their seeing the fire, were beginning to
smoke. This was not certainly a sign of immediate danger, for the cabin
was probably filled with smoke, which was escaping from the cracks
around the windows, which, fortunately, were all closed.

Phœnix had just been on the point of proposing that they should get
out of this thing as quickly as they could, when Chap’s words came, and
he forbore.

The eyes of the boys smarted with smoke and heat, and their backs and
legs began to ache with the great strain of holding that swashing
rudder. If the boat had been going faster through the water they could
not have done it.

But their hearts held out, and if they were nearing the shore they
would not give out just yet.

Directly, there was a gentle jar, which ran from the bow to the stern,
and which the boys distinctly felt beneath their feet.

“The bow has touched!” shouted Phil. “Now put the rudder round and let
the wind blow her stern in shore.”

With renewed vigor the boys pushed the end of the tiller to the other
side of the deck, and, as Phil had said, the wind slowly blew the stern
of the boat shoreward.

“She’s all right now!” cried Phil. “Let her go and skip.”

Whereupon they skipped.

Over the railings and down the side of the steamboat they went, sliding
or dropping, they scarcely knew which, and if Chap had not been ready
with his boat, they would both have gone into the water. There was no
more danger than there had been a few minutes before, but the moment
their work was done a panic had seized them, and they felt they could
not get away from that steamboat too soon.

“If you fellows had fallen into the water,” said Chap, as he hurriedly
pulled ashore, “you would have taken your deaths of cold, for I never
saw you look so hot.”

By the time the Wistar had been blown ashore, there was a little crowd
of people on the beach. Some of them had followed the burning steamboat
for some distance, and had run over the fields to the river when they
saw her coming in. Even Joel’s apathy had yielded to the general
excitement, and he waded into the water and pulled in the bow of the
boys’ boat before it touched the sand.

“If ever there was a pair of boys,” he said, addressing the red-faced
Phil and Phœnix, “as wanted a gar-deen, it’s you two. If your uncle had
seen you aboard that bonfire,” he continued, addressing Phil, “he’d ’a’
gone wild.”

Neither Phil nor Phœnix made any reply to this remark, but walking up
the bank out of the way of the heat and the smoke, they sat down to
watch the subsequent proceedings. For the present they felt as if they
had done enough. Chap, however, rushed in among the people, hoping at
last that he might be able to do something.

Now that the boat was securely aground in shallow water, and there was
a good chance of their getting off if the fire came too near, the men
on shore, who would not have dared to go near the blazing steamer when
she was out in the river, showed a determination to do what they could
to save at least a portion of the boat and cargo.

The boards were torn from a neighboring fence and placed from the shore
to the lower deck of the Wistar, and up these slippery and very much
inclined gang-planks several men quickly clambered. A heavy hawser
which lay on deck was passed on shore, and the boat was made fast to a
tree.

The forward part of the Thomas Wistar was now burned to the water’s
edge, and although the freight in that part of the vessel was still
burning, it was believed the fire did not now extend abaft the engine.

Late in the afternoon, a steam-tug from the city, which had been
telegraphed for from Boontown, arrived, with a fire-engine on board,
and the fire on the Thomas Wistar was soon extinguished.

Long before this event occurred, however, three very hungry boys went
up to Hyson Hall to dinner.




[Illustration]

CHAPTER XVII.

IN WHICH A COUNCIL IS HELD.


The next morning, when Chap Webster came over to Hyson Hall, he brought
his sister Helen with him. Phœnix Poole was already there, for he was
determined to make the best of the period of slack work on his father’s
farm, and he arrived very early in the day.

“Mother sent me,” said Helen to Philip, “to see if you are getting on
comfortably here, and if you needed anything we could do for you. She
would have come herself, but she could not do so to-day because she had
things to attend to which she could not very well leave.”

Mrs. Webster was a good lady, who never went away from her home except
on Sunday, because she always had things to attend to which she could
not very well leave.

“Mother thinks that men can’t get along in a house by themselves,”
said Chap. “I don’t agree with her; but, if you want anything done in
the way of buttons, or casting a general eye over dusty corners, Helen
is just as good as she is.”

“Oh, I don’t need anything of that kind!” said Phil, laughing. “Susan
attends to me first-rate. But it’s comfortable to have neighbors like
your mother, who are kind enough to send to see how a fellow is getting
along.”

“Another thing mother wants to know,” said Helen, “and that is if you
really do want Chap to come and stay with you. He has been going on at
a great rate, trying to make us think that something like a band of
Indians was coming to attack the house, and that he ought to stay here
to help you keep them from climbing in at the doors and windows.”

“People don’t climb in at doors,” said Chap.

“Well, they get in somehow,” said Helen.

“But do you really want him, Phil?”

“Not for that kind of thing,” said Phil; “but I should be very glad to
have him come and stay with me till uncle comes back. And Phœnix, too,”
he added.

“There’s no use talking about that,” said Phœnix. “It’s hard enough for
me to get off in the daytime.”

“There’s only one difficulty in the way,” said Phil, coloring a
little. “I don’t know that I’ll be able to feed any visitors. The money
uncle left with Mr. Welford to keep this castle in running order has
about given out----”

“Oh, pshaw!” said Chap, interrupting, “there’s always plenty of flour
and butter and eggs and vegetables on a place like this; and if we want
butcher’s meat and groceries, mother can send them over from our house,
and call them my rations.”

“Uncle wouldn’t like that,” said Phil, “and we never run up any bills
with the people in town.”

“At any rate,” said Chap, “if one fellow can get along here, two can.
If that’s the only objection you have to my staying here, I’m going to
stay. I don’t think you ought to be left alone.”

“Nor I, either,” said Phil; “and if I starve you, you can go home to
your meals.”

“Well, then, I suppose everything is going on all right,” said Helen,
“except the money, of course, and I’m sure there will be no trouble
about that. Your uncle will remember that he didn’t leave you enough,
and will send you some, if he doesn’t intend to come back soon.”

“I don’t know about that,” said Phil; “but everything else isn’t all
right. I would like you all to hear a letter I got this morning, and
then to tell me whether you think that it is all right or not. I
suppose Chap has told you, Helen, about that Touron fellow that was
here?”

“I believe Chap has told me everything that has happened here, and
everything he knew about everything, and I hope he hasn’t told me more
than he ought to.”

“Not if he didn’t draw too much on his imagination,” said Phil. “I knew
he always told you everything, and I don’t mind a bit your knowing what
is going on here. Now just listen, all of you, to this letter from Mr.
Welford.”

Helen Webster, who had a very practical and business-like side to her
character, sat straight up in the wicker chair which Phil had brought
out on the porch for her, and prepared to give her earnest attention to
all the details of Mr. Welford’s communication.

Chap stood up straight, with his hands in his pockets and a cloud
on his brow. He had always had his doubts of that Welford, and was
prepared to criticise whatever he might hear. Phœnix, who was a good
hand at paying attention, but a poor one to talk, sat on a bench,
with his elbows on his knees and his chin in his hands, and gazed
steadfastly at Phil.

Mr. Welford’s letter read as follows:

  “MASTER PHILIP BERKELEY,--Sir----”

“He begins as stiff as a poker,” said Chap.

“And he stirred me up like a poker, too,” said Phil.

And then he read on:

  “I have put the matter of the mortgage on Hyson Hall into the hands
  of Mr. John P. Harrison, who will see what can be done. In the mean
  time, I desire you to make every effort to find out your uncle’s
  whereabouts, and to acquaint him with the state of affairs. I shall
  put an advertisement into several newspapers, requesting him to
  return as soon as possible.”

“Your uncle won’t like that,” cried Chap. “I shouldn’t wonder if he
thrashed old Welford as soon as he comes back.”

“Oh, Chap,” said Helen, “he wouldn’t do that!”

“No,” said Phil, “he won’t thrash him, but I know he won’t like it. But
the worst part of the letter is to come.”

Phil then read:

  “And now, sir, I have to say that I have received very discreditable
  accounts of you. I have been told, and have been assured that
  every word of the statements can be proved, that young Touron was
  shamefully treated at your uncle’s house. You attempted to shoot him
  with a gun, and he was afterwards dreadfully beaten by one of your
  comrades. Such conduct, sir, is outrageous and amazing. You are not
  only acting in an unlawful and ungentlemanly manner, but you are
  directly working against the most important interests of your uncle
  by injuring and exasperating the holders of the mortgage on his
  property, so that they will push their claims to the utmost limit.
  What action against you personally may be taken by the Tourons I do
  not know. If you get into trouble you must apply to Mr. Harrison.
  There is no more money subject to your order in my hands, and I wish
  to have no further communication with you.

                                                     “HENRY G. WELFORD.”

“Upon--my--word!” exclaimed Chap. “A pretty gentleman! No ‘Yours
truly,’ or even ‘Yours respectfully!’ I tell you what it is, Phil, I
always believed that that Welford ought to have been put down in the
beginning. What he wanted was the iron heel. It mightn’t have seemed to
work at first, but he’d have crumbled before long. Look at Susan!”

“I think the letter is perfectly shameful,” said Helen, disregarding
her brother’s remarks. “What dreadful stories that French boy must have
told!”

“Indeed, he did,” said Phil, warmly. “I never tried to shoot him at
all. I only took the gun from Susan, and I did not even raise it. If he
hadn’t been such a coward he’d have seen that.”

“I wish I hadn’t licked him,” said Phœnix. “I didn’t think he’d cut up
as rough as this.”

“Phil,” cried Chap, extending his right arm, as if he were addressing
an audience, “if I were you I tell you what I’d do. I’d just go
to this Welford and tell him that what Touron said was a lie from
beginning to end----”

“But it wasn’t,” interrupted Phœnix.

“I’d tell him,” continued Chap, “that I hadn’t had the slightest idea
of shooting him, for the stairs are so long I could easily have popped
him before he got to the top if I had wanted to, and that I hadn’t
anything to do with beating him, but that he deserved all he got, and
that if my friend, Mr. Phœnix Poole, hadn’t thrashed him, I’d have done
it myself. And if you don’t like to go and say all that, I’ll go and
say it for you.”

“Now, Chap,” cried Helen, “don’t you be putting any such ideas into
Phil’s head, and don’t you go near Mr. Welford yourself. You will only
make matters worse.”

“And I am not going, either,” said Phil. “I should be sure to say
something I ought not to. I think he has treated me outrageously!”

“It is the crudest thing I ever heard of,” said Helen. “He ought not
to believe what the French boy said without hearing your side. But you
are right in not going to see him now. It would only make a dreadful
quarrel.”

“But I shall answer his letter,” said Phil, “and tell him what I think
of it.”

“Please don’t,” said Helen, rising up and coming up to Phil,--“not
while you are so angry. If Mr. Welford knew just how things were, he’d
think very differently. But it won’t do any good to make him madder.
Don’t one of you boys do a single thing till I have seen mother and
told her all about it. She used to know Mr. Welford very well, and
she’ll tell us what ought to be done. And now, if there isn’t anything
I can do for you, it is time for me to go. Mother said Chap could stay
with you if you really wanted him, and I don’t believe there will be
any trouble about your not having things to eat. There’s always lots of
things on a place like this, and Chap isn’t particular, and mother will
send some pies, and anything else you don’t happen to have.”

“Good!” cried Chap. “Just you tell mother that this garrison is greatly
in need of pies, and one of those rolled-up blackberry puddings would
make us hold out splendidly. Do you want me to go home with you?”

“No,” said Helen; “I’m going to take the straight path across the
fields. Good-by!”




[Illustration]

CHAPTER XVIII.

TOURON IN THE FIELD.


About ten o’clock the next morning a high, old-fashioned carriage,
swung on straps like a stage-coach, and with a little seat near the
roof for the driver, was being slowly drawn into Boontown. It had been
originally intended for two horses, but on this day only one horse
could be spared, and his driver, an elderly colored man, allowed him to
jog along at a very easy gait. Inside the coach might be seen a very
pretty but a very anxious face, and this belonged to Helen Webster.

The queer old vehicle was the Webster family carriage, and in it Helen
was going to see Mr. Welford. She had talked to her mother about Phil’s
troubles, and Mrs. Webster became so much interested in the subject,
that if she had not had a great many things to attend to at home that
she could not very well leave, she would have gone to town to see Mr.
Welford herself.

It would have been of no use to speak to Mr. Webster about the matter,
because he was a quiet and rather timorous man, who avoided all
disputes and dissensions by never taking anybody’s part, and never
quarrelling himself. Nothing annoyed him so much as being consulted in
regard to trouble between neighbors, and so, in this case, he was not
consulted.

After much talking, Mrs. Webster declared that she did not see why
Helen could not go and talk to Mr. Welford, because she, her mother,
could tell her exactly what she ought to say, and it would be the same
thing as if she went there and said it herself.

Helen did not like this plan, for she was afraid of Mr. Welford, but
she consented to go, for Phil must certainly be set right, and there
seemed to be no one to do it but herself. So off she started this
morning in the carriage, her mother having previously spent an hour in
telling her exactly what she ought to say.

The nearer she came to town the slower she wished the horse would go.
If Mr. Welford’s office had been five miles the other side of Boontown,
she would have been very glad. She tried her best to put what her
mother had told her in proper order in her mind, but, somehow, the
various instructions became strangely jumbled up, the old coach jarred
and jolted so much with only one person in it, that when she reached
Mr. Welford’s office, she did not feel at all ready to lay her business
before him.

At first she thought of telling old William to drive round several
blocks, but this she knew would be ridiculous. She hoped Mr. Welford
was not in; indeed, she felt quite encouraged when she thought that at
this time of day he might probably be out attending to business. But
the young man at the table in the front room told her Mr. Welford was
in, and she was shown into that gentleman’s private office. Mr. Welford
greeted her kindly, but evidently did not recognize her.

“You don’t remember me,” she said, in rather a low voice. “I am Helen
Webster.”

“Indeed!” said Mr. Welford. “I didn’t know you. I have not seen you
since you were a very little girl.”

Then he shook hands with her, offered her a seat, and asked her
questions about her father and mother. After these had been answered,
there was a pause, and then Helen thought it was time to state her
business, but she could not, for the life of her, remember how her
mother had told her to begin.

“I came to talk to you about Philip Berkeley,” she said, after she had
remained quiet for a time that to her seemed dreadfully long.

“That boy at Hyson Hall?” asked Mr. Welford, quickly.

“Yes, sir,” said Helen.

Mr. Welford’s face grew very dark.

“Never in all my life,” he said, “did I hear of a boy who gave so
much trouble in so short a time as this Philip Berkeley! Scarcely has
his uncle left him to himself when he begins a career of horse-racing
and general mad-cap behavior, actually taking possession of people’s
hats, and hanging them up in grocery stores to be called for; then he
comes to me with a likely story of having quarrelled with one of his
servants, and needing hundreds of dollars to pay her off and discharge
her, and as soon as he finds he can’t get the money he tells me the
quarrel is at an end; he then actually attempts to kill a young man
staying in his house, and, failing in this, causes his visitor to be
dreadfully beaten by one of his associates. I did not intend to say
so much about him, but the very thought of the young rascal makes me
indignant. And now, what has he been doing to you, or your family? I
suspected that it would not be long before we should hear complaints
from some of his neighbors.”

Helen sprang to her feet, pushed back her chair, and stood up in front
of Mr. Welford. She did not now remember a word her mother had told her
to say, nor did she care to. Her eyes sparkled, her face was flushed,
and words came to her almost faster than she could utter them.

“Doing to us!” she exclaimed. “He never did anything to us that
wasn’t as good and kind as it could be,--and to everybody else, too,
for that matter. And that is just what mother sent me to tell you.
She would have come herself, but she couldn’t; and she thinks it’s a
shame! And we all think it’s a shame that a boy like Philip Berkeley,
who is all the time trying to do the best he can, and who has ever
so many dreadful things to contend with, should get such a letter as
the one you wrote to him. Everything that French boy told you was a
falsehood, and he knew it; and all that Phil told you was true about
the housekeeper and her money and all. My brother Chap, who is with
him all the time, and knows everything he does, has told me all about
everything from beginning to end. And he never ran away with anybody’s
hat, except by accident.”

And then Helen, who had waxed as warm and eloquent as if she had been
her own brother Chap, gave Mr. Welford a detailed account of the actual
facts in connection with the matters that had excited his indignation.

She put the cases so clearly and strongly before him, and with such
an earnestness and evident interest in the subject, that at last Mr.
Welford could not help smiling.

“As far as young Berkeley is concerned,” he said, “it is just as well,
perhaps, that your mother did not come, for I don’t believe she would
have advocated his cause half so warmly as you have. If what you say is
correct----”

“And it is, every word of it,” said Helen. “I wouldn’t come here to
tell you things that were not true, sir!”

“Oh, of course!” said Mr. Welford. “I understand that perfectly. I
meant to say if you are correctly informed.”

“My own brother told me,” said Helen. “And as to the letter, Phil read
that to me himself. There could be no mistake about that.”

“You seem to think my letter the worst part of the whole proceeding,”
said Mr. Welford.

“Of course, I do, sir!” said Helen. “And we all do,--that and the
French boy’s story.”

