U M i \ c ft 31 r Y OF NOr.ni CAROLINA School of Library Science UNIVERSITY CF N.C. AT CHAPEL HILL 00022245802 ^"&>£-^'l \/ t%-~*~z-z^-^_ 1 *fi THE SILVER RIFLE, Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2012 with funding from University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill http://www.archive.org/details/silverriflestoryOOguer E\)c Sillirr Btflr — Jrontisptrrr. Isn't that old Mr. De Forest's rifle?" p. 42. THE SILVER RIFLE: A STORY OF THE SARANAC LAKES. BY CLARA F. GUERNSEY, AUTHOR OF "THE SILVER CUP," "THE LEIGHTON CHILDREN,' " SCRUB HOLLOW," ETC. PHILADELPHIA: AMERICAN SUNDAY-SCHOOL UNION, No. 1122 Chestnut Street. NEW YORK : 7, 8 & 10 BIBLE HOUSE, ASTOR PLACE. Entered, according to Act of Congress, in the year 1S71, by the AMERICAN SUNDAY-SCHOOL UNION, in the Office of the Librarian of Congress at Washington. CONTENTS. CHAPTER I. PAGE Mr. De Forest 9 CHAPTER II. Mr. De Forest's Letter 32 CHAPTER III. The Woods 64 CHAPTER IV. In the Wilderness 89 CHAPTER V. Lake Lois 125 CHAPTER VI. A Long Night 149 Vlll CONTENTS. CHAPTER VII. PAGE The Search 172 CHAPTER VIII. Lost in the Wilderness 194 CHAPTER IX. The Hair-Line 207 CHAPTER X. The Panther 219 CHAPTER XI. Conclusion •. . 248 THE SILVER RIFLE. CHAPTER I. ME. DE FOEEST. IT'S too late for father to come now," said Allan Fitz Adam, in a tone of great disap- pointment. "The train must have been in this long while." " Yes, I suppose so," said John, with a sigh. " He '11 have had an uncomfortable time of it, too, out there, at the old place, with the Marshalls. I can't bear to think they '11 own the house. I 'd rather it was burned down. I don't see why such nice people as Mr. De Forest have such dis- agreeable relations." Allan did not attempt to answer this difficult question. " I wonder what will become of Pedro and Lorraine," he said. " I am sure they never could go and live with the Marshalls." " No, indeed ! Lorraine is so much more of a 9 10 THE SILVER RIFLE. lady than Mrs. Marshall, and Pedro so much more of a gentleman than Mr. Marshall, they never would get on together at all : and the poor dogs and the cats." " Father said he thought it likely Mr. De Forest had provided for them all in his will. What good times we have had in that house, John, and how kind he was to us always : it seems now as if we had never thought half enough of him. I can't feel that he is dead." " Nor I : it seems as if we should certainly see him, if we went there. I can't realize that we shall never sit in the library again, and hear him tell stories. I can see just how it looked, and the two dogs and the two old cats on the hearth- rug, and you and I with them, and he sitting in his old chair, and all. I hate to think of the Mar- shall pulling over his things, and looking into all his drawers, and his desk." " Do you remember the Sunday evening when he showed us that old Chinese box, and what was in it ? The little baby's shoes — his little boy's that died so long ago — and. his little daughter's old doll, and his wife's lace handkerchief, the last she wore. I wish I had that box : I 'd take care of it as long as I lived." " Gus Marshall asked me once if I knew what THE SILVER EIFLE. 11 was in that/' said John ; " and I didn't answer him. And then he said his mother believed it had jewels in it, and that she thought her uncle might give them to her; but it was just like the old miser, to keep them locked up." " If there is a boy on earth I despise, it's Gus Marshall," said Allan, with emphasis. " I hope you didn't tell him what was really in the box." " Catch me ! But I can't bear to think of the Marshalls looking over those things. A miser, indeed! Why, Mr. De Forest paid all Gus's school bills : I know he did." " Certainly ; and money poorly laid out it was, too, for he is the greatest dunce I know. He thinks of nothing but money, too, and being fashionable, and such stuff," said Master Fitz Adam, with lofty contempt. " If all the old things are to be sold, I hope father will buy some of them for the sake of old times." The two boys were together in the parlour of their city home. The month was September, and the twilight was beginning to close in so early, as to give notice of the coming of long winter even- ings. The brothers were in rather a thoughtful and saddened mood. Only two days before they had heard of the death of an old friend, whom they 12 THE SILVER RIFLE. had known from their childhood, and to whom they had been much attached. Mr. De Forest had been an elderly gentleman, who had outlived his wife and children, and whose nearest relation was a niece, whom he did not particularly like, though he had always been kind and liberal tow T ard her and her children. However much he did for them, Mrs. Marshall and her husband always thought that he might do more; and though Mr. Marshall had an in- come much larger than he spent, he made so many demands on his uncle's purse, that Mr. De Forest had been obliged to take a decided stand, and refuse him the money for which he was always asking ; for which reason the Marshalls always spoke and thought of their uncle as miserly and stingy, utterly forgetful of the kindness they had received at his hands. He lived in an old house in a lonely place among the Catskills, with no companions but his old servants, his dogs, his cats, and his books. He led rather a secluded life, and Mr. Fitz Adam and his two sons were almost the only guests whom he ever received at his house. There, however, the boys had been frequent visitors ; and it was from Mr. De Forest that they had learned to shoot and to angle ; and Allan had even acquired no THE SILVER EIFLE. 13 mean skill in the delicate manufacture of artificial flies, which the old gentleman was supposed to have carried nearly to perfection. At that time the wilderness of north-eastern New York, and the Adirondack range, had not become the resort that it is now. Any amateur sportsman who made his way into " John Brown's tract" was thought to have performed quite a remarkable feat ; and the region of the Saranac Lakes and the mountains was unknown, except to the professional trapper, and a very few gen- tlemen whose love of forest life had carried them into the recesses of the woods and waters. But for many years Mr. De Forest had 'been used to spend the autumn, and often a large part of the early winter, in that wild region; and it was better known to him than to any one, with the excep- tion of a few old guides and hunters. Mr. De Forest was not very fond of talking of his ex- periences in the wilderness : perhaps he did not care to do anything to make his favourite haunts a place of resort for the multitude of sportsmen. He had, however, often asked Mr. Fitz Adam to accompany him, and that gentleman had always intended to accept the invitation. Mr. Fitz Adam was, however, a lawyer, distinguished at the bar, and overwhelmed with business ; and lie 14 THE SILVER RIFLE. had never yet been able to find the time when he could give up a month or six weeks to such an excursion, or go so far from the post-office and the telegraph. He had always meant, and hoped, to make the trip at that indefinite " some time," to which busy men look forward all their lives, and which they so seldom attain. Reserved as Mr. De Forest was in general, he had always talked freely to the boys about his adventures among the lakes and mountains, — adventures which, of course, the two brothers eagerly desired to share. They had been promised that, when they were old enough, they should go with their old friend oil his annual excursion ; and they had hoped that the long desired trip might have taken place that fall. Many a young gentleman who piqued himself on his talents with rod and gun would have given a great deal for the privileges accorded to John and Allan. I fear that much of the attention which the boys received from certain gentlemen of their father's acquaintance, was owing to the wish of said gentlemen to know more of Mr, De Forest. Although their old friend had never so much as hinted that he did not wish the stories he told them to be repeated, yet still John and Allan had a feeling that he would be better THE SILVER RIFLE. 