“Well,” said Mr. Welford, “you appear to be turning the tables pretty
completely. The accounts I received regarding Philip Berkeley were so
straightforward, and apparently so well based upon fact, that I could
not help believing them, especially when I remembered what I knew
about him myself. But, after what you have said, I will carefully
investigate each one of these charges, and if I find I have been
mistaken I will say so. Will that be satisfactory to you and to your
mother, and to the rest of the family?”

“Oh, yes, sir!” said Helen. “And the reason why I came instead of one
of the boys was that Phil and Chap are so angry there is no knowing
what they would have said. And as to Phœnix Poole, he is so good and
quiet, and always behaves so well, that when he does get roused up he
is perfectly terrible. That is the way he came to thrash the French
boy.”

“I am glad he did not come,” said Mr. Welford. “I would much rather
have had you than any of them. And now, good-by! I will give attention
to all you have told me.”

As Helen drove away, and thought of all she had said to Mr. Welford,
and how she had stood up and talked to that respectable and dignified
gentleman, just as if he had been a boy or a girl of her own age, she
covered her face with her hands and cried all the way home.

That day was a busy one at Hyson Hall. Early in the morning Joel
announced to Phil that the wheat crop was ready to be harvested, and
that hands must be engaged for the work. To Phil’s statement that there
was no money to pay these hands, Joel simply answered that the crop
must be got in, no matter what happened; and, if there was no money,
some wheat would have to be threshed out and sold to pay the men. He
admitted that this was a poor way of doing business, for wheat would
bring a low price at this season, but, then, Mr. Godfrey might be back
before the work was done and everything would be all right. It was,
therefore, agreed that Joel should start early the next day to look up
hands.

Preparations for the harvest occupied Phil and Joel all day. Phœnix
was not there, and Chap was left much to himself. He had come to the
conclusion that the state of affairs on this place demanded that the
man with the black straw hat should come to the front.

To be sure, that individual had requested to be summoned only upon Mr.
Godfrey Berkeley’s return; but Chap thought if he could do any good he
ought to come now. If he had any plan about getting the treasure out
of that wreck, this was the time for him to go to work to do it; or it
might be that he could make statements that would enable them to raise
money, not only for wrecking purposes, but for the general needs of the
estate.

So he took from his pocket the postal-card that the man had given
him--which by this time had become pretty well rumpled and a little
dirty--and prepared to write a note on it. The card was addressed to
“Mr. Alexander Muller, 340 Sixth Avenue, New York.”

Chap had an idea that this message should be something like a
telegram,--very compact and to the point,--a message which the person
receiving it should understand, and no one else. So, after a good deal
of thought and study, he produced the following:

  “Personage you were on track of not arrived. Your immediate presence
  demanded. If necessary, order batteries sent. Additional reasons for
  secrecy and despatch.

                                                       “CH----N W----R.”

When this was done, Chap took it to town and mailed it, walking all the
way there and back.

The next morning, after breakfast, a boy appeared on the porch with a
note for Phil. When the latter opened and read it he gave a great shout.

“Hello, Chap!” he cried, “it’s from uncle!”

Chap seized the paper held out to him and read,--

  “DEAR PHIL,--Send me Old Bruden by bearer.

                                       “G. B.”

“That’s his writing,” said Chap.

“Certainly it is!” cried Phil, in a high state of excitement. “Where
is Mr. Berkeley?” he said to the boy.

“I don’t know anything about him,” was the answer. “A man gave me the
note, and told me I was to bring a gun to him, and he would give me a
quarter.”

“Where is the man?” asked Phil.

“He’s down on the road, sitting by the little bridge; but he said if
anybody came with me he wouldn’t give me a cent.”

“Look here, Chap,” cried Phil, “if uncle is down there I’m bound to
see him and tell him what is going on here. He has some reason for
not wanting to come back just now, but he don’t know what a dreadful
condition things are in. Here is a quarter,” he said to the boy, “so
you won’t lose anything. Just you stay here a few minutes. I’ll cut
over the fields to the bridge,” he said to Chap, as he ran down the
steps.

“Aren’t you going to take him the gun?” said Chap.

“No!” cried Phil, as he hurried off. “When he hears what I have to tell
he won’t want to go gunning.”

The boy now started to go.

“Just you sit down and rest yourself,” said Chap, stepping in front of
him.

“But I’m not tired,” said the boy.

“Well, try how it goes to rest yourself when you are not tired,” said
Chap. “It’s something you ought to learn, and you had better begin now.
There’s a bench behind you.”

The boy reluctantly sat down, and Chap stood guard over him, determined
to keep him there long enough to prevent him from giving notice to the
man at the little bridge that Phil was coming.




[Illustration]

CHAPTER XIX.

PHIL AND CHAP START ON AN EXPEDITION.


When Phil left the house, after receiving the note from his uncle, he
ran down past the barn, climbed two fences, and hurried over the fields
to a little stream, which ran through the Hyson Hall property and then
crossed the public road.

There was a bridge here, which was a favorite resting-place for
foot-travellers in summer-time. The spot was shaded by a large tree,
and there were some grassy banks, which were very pleasant to sit upon.

Here it was that the person who sent the note to Hyson Hall was to wait
for Old Bruden to be brought to him; but when Philip reached the spot
he could see no one. He looked on both sides of the bridge and even
under it; he looked up the road, he looked down the road; he stood up
on the fence, and gazed far over the fields in every direction, but no
person could he see. He shouted at the top of his voice, calling out
his uncle’s name, uttering whoops and yells that could be heard for a
considerable distance. He ran down the road for a quarter of a mile,
then climbed a fence again, but not a human being was in sight. In
about half an hour he hastily returned.

“Chap,” said he, “is that boy gone?”

“Yes,” answered Chap. “I let him go after I had given you plenty of
time to get to the bridge. He said he came from town, and was in an
awful hurry to get back. I made him go by the path along the river,
so that I’d be sure he wouldn’t interfere with you. Did you see your
uncle?”

“No,” replied Phil. “Did the boy say anything about the person who sent
him with the note,--what kind of man he was?”

“No,” said Chap, “he didn’t say anything about him.”

“I’m sorry for that. I thought you’d ask him a lot of questions, and
find out if it really was uncle who sent him.”

“It’s a pity,” said Chap, “but I never thought of it. I was giving the
boy a lecture about the folly of being in a hurry when he ought to keep
quiet, and getting himself into a stew when there was no occasion for
it.”

“Chap,” exclaimed Phil, “if that was uncle, we are bound to find him!
He must be still in this neighborhood, and we must scour the whole
country. I expect he’s going off again on some sporting expedition, and
just came back to get the gun.”

“And he didn’t want to be interfered with,” said Chap, “or to have
anybody ask to go along.”

“That may be,” said Phil; “but why he didn’t wait till Old Bruden was
brought to him I can’t imagine. But we must set out and hunt him up.
He’s got a good start of us, but we’ll take the horses, and we shall be
sure to catch up with him. I’m pretty certain he is on foot, from what
the boy said.”

“All right!” cried Chap, with great animation; “I’m ready!”

“We must both of us go,” said Phil, “because it may be necessary to
head him off. When he makes up his mind to do a thing, he is not going
to let anybody stop him if he can help it. If he sees us, he’ll be sure
to get away if he can.”

“What horses are we going to ride?” asked Chap.

“I’ll take Jouncer, and you can ride Kit. As soon as I have spoken to
Susan we will run out to the field and catch him.”

Susan was not altogether pleased when Phil told her what he and Chap
were going to do, and asked her to put up a couple of luncheons which
they could slip in their pockets, as they might not get back until
afternoon.

If Joel had been at home, all this would have made no difference to
Susan, but she did not like the idea of being left without a man or boy
upon the place. But it was of no use to object, and she was really as
anxious as any one else to have Mr. Berkeley found.

It took the boys a good while to catch Kit, for he had been so long in
the pasture that he had become wild, but at last they cornered him and
brought him up to the barn.

Jouncer and he were quickly saddled and bridled, and then Phil ran back
to the house. He soon returned, bringing the packages of luncheon, and
carrying Old Bruden, with a shot-pouch and powder-flask.

“I brought the gun,” he said, “for if uncle sent for it I suppose he
ought to have it, though I know he won’t need it. But he likes to have
his orders obeyed.”

“That ought to be done,” said Chap, as they rode away, “especially in
war-times like these. It might have been better to let the boy take the
gun, and then scoot after him.”

“Very likely,” said Phil; “but there’s no use talking about that now.”

“No,” added Chap, “the milk has soaked into the ground out of sight.”

“Susan did not like being left alone,” said Phil, “but I told her we’d
stop at the Poole place and ask Phœnix if he couldn’t go over as soon
as he got through with his day’s work. Joel is away, and we may not be
back till dark, you know.”

“That’s so,” said Chap, straightening himself up; “we are not coming
back without Mr. Berkeley, dead or alive.”

Phœnix was not at home, having been sent to town early in the morning
with the spring-wagon. The boys rode on to Boontown, and soon found him
busily attending to various commissions.

Phœnix was much surprised at the appearance of his friends, especially
when he saw them both mounted and Phil carrying a gun. When he heard
what was on hand, he readily agreed to go to Hyson Hall as soon as he
got his work done.

“I wish I wasn’t so tremendously busy,” he said, “for I’d like nothing
better than to go along with you; but all I can do is to be over at
your place when you get back and hear the news.”

Phil then went to nearly every place in town where he was acquainted,
and asked if Mr. Berkeley had been recently seen there.

He did not go to Mr. Welford’s office, not having heard of Helen’s
visit to that gentleman; but Chap went there and made inquiries of the
clerk. But no one had seen or heard of Mr. Godfrey Berkeley.

The agent at the railroad station, who knew Mr. Berkeley very well,
assured Phil that he had not arrived there by any train, nor had he
been there at all. The only thing they heard that seemed anything like
a clue to Mr. Berkeley’s whereabouts was from a colored woman, whom
Phil knew, who lived on the outskirts of the town.

She had seen a man, that morning, cross over the fields near her
shanty, and get over a fence into a road which ran northward from the
town, and in an almost opposite direction from Hyson Hall.

This man had something on his back which might have been either a
bundle or a knapsack, but she did not take any particular notice of
him, and had not the slightest idea that it might be Mr. Godfrey
Berkeley. If she had thought such a thing as that, she would have sent
one of her boys after him to carry his bundle.

“I shouldn’t wonder at all if that was uncle,” said Phil to Chap. “At
any rate, we can’t do better than to ride along this road. We can
surely find out something more about the man before long.”

Emile Touron was boarding at a small tavern on the main street of
Boontown, but not near the centre of business. It was a pleasant, shady
place, and not far from the office of Mr. Markle, who had the Hyson
Hall mortgage business in hand, and with whom young Touron consulted a
great deal more than that gentleman thought necessary.

After breakfast, that morning, Emile had been sitting in an arm-chair
in front of the tavern, when he saw, at some distance, a stout boy
driving a spring-wagon into town. He immediately went up-stairs, and
seated himself at his bedroom window, where, sitting a little back with
the curtains partly drawn, he could have a good view of the street. He
thought he would prefer to sit there and see Phœnix as he drove into
town. Then when Phœnix had passed, Emile thought it would be a good
thing to stay in his room and get another look at him as he went out of
town; but before this latter event occurred, Emile was very much amazed
to see Chap and Phil come clattering by, and ride up into the town.

“Oho!” he thought,--but it must be remembered he thought in
French,--“it was a good thing for me to come up here. And so they are
all in town, eh? They must be going off on some expedition, with their
guns and ammunition. This will be a good time for me to go down to that
place and see how things are going on.”

Emile now quickly prepared to make a visit to Hyson Hall, but he did
not go this time in the rickety carriage from the livery-stable. He had
become better acquainted with the resources of the town, and had found
out that a grocer, a few doors from the tavern, had a very good horse
and buggy, which he occasionally hired out. This Emile procured, and
was speedily driving towards Hyson Hall.




[Illustration]

CHAPTER XX.

“ZOSE ANGEL BELLS.”


As soon as the boys had departed, Susan went round the lower part of
the house, and shut and fastened all the lower doors and windows. Then
leaving the house in charge of Jenny, with injunctions to that young
person to lock the back door after her, and not to open it or any other
until she returned, the vigilant housekeeper went down to the barn,
locked and bolted all the doors there and in the stables, and then
walked over to the little house where Joel’s mother lived, and, finding
this old woman all right, she came back to the house.

About an hour later, she sat down by the dining-room window to
rest a little after her morning’s work. Her reflections were not
very pleasant, for her mind was much troubled by the present state
of affairs. She knew the want of money, and the threatened legal
proceedings, and she was afraid there were other troubles which
neither she nor Phil knew anything about. She was always a loyal
woman to her employers, and she took a deep interest in this family
and its prosperity, but she was very jealous of her own position and
prerogatives, and it had been a hard thing for her to change her
allegiance from Mr. Godfrey to a mere boy like Phil; but in a moment
of excitement she had done it, and now she was glad of it, especially
since there was danger of another boy getting at the head of affairs.

She bitterly hated that French boy. True, she had not intended he
should be killed when she gave Phil the gun at the time of the quarrel,
and she had good reasons for knowing that nothing of the kind would
occur, but she wanted to frighten Emile, and was rejoiced to think
how thoroughly she had succeeded. It would be a dreadful thing, she
thought, for this estate to pass into the hands of those French
people. If she had the money, she would gladly pay the interest on the
mortgage, or whatever was necessary to save the property, and would
have been certain it would be paid back to her.

As for Mr. Godfrey’s going away at such a time, she did not know what
to think of it. She had liked him very much ever since as a young
man he used to come to visit his father. She believed him to be just
and honorable, and she was very much afraid that he must have gone
crazy before he could do a thing like this. He was always a very queer
person, not at all like other people.

These rather doleful thoughts were interrupted by the sound of wheels,
and looking through the half-open Venetian shutters, she saw the
grocer’s buggy approaching. When she recognized Emile as the driver,
her heart fell within her.

“Why on earth should he come here?” she exclaimed,--“especially to-day.”

She did not go to the front door to receive him, but stayed where she
was.

In a few moments the voice of Emile was heard outside, loudly calling
for some one to take his horse, but Susan did not move.

The calling continued, louder and more peremptory, and at last Jenny
came up-stairs to know if she should go to the door.

“No,” said Susan.

But, as the shouting went on, the housekeeper presently said, with a
sigh,--

“Well, I suppose the rascal won’t go away until he has seen some one,
so you may go out, Jenny, and tell him that there is no one at home.
Perhaps that will satisfy him.”

Jenny went out, and was met by a volley of abuse from Emile, but this
made little impression upon her.

“There’s no one at home,” she said, “so you’ll have to come again.”

“When will zey be back?” quickly asked Emile.

“I don’t know when Mr. Godfrey will be back,--probably not for a long
time,” said Jenny. “And Mr. Phil and Chap Webster don’t expect to come
home until after night.”

“All right,” said Emile. “I want somebody to take my horse.”

“There isn’t anybody here to do it,” said Jenny. “Joel is away getting
men for harvest.”

Emile smiled.

“If zat is so,” he said, “I will tie him to zis post, and after a while
I will take him to ze barn myself.”

He fastened the horse to a hitching-post, and then quickly passing
Jenny, who had been gravely watching him, he ran up the porch-steps and
entered the half-open front door.

Here he was met by Susan, who would have shut the door in his face
if she had reached it soon enough, and who confronted him with a
countenance that plainly enough expressed the question,--

“What do you want here?”

The moment Emile saw her, his eyes sparkled with rage.

“Aha!” he cried, “you is ze vile woman who would have me killed! Now
let me tell you zis: When, in two or tree days I am master of zis
house, I will drive you out, and I will have you put in ze prison. And
now get out of my way; I want to look at my house.”

“Oh,” thought Susan to herself, as she clinched her hands, “if Mr.
Godfrey only kept a watch-dog! but he never would do it.”

Emile stepped to the parlor doors and threw them wide open.

“Open zose windows!” he cried. “Why you keep it so dark here?”

“I’ll do nothing of the kind,” said Susan.

“Zen I’ll do it myself,” said Emile.

He opened all the parlor shutters, and then walked around the room,
scrutinizing the furniture, pictures, and ornaments in a way he had
never done before.

Susan could do nothing to prevent him. She could only look on and grind
her teeth.

When Emile came out of the parlor, he went into the dining-room.

“When Mr. Berkeley comes home,” said Susan, “I will tell him of this,
and he will have you punished. You will not be allowed in this country
to walk into people’s houses and act in this way.”

“Humph!” said Emile, shrugging his shoulders; “when your Mr. Berkeley
comes home, he will have no home.”

Presently a happy idea seemed to strike the French boy. Coming to the
hall, where Susan still stood, he said to her,--

“Where are zose bells zat used to dingle-dangle on zis house?”

“It’s none of your business where they are,” said Susan, shortly.

“Look you here,” said Emile, stepping closer to her, with his face
turning very dark, “you tell me where are zose bells, or I will make
you do it.”

It was not easy to frighten Susan, but she may have thought this French
fellow capable of any crime. After a moment’s reflection, she went into
the dining-room and got a key. Then, saying to Emile, “If you must see
everything, I suppose you must,” she led the way up-stairs. Opening the
door of a large room at the very top of the house, she pointed to a row
of greenish metal bells, which stood on the floor by one of the walls.

“Now you’ve seen them,” she said, “I hope you are satisfied.”

“No, I am not,” said Emile. “How do you get out on zis roof?”

“There’s a trap-door over there,” said Susan, “at the top of that
flight of steps.”

Emile went up the steps, and opened the door. Then he came back.

“I am going to hang some of zose bells on ze roof,” he said. “I see ze
little posts are zer yet.”

“Mr. Berkeley will not allow that; he took them down himself,” said
Susan.

“Zat makes no difference to me,” remarked Emile. “I s’all hear zose
angel bells again.”

And, picking up one of the bells, which, though large, was not very
heavy, he carried it up the steps.

“All right,” thought Susan, “you can hang yourself up there, if you
like.”

Then, going out of the room door, she locked it, put the key in her
pocket, and went down-stairs.

“Now,” said she to Jenny, who had been left on guard below, “I have
locked that young rascal in the cockloft, and I intend to keep him
there till Joel, or some one of the others, comes home. You heard him
threaten me, and I’m sure there’s no law against my keeping him shut up
till there’s a boy or a man about the house. I know he is none too good
to take something, and carry it away with him.”

To these remarks Jenny assented heartily, being thankful that something
had occurred to make Susan forget to scold her for having allowed the
French boy to come in at the front door.

As the housekeeper went about her work she felt pretty well satisfied
with the events of the morning. She hoped that the boys would bring Mr.
Godfrey back with them, and was glad to think that in that case the
young Frenchman would be on hand to be dealt with as he deserved.

She was also glad that Phil had taken Old Bruden to Mr. Godfrey. Susan
was not a superstitious woman as a general thing, but the few notions
of the kind she had were strongly rooted in her mind, and she believed
that Mr. Berkeley would be more completely master of the situation if
he had that gun.

Like most persons who hold superstitious ideas, she had but slight
reasons for her belief, but she knew that the former owners of the gun
had been masters in their establishments when they kept possession of
it, and had ceased to be such when they let it go from them. And this,
she believed, would be the case now. Above all things, she feared to
have the gun fall into the hands of Emile Touron.

As for that young gentleman, he was quite busily employed for some
time after Susan left him. He hung the bell on one of the upright
projections which were ranged along the four sides of the roof, and
which had been originally placed there to support the bells, which had
been the delight of the heart of the old tea-merchant, Mr. Godfrey’s
father. These bells were made of very light metal, so that they would
easily swing in the wind, and the strong breeze which was blowing made
this one ring quite to Emile’s satisfaction.

But one bell was not enough. He wanted to hang several of them, and
then go below to listen to the effect. Years before, he had been
greatly entertained by these bells, which had fixed themselves in his
memory as the principal characteristic of the place, and he was anxious
to enjoy again the pleasant sensation.

He was so full of his work that, when he went down-stairs again, he
did not notice that the door of the loft was shut. He brought up two
bells this time, and hung them. Two or three more, he thought, would
be enough, and then he would go down on the lawn and hear them ringing
in the wind. But, descending again, he noticed the closed door. He
ran to it and tried to open it, but it was of no use. He rattled the
door-handle, he shouted, he kicked, but no one came.

He grew very angry and a good deal frightened. He had never imagined
that the woman would serve him such a trick. He tried to break the lock
or force the door, but this was all in vain. The doors at Hyson Hall
were very heavy, and the locks massive.

Then he ran out on the roof and shouted, hoping to attract the
attention of some one below. But no answer came to him except the
jangling of the bells. For a long, long time Emile stayed up there,
sometimes running down into the loft, to see if the door had been
opened, and then returning to the freer air of the roof.

Susan paid no attention to his shouts or noise, most of which she
plainly heard. She supposed he might be hungry, but she also knew he
was very angry, and she would not have dared to open the door while she
and Jenny were by themselves in the house.

After a while, Emile became tired of shouting and kicking, and sat
down on the parapet, gazing around in the hope of seeing some one
approaching.

Looking towards the river, a strange object caught his eye. It was the
remains of the Thomas Wistar, on Spatterdock Point.

Instantly the idea struck him that this was the wreck he had discovered
under water, and which, in some way, had been raised. He did not notice
that this was the hull of a steamboat, for it lay at quite a distance
from the house, and there were trees intervening, and he did not
imagine that there could be two wrecks on the same property.

It is true that Spatterdock Point was some distance from the place
to which he had gone with the other boys to look for the sunken
treasure-ship; but Emile was not familiar with the river-front, and did
not notice this.

He had heard of the steamboat on fire at Boontown, but, being very busy
with his lawyer at the time, had not gone to see it, and had not known
of its floating down the river.

“Those vile boys,” he thought, as he sprang to his feet, and stood with
clinched hands gazing at the unfortunate Wistar. “They’ve got that
ship out of the water, and have carried away the treasure. That is
the reason they went to town, armed to the teeth. They have stolen my
money! That gold was mine! Everything on this place belongs to me.”

It may be remarked that Emile always seemed to consider that when the
mortgage was foreclosed the estate would belong to him, and not to his
father. This was owing to his egotistical way of thinking about things
in which he was in any way concerned.

This sight of the wreck of the Wistar made him more angry than ever. He
was certain that the boys had carried off all or part of the treasure
he had been told about, and he fairly stormed around the flat roof as
he thought of it.

Once he saw Jenny below, looking up at him. He leaned over the parapet
and yelled at her to come up and unlock the door, but she only smiled.
Enraged, he seized a piece of plaster and threw it at her, but he did
not hit her.

Early in the afternoon, a man came walking along the public road
towards the little bridge, which has been spoken of before. He had
in his hand a book, which he was reading as he walked. Suddenly he
stopped, raised his head and listened. He seemed to hear something
which surprised him, and the longer he listened the more surprised he
appeared.

The wind was blowing from the direction of Hyson Hall, and on the
breeze there came the sound of tinkling bells. Presently the man shut
up his book, put it in his pocket, and, getting over the fence at one
side of the road, he ran up to the top of a little hill, from which he
could get a view of Hyson Hall.

He had strong eyesight, and he could plainly see several bells dangling
and swinging on the top of the house. At first he seemed scarcely able
to believe his eyes, then he turned a little pale, and then his face
grew dark.

He was evidently very much troubled. As a fresh gust of wind brought
the sound still plainer to his ear, he turned away with a very cold and
stern countenance, went down the hill, and, getting over the fence,
walked rapidly along the road in the direction from which he had just
come.




[Illustration]

CHAPTER XXI.

ON SEPARATE ROADS.


About four o’clock in the afternoon, Susan went up to the door of the
loft and unlocked it.

Emile was sitting at the top of the flight of steps that led to the
roof, and immediately ran down towards her. Before he could say a word
she called out to him,--

“You can come down now. Phœnix Poole, the boy who thrashed you the
other day, is coming, and he will be in the house in a minute. You can
talk to him till Mr. Philip comes back.”

Emile rushed past her without a word. He dashed down-stairs, along the
hall, and out of the front door. His horse, which had been fed and
watered by Susan and Jenny, was still standing by the post where he had
hitched him.

Quickly untying him, Emile jumped into the buggy and drove away. The
horse, who for a long time had been impatient to go, trotted gayly,
and Emile, who was much more impatient than the horse, whipped him up
to make him trot still faster.

When Phil and Chap left the cabin of the negro woman, who had seen a
man walking northward along the road which passed her house, they rode
for some time before they heard of the man again. Then they met a boy
in a wagon, who said he had seen such a man, but he was walking in the
field, and he had not taken much notice of him.

There were few houses near the road, but before very long they came to
one where a woman was washing clothes in a side-yard. She said she had
seen a man pass by, but she wasn’t certain whether he had a bundle or
not, and could not just then remember whether it was this morning or
yesterday morning that she saw him. She had been washing both mornings,
and it might have been the day before that he passed.

There was little encouragement in this, but still the boys pushed on,
fully convinced that if they found Mr. Berkeley at all, it would be
by using their own eyes, and not those of other people. There was a
probability that he had passed along this road, and on this they must
act.

A little before noon they stopped in a shady place and ate their
luncheon, while their horses made a meal from the grass at the side of
the road. Starting again, after the animals had had a sufficient rest,
they soon reached a place where the road forked.

Phil knew this part of the country pretty well, having ridden over
it with his uncle, and he explained to Chap that the roads, which
separated here to go around an extensive piece of woodland, came
together again a few miles above. On each branch-road there were
several houses where inquiry should be made. He therefore proposed
that Chap should take the left-hand road, while he took the one to
the right, and whoever reached first the point where the roads joined
should wait for the other. This was agreed to, and each boy set out on
his separate way.

Chap made several inquiries, without result, and after a time he came
to a barn and farm-yard by the roadside. He stopped, and was just about
to call out to a boy in the barn, when he suddenly opened his eyes and
mouth in amazement.

On a log at the other end of the barn-yard sat the man with the black
straw hat. He was talking to a man who was mending a horse-rake.

Chap jumped from Kit’s back, tied him to the fence, and ran into the
barn-yard.

“Hello!” he cried. “Who on earth would have expected to see you here?”

Mr. Alexander Muller, of 340 Sixth Avenue, New York, turned round
quickly on hearing Chap’s voice.

“Well!” he exclaimed, rising from the log; “I certainly did not expect
to see you, either. Did you come to meet me?”

“I didn’t know you were on the road,” said Chap.

“I expected to see you to-morrow,” said the other, “but came here first
to attend to some business. By the way, why did you write me such an
astounding note--and on a postal-card, too?”

“Why, you gave me the card,” Chap said.

“Yes; but I did not expect anything so exceedingly confidential and
startling to be written on it. It came to my boarding-house while I was
away, and was put upon the dining-room mantel-piece. I am sure every
boarder in the house read it, and I feel that I have since been looked
upon as head conspirator in some terrible plot. What on earth did you
mean by it? I could not suppose it was anything important, but I really
had the curiosity, as I was coming to this part of the country anyway,
to go to you and see what it was.”

The man who had been mending the horse-rake having gone into the barn,
Chap and Mr. Alexander Muller seated themselves on the log, and the
former told the whole story of the trouble about the mortgage, and of
Mr. Berkeley’s note, and of the present search after him.

“These things are no secret,” said Chap; “and, as I know you want to
find Mr. Godfrey, perhaps you will help us. And if you can’t do that
you may be of good in some other ways. For money must be raised, if
Mr. Berkeley isn’t found soon, and if you tell what you know about the
treasure on the sunken ship, perhaps some one will advance some funds.”

Mr. Muller smiled, and then he said,--

“I wish very much to see Mr. Berkeley, but, from what you tell me,
there must be other people who wish to see him even more than I do. I
imagine it will be of no use for me to go over to his place just now.”

“It might be of a great deal of use,” said Chap, “especially if you
would see the lawyers and Mr. Welford, and tell them a part, at least,
of what you know.”

Mr. Muller laughed and shook his head.

“I shan’t open my business before any of those people,” he said. “You
will understand when all is revealed. But I expect to be in this part
of the country for some time, and if I get on Mr. Berkeley’s track I’ll
help to find him.”

“That would be capital,” cried Chap. “You must be good at that sort of
thing.”

“Oh, splendid!” said Mr. Muller.

“And if you should find him,” said Chap, “don’t forget to tell him all
about the mortgage affair; and let him know that if he doesn’t hurry
home he might as well stay away altogether, for everything he has will
be sold. And now I must get on. I’ve been here too long.”

Bidding Mr. Muller a hasty good-by, Chap mounted Kit and rode rapidly
away. A short distance above this barn-yard the road turned to the
right towards the main road, which it joined about half a mile away;
but it also branched just here a little to the left, and Chap, who was
riding very fast, and whose mind was full of the interview with the
man with the black straw hat, did not notice the right-hand turn, but
kept on the branch-road to the left, which led down into a wide valley
and joined the main road at last three miles farther on. Chap made no
more stops for information, and when, after a hard gallop, he reached
the junction with the main road, he thought it was the point at which
he had agreed to meet Phil, although it was in reality several miles
beyond.

Phil, on his road, heard nothing of any solitary traveller, and he
became convinced that unless Chap had found some clue, the sooner they
retraced their steps and tried some other track the better.

He kept on, however, to the point of meeting, and was not surprised at
not seeing Chap, for he expected to have to wait for him, as his friend
was a great fellow for having long discourses with people.

The road here was bordered on both sides by thick woods, and there was
not a house in sight. Phil had learned from his uncle how to hobble a
horse, which he now proceeded to do, and allowed Jouncer to graze on
the plentiful grass by the roadside.

Then he thought he would try and get a shot at something with Old
Bruden. He was sure the gun was loaded, although he had forgotten
that fact when he started with it in the morning, and it would be a
good thing to get the loads out of it, which might as well be done by
shooting something as in any other way.

Perhaps he could get a crack at some big bird in these woods. He tried
both barrels with the ramrod, and found they each contained a very
heavy load. He had forgotten who last loaded the gun, but supposed it
was some of Chap’s work, who believed in plenty of powder and shot.

He then put on a couple of caps and strolled about for some little
time, but found nothing to shoot at. Returning to the junction, he
leaned the gun against a tree and gazed down the other road, hoping to
see Chap coming. Then, as he walked about, whistling, his attention was
attracted by an apple hanging on a tree near the road.

Years before, there had been a house in the little clearing here, and
there were a few old apple-trees still growing about the spot.

Phil could not find anything to throw at this apple, which looked as if
it was ripe enough for a boy, but it was not far above him, and might
be hooked down. He thought of the ramrod of the gun, and getting it,
soon jerked the apple from its twig.

It was not a very good apple, but Phil ate it with relish, and thought
he would very much like to have another. There was no more fruit on
that tree, and so, ramrod in hand, he went rambling about looking for
another tree and another apple.

When Emile Touron left Hyson Hall, there was a good deal remaining of
the long summer afternoon, and as he knew he would have to pay for the
horse for the whole day, he determined to get all the good out of him
that he could. Besides, he felt too angry to go back to his lodgings.
He would rather be alone and have a horse to shout at and cut with a
whip. As for eating, he had forgotten all about it.

Instead, therefore, of turning into town, he drove along the road
which led to the north, and which Phil and Chap had taken that morning.
He drove rapidly, and did not intend to return to town until he had had
a good day’s use of the horse.




[Illustration]

CHAPTER XXII.

IN WHICH THERE IS A GOOD DEAL OF FAST TRAVELLING.


Meantime Philip was wandering about the edge of the woods, with a
ramrod in his hand, looking for an apple-tree.

As there could be no such trees in the woods except those that had
been planted around the house,--which had disappeared so long ago that
even the clearing in which it had stood had grown up,--it is not to
be supposed that Phil’s search could be crowned with much success;
but still he kept on, peering about the trees and bushes until he had
wandered some distance from the junction of the roads.

It was at this time that Emile Touron, driving northward in the
grocer’s buggy, had nearly reached the point which Phil had appointed
for the meeting of Chap and himself.

Seeing a horse grazing by the roadside, Emile drew up, and then
stopped. Looking at the horse intently, he recognized him as Jouncer,
of whom he had made several careful studies during his visit to Hyson
Hall.

Apprehension of danger immediately seized him. If that horse were here,
the boys could not be far off.

He turned his buggy in the road, the wheels making but little noise
in the soft dust, and was about to drive back again, when he caught
sight of Phil’s gun leaning against a tree. Farther up the road he saw
Phil--some two or three hundred feet away, with his back towards him.

Drawing up the horse, Emile threw the reins around the dashboard,
stepped lightly from the buggy, and stealthily approaching the tree, he
seized the gun. Raising the hammers, he saw that the gun was capped,
and ready to fire.

Now he felt like another person. Seeing neither Chap nor his horse,
he quickly concluded that that individual had gone away somewhere,
and that Phil was waiting for him. He had been afraid to meet his
armed enemies, but now the tables were turned. All his rage and
vindictiveness boiled up afresh, and, going out into the road, with the
gun in his hand, he gave a yell.

Phil instantly turned, and stood astounded.

“Ha! ha!” cried Emile. “Now I have you! I can shoot you like one dog,
if I choose. Now, you beg my pardon for what you haf done, or I will
blow your head off!”

Whether Phil heard these words or not it is impossible to say, but
certain it is that he did not heed them. Brandishing his ramrod, he
rushed towards Emile. He felt sure that the latter was merely trying to
frighten him, and he did not intend to be frightened. He did intend,
however, to take that gun from him.

But he did not know the French boy’s nature. Surprised at Phil’s
temerity, Emile again shouted to him, saying that if he did not stop
he would certainly fire, at the same time cocking both barrels, and
raising the gun to his shoulder. His threat was not an idle one. Phil
approached so furiously, brandishing his ramrod, that Emile would not
have dared to let him come near him. He was much less afraid of the
consequences, if he fired, than of Phil’s attacking him, and being
assisted in a moment, perhaps, by Chap. He had found out before that
Phil, though a smaller boy than himself, was a tough fellow to handle.
And now he carried a weapon of some kind. He quickly made up his mind
to warn Phil again, and then, if he did not stop, to fire. Angry as
he was, he did not wish to kill the boy, and determined to fire at
his legs. He did not think of the legal consequences of such an act,
nor that the report of his gun would probably make his horse run away.
There was nothing in his mind but mingled rage and fear.