15 pleased if they kept his confidences to themselves. It is probable that their old friend liked them all the better for their discretion, and that their privileges at his house were more extensive than if they had boasted of the favours received at his hands. Allan's first " real grown-up rod " and John's first fowling-piece had been his gifts. It was he who taught them some of the mysteries of fly- fishing : and a most mysterious art it is. It was he who taught them to manage a gun, and hit a bird on the wing, and to use a rifle. Under his instructions the boys had really attained consider- able skill, and could be trusted to go out for a day's hunting, without any great danger of shoot- ing themselves or their companions. They had been allowed to handle, and even to fire, Mr. De Forest's famous rifle, with which he was known to have performed some wonderful feats. This rifle was the pride of the old gentle- man's heart ; and he, and of course the boys, firmly believed that it was the best of its kind in the United States, — that is to say, in the world. It had been "built" expressly for its owner by a celebrated maker, and was not only remark- able for the useful, but for the ornamental. It was lavishly inlaid with solid silver, wherevei. 16 THE SILVER RIFLE. such decoration could be bestowed, in curious patterns of scroll-work and foliage, with figures of birds, deer, and squirrels beautifully designed and executed. The price which Mr. De Forest had paid for this rifle was a matter which he kept to himself; but it must have been something very consider- able. When at home, this wonderful rifle was kept in a case almost as valuable as itself; but its " travel- ling carriage," as its owner called it, was a plain ordinary gun-case : but it was secured by a com- plicated lock. It was not often, however, that the rifle was out of reach of the old gentleman's hand during his expeditions. The trappers and hunters of the wild region he loved, called it " the silver rifle," and regarded it with an almost superstitious re- spect. Mr. Marshall had more than once expressed a fear that his uncle would be murdered, for the sake of this rifle, by " some of those people " in the woods. Mr. De Forest had smiled at the warn- ing, however, and said that if he were ever killed for any such reason, it would be by some member of a gentleman's sporting society, anxious to get possession of his fly-book. THE SILVER EIPLE. 17 Mr. Fitz Adam had received with much grief the news of his old friend's death, and had gone to the funeral two days before. To their great regret, the boys had been left at home. . Mr. Mar- shall's whole family was to be at the house, which would be more than full ; and Mr. Fitz Adam had felt that, with all his professional self-control, it would be rather a trial to him to see the Mar- shall in possession of his old friend's home ; and he preferred that his sons should keep their last memory of the place as they had been used to see it during the lifetime of the owner. Perhaps it might be that he had some dread of a collision between John and Allan and the Marshalls. The boys had consoled themselves with the thought that they should not see Mrs. Marshall, whom they greatly disliked, in possession of the home they had loved so well. They had expected their father that evening, and felt very much disappointed that he had not come. "It's no use to wait any longer," said John, lighting the gas: "we might as well have tea. Let 's ask Mrs. Ray to let us have it here : it 's so lonesome to go down into the dining-room with no one but you and me." Mrs. Ray, the housekeeper, — an exceedingly 2 * b 18 THE SILVER RIFLE. good-natured woman/ — consented readily j and, as she had a friend of her own to tea in her room, she left the boys alone. They had hardly settled themselves at the little table, when their cousin Everard Fenton came in. Everard was a young man of twenty-one, who had arrived at the dignity of the sophomore class in his college. He was a great favourite with the boys, and, sophomore though he was, he was hardly older in reality than his cousins. Everard was one of those boys who seem to take a long time to grow up, and who are younger at twenty-one than are others at sixteen. He was a kind, gentle, light- hearted sort of youth ; and notwithstanding his age, and his dignified position as college student, was, where John and Allan were concerned, rather the led than the leader. " Has n't Uncle Fitz come home ? " was his first question. " No. We thought he 'd certainly be here to- night," said John. " I can't think what keeps him." " Have some tea ? " said Allan, pouring it out. " Thank you : you need n't make it quite all sugar and cream, though. Does Mrs. Ray trust you two young ones to make tea for yourselves ? " " Oh, you need n't put on the sophomore to THE SILVER RIFLE. 19 us," said John ; " I 've seen the animal before, and it don't awe me ; not much. Why are you not back at college ? I thought you were going back to-day. You'll be late, and then you'll catch it." Everard put on a look of mystery. " I 'm not going back, — not just yet." " Why ? " said John and Allan, in a breath. " Oh, for a reason." " They won't let him," said Allan, in a make believe aside to John. "He's been expelled, or dismissed, or something." " No, indeed," said Everard, earnestly, and then smiling at himself for being in earnest. " But there is a reason, and you are not to know it just yet." " Let him alone, and he '11 be sure to tell us," said John. " Maybe he 's going up into the Adirondack hunting deer," said Allan, making what he thought the most unlikely supposition. To his surprise, however, Everard coloured, and said in a tone of great surprise, " Why, how did you know?" Both the boys jumped up in astonishment. " You don't mean it ? How ? Where ? When ? Who with ? " they asked, heaping one question upon another. 