“Stop!” he cried; but Phil did not stop.

It may be supposed that no boy would have the courage to run forward
thus in the face of a loaded gun, but Phil had not the slightest idea
that Emile would dare to fire.

Hurriedly aiming the gun below Phil’s body, Emile pulled one trigger.
As he did so, the thought flashed through Emile’s mind that if he did
not hit the young rascal at first, this would show him that he was in
earnest. As the hammer came down, the cap exploded with a loud snap,
but the gun did not go off.

Phil stopped short and turned pale. Was the fellow really going to kill
him? In another instant he would have turned and fled to the shelter
of the woods, but Emile, frightened at his failure, and reckless of
what he was doing, aimed the gun at Phil’s head, and pulled the other
trigger. Again there was a snap, but no report.

The color rushed back into Phil’s face at this second mis-fire. The
gun was harmless now, and again he dashed at Emile, but the latter
instantly turned and ran for his buggy, carrying the gun. He did not
drop it, because he was afraid that Phil would use it against him.

Phil was after him in hot haste, but Emile reached the buggy first,
and springing in, shouted to the horse. The animal was already getting
restive, having his head turned homeward, and immediately started away.

Phil got near enough to the buggy to make a grasp at the hinder part of
it, but Emile had seized the reins and whip, and at this instant giving
the horse a cut, the animal sprang away, and the buggy was soon out of
Phil’s reach and whirling rapidly towards town.

Phil stopped, and ran to Jouncer, hurriedly unhobbling him, determined
to ride after that young rascal and denounce him to the authorities of
the town. He forgot all about Chap. His only thought was to go after
Emile.

But Chap had not forgotten himself. He had waited a good while at the
upper junction, and at last had made up his mind that Phil must have
been detained at some house below, and that he would ride down and
meet him. It was of course impossible that he should have passed the
junction. So it happened that just as Phil was about to start, Chap
came galloping along on Kit.

As quickly and clearly as possible under the circumstances, Phil told
his friend what had happened, and the two started off on a gallop down
the road.

Chap was very angry, and deeply deplored the fact that he had not
arrived a few minutes sooner. Nothing but a State’s prison would stop
this French boy’s atrocities. And now he had actually stolen a gun!
This was enough, even if nothing else could be proved. They could
certainly shut him up now. Phil had about the same ideas, but he did
not say so much.

Jouncer was a horse of great endurance, and was well fed every day, and
he galloped bravely; but Kit had been out to pasture for a month or
more, and doing no work had had no grain, and this swift pace, added
to the previous travel of the day, soon began to tell upon him, and he
weakened visibly.

“Chap,” cried Phil, “we will have to hold up! Kit can’t stand it. We
shall kill him if we keep on.”

They stopped, and it was evident that what Phil said was true. Kit was
puffing and heaving at a terrible rate. The boys were now at least
seven or eight miles from Hyson Hall, and it was plain that Kit could
not get there that night.

Chap proposed that Phil should ride on after Emile while he went to the
nearest house and stayed all night with the horse, but Phil was not
willing to do this.

He felt that he ought to see for himself that Kit found comfortable
quarters, and he was not certain that Jouncer ought to be galloped
for the five miles that lay between them and the town, and gallop he
certainly must to overtake that French boy, who would have no pity for
his horse.

So the two companions went slowly onward, leading Kit, until they came
to a house where Phil had stopped earlier in the day, and where the
people agreed to keep the boys and the horses for the night.

“I should feel worried about things at home,” said Phil, “if I didn’t
know that Joel will be back before dark, and that Susan will make
him and his mother come up to the house to sleep. They did that once
before, when uncle and I were away for a night.”

Emile certainly had no mercy on the horse he drove. He had looked back
when he reached the top of a rise in the road, and had seen the boys
riding after him, and he believed they were still in pursuit.

He was afraid to throw away the gun for fear they would pick it up,
and if they got it he felt sure they would shoot him. He knew they
must have ammunition with them, for he had seen the powder-horn and
shot-flask tied to Jouncer’s saddle.

When he neared the town he felt almost sure he had distanced them, and
he slackened his pace, but he found no opportunity of getting rid of
the gun. Here and there he met people returning from their work, and
although dusk was coming on, it was by no means dark enough for him to
throw away a gun without attracting observation.

But he felt he must get rid of it. No one must see it in his
possession. If he could hide it until after dark he would throw it into
the river.

When he entered the town, he drove up a side street to his tavern, and
stopped before he reached the corner of the main street on which the
house fronted. There was a back door open, and no one was to be seen
in this part of the premises. With the gun in his hand, Emile slipped
quietly into the house and ran up-stairs to his room without meeting
any one. There he laid Old Bruden between the two mattresses of his
bed, and came down-stairs again. Jumping into the buggy he drove round
to the grocer’s, delivered up the horse and buggy, and paid for their
hire.

Then he walked into the tavern and made inquiries about supper. While
waiting for this meal his mind became greatly troubled. Those boys
would certainly be along directly, and they might have him arrested.
The house was now lighted up, and people were going about. He was
afraid he would have no chance very soon to get that gun out of the
house.

Then a thought struck him. Perhaps the gun was not loaded after all,
and in that case he could assert that he was only trying to frighten
Phil. He ran up-stairs, locked the door, and took the gun from the bed.
There was no ramrod in it, but Emile had a long thin switch which he
had cut for a walking-stick, and with this he measured the outside of
the barrels and then the inside. The gun was certainly loaded, and he
had no means of getting the loads out.

With a sickening feeling of fear he put Old Bruden back between the
mattresses, smoothed the bedclothes, and went down-stairs. Then he
walked over to the railroad station and asked when the next train would
start for New York.

The ticket agent told him that the only train for New York that evening
was due in a few minutes; in fact, it was coming then.

Emile hesitated but a minute, and then he bought a ticket, and when
the train arrived he stepped on board. He had had nothing to eat since
breakfast, but he would buy something on the road. As for his baggage
he would telegraph for that, or he would abandon it altogether.

[Illustration: With a sickening feeling of fear he put Old Bruden back
between the mattresses]

His fear had now gained such power over him that he was impatient and
restless because the train did not start the moment he entered it.
The two minutes’ stop seemed like a quarter of an hour to him. But at
last it moved away.

He did not go to New York that night, but stopped at a large town, got
his supper and slept there, and then early in the morning he went on.
This course would be wise, he thought, in case they should telegraph
after him.




[Illustration]

CHAPTER XXIII.

MR. GODFREY BERKELEY IS HEARD FROM.


When the boys arrived at Hyson Hall the next morning--for Phil thought
it better to go home before continuing the search for his uncle--they
found great trouble there.

Joel had not returned at all, and Susan, not knowing what had happened
to him or the boys, was in sore distress. Phœnix had been obliged to
go home at dark, and she had sat up all night. She had determined to
send Jenny to the neighbors in the morning, but when day broke she had
formed a different plan.

The boys might be ever so far away, looking for Mr. Berkeley, and there
ought to be some one there who would attend to things. She was afraid
that Joel had gone off and got drunk.

There had been times when he had done this thing, and she could imagine
no other reason for his staying away and sending no message. So she
resolved to send Jenny to her father to ask him if he could not come to
Hyson Hall, to stay a day or two until things were straightened out.
She could not be left alone another night.

After a very early breakfast, Jenny had walked to town and taken the
train for a station within a mile of her father’s house. Susan was
rejoiced to see the boys, but was not surprised to hear them say that
they must start off again after breakfast. But they did not start off
again.

When Phil heard of Joel’s continued absence, he made up his mind that
they would not leave home until either Joel or Jenny’s father should
arrive; but he must ride back to town to give information in regard to
Emile.

They had passed by the town so early that morning that he thought Mr.
Harrison--the lawyer to whom he intended to make his complaint--was
probably still in bed.

As soon as possible he started off, leaving Chap behind in charge of
the stock and other farm affairs, with special injunctions to take good
care of Kit and get him in condition for another trip on the morrow.

Chap determined that Kit should be well fed that day, but when he went
to the grain-bins he was surprised to find them all empty. Kit and the
two work-horses had to get along as well as they could on hay and a
little corn which Chap found in the corn-house.

When Phil reached Mr. Harrison’s office he introduced himself,--for
that gentleman did not know him,--and then told the tale of Emile’s
attempting to shoot him, and of his stealing his gun; also relating
what Susan had told him of Emile’s conduct at Hyson Hall.

Mr. Harrison listened quietly, and then asked,--

“Were there any witnesses to young Touron’s attempt on your life?”

“No, sir,” said Phil; “my friend did not get there until it was all
over.”

“And he did not see Touron go away with the gun?”

“No,” said Phil; “but he saw the buggy far up the road, and he knew the
French boy had the gun, because I told him so.”

Mr. Harrison smiled.

“I am afraid you cannot make out much of a case without witnesses,” he
said, “and as I have heard of other troubles at your place in which
Touron fared very badly, it would not do to begin proceedings with
nothing to back them but your assertions. However, I will look into
the matter further, but I will first mention that I have just heard
from Mr. Markle, who is the Tourons’ lawyer, that he has received
a despatch from New York, in which young Touron states that he was
obliged to leave this town on account of a conspiracy against his
safety; and also states that his father desires instant despatch in
settling up this foreclosure business. As he is his father’s accredited
agent, Mr. Markle feels bound to obey his instructions, and I see
nothing to prevent the Hyson Hall property passing out of the hands of
its present proprietors. I have investigated the matter thoroughly,
and find there is quite a large sum due the holder of the mortgage.
As there seems no money to pay this, nothing remains but to sell the
place, since Touron is so determined to push matters.”

“I suppose all that will happen,” said Phil, mournfully, “unless I can
soon find my uncle. But it is all stuff about a conspiracy against
Emile Touron. He ran away because he was afraid I would inform against
him.”

“That may be,” said Mr. Harrison; “but I don’t see how it is to be
proved. Suppose we walk round to the place where he lodged and ask some
questions there.”

Mr. Harrison and Phil went to the tavern, and were there informed by
the proprietor himself that Mr. Touron had come in from a drive the
evening before, had taken the horse and buggy to the place where they
had been hired, and had then walked to the tavern and asked if supper
was ready.

In reply to Mr. Harrison’s questions, the tavern-keeper said he was
certain young Touron had no gun with him, because he would have been
sure to notice it, and he also asserted that there was no gun in
Touron’s room; because, having received a message from Mr. Markle,
informing him that Touron had been obliged to leave town suddenly,
and requesting him to take care of his effects, he had gone up to his
lodger’s room and packed all his belongings into his valise, which he
intended to keep until his bill was paid. There was no gun in the room.

Phil and Mr. Harrison then went down to the grocer’s house, and were
there assured that no gun had been in the buggy when it was brought
home the evening before.

“Now,” said Mr. Harrison to Phil, when they went out on the street, “it
is quite clear that young Touron did not bring a gun to town with him.
Therefore, if your story is correct, the only thing he could have done
with it was to throw it away on the road. I am willing to do everything
I can to help you prove what you assert, and I will send my clerk on a
horse to make search along the road over which Touron passed. He can
also ask questions of the people who live on the road. Perhaps some of
them have found the gun. You can go with him, if you like, and help him
look for the gun, as well as show him how far along the road to go.”

Phil and Mr. Harrison’s clerk soon rode off together, and the road from
the town to the place where Phil had waited for Chap was thoroughly
searched.

There were not many bushes by the fences, but all these were well
looked into, and the people at the houses were questioned, but no gun
was found, and no one had seen a gun by the roadside or in the fields.

The afternoon was half gone when Phil rode mournfully home, and the
clerk returned to make his report to Mr. Harrison.

When Phil reached Hyson Hall he found Joel. The latter had not been
drunk, but had had trouble. He had gone much farther than he had
expected, and had been obliged to stay away all night. He had not
considered this a matter of much consequence, for he supposed Phil and
Chap would be at the house, and that they could attend to the barn
affairs for one night at least.

The milking was always done by Jenny and Joel’s mother. But he had not
been able to set any hands at all. Disengaged men were very few, and
those he saw were not willing to come to a place where they probably
would not be paid for their work. Everybody seemed to have heard of the
troubles at Hyson Hall, and to know that the house and everything on
the place would soon be sold by the sheriff.

He had also tried at several places to buy some oats, for those ordered
from Trumbull’s had not come, but nobody would sell him any except for
cash.

Phil could not help thinking that Joel ought to have told him some time
before that they were so nearly out of oats, but he did not find any
fault with the man. He seemed to have managed matters so badly himself
that he had not the heart to blame anybody else.

“I guess we will have to turn the horses out to grass,” he said, “until
they are sold.” And then he went to the house.

Towards evening Helen Webster came to see her brother and Phil. She had
expected to be there sooner, but her mother had wished to come with
her, and so the visit was deferred; but there seemed to be no time when
there was not something which Mrs. Webster ought to do, and at last
Helen had come by herself.

She told the boys of her visit to Mr. Welford, which was the first
they had heard of it, and was much surprised to find that Phil had not
received a letter from the banker entirely exonerating him from the
charges that had been made.

“He ought to have written to you right away!” said Helen, indignantly;
“to tell you that he had found out that the things he had said about
you were not true. He was quick enough to write when he had fault to
find.”

Phil was very much comforted by Helen’s account of her visit to Mr.
Welford. He did not think much would come of it, but it pleased him to
know he had some one to speak for him.

“I am ever so much obliged to you and your mother,” he said; “but I
think Mr. Welford won’t be in any hurry to say he was mistaken. These
people don’t believe you when you go to them and tell them the plain
truth.”

And then, to prove his position, he gave Helen a full account of all
that had recently happened.

Helen was much affected by what Phil told her. She was already so much
incensed against Emile Touron that she could find little more to say
about him except that he was the most wicked person she knew of, and
that he certainly ought to be put in prison. Her grief at the probable
sale of Hyson Hall was very great.

“To think of this beautiful place being taken away from your family,”
she said, “and given to those horrible French people! It is too
dreadful! If my father were rich I would get him to come and buy the
place, and then your uncle could buy it back whenever he chose.”

“I was thinking of that myself,” said Chap; “but father couldn’t do it.
There isn’t anybody about here who could bid against those Tourons.
They are rich people, and they want this place.”

“But isn’t there any way of raising money?” asked Helen, anxiously.

“Yes,” said Chap, “there is a way, and the thing ought to have been
done long ago. That wreck down there----”

“Now, look here, Chap,” interrupted Phil, “it’s of no use to talk about
that wreck. Even if there is any treasure in it, we couldn’t get at it
without first spending a lot of money, and that is what we haven’t got.
No, Helen,” he continued, “there isn’t any way of raising money that
I can see. There isn’t anything I could sell, except some horses and
cows, and they wouldn’t bring anything like enough. Besides, I haven’t
any right to sell uncle’s property, even to pay his debts.”

“No,” said Chap; “and if you were to do anything of that kind your
uncle would come along next day and make a jolly row about selling his
stock for half-price.”

“Couldn’t you take boarders?” suggested Helen. “That is a splendid way
to make money in the summer-time, and this house is big enough to hold
ever so many of them.”

“That would be capital!” cried Chap. “I’d just like to stay here, Phil,
and help you run a boarding-house. I could ride over the country and
buy up butter and eggs.”

“And bring them home all mixed together,” said Helen, laughing. “I
don’t think you would make much of a manager, Chap, if the people were
at all particular.”

“Now, Helen,” said Chap, “you know I am very particular.”

“There is no use arguing about that,” interrupted Phil. “We couldn’t
get any boarders to come here. They’d be afraid they’d be sold with the
rest of the property.”

“Don’t talk that way, Phil,” said Helen. “It sounds awful.”

The party was now joined by Phœnix.

“I didn’t know whether I’d find you at home or not,” he said to Phil;
“but I came over to see. Sorry I couldn’t stay last night, for I left
Susan in a dreadful stew. Didn’t find your uncle, I suppose?”

“No,” said Phil.

He was about to begin an account of his adventures the day before, when
Phœnix pulled a letter out of his pocket and handed it to him.

“I was in town this afternoon,” he said, “and the people in the
post-office gave me this to bring to you. It is a drop letter, and must
have been put in yesterday. They said they saw you in town, but guessed
you must have forgotten to stop at the office.”

“I did forget,” said Phil, as he took the letter. Glancing at the
address, his face brightened. “It’s from uncle!” he exclaimed.

“Good! good!” cried Helen, clapping her hands. “Now everything will be
all right! I felt sure all the time that something good would happen!”

Phil tore open the envelope and took out the note it contained. It was
very short, and he read it aloud. He had no secrets from his friends.
This was the note:

  “You have grieved me to the heart. I expected to be with you for
  a time to-day, but little did I suppose I should be met with an
  insult--for it was nothing less--before I set foot on my own land. I
  don’t wish to see you for the present, and I cannot say when you will
  hear from me again.

                                                                 “G. B.”

Phil stood, pale, with the letter in his hand, and said not a word.
Helen burst into tears.

“That is too cruel!” she said. “What does he mean?”

Chap’s face flushed, and he clinched his fist.

“Do you suppose,” he said to Phil, “that he got his back up in that
way because you didn’t send the gun to him?”

But Phil made no answer. He still stood with his eyes fixed on the
floor. This was the most cruel blow he had ever received, and it
stunned him.

Phœnix said nothing, but his mind was filled with an earnest wish that
he had not stopped at the post-office.

“Chap,” said Phil, directly, in a husky voice that did not seem like
his own, “I won’t bother you to stay here to-night, but I would like
you to come round in the morning. Good-by, all!”

And he went into the house with the letter in his hand.

Helen and the two boys walked down the porch-steps without a word. But
when they were some distance from the house, Chap suddenly stopped and
shook his fist.

“The fellow that ought to have his head punched worst of all,” he
cried, “is that uncle!”

Half an hour later Phil was sitting gloomily on the porch, looking over
the fields, when a man came through the hall and out of the front door
to speak to him.

“I am Jenny’s father,” said the man. “She said you were a little hard
pushed and needed help, and so I came over with her.”

Phil rose and looked up at the person addressing him. To his surprise,
he recognized him as the man who had held his horse on the day he
had violated a town ordinance by tying Jouncer to a tree. The man
recognized him also.

“Hello!” he cried. “So you are young Hyson, are you? I’ve heard a good
deal about you, but never knew who you were before. I suppose you
haven’t been tying any more horses to trees lately?”




[Illustration]

CHAPTER XXIV.

THE GROCER’S BUGGY ONCE MORE.


John Morgan, Jenny’s father, was a very sensible, practical man, and he
had, besides, a genial and kindly humor which had a good deal of effect
that evening in quieting and comforting the troubled soul of poor Phil.

The two sat together for an hour or more after supper, talking over the
various affairs connected with the farm. Phil felt so utterly crushed
by his uncle’s note, which to him seemed so hard and undeserved, and
which, coming at such a time, was doubly severe in its effect, that at
first he took no interest in such matters.

But John Morgan knew of the boy’s troubles, having had very full
accounts of them from Jenny, though, indeed, nothing had been said to
him of Mr. Berkeley’s letter, and, seeing what a melancholy mood he
was in, he thought the best way to comfort him was to talk of every-day
matters in as cheerful and hopeful a way as possible.

He told Phil that as his harvest was over, and as his two older boys
could attend to the work on his place, he would stay here and give his
help until other arrangements could be made.

He had been talking with Joel, and knew pretty well what ought to be
done. He knew of a man who would come to him, and with this assistance
he and Joel would get in the wheat crop. As for feed for the stock, and
whatever else of the kind was needed on the place, he would see that it
was supplied, and when the wheat was threshed, everything could be paid
for.

Although these were the least of Phil’s troubles, it was some
satisfaction to know that the farm affairs would be made all right.

John Morgan also spoke about the mortgage and Mr. Berkeley’s absence;
and, although he could not say anything about either of these things
which could give any real encouragement, it was pleasant to Phil to be
talked to by a man who was both sensible and sympathetic.

The next day Chap came around and proposed that they should set off
again in the search for Mr. Berkeley, but Phil would not consent. If
his uncle was so angry with him that he did not want to see him, he
did not feel like forcing himself upon him.

He felt besides that they could not find his uncle now. There had been
some chance, indeed, when they started off before; but by this time his
uncle was probably hundreds of miles away. He had no doubt dropped the
note into the post-office just before he left town.

The next day was Sunday, and on Monday morning Phil rose with a feeling
that something must soon happen to put an end to this strange state of
affairs. From what Mr. Harrison had told him, he supposed that legal
proceedings would begin with the beginning of the week. What would
happen to him if the place were sold he did not know. His uncle was
his nearest relative, and he did not seem to count for much just now.
Perhaps he would go and stay with Chap for a time, until something
turned up. He could certainly do work enough to pay for his board. At
any rate, it was too doleful a thing to walk about the place and talk
of his misery, so he took off his coat, and went out into the field to
help the men bind the sheaves.

Chap, like a good fellow, took off his coat also, and went out to help
his friend. Binding wheat, he declared, was one of the jolliest sports
in the world. He would have preferred, however, to go to work upon
the old wreck, and get money enough to do away at once with all the
troubles that hung over Hyson Hall. But it was of no use to talk to
Phil of anything of that kind now.

While the boys were at dinner that day, Susan was standing on the front
porch in a very disconsolate mood. The whole household, indeed, felt
the shadow of the coming troubles, and no one, except John Morgan, made
even an attempt to be cheerful. Susan had many reasons for feeling
badly. She pitied Phil very much, and her conscience reproached her for
having treated him so unkindly immediately after his uncle went away.
But not only did she grieve that the Berkeleys should lose their home,
but she was sorry on her own account. For many years Hyson Hall had
been her home, and she had expected it to be such for many years to
come. Her depression was greatly increased by the loss of Old Bruden.
Now that the Tourons had possession of the master’s gun, the matter in
her mind was pretty well settled.

While thinking over these things, she heard the sound of approaching
wheels. Looking up, she saw the grocer’s buggy and the grocer’s horse
coming towards the house. Her heart fell within her. It actually made
her sick to think that anybody--unless, indeed, it should be Mr.
Godfrey Berkeley--should come to that house. Visitors meant trouble.
This could not be the French boy coming back? No; it was two gentlemen.

She went into the dining-room to tell Phil of the approaching visitors.
Chap jumped up and looked out of the window.

“Borden and Tousey’s horse and buggy!” he exclaimed; “but I don’t know
the men. They are a couple of solemn-looking coves.”

Phil rose from the table, a little pale.

“Of course it’s the sheriff, or some of them,” he said. “I supposed
they’d come along to-day. Mr. Harrison told me that old Touron had
given orders to foreclose immediately.”

“What do they do?” asked Chap, a little nervously. “Do they turn you
right out, neck and heels?”

“All I know about it,” said Phil, “is that when a place has been
mortgaged, and the money that ought to have been paid hasn’t been paid,
the people that hold the mortgage have the matter closed up, and the
sheriff sells you out. Then, if these money-lenders want your property,
they buy it themselves; and after the sheriff takes out what is due to
them, and all other expenses, he gives you what’s left. But as things
sell awfully cheap at sheriff’s sales, there generally isn’t anything
left. Uncle told me about these things, and that’s what I remember of
it.”

Phil made this rather long speech as he was walking nervously about in
the dining-room, waiting till the visitors should get out of the buggy
and come to the house.

He did not feel at all like going out to meet them. Very soon there
were steps on the porch, and then a knock on the door. In a few moments
Susan came to Phil, and told him that two gentlemen wanted to see him
in the parlor.

“Shall I come with you?” whispered Chap.

“No,” said Phil. “Perhaps you’d better not.”

He felt that he could better bear it alone, and resolutely, but with a
fast-beating heart, he entered the parlor.

In five minutes more he rushed back into the dining-room, his eyes
sparkling, his face glowing. Seizing Chap by the arm, he exclaimed,--

“It isn’t the sheriff at all! It’s two of the steamboat men from the
city. They’ve come to pay us for running the Thomas Wistar ashore. What
they say we have earned will more than pay the Tourons’ interest.”

Then he dragged Chap, amazed and speechless, into the parlor.




[Illustration]

CHAPTER XXV.

OLD BRUDEN MAKES AN IMPRESSION.


When the grocer’s buggy drove away from Hyson Hall it left two happy
boys behind. A woman was soon added to the number of rejoicers, for
Susan was told the great news, and Jenny, when she heard it, ran to
the wheatfield to tell her father and Joel. The whole world seemed
more cheerful to the people of Hyson Hall. The sun shone with great
brightness, although this had been noticed before by the workers in the
harvest-field.

Everything out-doors, as well as in-doors, seemed to have something
bright and sparkling about it; and a fresh breeze sprang up, which, if
the bells had still been hanging on the roof, would have added a merry
peal to the rejoicing. But the bells were not there. Susan and Phœnix
had taken them down soon after young Touron had made his precipitate
retreat from the place.

The two gentlemen who came in the buggy were connected with the
railroad company which owned the Thomas Wistar and other steamboats
plying upon the river.

Full reports of the manner in which the boat had been run ashore had
been given to the company; and now that everything of value had been
taken from the Wistar, and a calculation had been made of the amount
of the loss, and the value of the goods, machinery, etc., which had
been saved, the two gentlemen had been sent to Boontown, to make
arrangements for compensating the persons who had been instrumental in
saving a portion of the boat and cargo.

Of these, the young fellows who had boarded the burning steamboat and
had run her ashore deserved the principal portion of the salvage-money.

Both the gentlemen were acquainted with Mr. Welford, and they went
first to his office to make inquiries in regard to Phil and his
companions. Now it was that the good effect of Helen’s visit to the
banker began to show itself.

Had these gentlemen come to see Mr. Welford before Helen’s warm defence
of Phil had made the banker investigate, as far as he was able, the
character and conduct of that young person, they would probably have
heard that it would be extremely injudicious to put money into the
hands of a boy who might spend hundreds of dollars in discharging old
servants and in carrying on all sorts of wild and disorderly pranks in
his uncle’s house.

But Mr. Welford spoke in a very different vein. Instead of urging the
officers of the company to delay the payment of Phil’s portion of the
salvage until the arrival of his uncle and guardian, he had advised a
full and immediate payment of the money due, feeling sure that Phil
would use it towards paying the interest on the mortgage. He did not
know exactly how much would be necessary to stop the foreclosure
proceedings, but hoped Phil’s share would be sufficient.

The gentlemen admitted that the boys’ services had been of great value.
Had the Wistar floated on until the tide turned, she would have turned
around with it, for her bow was more heavily loaded than her stern,
and, in that case, the wind would have swept the flames over the whole
vessel, and everything on board would have been consumed; or, if she
had floated much longer, she would probably have burned sufficiently
to have sunk in mid-channel. But the boys had prevented all that by
bringing her into such an excellent moorage as Spatterdock Point.

When the two gentlemen talked to Phil in the parlor of Hyson Hall,
they made him understand how thoroughly the company appreciated the
brave efforts of himself and companions to save their property, and
named the sum which was considered their due.

They then asked the full names of the three boys to whom the money
should be paid. Chap hereupon protested that none of the money was due
him, for he was not on the Wistar at all, and did not do anything to
help get her ashore.

“That’s nonsense!” cried Phil. “If you hadn’t stayed on the row-boat we
wouldn’t have gone on the steamboat.”

“But if the fire had burst out under you,” said Chap, “it wouldn’t have
hurt me. At any rate, you’ve got to have my share, and Phœnix will give
you his, too, for if you don’t have it all, this place will be sold,
Wistar or no Wistar.”

“Phœnix will have something to say about that,” said Phil.

It was finally agreed that a cheque for the full amount should be made
out to Mr. Welford’s order and sent to him, and he and the boys could
arrange as to the proportion each should receive. Then the gentlemen
left.

“If Phœnix don’t give you every copper of his share,” said Chap, “he’ll
get a worse thrashing than he gave Emily.”

“Who’ll give it to him?” asked Phil.

“I will,” replied Chap. “You needn’t laugh. A fellow can do big things
when he has justice on his side.”

The boys did not go into the harvest-field again that afternoon. They
both went over to the Poole place, to tell Phœnix the wonderful news.

“It pays better to run a wreck into the mud,” said Phœnix, when he
heard the story, “than to hoist one out of it.”

“Now, look here,” cried Chap, “it’s no use talking that way. Just wait
till our wreck is hoisted out of the mud!”

“All right,” said Phœnix, “I’ll wait.”

When the matter of the division was talked of, Phœnix fully agreed with
Chap to hand over the whole amount to Phil, and to wait for repayment
until Mr. Berkeley’s return. Phœnix, however, made one reservation: If
there should be any money left over after the Tourons’ claims had been
fully paid, he would like to have a dollar and a quarter. He had lost
his knife, and it would take that much money to buy him another like
it. It was a dreadfully awkward thing to be without a knife. This was
agreed to, and the matter was settled.

That evening, Mr. Alexander Muller came into Boontown, after a long
walk. He determined to stay in town for some days, and took lodgings
at the tavern which young Touron had lately left. The room that Emile
had occupied was given to him, and soon after supper he was glad to
hang his black straw hat on the rack in the hall, and go up-stairs to
bed.

But he did not sleep well. He had bad dreams. He dreamed that he was
taking a journey by rail, but he did not travel in the ordinary way.
Instead of being in a car which ran upon the track, he was lying at
full length upon a rail, which was carried by two brakemen. This rail
seemed much unlike other rails. It was not smooth and even, but was
full of jagged points and knots and sharp bends, which ran into his
back and made him very uncomfortable. He moved and wriggled about, but
could not get on any part of the rail where it was smooth. He tried to
fall off, but he found that this was impossible. So he went on and on,
the brakemen sometimes stumbling and falling on their knees, which made
the jagged points run into him worse than ever.

At last he woke up, and when his eyes were fully opened, he said to
himself,--

“I never slept so uncomfortably in my life. My back aches as if it had
been threshed with a flail. There must be something in this bed.”

He got up, struck a match, and lighted a candle. He turned down the
bedclothes, and then turned down the upper mattress, which was very
thin. Under this he found a double-barrelled shot-gun. Mr. Muller was
greatly astonished.

“No wonder I slept badly,” he said, “lying on this thing.”

Then he took up the gun, and sat on the side of the bed, thinking. He
had heard some talk that evening, at the supper-table, about a French
boy who stole a gun from young Berkeley, and also attempted to shoot
him. He knew that this was the room which had been occupied by a French
boy, because the landlord had mentioned it when he accompanied him
up-stairs. Naturally, therefore, he connected the gun with the story he
had heard.

Since his interview with Chap Webster in the barn-yard, he had thought
a good deal about the story the boy had told him of the troubles at
Hyson Hall. He rather liked Chap, although he had been a good deal
provoked at him when he read the postal-card which had made him an
object of ridicule at his boarding-house in New York. He had never
seen Philip Berkeley, but the fact of his having taken a good deal of
trouble to restore him his black straw hat, by posting up a notice to
its owner, and leaving it in a place where it could be conveniently
called for, had impressed him with the idea that Phil was a sensible
and considerate boy. He felt willing, therefore, to do all he could to
help the young fellow who was put to so much trouble by the absence
of his uncle; and as he had, besides, a very strong desire on his own
account to find Mr. Godfrey Berkeley, he had made a good many inquiries
about that gentleman at the different places he had visited during the
last few days, but had received no information whatever.

“I think,” said he to himself, at last, “that I will put this gun back
where I found it; but I won’t put it across the bed, as it was before.
There is room enough here for us both to lie very comfortably.”

So he laid Old Bruden on the farther side of the bed, with its muzzle
pointed a little outward, so that he should not be incommoded, in case
it should choose to go off in the night. He could not find out whether
it was loaded or not, because there was no ramrod to the gun, but he
felt perfectly safe with its muzzle pointed away from him. He had often
slept with a loaded pistol under his pillow.




[Illustration]

CHAPTER XXVI.

MR. TOURON ATTENDS PERSONALLY TO HIS AFFAIRS.


The next day but one after the visit of the two gentlemen to Hyson
Hall, Mr. Touron, at his residence in New York, read in his morning
paper a short account of the boys who had saved part of the cargo of
a burning steamboat, by running her ashore. The name and residence of
Philip Berkeley were given, and mention was made of the handsome sum he
and his companions were to receive for their services.

The French gentleman instantly suspected the effect which this event
would have upon himself. Philip Berkeley would pay off the interest
on the mortgage, and Hyson Hall would not be sold by the sheriff nor
bought by the Tourons.

“What slow and stupid dolts these country lawyers are!” said Mr.
Touron, angrily, to himself. “That foreclosure should have been made
a week ago, and the whole affair settled, and Mr. Markle should have
bought the property in my name, as I directed him. I will go down there
myself. There may be time yet to finish up the matter.”

When Emile heard that his father was going to Boontown he asked that he
might go with him. He had not told his father anything about the affair
with the gun, having explained his sudden departure by saying that he
had heard that he would be attacked by the boys from Hyson Hall if he
stayed there any longer. But he had taken care to relate the treatment
he had received from Phœnix Poole and Susan, and he hoped that, by his
father’s influence, these outrages might be made to offset the little
affair on the road.

He also had a morbid desire to see if the gun were still between the
mattresses of the bed. He would make some pretence to go to the room he
had occupied, and if the gun were still there he would, at all hazards,
get it away and drop it into the river.

Perhaps they would stay at Boontown all night, and then he would have
a good chance. What he would do or say if he should not find the gun
where he had left it, he did not consider.

When Mr. Touron and his son arrived at Boontown they found that they
were in time. Mr. Harrison, who had heard of their arrival, hurried to
Mr. Welford’s office to know if the boys’ money had been received.