20 THE SILVER RIFLE. "Well, you see/' said Everard, rather em- barrassed, "it was all settled, before you came home from grandma's, that your father and mine, and you and I, were going with Mr. De Forest for a month or so this fall. He 's always wanted Uncle Fitz to go, you know ; and the last time he was in town, while you were away, he and my father were talking together. Now I must tell you what, perhaps, you don't know, that Dr. C has been scolding both my father and yours for working themselves so hard ; and he told them both that if they did not take a vacation, and a good long one, they would both be breaking down, Uncle Fitz especially." " I know it," said John, with some emotion. " And father always says he 's going to ; and he did go off with those people in the yacht this summer, but he was telegraphed home, finally; and everywhere he stopped there was a pile of business letters to be answered; and, worst of all, the other people all fell to quarrelling, and he had to settle it: so he didn't have a very good time." " Why, John," said Allan, who was not so observant as his brother ; " do you think father is n't well ? " " I know he isn't," said John. "And I heard THE SILVER RIFLE. 21 the doctor tell him myself, that if he did n't take more care of his head and eyes, they would fail him ; and grandma told him so too ; and he 's always putting off his resting time, and putting it off; and some time it will be too late ; and Uncle Fenton is just as bad." Allan looked alarmed. " Do you mean there is any danger ? " he said. " Now I think of it, father has complained of his head a good deal lately. Oh, John ! if you knew, why did n't you tell me ? " " What is the use of worrying two people, when it don't do any good," said John, shortly ; " and they did n't tell me anything about it. I only heard it by accident ; so I had no right to repeat it. If he 'd only take more care of him- self, and not work so hard, he'd do well enough. Go on with your story, Everard. What hap- pened next ? " " Well, father and Mr. De Forest were talking together in the bookstore, and Uncle Fitz and Dr. G happened to come in. So I suppose the doctor thought he would kill two birds with one stone, and he knew he should have Mr. De Forest on his side : so he talked to them both very decidedly, and told me I ought to take care of my father, — as if he would mind me," said Ever- 22 THE SILVER RIFLE. ard, rather injured. "Then your father said that he meant to take time by and by, and go to see his brother in St. Louis. Mr. De Forest said that would be no use : he would be writing letters, and answering telegrams all the while ; and that as for my father, the book-agents and beggars would find him out, if he were anywhere within thirty miles of the railroad. ' The only way for both of you,' he said, ' is to come up into the Adirondack with me this fall. I will take you where you will hear or see nothing of law busi- ness, or boards, or book-agents, and where the telegraph cannot get at you. Dr. Fen ton can get some one to take his pulpit, if not his place ; and as for Fitz, here, he had better lose a dozen cases, than bring on apoplexy, or something worse.' So then Dr. C went at both of them, and Mr. De Forest helped him ; and they fairly promised they would go this month, and you and I were t- go with them ; but I was told not to say any- thing to you, because you'd be so disappointed if anything happened to prevent; and besides," and here Everard checked himself. " You need n't stop," said Allan ; " I suppose father thought, if we knew too long beforehand, we should be all on end : but of course it is all over now." THE SILVER EIFLE. 23 " I don't think so. I asked Uncle Fitz, when I left him at the cars, if he meant to give up the plan, and he said, No. He must get away from his business ; and that Mr. De Forest had always been wanting him to go ; and that he should like to see the places where his old friend had spent so much time, and hear what the people there could tell about him, and that we would set out as soon after he came back as we could." " It will seem sad, too, going there without Mr. De Forest," said Allan ; " but I would like to see the places he has talked to us about so much, and his old guide that he used to think so much of." " And is that what you have stayed at home from college for ? " asked John of Everard. " Yes, partly. You see father and mother don't half like some of the ways at our college, and neither do I ; and so, on the whole, father says I may stay at home this term, and study what I can, and go to Dartmouth in the spring." " All right," said John. " I suppose Allan and I are bound for the old place, too. It runs in the family." " You '11 go together ? " questioned Everard. " Rather so," said Allan, with a bright look at 24 THE SILVER RIFLE. his brother. " I could n't fight with any one else half as comfortably as I can with John." " You mean no one else would be able to put up with your freaks/' said John. " But, Allan, won't you like to see the lakes and the moun- tains he has told us so much about ? Oh, Ever- ard, we did use to have such nice times with him ! He was so good to us." " Yes. I don't wonder you miss him/' said Everard. " I did n't know him so well as you, but I liked him. I don't know as much about hunting as you do; perhaps I don't care so much about it. How much shot do you think a gun ought to carry to the ounce ? " " Shot ! " said John, with mingled wonder and pity. " You don't think you are going out after deer with a shot gun, do you ? " " People do, I know." " People ! " said John, scornfully. " People may, if they choose : they don't know better. I '11 tell you — " but the young gentleman's lecture was interrupted, for a carriage stopped in front of the house ; and Allan jumped up, exclaiming, " There 's father, after all ! " The boys rushed into the hall to meet not only Mr. Fitz Adam, but also, to their great surprise, Lorraine. THE SILVER RIFLE. 25 The latter, on seeing John and Allan, gave way to the emotion she had been repressing all day, burst into tears, and sobbed as if her heart would break. Mr. Fitz Adam led her into the parlor, and seated her in a great chair before the fire. " We Ve had rather a trying day," he said to his sons. " She is quite tired out." Allan put his arms round the old lady's neck and kissed her affectionately. " It 's so hard, I know," he said, with tears in his own eyes ; his grief for his old friend renewed by the sight of Lorraine. John relieved her of her bonnet and cloak, and considerate Everard brought her a cup of tea. " Thank you, thank you, my dears," said Lor- raine, trying to compose herself. "I did not mean to, but seeing the young gentlemen brought it all up to me so plainly." " I understand," said Mr. Fitz Adam, sooth- ingly. " Sit still, and get rested, Lorraine. John, ring the bell, please, and tell them to get some- thing ready for us ; for we have had no dinner. A freight train was wrecked on the track before us, and we have been waiting for them to clear away. Lorraine was never on the cars before, and she is tired out." 3 26 THE SILVER RIFLE. " I think you look pretty tired, too, father/' said Allan, remembering with anxiety what John had said of the doctor's remarks. " I am rather tired ; but I shall be better when I get some tea," said Air. Fitz Adam, passing his hand over his forehead. Everard took his leave, and went home to talk over the coming expedition with his father. It was not till after dinner, when Lorraine, wearied out, had gone to bed, that Mr. Fitz Adam told the boys what had taken place at the old house. " You will be glad to know that Pedro and Lorraine are provided for," he said. " I thought he would provide for them, if he made a will," said John; "but so many people never do." " Mr. De Forest was not a man to neglect his duty to his old friends in that way," said Mr. Fitz Adam. " His will was made a long time since. The house, and the land about it, are left to Pedro and Lorraine for life, with a sufficient annuity, on condition of their taking care of the dogs and the two cats. After their death the place is left to me, and the whole of the furni- ture and everything in the house." "Oh, I'm so glad!" said Allan. "Now it won't all be pulled to pieces." THE SILVER EIFLE. 