But, although Phil and his two friends had been with Mr. Welford in the
morning, and had arranged for the equal division of the salvage-money,
with the proviso, which was agreed upon in writing by the parents of
Chap and Phœnix, that all the money should for the present be placed at
Phil’s disposal, nothing had been heard from the railroad company. No
cheque had been received.

There was nothing surprising in this, as such things are generally not
done in great haste; but the delay, under the circumstances, was very
unfortunate.

But Mr. Welford was anxious to do whatever he thought he ought to do
in this matter, and he and Mr. Harrison went around to Mr. Markle’s
office, where the Tourons were.

Here there was soon a stormy scene. Old Mr. Touron would listen to
nothing that Mr. Welford or Mr. Harrison said, and insisted that
matters should be instantly settled.

He complained loudly of the treatment received by his son, and of the
negligence and delay of Mr. Markle. At last Mr. Harrison spoke up.

“If you choose to press your affair,” he said, “perhaps we can also
press something on our side.”

He then told the story, which Phil had given him, of Emile’s assault,
and the theft of the gun.

Mr. Alexander Muller had heard of the arrival of the Tourons, and had
strolled into Mr. Markle’s office, where nobody seemed to notice his
presence. Before Mr. Harrison had quite finished his story he went out.

“What you say to that?” asked Mr. Touron, of his son, when the lawyer
had finished.

“It is not true!” said Emile. “It is all one vile tale!”

And he went on, at considerable length, to assert that this was
only part of the persecution to which Phil and the other boys were
subjecting him.

“What proof have you of the charge you make?” asked Mr. Touron of Mr.
Harrison.

“We can bring forward the testimony of Philip Berkeley,” said Mr.
Harrison, “the boy whose life was threatened, and from whom the gun
was taken. His character has been proved to be an excellent one, and I
believe his testimony would be received by any jury in this county.”

“It is not as good as zat!” cried Emile, snapping his fingers. “I can
prove what he and ze ozers haf done to me, and my word will be as good
as his.”

“Excuse me for interrupting your conversation,” said Mr. Alexander
Muller, who had re-entered the room a minute or two before, “but this
gun which that young gentleman left between the mattresses of his bed,
on the evening when he so suddenly went away from town, may be useful
in proving the charge which Mr. Harrison has made.”

When Emile saw Old Bruden, he stepped back quickly, as if he were
afraid of it. Then he suddenly exclaimed,--

“I know not’ing about zat gun! I never saw it before!”

“The tavern-keeper informs me,” continued Mr. Muller, “that no one but
myself has occupied the room in which I found the gun since that young
gentleman left it. He also asserts that this gun belongs to Mr. Godfrey
Berkeley. He knows it very well. It has been in the neighborhood a
long time. It is also, as you see, without a ramrod, which corresponds
with young Berkeley’s story, as Mr. Harrison has just told it. But I
measured the barrels with a stick, and I find it is loaded, although
neither barrel went off, and these two caps were snapped,” and he
slightly raised the hammers, and showed the two split percussion-caps.
“I can swear,” he added, “that this is the condition in which I found
it.”

“I think,” said Mr. Welford, who had carefully attended to everything
that was going on, “that without any reference to the mortgage
proceedings or anything else, we should get out a warrant against this
young man. It is due to him, as well as to all parties concerned, that
the case should be investigated before a justice of the peace. You
must not think that we are trying to intimidate you,” he continued,
addressing Mr. Touron. “This matter, as I said before, has nothing to
do with the other affair.”

So saying, he left the office, accompanied by Mr. Harrison and
Alexander Muller, the latter carrying Old Bruden carefully under his
arm.

Mr. Touron leaned back in his chair and thought over the matter. He was
very much afraid that this charge against Emile could be proved. He had
no confidence in his son’s word, and the matter was a very serious one.

Mr. Touron was a prudent man, and considered the subject carefully. In
pressing the proceedings against Mr. Berkeley’s estate, he did not wish
to recover the money which was due him. He only desired that the place
might be sold by the sheriff that he might buy it. He already owned
property in Boontown, and had long wished to possess Hyson Hall, which
he intended to make his summer residence.

He knew that if he turned the Berkeleys out of it in the way he
proposed, it would make him unpopular in the neighborhood for a time;
but he supposed that this feeling would soon pass away, and he did not
care much about it. But if, almost at the same time that Hyson Hall
was sold by the sheriff, his son should be brought to trial here on a
charge that might send him to the penitentiary, his unpopularity might
be a very serious thing.

A jury selected from this vicinity would not be likely to deal gently
with Emile. He thought it better, therefore, to wait awhile before
pressing the foreclosure matter, and see how things would turn out. In
six months, more interest would be due on the mortgage, and he felt
quite certain that there would be no money to pay it. Godfrey Berkeley
would not have run away if he had not been bankrupt, and it was not at
all likely that there would be another steamboat for the boy to save.
In six months he could get the property without any trouble.

He therefore arranged with Mr. Markle that the foreclosure business
need not be pressed for the present, and left the office with his son,
intending to quietly take the first train for New York; but before he
reached the station Emile was arrested, and taken before a justice of
the peace.

Phil and Mr. Muller were sent for, and gave their testimony, and at the
conclusion of the examination, Emile was required to give bail for his
appearance in court early the next month. His father gave the required
bail, and the two left town.

Of course, this affair created a great deal of talk in Boontown, and it
interfered very much with the sleep of certain persons at Hyson Hall,
and at the Webster and Poole farms.

As soon as the cheque was received the interest on the mortgage was
paid, and the small sum remaining was divided among the three boys.
Phœnix bought his knife, which he kept for a long time, and which he
always called his Thomas Wistar.




[Illustration]

CHAPTER XXVII.

THE LONELY SUMACH.


Mr. Alexander Muller remained some days in Boontown, and for the
greater part of the time he was quite busy with the affairs which
brought him there. But there came a day in which he had nothing to do,
and it struck him it would be a good idea to take a holiday, and have a
long stroll in the woods. He was a good deal of a naturalist, and was
very fond of woodland rambles.

When he left Mr. Markle’s office, on the day of the Touron affair, he
had taken Old Bruden back to the tavern, where he supposed Phil would
call for it. But Phil’s mind had been much occupied, and he had not
thought of the gun. Mr. Muller determined, therefore, that he would
walk down some evening to Hyson Hall, and carry Old Bruden home.

But when he decided to give himself a holiday, he thought there could
be no objection to his taking Old Bruden with him, especially as he
intended afterwards to give himself the trouble to walk all the way to
Hyson Hall to return it.

The thought came into his mind that it would be well perhaps to leave
the gun in the condition it then was, as it might be used in the
approaching trial of young Touron. But Mr. Muller had his own ideas
about that trial, and he did not believe the gun would ever be needed.
Besides that, he did not know of any other gun he could borrow, and he
felt very much like having one with him, in case he should see anything
he wished to shoot. He therefore bought a small quantity of powder and
shot, and a box of caps; with these, and a luncheon in his pocket, and
Old Bruden on his shoulder, he started for the Green Swamp. He had no
ramrod for his gun, but he cut one from the first dogwood tree he met
with.

He had never been in the Green Swamp, but he had heard a good deal
about it, and he wished to explore it as far as possible. He wandered
about the whole of the morning, finding a great many things to interest
him in the way of mosses, ferns, and other specimens of woodland growth.

He found, also, that it would have been just as well if he had not
brought Old Bruden with him, for he saw nothing at all at which he
cared to take a shot. There were no birds of any value, and although a
rabbit occasionally jumped from its cover and went skipping away into
the bushes, this was not the season to shoot rabbits.

Besides being entirely useless, Old Bruden was a real inconvenience to
him, for it was necessary, in order to push his way into the heart of
the woods, for him to cross wide expanses of swamp-lands, from which
the place derived its name. He frequently had to make his way from one
tussock of weeds and grass to another, and as the distance between
these tussocks was sometimes four or five feet, and the intervening
ground very wet and soft, he found that in making his long steps and
jumps a heavy gun was very much in his way. But he had it with him, and
there was nothing to do but to carry it along as well as he could.

After a time, he reached a stream of water, some eight or ten feet
wide, which seemed to bar his way entirely. Had it been an ordinary
stream, he might have waded across, but in a swampy place like this he
did not know but he might sink up to his waist if he stepped into this
apparently shallow piece of water; and to stick fast in the middle of
this lonely wood did not at all suit his fancy. He sat down on a little
piece of dry ground and ate his lunch, and then he determined to find,
if possible, some place where he could cross this brook.

The ground beyond seemed somewhat higher and drier, as if it were
drained by this running stream. The bank on his side, too, afforded
better walking than the swamp-land he had recently crossed.

He therefore pushed his way up the stream, hoping that he would come to
a place where the banks would be near enough together and firm enough
for him to jump across; but, though he walked a long distance, the
stream did not seem to narrow.

At last he reached a place where the bushes grew quite thickly on
either side, although he found little difficulty in pushing his way
along.

Soon, to his great delight, he came to the trunk of a large tree that
had fallen diagonally across the stream. It was not a very easy thing
to walk on this log, but Mr. Muller stepped boldly on it, and using the
gun as a balancing-pole, he got over without a slip. On the other side
he found, as he had expected, good walking, with very little underbrush
among the trees. Guiding himself by means of a pocket-compass toward
what he supposed must be the centre of the wood, he trudged gayly
onward.

Before long, he came to a space which was covered by low evergreens,
and, above these, he could see at a distance a little knoll or hill. On
the top of this knoll, the near side of which seemed rocky and almost
bare of trees, there grew a tall bush, or little tree, on which he
could here and there see a red leaf glowing in the sunshine. A short
distance behind this bush the forest seemed to rise again, thick and
shady.

“It is early for leaves to turn red,” said Mr. Muller to himself. “That
must be a sumach-bush,” and he walked toward it.

Just as he reached the bottom of the little hill, he heard a stir in
the tufted grass.

“What is that?” he thought, and instantly stopped and cocked his gun.

Old Bruden would have been freshly loaded if the dogwood ramrod had
grown with a screw at the end, so that Mr. Muller could have drawn out
the old loads. But he had sifted some powder into the nipples of the
gun, and had put on fresh percussion-caps, and was content to fire out
the old loads.

Something now quickly glided from the tuft, slipped rapidly over the
ground in front of him, and disappeared in another thicket.

It was a large blacksnake, but it passed before him so suddenly and
swiftly that Mr. Muller was not ready to fire at it. But he would be
sure to take a shot at it if it appeared again. He would be very glad
to kill a large snake like that. He would take the skin home and stuff
it. It would be quite a curiosity.

Mr. Muller stepped forward a few paces and stood ready, his eyes fixed
upon the thicket. In half a minute the blacksnake appeared again, and
rushed directly up the hill with that rapid motion peculiar to these
reptiles.

Mr. Muller took good aim at him, and when he thought he had him well
covered with the muzzle of his gun, he pulled the forward trigger. The
cap snapped loudly, but there was no report.

Instead of that, a man’s voice shouted,--

“What are you about?”

Utterly astonished, Mr. Muller looked beyond the point where the snake
had been, and found that he was aiming his gun almost directly at a man
who was lying on the ground in the shade of the tall sumach.

The snake had been on a little rise in the ground when he pulled the
trigger, and if the gun had gone off, a great part of the charge would
probably have struck the man, who was lying on the ground not many
yards beyond.

The man, who had been reading, sprang to his feet, leaving his book
wide open on the grass. He looked startled and angry, as well he
might. But before he could say or do anything, Mr. Muller hastened
forward to explain.

“I was not aiming at you, sir. I was going to fire at a large snake
that just passed near me.”

“But you ought to be more careful,” replied the other. “If your gun had
gone off you certainly would have hit me.”

“I am generally very careful,” said Mr. Muller; “but who in the world
could have imagined that a man would be lying on the ground in this
lonely spot?”

“That is true, perhaps,” said the other; “and, on my part, I never
could have imagined that anybody would come to this lonely spot to
shoot snakes. And may I ask, sir, what you are doing with my gun?”

“Your gun!” exclaimed Mr. Muller, and for a moment he seemed stupefied,
and then his face began to shine as if it had been lighted up from
inside. “Are you Mr. Godfrey Berkeley?” he cried.

“Yes, I am,” said the other, shortly.

Mr. Muller laughed aloud.

“Why, I have been wanting to find you for ever so long! And who could
have supposed I would stumble on you here?”

Mr. Berkeley now seemed quite annoyed and angry.

“You had no right to look for me, sir, whoever you may be! If I choose
to seek quiet and privacy, no one is authorized to intrude upon me.”

“I am sure, sir, I was not trying to intrude upon you this time,
although I admit I have been inquiring for you in various places. I
came here for sport and recreation, and I suppose these woods are as
free to me as to any one else.”

“Yes, they are,” said Mr. Berkeley, “but I did not think that any one
but myself would penetrate to this secluded spot. How did you get over
the stream down there? The bottom is very soft.”

“I found a fallen tree lying across it,” said Mr. Muller.

“You must have been very anxious to shoot snakes,” remarked the other.
“That fallen tree is surrounded by a thicket that I did not suppose any
one would care to penetrate.”

“I wished to explore the forest,” said Mr. Muller, “and so pushed on
toward its centre. And the way I happen to have your gun with me is
this: I found it, a few nights ago, in the bed where I was sleeping,
and where the Touron boy hid it, after he attempted to shoot your
nephew, Philip Berkeley.”

[Illustration: “You had no right to look for me, sir, whoever you may
be!”]

“What in the name of common sense are you talking about?” cried Mr.
Berkeley. “Shoot my nephew! Are you crazy?”

“No, I am not crazy,” said Mr. Muller, very quietly, “and you need not
alarm yourself. No one has been injured. If you will sit down here in
the shade I will tell you the whole story. It is a long one, and I am
rather tired.”

The two then seated themselves in the shade of the sumach, and the man
with the black straw hat told Mr. Godfrey Berkeley the story of the
troubles at Hyson Hall as he had had it from Chap Webster; he also
related the startling events which had since occurred.

These accounts greatly excited Mr. Berkeley. He frequently interrupted
Mr. Muller with exclamations of astonishment, and when all was told, he
sprang to his feet and exclaimed,--

“I must leave here instantly!”

“You need to be in no particular hurry,” said Mr. Muller. “Everything
is all settled now.”

“Nevertheless, I must return immediately,” said Mr. Berkeley, “and if
you will wait a few minutes I will walk back with you.”

So saying, Mr. Berkeley picked up his book and hurried to a group of
large trees, which stood some distance back from the lonely sumach.

Mr. Muller followed him, and was much surprised to see him approach a
neat little log hut, which was quite concealed from the open ground by
a clump of bushes.

Mr. Berkeley entered, and the other looked in at the door. There was a
low bed on one side of the cabin. On a small table and a shelf were a
number of books, in leather bindings, and a valise stood in the corner.
Outside, by the door, were a few cooking utensils.

“Do you live here, sir?” asked Mr. Muller.

“Yes,” said Mr. Godfrey, who was busily putting a few things into his
valise, “I have lived in this cabin for several weeks, and I expected
to spend the rest of the summer here. I suppose you want to know why I
have been leading this hermit life?”

“Of course I have no right to inquire,” said Mr. Muller, “but I am
burning with curiosity.”

“I am so glad you found me,” said Mr. Berkeley, “although you did it
accidentally, that I feel quite willing to tell you all about my coming
here. I will do so as we walk through the woods.”

“I am also extremely glad I found you,” remarked Mr. Muller, who had
said nothing yet about his own reasons for wishing to see Mr. Berkeley,
preferring to wait until the mind of the other should not be so
occupied and excited by the affairs of which he had just heard. “And
what is more,” he continued, “I am greatly rejoiced that this gun did
not go off.”

“And I more than you,” said Mr. Berkeley. “I knew Old Bruden could
not be depended on for sure fire, but I never expected to derive any
advantage from that fact. And now,” added he, taking up his valise, and
preparing to padlock the door of his hut, “I think we are ready to go.”

“Do you intend to leave all those books here?” asked Mr. Muller, in
surprise.

“Yes,” said Mr. Berkeley, “I brought them here by degrees, and I
can’t carry them all away at once. Besides, I may want to come back
here again. I think they will be quite safe, for I am certain that no
one but you and myself has yet discovered that fallen tree among the
bushes.”

As the two walked away--the one carrying the gun and the other the
valise--Mr. Berkeley told his little story.

“I came out here,” he said, “to study law.”

“To study law!” exclaimed Mr. Muller.

“Yes,” said the other. “You need not be surprised, and you need not
laugh. The idea is not original with me, and the thing has been done
before. A young friend of mine read law for four months in that very
hut, which he built. He approached it, however, by a difficult path
through the woods, not knowing of our convenient bridge. He came for
the same reason that I came,--to study undisturbed. His provisions were
brought to him on certain days by his brother, who left them under a
tree more than a mile from here, where my friend went to get them. His
brother never knew where the hut was situated. I go over to the little
village of Bridgeville for my provisions. It is a long walk, but I
don’t have to go often.”

“But I cannot understand why _you_ should come here,” said Mr. Muller,
to whom the idea of a man owning a fine house and choosing to live in a
little hut like that seemed utterly absurd.