27 " The most of his property he has left to the Marshalls. It was much larger than any one supposed ; but they are greatly provoked, and dis- satisfied that they are not to have the house too, though it is of little value. There are a few other legacies, one of five hundred dollars to Michael Heath, the man who used to be with him so much in the Adirondack. He has left you, Allan, all his fishing tackle, including that fine silver-mounted rod, and has given John his silver rifle." " Oh, father ! " said John, half pleased, half sorrowful. " How much he must have thought of us?" " Yes, indeed, he did. The will stipulates that you are to have the rifle immediately. I suppose there are not many people who would trust such a valuable piece to a boy of your age ; but I think you will know how to use it ; and I am sure you will be careful of it." " Indeed I will," said John, who could hardly believe that he was the actual owner of the wonderful rifle. "Did you bring it with you?" " No ; I left the things to come down by ex- press, and they will be here to-morrow. I sup- pose he thought, perhaps, there was some differ- 28 THE SILVER RIFLE. ence in the value of the two gifts, for he has given Allan that pretty little silver tea-set." " I 'm sure I never should have thought of what the things cost," said Allan ; " and I 'd rather have the fishing things than anything else. I suppose the Marshalls did n't like it very well ; did they ? " " jS t o. They were greatly displeased, and said some very insulting things, both to Lorraine and Pedro, and to me ; but I hope I kept my temper ; though I own it Avas hard work, when Mr. Mar- shall spoke of the folly of putting such a valuable thing as the rifle into the hands of a dissipated, reckless boy." " Dissipated, indeed ! " said Allan, in high in- dignation, while John only laughed. " I wonder when, or how? He did indulge himself rather violently in mission schooling last summer, to be sure. They had n't better say anything, when every one knows how Gus goes on." " Pooh ! What 's the use of minding," said John, carelessly. " Every young fellow is dissi- pated, according to Mrs. Marshall. You can't go and get a saucer of ice-cream, without her making out that you are going to ruin. But I don't know what they thought Gus could do with the rifle. He 's afraid of a gun." THE SILVER RIFLE. 29 " Sell it, of course," said Allan. " They 'd sell their grandmother, if they could ; but I 'ni so glad they can't turn out Pedro and Lorraine. How did Lorraine happen to come down with you, father ? " " She wanted to get her mourning ; and then she has a little nephew in town, whose parents are dead, and whom she and Pedro are going to adopt. Mr. and Mrs. Marshall behaved so to the two old people, that I really felt obliged to interfere. I am glad you did not go, boys. It was disgusting to see the way they went on — in that house — even before the funeral. I am made executor, — Mr. Bland and I ; and I do not sup- pose Ave shall have a very pleasant time, though his affairs are all in excellent order ; but his niece will be sure to think we have done her injustice. She more than hinted to me that you and I had understood how to make our own advantage with the 'poor childish old man/ as she called him. Never mind them ; I don't want to think any more about them. One gets used to trials of temper in my profession, or ought to; but I don't think I ever had harder work to keep mine." " Did you know that he had left us anything, sir?" asked John. " No ; only I knew he had made his will, and, 30 THE SILVER RIFLE. as he did not ask me to do it, I thought probably we were remembered in some way; but I never thought of his leaving us the house. He spoke of you both before he died. Lorraine will tell you about it to-morrow. Has Everard told you about this Adirondack expedition ? " " We guessed it by accident/' said Allan. " Do you really think you will go, father ? " " Yes, my boy, I think I shall. I begin to feel that the doctor is right; and that I must have some rest from courts and referee cases, if I want to be good for anything for the next few years. You need not look so anxious, my sons. There is no very immediate danger; and I don't doubt a few weeks of out-door life will quite set me up. Your uncle needs it more than I do. How do you think Everard will stand it '? " " It will be good for him," said John ; " only he don't know much about a gun, or anything of that sort." " He has not had your opportunities. His father was by no means a bad shot, when we were young men together. But do you really suppose I am going to let you go, too ? " " Father," said Allan, imploringly, " you never would go off there without us ? " THE SILVER RIFLE. 31 " I suppose not ; but what will the doctor say at your being out of school ? " " Oh, we '11 bring him home the most hideous crawling creature we can find," said Allan, " and then he '11 think it 's all right." "How odd it is," said John, thoughtfully. " Nothing ever turns out just as you expect it will. We 've been looking forward to going so long, and now we are going, to be sure, but without Mr. De Forest. Things come about so differently from the way you think they will. Does n't it seem so, father ? " " Have you just found that out, my son ? " said the father, half amused, half saddened. " You '11 find that truer every year you live, I 'm afraid. Bring me the Bible, Allan, and we will have prayers, and go to bed. To-morrow evening we will talk over the matter, and see what we shall want." CHAPTER II. ME. DE FOREST'S LETTER. LORRAINE, Mr. De Forest's housekeeper, was a handsome stately old woman. She was the daughter of a Seneca Indian and a French Canadian ; but she had been adopted when a child into Mr. De Forest's family, and had remained there all her life, marrying Pedro, who had grown up with her in the same house. Pedro, too, had Indian blood ; but both he and his wife were anything but uncivilized people, being highly skilled in all matters relating to their domestic duties, and most attached and faithful friends to their " young master," as they always called Mr. De Forest. Both of them took great delight in petting the two Fitz Adams; and John and Allan would now and then try to vex their own good-natured house- keeper by their praises of Lorraine's cookery, which they declared to be infinitely superior to anything at home. Pedro was as fond of a gun THE SILVER RIFLE. 33 and rod as his master; and the boys had passed many a day wandering about the woods with the old man, and listening to his stories. Both he and Lorraine had endless legends of the ancient glories of the De Forest family, — the wonderful beauty, the dress and accomplishments, of its daughters, and the surprising talents of its sons ; the horses they used to ride, and their ad- ventures in peace and war. To hear all these tales did the boys^most seri- ously incline. Pedro and Lorraine firmly be- lieved that " the young gentlemen " were, beyond comparison, superior in learning, manners, and morals to any other young gentlemen of their age. This opinion, however, they always thought proper to disguise before the said young gentle- men, and to assert that they never would be quite equal to their own father, or to various and sundry De Forests of long ago. Pedro was very proud of John's steady hand and quick eye in shooting; but John never made a good shot without hearing from his old friend some anecdote of what "young master" had done at his age. When Allan took a prize in school, Lorraine, fully believing that he had achieved the very highest honours, nevertheless felt herself bound to tell him, on principle, how Master c 34 THE SILVER RIFLE. Edmund De Forest had taken the gold medal ai college, " and he only two years older than you are, Master Allan." This manner of discourse was adopted with the laudable intention of repressing the vanity of the young gentlemen, and producing that modest opinion of themselves, and their own powers, which Pedro and his wife considered essential to properly educated young people. The next morning John accompanied the old woman to find the child of whom she had come in search, and who, by the way, was Pedro's sister's son. He was a pretty, delicate, intelligent-look- ing little fellow of six ; and Lorraine's heart went out to him, as he nestled in her arms and laid his cheek to hers. He was quite willing to go with her ; and it was with great pleasure that she carried him back to Mr. Fitz Adam's home. " You don't know how fond Mr. De Forest was of you two," said Lorraine to the boys that evening, as she sat before the dining-room fire with her knitting in her hand. Little Theodore was contentedly building houses with some old blocks of John's which Mrs. Ray had found for him. John and Allan were sitting on the hearth- rug ; John with his dog's head on his knee, and Allan serving as a parade-ground for the family THE SILVER RIFLE. 35 cat, who went purring over and around him, now and then rubbing her nose against his with effusive affection. " I know he was always very good to us," said Allan, with emotion. " I can't feel that he is really gone, and that we shall never see him again." " Not here, my dear ; but I hope we '11 all look forward to seeing him above," said Lorraine, softly. " If ever there was a man who kept the two great commandments, it was young master. He didn't talk much about his religious feelings. It never was his way; but they were very real to him." " I know," said Allan. " He always made Sunday such a pleasant day. If all religious people were like him and my uncle Fenton, I should think every one would want to be a Christian." " Well, you see, dear, some folks are smooth- grained Christians, and some are knotty Chris- tians. Now young master he was one of the smooth-grained kind. His dying so suddenly was a great shock to me, at first; but I can see now that the Lord's way was the right one, and that it was a mercy he had no pain to suffer. The night before he died I went into the library, 36 THE SILVER RIFLE. as I generally did, about ten o'clock, and I found him sitting before the fire, with the Bible open on the stand before hirn. He was looking into the blaze with a kind of thoughtful look on his face. I asked him what he wanted for breakfast ; but he didn't answer me for a minute ; and then he said, without looking up, ' Lorraine, do you know this is my wife's birthday?' Well, you know, it sort of gave me a turn ; for I don't be- lieve he 'd spoken of mistress three times to me since she died. " It was her birthday ; and Pedro and I had been talking about it : and my mistress died on her birthday, — thirty years ago that night. I said, ' Yes, sir ; I remember.' " ' Lorraine/ said he, ' I think it 's almost time I went to her and my children.' " You can't think, my dears, how it took me, to hear him speak like that. " ' Sir/ I said, ' I hope you will be spared to us for many years yet.' " 'That may be/ said he, with a smile, — such a sweet look it was, as if he was seeing something far away ! ' but for all that, I feel it is almost time. I have provided for you and Pedro/ -he went on. ' The old place will be yours as long as you live, and after that the house and furniture THE SILVER RIFLE. 37 will go to Master Fitz.' You know we always called your father so. It don't seem as if it was more than yesterday since he was a boy like you. Well, I was glad to hear him say so; for it had always been rather a trial to me to think of Miss Malvina — Mrs. Marshall, that is — taking posses- sion of all the things that belonged to my young mistress. She's not a bit of De Forest, Miss Malvina ; she 's all clear Gibson. " ' Yes,' he went on, as though he were talking to himself. ' Fitz won't pull the old place to pieces ; and I think the boys will like to come back to the house ; and it will be a country home for them to come to out of the city. Lorraine,' said he, 'I rather wish the little fellows were here now.' " ' Why don't you send for them, sir,' I said. " ' Oh, they are going out into the woods with me this fall,' he said. 'Don't mention what I have told you ; but look, here, Lorraine, — it 's a fancy of mine, — if I should never see them again, — though I know no reason why I should n't, — tell them that I loved them, and thought of them a great deal, sitting here alone by myself; and that they must prepare to meet me where there are no partings ; ' and then he said other things, and asked me if I could remember. 4 38 THE SILVER RIFLE. " Well, I felt so struck by what he 'd said, I felt as if it was a forewarning, and I said : " ' Why don't you write what you have to say to the young gentlemen, sir? None of us can tell, to be sure, when we shall be called away ; and if it should be you were never to see them again, — which I hope you will many times, — they 'd love to have such a letter, I know.' Said he : c Lorraine, I think I will ; and I '11 do it to- night.' " ' Don't you feel well, sir ? ' I said ; for I was startled. " ( Yes,' said he, ' as well as usual ; but, Lor- raine, you know how your mistress left us, and my father ; and I think I '11 take your advice. I suppose it is the day has made me think of these things.' "So he opened his writing-desk; and I went out and told Pedro; and he said it was only my notion ; but we both sat up till he went to bed. The next morning, when Pedro went up, he found him lying, just as he had passed away in his sleep, with a smile on his face, and looking so still and happy. I shall always think he was forewarned." "Do you know if he did write," said John, in a low voice. Allan was too much moved to speak. THE SILVER RIFLE. 