“When I was a young man,” said Mr. Berkeley, “I studied law, but soon
tired of it. Lately, since I have determined to settle down to a quiet
life, I have tried farming; but I do not think I succeed very well as a
farmer. I lose more money than I make.”

Here Mr. Muller gently rubbed his hands together, as if the remark
pleased him.

“I recently determined to take up law again,” said Mr. Berkeley, “and
began to read at home; but there were so many things there to disturb
me, and continually to distract my mind, that I found it impossible
to study. I therefore decided to follow my young friend’s example,
and betake myself to the woods. I found his house in good order, and
soon made it quite habitable. Of course, I allowed no one to know
where I had gone, as, otherwise, I would have been bothered almost
as much as if I had stayed at home. I would like you to understand,”
continued Mr. Berkeley, “that I have good reasons for wishing to study
law,--especially a particular branch of it. There are large tracts
of land in the West, which were acquired by grants and purchases by
my grandfather, to which I know I have a legal right. It is to make
myself able to investigate the title to these lands, and to prosecute
my claims to them, that I wish to become master of the laws concerning
such matters. I am not a rich man, and I have every desire to better my
fortunes.”

“A very laudable desire, truly,” said Mr. Muller; “and I hope to be
able to---- But no matter about that now. Don’t let me interrupt you,
sir.”

“Of course I had no idea,” continued Mr. Berkeley, “that when I went
away there would be any money troubles at Hyson Hall. Mr. Touron, who
is a relative by marriage, has repeatedly assured me that I need give
myself no concern about the payments on the mortgage that he holds, if
at any time it should be inconvenient for me to make them. He never
before even asked for his interest, and I intended in the fall, when I
generally go to New York, to have a settlement with him, but I did not
imagine he would make any trouble when I was absent.”

“Perhaps that is the very reason he tried to foreclose,” said Mr.
Muller. “He probably thought you would never turn up again, and the
chance was too good to lose.”

“That may be very true,” said Mr. Berkeley. “But tell me more about
this young Touron. He is the son of the old man’s first wife, but I had
almost forgotten his existence.”

Mr. Muller then proceeded to tell all he had heard about Emile, and
related how, in addition to his more serious offences, he had gone to
Hyson Hall and cut up all sorts of didos, such as hanging a lot of
bells on the roof, threatening the housekeeper, and he knew not what
else besides.

Mr. Berkeley stopped short in his walk.

“Hung bells on the roof?” he said. “Are you sure of that?”

“Oh, yes!” said Mr. Muller; “these things are quite the town talk. He
found the house deserted one day, except by the women, and it seems he
did pretty much as he pleased.”

This statement seemed to affect Mr. Berkeley more than anything he
had yet heard, and for some time he walked on without saying a word.
When they reached the outskirts of the town, Mr. Berkeley asked his
companion if he still intended to go to Hyson Hall.

“Yes,” said Mr. Muller, “I proposed to take this gun there, and I also
have something which I wish to say to you, and it may take some time to
talk about it.”

“In that case,” said Mr. Berkeley, “I shall be very glad if you will go
on to the house now. You must stay all night, and I will talk with you
to-morrow. I wish to stop to see Mr. Welford, but would like to have a
note reach my nephew before my arrival.”

Mr. Muller consented to this arrangement, and Mr. Berkeley, writing
a short note in pencil on a piece of paper which he tore from a
blank-book, directed it to Phil, and gave it to his companion. The two
then separated, Mr. Berkeley promising to be at Hyson Hall in time for
supper.

“I hope that young Webster won’t be there,” thought Mr. Muller,
as he trudged away,--“that is, if he has not forgotten the sunken
treasure-ship and the three brothers.”

But Chap was there, and he had not forgotten.




[Illustration]

CHAPTER XXVIII.

THE RETURN OF THE RUNAWAY.


When Phil Berkeley read the note that was brought to him by the man
with the black straw hat, he gave a shout of joy which rang through the
house.

“Read that,” he cried to Chap, who had been on the porch, making
calculations on a piece of paper, and who now ran in to see what was
the matter.

Chap seized the note and read:

  “MY VERY DEAR PHIL,--From the bottom of my heart I beg your pardon
  for the cruel words I wrote you. It was all a mistake. I long to see
  you again, and shall be with you very soon after you read this.

                                      “Your affectionate uncle,
                                                              “GODFREY.”

The joyful news spread rapidly over the place, and in ten minutes Joel
was driving a light wagon toward town, to meet Mr. Berkeley and bring
him home.

Never was prodigal uncle received more warmly. Phil, of course, was
wild with joy. Even if Mr. Berkeley had not returned that day, the note
he had received would have made him the happiest boy on earth.

Chap was a good deal more overjoyed than if one of his own uncles had
arrived, and Susan’s face had not been so radiant for many a year.

Even Mr. Muller, possessed with the pervading spirit, could scarcely
resist welcoming Mr. Berkeley to Hyson Hall. But as he had not the
slightest right to do so, he kept discreetly in the background and
smiled his gratification.

During supper, and long after the meal was over, the talking, the
questioning, and the explanations went on. There was so much to ask and
to tell that there seemed to be no end to it all. Mr. Muller went to
bed early, for he had done a great deal of walking that day. Chap would
have been glad to sit up all night to talk and listen, but, after a
time, he discreetly followed the example of Mr. Muller.

As he was about to pass the open door of the room which that gentleman
occupied, he stopped and asked,--

“Are you asleep, sir?”

Mr. Muller felt very much inclined to say that he was, but instead of
that he muttered that he was not quite asleep yet--just dropping off,
he thought.

“I’ll not bother you now,” said the considerate Chap; “but to-morrow
you’ll find me all ready to talk about that business.”

And he passed on.

“That is more than I shall be,” said Mr. Muller to himself. “I wonder
if there is such a thing as a sunken ship on the place?”

And he went to sleep and dreamed that he had gone to bed in a ship that
was buried three hundred feet under mud and sand; and he was in a great
deal of trouble when he thought how difficult it would be for him to
get out when it was time for him to go ashore for breakfast.

Phil and his uncle sat up until long after their usual bedtime. As soon
as they were alone, Mr. Berkeley explained to Phil the reason he wrote
the note which had caused the boy so much grief.

“When I walked over this way on the morning of that day,” said Mr.
Berkeley. “I came after Old Bruden, because I thought it would be a
good thing to have a gun out there in the woods with me, and I picked
up a little fellow on the road to send to the house. I thought it very
likely you would come running to meet me when you heard where I was,
and so I did not stay by the bridge where the boy left me, but went
over to the top of one of the little hills in the field, to watch and
see who came from the house.

“I knew very well that if you came to me you would wheedle and coax
me into giving up my splendid plan of study. When I saw you coming,
and without the gun, as if my wishes and requests were not worth
considering, I was a little provoked, and hurried down the other side
of the hill, and by the time you reached the bridge I was far enough
away. I did not, however, go back to my little hut, and after a time
I began to think how disappointed you must have been when you came
to the bridge and did not find me. It also dawned upon me that I was
not behaving in a very sensible manner. It would be much better to
go home and get what I wanted and trust to you not to annoy me with
questions as to where I was and what I was doing. So, in the course
of the afternoon, I started back for Hyson Hall, thinking it very
likely I should spend the night there and return to my hut the next
day; but when I came near the house, I heard those bells and soon saw
them on the roof. I don’t know of any sound that could have affected
me more disagreeably than the jingling of those bells. I knew that you
understood how much I disliked them, and it pained me to think you
should hang them up while I was gone. And when I considered that you
knew I had been in the neighborhood that morning, it seemed to me that
you had hung them in revenge for my having taken myself out of your
way. I was so angry at this imagined insult that I marched off and
mailed you that abominable note.”

“It’s all right now, uncle,” said Phil. “I don’t wonder you thought I
was a contemptible rascal. If I hadn’t been in such a hurry to start
off and look for you, Emile would not have dared to come here, the
bells would not have been hung up, you would have been home in the
afternoon, and everything would have been all right.”

“It often happens that way, my boy,” said Mr. Berkeley. “But you have
had a hard time, Phil, and you have done splendidly. If any mistakes
were made they were not your fault. You have saved me this property,
and I shall never forget what I owe you. When I went away, I expected
you would have some bothers and perplexities, but I thought it would
be a useful experience for you to weather through them. It would have
been impossible for me to imagine that you would have such anxieties
and trials as those you have gone through. And, although I always had
a good opinion of you, I would not have supposed that you would have
stood up against your difficulties so manfully.”

As to the deficiency in money for household and other expenses, Mr.
Berkeley easily explained that. He had expected a certain sum which
was owing to him to be paid on his account to Mr. Welford, which that
gentleman had not received. If this payment had been properly made,
there would have been no difficulty in carrying on the Hyson Hall
establishment until Mr. Berkeley’s return.

“But, uncle,” said Phil, as they were preparing to go up-stairs,
“there’s one thing I don’t understand. You said, in the long letter
you left for me when you went away, that you couldn’t stay at home any
longer because life here was so monotonous. Now, it seems to me it
must have been ever so much more monotonous in a little log hut in the
woods, where you never saw a soul. Of course I can understand why you
couldn’t study here, where you are interrupted every five minutes by
some of us.”

“It was the monotony of interruption that disturbed me,” said Mr.
Berkeley, smiling. “Every day it was the same thing. I would plan out
a certain amount of reading, and the day would often pass without my
opening a book. In the woods it was very different. Law is generally
considered a very dry and musty subject, but my studies were very fresh
and interesting to me. The whole affair seemed like an adventure. It
reminded me of part of my life in South America, and I enjoyed it
greatly. I was not only leading an untrammelled life in the woods,
but I was doing something useful and sensible besides, and this is
more than I can say of a good deal of the out-door life of my earlier
years. And, then, there was the spice of running away from a tyrannical
nephew. That made it all the jollier, don’t you see?”

“No, I don’t,” said Phil. “But some of these days I may run away from
you, just to see how pleasant it is.”

“If you do,” said Mr. Berkeley, “I’ll let old Touron buy Hyson Hall,
and when you are tired of roving you can come back and live with Emile.”

When the two went up-stairs, Chap called out to them from his room. He
had evidently been keeping himself awake on purpose to hail them when
they came up.

“Phil,” cried Chap, “did you ask your uncle if he saw anything of the
lonely sumach when he was in the Green Swamp?”

“That boy again!” groaned Mr. Muller, as he turned over in his bed.

“No, I didn’t,” said Phil. “I never thought of it. But you have heard
of that lonely sumach, haven’t you, uncle? Did you see it?”

Mr. Berkeley stopped at the door of Chap’s room, which, like the other
bedrooms on that floor, opened on the large central hall.

“Yes, I have heard of it,” he said, “and I am quite sure I have found
it. It was not far from my hut, and I did most of my reading in its
shade.”

“In its shade!” cried both of the boys together.

“Yes,” said Mr. Berkeley. “The ground under it was smooth and grassy,
and, as it stands by itself on a little hill, there was more air out
there than in the thick woods about my hut.”

“Then it isn’t poisonous, after all!” cried Chap, who was sitting up in
bed.

“No,” said Mr. Berkeley, “I certainly did not find it so.”

“That _is_ a disappointment!” cried Chap.

“What!” exclaimed Phil. “Did you want me to have a dead uncle?”

“No,” replied Chap, “I didn’t mean that; but still---- Oh, you
understand! Good-night!”

And he lay down, and drew the bed-covers around his ears.

He had earnestly longed to find that tree, and now, alas! it was not a
deadly tree at all. One of life’s charms had vanished.

The next morning, after breakfast, Mr. Berkeley noticed Old Bruden
standing in a corner of the hall, where Mr. Muller had placed it when
he brought it home, the afternoon before. Taking up the gun, Mr.
Berkeley raised the hammers, and then remarked,--

“Have you forgotten, Phil, that it is against orders to leave a loaded
gun about the house in this way? There is a fresh cap on one of these
barrels.”

Phil explained that he had had so much to think about the night before
he had not noticed the gun at all.

Thereupon Mr. Berkeley, having put upon the other nipple a
percussion-cap, which Mr. Muller produced from one of his pockets, went
out on the porch to fire out the loads.

He pointed the gun over the lawn, where there was nothing that could be
injured, and pulled one trigger. A cap snapped. Then the other trigger.
Another snap.

“What is the matter with this old gun?” said Mr. Berkeley, coming into
the hall. “I must draw the loads. Where is the ramrod?”

Phil got it from the umbrella-rack, where he had put it when he brought
it home. Mr. Berkeley then fixed the screw and, running the ramrod
into one of the barrels, proceeded to draw the load. First he pulled
out a piece of raw cotton, then another piece, and then some more.

“Why, this load seems to be all wadding!” said Mr. Berkeley, in
surprise. “Here is quite a pile of it.”

The interested and somewhat amazed group standing around the gun was
now joined by Jenny.

“Them’s Susan’s loads,” she said to Phil. “She put ’em in when she took
the gun up to her room. She wanted to make sure it wouldn’t go off.”

“And she certainly did make sure of it!” cried Phil, as his uncle
pulled the cotton from the other barrel.

Phil was now obliged to tell the story of Susan and the gun, though
he touched so lightly upon the bad points of it that Chap stuck his
hands in his pockets and strutted up and down in disgust. Mr. Berkeley
understood the story quite well, although he chose to say little about
it.

“Susan is a prudent woman,” he remarked, “and her cotton loads have
probably saved at least one of our lives.”




[Illustration]

CHAPTER XXIX.

THE ONE FELLOW WHO WAS LEFT YET.


During the morning, Mr. Berkeley and Phil were busily engaged in farm
affairs with Jenny’s father and Joel. Chap had thought of going home,
but Mr. Berkeley had urged him not to break up the family party so
soon, and Mr. Muller remained until he should have an opportunity of
entering upon his own business.

Chap was delighted when he saw the man with the black straw hat sitting
alone under one of the trees on the lawn, but it cannot be truthfully
said that the heart of Mr. Muller leaped very high for joy when he saw
the long-legged boy striding down upon him.

“What about that wreck?” said Chap. “I’ve been just aching for a chance
to speak to you. We ought to go right to work. It won’t do to let this
family slide back again into misery the very minute they’ve got a
little hoist out of it. From what I can make out, there’ll be lots of
money wanted yet. And that wreck has got to be bounced out of the mud
in short order. I suppose you are all ready to pitch right in. Have you
told Mr. Berkeley what you’re here for?”

“Well, no,” said Mr. Muller, “I haven’t yet. There has been no time.
And I am sure there is no hurry about that wreck. It has been in the
mud a long time, and it will wait there till we want it.”

“No, it won’t,” cried Chap. “No, it won’t. There isn’t a night but I
tremble for that wreck. That French boy knows all about it, and you
can’t tell when he and his father will come up the river in a boat,
with divers and submarine armor, and they’ll have a hole cut in the
side of that ship, and all the treasure-boxes taken out, before we know
a thing about it.”

“That would be bad, indeed,” said Mr. Muller, “but I don’t see how it
is to be prevented, unless a guard is kept up on the river-bank.”

“Prevented!” cried Chap. “The way to prevent their doing it is to do it
ourselves--slam-bang! without waiting a minute longer than we can help.”

Mr. Muller did not know what reply to make to his enthusiastic
companion.

“Suppose we go and look at this wreck,” he said, after a moment’s
thought.

This suited Chap exactly, and without further ado the two proceeded to
the river-bank. The tide was not very low, and only the extreme ends of
the exposed ribs of the treasure-ship could be seen.

“She is pretty well covered up,” remarked Mr. Muller.

“You can see more of her at low tide,” said Chap, “but we don’t care
anything about that part of the ship. That is the bow, and most likely
there is nothing in it but sailors’ clothes and such stuff.”

“Which would be dreadfully old-fashioned now,” remarked Mr. Muller.

“The part we want to get at,” continued Chap, “is the stern, which is
out there in deep water, and never can be seen at all. The treasure
would, very naturally, be in that part of the ship.”

“Quite likely,” said Mr. Muller, “but it is frightful to think of its
being out there in deep water.”

“Yes,” said Chap, “and, what is more, one side of it must be jammed
against the shore, and pretty well covered up with mud.”

“The channel must come quite near the bank in this part of the river,”
said Mr. Muller.

“Oh, yes,” replied Chap, “a good stone’s-throw from where we stand it
is deep enough to float anything. Down below here, near the place where
the Thomas Wistar was run ashore,--they’ve towed her off now,--it’s
shallow ever so far out, and it’s pretty much the same thing above.”

Mr. Muller looked about the place where he was standing, and seemed to
be considering something.

“Well,” said Chap, impatiently, “what do you say? Are you ready to go
right ahead with this thing? You may think it is none of my business,
but I’ve been pushing on the affair for ever so long, and I want to be
on hand when anything is done.”

“I have no doubt you will be,” said Mr. Muller,--“no doubt of it at
all. But I really cannot counsel immediate action in this matter. A
great many things have to be considered first. I think we had better
let the subject drop for the present.”

“All right!” said Chap. “Drop her!”

And, without another word, he marched off, leaving Mr. Muller standing
on the river-bank.