39 " Yes, my clear ; I found the letter between the leaves of his Bible, and took it, and kept it for you, or I do believe Miss Malvina would have read it. Here it is," and Lorraine drew from her ample pocket a carefully folded paper, from which she took the letter. It was directed " To my two dear boys." Allan leaned over his broth- er's shoulder, and read it through his tears. " My dear Lads," it began : " Though I know no reason why I should not hope to meet you again, and go with you on our journey that we have so often talked about, yet still, sitting here to-night, by the fire, I have remembered that I am an old man, and that, like some others of my family, my call may be sud- den. You two have been very dear to me, and your society has been the greatest comfort of my old age. You have been good and dutiful boys to me — " " Oh, I was n't, I was n't," said Allan, with a sob. " I pulled Sport's tail, and made him growl ; and I meddled with the red hackle, when he told me not." " He never laid it up against you, my dear," said Lorraine ; "that you may be sure." John said nothing ; but he remembered, with a pang, one or 40 THE SILVER RIFLE. two little things said and done, which now he would have been glad to recall. " You will see," continued the letter, " when I am gone, that I have not forgotten you. Let me ask you not to lend the rod and the gun to any one but to each other. " You will be going to college soon ; and you will be much in the world ; and you will hear and see a great many things of which I, in my solitude, only hear and see the echoes and shadows. Allan read to me once out of some of the poems he likes : ' The old order changes, yielding place to new, And God fulfills himself in many ways.' "You are of the young generation, and must go with it, — in many things which seem very strange in my old eyes ; but trust me one thing, my dears, in all the years I have lived, I have felt more and more that Christ is ' the way, the truth, and the life ;' and that whatever of good science may teach you, or whatever wild notions men may conceive and send abroad, ' no man cometh unto the Father but by' him. Keep near him, my sons. Love your father and one another. You are very much united now. Don't let the world part you. It has nothing half so good to give as brotherly love and trust. THE SILVER RIFLE. 41 " May God bless you, and bring you into his everlasting kingdom. " Your old friend, " Lawrence De Forest." The boys drew closer to one another as they finished, and sat in silence for some time, greatly moved and touched by these last words, which seemed to come now like a message from the other world. Little Theodore came to his aunt, saying that he was sleepy, and wanted to go to bed • and Lor- raine rolled up her knitting, and went away with the child. When the brothers were left alone, John put his arm over Allan's shoulder, and drew him closer. "We'll try and remember this, won't we?" he said, looking into the fire. " Yes, indeed," said Allan, returning the caress. " John, do you know I 've been ever so jealous of Everard, sometimes, lately?" " You silly fellow," said the other; " Everard's a nice boy enough, and I like him ; but he is n't you : nobody else is." " All right," returned Allan, assenting to this indisputable proposition, and then looking round 4* 42 THE SILVER RIFLE, to be quite sure that no one saw them, the boys exchanged a kiss, though they were fifteen and sixteen. The next morning the expressman brought the cases containing the silver rifle and the fishing tackle, — Mr. De Forest's last gifts to his young friends. " Is n't that old Mr. De Forest's rifle ? " said the expressman, with interest, as John opened the outer case, and showed the inlaid one within. " Yes," said John. " Did you know him ? " " Is he dead, then ? " said the expressman, in a tone of regret. " Yes ; he died last week," said Allan, with a sigh. " He left the rifle to my brother, and his fishing tackle to me. We used to be with him a great deal." Mr. Fitz Adam had been obliged to send out for change, so that the man had to wait for a few minutes, and seemed not sorry to do so. " He was a real nice old gentleman," said the messenger, watching the opening of the rifle-case with great interest. " I was raised in the village. My father was a gunsmith there ; and if Mr. De Forest wanted any little tinkering done, he used to come to father. Many a time I 've seen him with that rifle. And what a gentleman he was ! THE SILVER RIFLE. 43 There never was anything stuck up about him : just the same to everybody. He was very good to my father once. Father 'd been laid up with the rheumatism, one fall, and could n't do any- thing ; and after he was well, my mother she took sick, and my old grandmother that lived with us died j and what with sickness, and what with the funeral expenses, we had n't a red cent left in the world, and what to do my father did n't know ; and we were in a peck of trouble, and in debt, and it seemed as if our little home would have to go; for you see father 'd mortgaged it, and could n't pay neither interest nor principal. Well, Mr. De Forest he heard of it; and he never said a word, but he just goes and buys up the mortgage himself, and told my father to take his time to pay it, 'because,' says the old gentle- man, ' I know you will, in time ; and at all events, you see your wife and children must n't be with- out a home.' And he did more, for he lent father money to get stock, and said he thought he could find work for him ; for that was all father wanted to get on : for he understood his trade first-rate, did father. And father says he, < This is what I call Christian charity, Mr. De Forest.' " ' Oh, no,' says the old gentleman, in his nice, polite way. 'We won't" call it charity, Seth. 44 THE SILVER RIFLE. It's only a little neighbourly kindness. I am sure you would do as much for me, if I were in trouble/ " And father, he was so kind of beat out, you know, he just sat right down on the bench and cried. Fact ! " Well, he did first-rate, and got on as well as possible, and paid it all back again — 'cause we none of us wanted anything given to us ; but it was the way of it, don't you see ? Yes, he was a nice old gentleman. Well, here 's the change. Thank you, sir. Who 's to have the old place, Mr. Fitz Adam, if it 's a fair question ? " " The two old people, for their lives, and then it will come to me or my boys," said Mr. Fitz Adam, who had been pleased both with the story and with him who told it. " Well, I 'in glad of it," said the expressman, heartily. " I kind of hated to think of them relations of his taking possession there. There is n't a house on m}^ beat where I hate to go so bad. Well, good-morning, young gentlemen. 1 'm glad the things have fallen into such good hands." " How every one dislikes those Marshalls," said Allan ; " and yet they are always so anxious to please people whom they think are a bit finer THE SILVER RIFLE. 45 than they are. How beautifully nice that rifle has always been kept. You must try and have it so always, John. That 's the worst of a gun. It's got to be cleaned; and no one will ever do it for you as it ought to be done." John laid the rifle carefully away, locked the case, and putting the key in his pocket, felt with mingled pleasure and regret that he was the actual owner of the wonderful weapon he had so often admired. " Get the chisel and hammer, Allan," he said ; " I suppose Pedro has packed the things all to- gether in that case." The boys unpacked the large box almost with reverence, both for the giver and for its contents. There was nothing but what renewed most vividly these associations with their old friend. There was the elegant cabinet containing all the thou- sand and one materials of fly-making, carefully assorted and labelled in their different trays. There were stores of the best lines and hooks, enough to last any one a lifetime. There was the rod which Mr. De Forest had carried on his last expedition, — Conroy's best work, — a plain, but elegantly .finished instrument; and another, which had been a present to Mr. De Forest, a most beautiful thing in the eyes of an amateur angler. 46 THE SILVER RIFLE. This rod had been got up quite regardless of ex- pense, and was fitted and ornamented with solid silver, and with every improvement which it could have. If there was anything to be objected to this rod, it was that it was rather too fine for use. Mr. De Forest had always kept it with great care ; but he had not often carried it, pre- ferring, like most practical anglers, an instrument not quite so showy, and thinking his friend's gift too elegant and expensive to be subjected to those numerous accidents to which fishing-rods are heirs. " Father," said Allan, " I believe I won't take this up into the wilderness. It 's too nice; and I might lose it, or break it, or something." " I think you are right," said his father, rather surprised at the boy's good sense. " And don't you think I ought to take the rifle, sir ? " said John, looking rather anxious and dis- consolate at the thought of leaving it behind. " That 's rather different," said Mr. Fitz Adam. " A gun is not so likely to be broken as a rod ; and I suppose there is no great danger of your losing it." " I 'd as soon lose my head," said John. " I 've known you do that," said his father, smiling ; " but I can't say I ever saw you neglect THE SILVER RIFLE. 47 your gun. Mr. De Forest always carried it ; so I suppose you may. But what am I thinking of, to stand chattering here with you two youngsters, when I should be at the office hearing a case." " Dear me/' said Allan ; " I wish there was n't any office, and then you could be with us all the time." " I wonder what you think you would do for your bread and butter, if it were not for the office," said Mr. Fitz Adam; but he smiled to himself as he went down the steps, thinking that it is not every boy who wishes for his father's company " all the time." At the bottom of the box Allan found the little old fashioned silver tea-set, which he remembered in connection with more than one pleasant little feast prepared at some odd time, on return from some expedition among the hills, with Pedro, or his master. The boys carried all their possessions up into their own room, and were presently joined by Everard, who was, of course, full of the proposed journey. The three spent a most delightful morn- ing arranging all their treasures, and selecting from among their stores such things as they wished to take with them into the wilderness. Allan and John bestowed a great deal of infor- 48 THE SILVER RIFLE. niation on their cousin, perhaps more than was absolutely necessary ; but E verarcl was very good- naturecl, and did not resent the instruction which his juniors lavished upon him. Allan accompanied his advice with a generous donation of " flies," and showed his cousin how to make a proper book to contain these treasures. Everard was more deft with his fingers than many a girl, and readily put his cousin's direc- tions into execution. The three passed a most delightful day, and Everard agreed to remain till evening, and talk over the matter still further with his uncle .Fitz. Allan went in the afternoon to see Lorraine and her little nephew safe on board the cars ; and hav- ing said "Good-by" to his old friend, he was leaving the station, when he was accosted by A ugustus Marsh al 1 . There was very little liking between the two boys, but still they were on speaking terms, rather because Augustus was desirous of being seen with the son of a distinguished man, than from any great degree of self-restraint, or polite- ness, on the part of Master Fitz Adam. Mr. and Mrs. Marshall had regretted that their an- noyance about the will had led them to treat Mr. Fitz Adam with disrespect. Augustus had been THE SILVER RIFLE. 49 directed by his parents to behave to John and Allan "just as if nothing had happened." He accordingly greeted Allan with a sort of half- familiar, half-fawning fashion, which he mistook for the " easy elegance " described in the trashy third-rate stories which formed his only reading. These works were equally untrue to nature and art. They abounded in the most surprising pic- tures of fashionable life, lords and ladies, and bad grammar ; and it was hard to tell in these books which were the more vulgar and silly, the authors or their works. Allan had as little worldly pride as any boy in the city. He would have walked down Broad- way with a chimney-sweep, provided he had liked the chimney-sweep, quite indifferent to the opinion of the passers by. It was not long since he had amazed Mrs. Marshall by carrying home a basket of potatoes for an old Irish woman whom he happened to know. And while so engaged, he had bowed to the lady in her car- riage, quite unconscious that he was doing any- thing remarkable. But there was something in Gus Marshall's manners and customs which invariably irritated and aggravated Allan, and developed in John a 5 D 50 THE SILVER RIFLE. certain reserve and dignity quite wonderful to behold in such a very young gentleman. " Ah, Fitz Adam \ how are you ? " said Gus, who, at seventeen, assumed all the airs of what he supposed to be " a man of the world." " Been acting as the old lady's beau, have you ? " " I 've been seeing Lorraine on the cars," said Allan, coldly, and walking on very fast. Gus, however, kept at his side. " Well," said Gus, " I suppose you are very well pleased with what the old gentleman has left you. Upon my word, Fitz Adam, I did n't give you credit for so much knowledge of the world and its ways, as to think you could get the old fellow to do so much for you in his will." " Gus Marshall," said Allan, hotly, " I '11 thank you not to talk to me about your uncle like that. I should think you 'd be ashamed of yourself." " Now, look here, Fitz," said Gus, with an air of superiority. "My name doesn't happen to be Fitz," inter- rupted Allan. " Well, then, Fitz Adam. Now you see, of course, I understand it all, and your reasons for visiting him so much ; and I don't blame you. It 's the way of the world, every one for himself. ' Dear me, ma'am,' I said to my mother, 'why should THE SILVER RIFLE. 