Disgusted with human beings, especially with the man in the black straw
hat, Chap walked directly home.

“I did think,” he said to himself, “that when I got to work with
a man something would be done; but men are just as pokey and
shilly-shallying as boys. But there is one fellow left yet!” he
continued, giving himself a bold slap on the chest; and, with a stern
and determined mind, the one fellow who was left yet strode rapidly
home.

In the course of a few days Mr. Berkeley made arrangements by which
he procured the money to refund to the three boys the amount they had
received from the owners of the Thomas Wistar. Phil declared he did not
want his share, but his uncle insisted he should take it. It had been
fairly earned by his own exertions, and he must keep it. The sum was
accordingly handed over to Mr. Welford to be invested in Phil’s name.

“What are you going to do with your money?” asked Chap, the first time
he met Phœnix after the distribution.

“We have been talking the matter over a great deal at our house,” said
the stout Phœnix, “and I haven’t made up my mind whether I’ll put my
money into land or into education.”

“The whole of it into one of them?” eagerly asked Chap.

“Yes,” said Phœnix. “Mother wants me to go to college; but father says
if I buy a piece of land down below our place, and get it ditched, and
put into grass, and cleared up, it will be a valuable property by the
time I am married.”

“Married!” cried Chap, in accents of scorn. “Think of a fellow waiting
to get the good of his money till he is married!”

“From what I have heard the folks say,” said Phœnix, “I should think
that would be the best time to get the good of it. But I don’t know
that I’ll put my money into land. I may switch off into a straight-out
education. Mother says that is better than any property. What are you
going to do with yours?”

“Well,” said Chap, “a part of mine is to be put into stocks, along with
Phil’s. That is what they all thought was the best thing to do with it
for the present. But there’s a certain lot of it I’m going to keep for
my own square, particular, and not-to-be-talked-about purposes, and no
questions asked or answered.”

“All right,” said Phœnix, “nobody is asking any.”

The next day Chap made a visit to the city, and spent the whole day
there. He paid his own way. It was vacation time, and no one interfered
with him.

On his return he was asked a good many questions, especially by Helen,
but answered none. For several days he spent a good deal of time away
from home, but he did not go to Hyson Hall, nor did Phœnix see anything
of him.

Mr. Berkeley was not long in making up his mind not to return to his
hut in the woods; but, although his affairs demanded his attention
at home, he determined to continue the study of law, for he was not
too old to achieve success in this profession, and he felt he ought
to devote his life to something for which he was better suited than
scientific farming.

A small room in the third story was fitted up as his study. His books
and papers were taken there, and strict orders were given that during
certain hours in the day he was not to be disturbed on any pretext.

It was much easier to observe these orders than it would have been
before the time in which our story began; for now John Morgan--Jenny’s
father--was regularly installed as farmer and general manager on the
Hyson Hall estate, while Joel was retained as his assistant.

Phil was much pleased with the new arrangement, and listened with great
interest to all the plans which were discussed.

This pleased Mr. Berkeley, for he wanted Phil to like a country life,
and to understand better than he had ever done how to manage with
comfort and profit an estate like Hyson Hall.

It may be here remarked that Emile never came to Boontown to stand
his trial. His father thought it prudent to send him to France on
business, and his bail was forfeited.

The man with the black straw hat had some time since told his business
and gone away. He had come to Hyson Hall to try to induce Mr. Berkeley
to build a town. This seemed like a vast enterprise to suggest to a
private gentleman, but Mr. Muller had studied the subject for a long
time, and had very clear and definite ideas about it.

He was quite ready to prove that it would be an easy thing for Mr.
Berkeley to have a small town on his property, if the work should be
begun in the way which he (Mr. Muller) recommended. It was plain enough
that a town was needed in this locality. The people living along the
river for several miles below had to go to Boontown for their groceries
and other merchandise, and their crops and produce had to be hauled to
that place to be shipped to the city and other points.

Moreover, a little town or village on this beautiful part of the
river-bank would attract people who would like to have a rural home not
too far from the city. Nothing of this kind was offered at Boontown.
That place was not attractive, and its river-front was particularly
disagreeable.

If Mr. Berkeley would lay out his land along the river in building
lots, and buy, perhaps, some adjoining tracts, and then build a wharf,
so that the steamboats could stop there, and put up a store, the thing
would be begun, and the place would then grow of itself. Mr. Muller was
ready to stock and take charge of the store. That was in his line of
business.

Mr. Berkeley listened with great attention to the long discourse of his
visitor, and then remarked that the idea was not a new one, and had
been seriously thought of before.

His father had greatly desired to have a small settlement on his
place, and had gone so far as to put up a wharf, so that people could
come up here by boat and look at the property, and the produce of the
surrounding country could be shipped from this point. But the first
steamboat that stopped there struck on a sunken wreck, that lay not far
from the wharf, and old Mr. Berkeley had to pay for the damages done
to her. Disgusted with this, he had had the wharf taken down, and the
piles pulled up, for fear that some other steamboat would make a stop,
and more damages would have to be paid.

“But could not a wharf be built farther out, or at some other point?”
asked Mr. Muller.

“There is no other point suitable for a steamboat-landing on my
property,” said Mr. Berkeley. “The channel makes a bend inland here,
and above and below the water is shallow for some distance out;
besides it would be very expensive to build a wharf into the deep water
beyond the sunken wreck. It is not the part that you may see sticking
out of the mud that is dangerous,” he continued. “It is another portion
of the vessel which is sunk in the channel, but not far from the bank.
The condition of my fortune does not warrant me in removing this wreck,
which has been there so long that it has probably become a part of the
bank. You see, therefore, that as it is impossible for us to have a
steamboat wharf here at present, it is useless to talk of starting a
town.”

Thus the matter was disposed of, and Mr. Muller discovered that
although he had not had the slightest idea of the fact when he told
Chap the story of the three brothers, the sunken ship had, after all,
very much to do with his business at Hyson Hall.




[Illustration]

CHAPTER XXX.

THE GREAT MOMENT ARRIVES.


Early one afternoon Chap Webster might have been seen rowing a little
boat, near the water’s edge, in front of the Hyson Hall estate. In the
stern of the boat was a box with a piece of canvas thrown over it, and
in the bow were several large packages. These things had been brought
home by Chap, in a wagon, that morning from Boontown, where they had
been sent to him from the city.

When Chap reached a spot nearly over the sunken vessel--and he found
the place very easily, for it was marked by a little floating buoy
which he had put there after many previous soundings and surveys--he
anchored his boat with a long rope, and began to carry out the great
scheme on which his mind had so long been set.

A large package securely tied up in India-rubber cloth, with the ends
of a long, double wire inserted into it, was lowered to the bottom
of the river, where it rested as near as possible to the side of the
sunken ship. The upper ends of the double wire were then attached to
the ends of two long, covered wires, which lay in separate coils in the
boat. This being done, Chap pulled up his anchor and slowly paddled
his boat to shore, carefully letting out his wires with one hand as he
paddled with the other.

This was quite a difficult thing to do, and it would have been much
better if he had had one of the other boys to help him. But he had come
to the conclusion that there must be no faint hearts in this matter,
and he had said nothing to them about it.

When he reached the shore, he fastened the boat to a stake, and taking
one coil of wire in his arms, he carried it up to the fence, which
stood at a little distance from the water’s edge, carefully uncoiling
it as he proceeded.

Then he laid it along the bottom of the fence, until he came to a
little brook which ran to the river through a pasture-field, and which
was bordered by thick bushes. He laid the wire along the edge of this
brook until it was all uncoiled. Then he went to his boat and brought
the other coil of wire, laying it by the side of the first.

Having thus carried these wires up the brook as far as they would
reach, he went to the boat and brought his box, which contained an
electric battery, to the spot where the farthest ends of his wires lay.

It was evident that all the distances had been measured and the
localities carefully surveyed. Having placed the box under some
overhanging bushes, where it could not readily be seen, Chap walked
along the line of his wires, carefully concealing them with leaves and
weeds wherever he thought it was necessary.

There were no cattle in the fields that afternoon, and as people seldom
passed that way, it was likely that his wires would be unnoticed and
undisturbed for an hour or so at least. Having settled these matters to
his satisfaction, Chap got into his boat and rowed away.

The first thing Chap did on reaching home was to go to Helen and tell
her all about this great affair.

His sister had often heard him talk of the wreck and the treasure he
thought it contained; but when she heard that Chap had made all the
arrangements for blowing the ship out of the water, and that it was to
be done that very afternoon, she was indeed astounded.

“Don’t you intend to tell the other boys?” she asked.

“No,” he answered. “They’ll be sure to want to put it off for this
thing or that, and might want to wait till we could have tin hoppers
made to catch the money in, or something of that kind. I’ve been
waiting long enough to do this thing, and I’m not going to hold back
another day. But I just felt I couldn’t keep it all to myself, so I
told you, for I know you’re the kind of girl who won’t hinder. Now I’m
going to take you down with me to see the thing blow up. Would you like
that?”

“Oh, yes!” said Helen, her eyes sparkling, “if we don’t have to go too
near.”

“We’ll keep out of danger,” said Chap. “But I’m going to do something
more for you. I’m going to let you touch her off!”

“Me!” cried Helen. “Oh, Chap! I couldn’t do that!”

“Why, it is nothing to do,” said Chap. “We’ll be far enough away, and
you’ve only got to touch a knob. Get your hat and come along. We’re
going to have the grandest blow-up ever heard of in these parts.”

A little nervous as to the danger, but wild with excitement as to what
was going to happen, Helen ran for her hat, and the two started away,
walking across the fields to the place where the battery had been
concealed.

On the way, Chap explained to his sister all his arrangements.

“According to what I can make out,” said he, “I’ve got enough
giant-powder sunk by the side of that wreck to blow up two ships.”

“I shouldn’t think they’d sell that stuff to a boy,” said Helen.

“It isn’t everybody who takes me for a child,” said Chap, loftily, and
made no further remarks on the subject.

“But how are you going to get the treasure?” asked Helen, presently.
“Won’t it be scattered all over, in every direction?”

“Now, look here, Helen,” said Chap, “I don’t want you to be making
objections. I didn’t let you into this thing for that purpose. I’ve
put the powder on the outside of the wreck, and it’s my opinion that
most everything will be blown in shore. If the money is stowed away in
iron boxes, perhaps they’ll come down without breaking. But we can’t
calculate for everything. The main thing is to blow her up.”

Soon after this the two arrived at their destination, and, uncovering
his battery, Chap exhibited it to his sister, and explained its action.

One of the wires which came from the jar which contained his simple
battery he united to the end of one of his wires from the river. The
end of the other wire was laid on a small board which covered one end
of the box, and was held in position by two wooden pegs. Directly over
this end of the wire was the end of the other short wire which came
from the battery, and which was fastened under a little wooden spring,
which Chap had made, and to the top of which he had fixed a small knob
or button.

“Now, Helen,” said Chap, when everything had been made ready, “you can
see just how the thing will work. When you press that knob, and push
the spring down, the two ends of the wires will touch, and the electric
circuit will be complete. These wires, which are insulated by being
covered with tape dipped in paraffine, except these upper ends, which
don’t need insulating, as they lie on wood, which is a non-conductor,
extend from the battery down to the giant-powder at the bottom of the
river. The two ends which are in the powder are united by a little
piece of thin platinum wire. When the circuit is completed by pressing
down the wire fastened to the spring, the electricity runs along
one wire, to come back by the other, but when it reaches the little
platinum wire it makes it red-hot, and that explodes the powder. So,
you see, it is all simple enough.”

“Yes,” said Helen, a little hesitatingly, “but you must have studied a
good deal to understand it all, and these things must have cost a good
deal of money, too.”

“I don’t mind expending time or capital,” said Chap, “when I am going
to do anything of importance. And now I think everything is ready.”

He then ran to a fence near by, and got up on the top rails, from which
he could get a view of the river for some distance up and down. Jumping
to the ground, he hastened back to Helen.

“There is no boat nor anything in sight!” he cried, “and the great
moment has arrived. Just push down that knob.”

“Oh, Chap, I can’t do it!” cried Helen, springing back.

“But you must! I want you to have the honor of touching her off. It’s
nothing to do, and it can’t hurt you. Just press down the knob.”

With trembling hand, Helen put her finger on the little knob and
pressed it down.

[Illustration: A column of water rose from the river, together with a
mass of mud and timbers]

A great boom, not loud, but deep and heavy, shook the air, and Chap,
who was standing outside the bushes, saw a column of water rise from
the river, together with a mass of mud and timbers. Smaller objects
flew high into the air, and as the wind was blowing from the river,
a sudden shower of spray fell all around him, as if it had been
raining. Then pieces of wood came thumping down, some in the field near
by.

One large stick, nearly three feet long, stuck into the ground not a
dozen yards from the spot where Helen sat, her hands before her eyes.

Chap rushed to his sister, as if he would throw himself over her to
protect her, but there was no need of that. Everything that was coming
down had come.

“Oh, Helen!” he cried. “I might have killed you! I ought to have had
ever so much longer wires. But there is no danger now. Let’s run down
and see how it looks.”

Before they reached the water’s edge, it was easy to see that something
very unusual had happened. The river was still heaving and tossing
above the place of the explosion. The water was thick and dark with
mud for some distance from the shore. Fresh mud was scattered over
everything,--the leaves and trunks of trees, the grass, the ground.
Pieces of timber, some half in and half out of the water, and some
thrown high up on shore, lay scattered about, but nothing was floating
on the surface of the river. All the woodwork of that vessel had become
water-logged long before, and such of it as had fallen into the water
had sunk again to the bottom.

With anxious eyes and hurried steps, Chap and Helen went up and down
the beach, looking here and there and everywhere, but they found no
iron boxes, nor did they see a single piece of gold or silver.

Mr. Berkeley and Phil, with Phœnix Poole, were sitting on the porch at
Hyson Hall, when they heard a great explosion down the river. There was
no flash or smoke, but they saw black objects flying into the air.

They sprang to their feet, and Phœnix exclaimed,--

“I’ll bet a thousand dollars that is Chap. He’s blown up the ship.”

Without another word all three started off at full speed for the
river-bank. When they reached the spot, they found Chap and Helen still
searching among the fallen timbers and clots of mud.

When the story had been told, and Chap had explained everything to the
astonished Mr. Berkeley, Phil exclaimed,--

“And haven’t you found any money?”

“Not a cent,” said Chap, ruefully. “I believe the crew must have been
paid off before they left the ship.”

Mr. Berkeley appeared much excited by what had occurred.

“Look here, young man,” he cried, clapping Chap on the shoulder, “you
needn’t trouble yourself about not finding any money. If you have
really blown that old wreck out of the channel, we’ll have a town here,
and I’ll give you a corner lot. I never thought the thing could be done
so easily.”

“Where is the scow?” said Phil. “If we could get a grapnel we might
fish up something.”

The boys looked up and down the beach, but saw no scow. And then Chap
pulled a long face.

“I forgot the scow was moored here,” he said. “I guess she’s blown to
flinders. But I’ll pay you for it, sir.”

“Not a bit of it,” cried Mr. Berkeley. “The old tub is not worth
considering. Judging from the timber lying around here, there can’t
be much of the wreck left. You didn’t think, young lady,” said he,
addressing Helen, “that when you touched that button you were starting
a town?”

“No, indeed, sir!” said Helen, with brightening eyes.

“But such was the fact,” said Mr. Berkeley; “and if we ever have the
town it shall be called Helena.”

When the bed of the river was afterwards examined, it was found that
there remained no obstructions to navigation which had not been so
shattered and loosened by the explosion that they could easily be
removed, and there was no reason why a wharf at that point could not
be used by river steamboats.

It was not long before Mr. Muller received a letter from Mr. Berkeley
assuring him of his hearty co-operation in the matter of the town of
Helena, which town ultimately proved a success, and became a source of
so much profit to Mr. Berkeley that the incumbrances upon Hyson Hall
were removed long before he had made out his titles to his Western
lands.

The first time the man with the black straw hat met Chap, he warmly
shook him by the hand.

“I didn’t suppose anything would come of your explosive ideas,” he
said, “but you have been the best man of us all. Mr. Berkeley says he
is going to make you a landed proprietor.”

“I don’t want any town-lots,” said Chap. “What I want is to be captain
of a tug-boat.”

“All right,” said Mr. Muller. “If the town ever owns a tug-boat, I’ll
see that you command her.”

On two stout brackets, over the dining-room mantel-piece at Hyson Hall,
and secured to the wall by a stout hasp and padlock, hangs Old Bruden.

When Mr. Berkeley heard Susan’s story about the gun, her superstition
pleased his fancy, for he was an imaginative man.

“It shall always be the master’s gun,” he said, when he hung it there;
“and when we shall have built our town, and paid our debts, and I shall
go to the city to practise law, Hyson Hall shall belong to my dear
Phil, and his shall be the master’s gun.”


THE END.




TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES:


  Italicized text is surrounded by underscores: _italics_.

  Obvious typographical errors have been corrected.

  Inconsistencies in hyphenation have been standardized.

  Archaic or variant spelling has been retained.