51 you blame the Fitz Adams for looking out for number one ? Don't we all do it ? Of course, it isn't to be supposed that two young fellows about town, like John and Allan, would go and bury themselves in the woods with an old man like that, unless they expected to get something by it ; ' and you 've done it : all right. I don't bear any malice." " I 'm not a young fellow about town," retorted Allan, in high indignation; "and I wouldn't be, for anything. Know the world indeed ! A wonderful mean kind of world you must live in, if you think everybody is as contemptible as all that. Do stop talking about the matter. You don't understand that, nor much of anything else." This remarkably candid speech astonished Gus, who had supposed that his remarks were emi- nently calculated to impress his companion with a feeling of respect and admiration. Gus was quite incapable of understanding the disgust and angry contempt which his conversation inspired. Except among a few silly boys who thought him a model for imitation, a desire to avoid Gus Marshall's company was very general in school and society ; and there were probably few youths of his age who subjected themselves to as many 52 THE SILVER RIFLE. snubs and settings down as this young person, who, with all his ambition to be considered ele- gant and fine, had not the least idea of what was essential to elegance or refinement. " Oh, come now, Allan ! " he said, attempting to take his companion's arm. " What is the use of putting on airs to me ? Don't I know the way of the world ? You did what your father told you, of course; and a man don't earn his place in his profession without knowing which side his bread is buttered. Did n't I say I did n't blame you ? " " Do you mean to say," exclaimed Allan, turn- ing on Gus with flashing eyes, "that when we went to your uncle's, we did it with the idea of getting anything out of him ? " " No ; oh, no, of course not," said Gus, rather dismayed. u Never mind." " There, don't you make such insinuations again," said Allan, quite fiercely, " about us, or about my father. Do talk about something else, if you must talk," concluded the boy, half aloud. But Gus was determined not to take oifence. He wanted to remark among the companions whose society he most affected, that so and so happened " when he was walking with young Fitz Adam." THE SILVER RIFLE. 53 " Are you going back to school on Tuesday ? " he asked. " No ; I 'm going up into the north woods with my father for a month." . " Indeed ! Well, do you know I rather expect I am going too ? " " You are ! " exclaimed Allan, by no means in a tone of rapture. " Yes. Some fellows I know are going up as far as Keeseville, at all events; and I am going with them. Where are you to be ? " " We don't know yet," said Allan, inwardly determined to be nowhere where Gus might be found. " You won't have as much fun as we shall, be- cause you'll be under your father's eyes, and your uncle's the minister, all the while. I heard he was going, and I suppose it 's with you. You 'd better throw them over and come with us. Mighty poor fun it would be for me to go to any such place with a minister and my father." " I 'd rather go with my father than with any one else in the world," said Allan, with emphasis ; " and I hope I don't do anything I 'd be ashamed to have a clergyman know." " Oh ! We all know you and John have laid yourselves out to be saints," said Gus, laughing. 54 THE SILVER RIFLE. " Well, it 's a line that pays, especially with the girls." " Gus Marshall," said Allan, who felt at that moment in anything but a saintly frame of mind, " I do just wish you would n't talk to me that way, or any other. I never did see a boy — and you 're nothing but a boy for all, as grand as you feel — that had such contemptible notions as you have about everything. I don't want to be rude ; but you don't know how your talk sounds. If you did, you would n't be so silly." " Why, what gunpowder you are ! " said Gus, colouring, but determined to keep his companion as long as he could. " No wonder the boys call you ' Fire-cracker Fitz.' " " I don't care what they call me," said Allan ; and having reached the stairs which led to his father's office, he turned short round and ran up three steps at a time, rushing into the office in quite a little whirlwind of excitement. For a wonder, just at that moment there was no one in the room but his father and his uncle Fenton, and Allan at once burst out with the question : " Father, is everybody in the world just as mean and contemptible as they can be ? " " Well, my son," said Mr. Fitz Adam, calmly, THE SILVER RIFLE. 55 " that 's rather a large general inquiry. I should like to hear the special case before giving any opinion." " Well, now, are they ? " said Allan, appealing to his uncle, who had smiled a little, but not un- kindly, at the boy's excitement. " It's just that Gus Marshall. He would walk with me ; and he said such things, that we — you and I and John — had been to Mr. De Forest's for what we could get ; and that he — he — only just think of it ! — did n't bear any malice toward us for it ! And he said that you knew which side your bread was buttered; and you don't, do you?" " Let us hope not in the sense, or in the par- ticular instance, which Master Gus meant. Com- pose yourself a little, my boy, if you can. When you have been a lawyer for a few years, you won't be able to get up such a tempest at every silly or low-minded speech you happen to hear." The Rev. Dr. Fenton smiled slightly ; for among his friends Mr. Fitz Adam was well known to possess a fine talent for virtuous indig- nation. " And he said it was the way of the world, and that nobody cared for anybody else, only for what they could get, and that every one was like that. Oh, father ! is that so ? I 'm sure, if it is, I don't 56 THE SILVER RIFLE. want to keep on living/' concluded Allan, in some emotion. " My dear boy/' said his father, putting down his papers and drawing his son toward himself; " I am sorry you should have been so annoyed and excited. I can only tell you my own experience of the world in answer to your question. In our profession we do not always see the best side of humanity, and perhaps grow rather hardened ; but even in my experience in my work, while I have seen a great deal that was contemptible and selfish, I have also seen magnanimity and kindness, jus- tice done at the expense of great self-sacrifice, high- mindedness and goodness coming out sometimes where it was least expected. There are a great many little worlds in the big one, and they are ruled by different spirits. I suspect that what Master Gus would call ' the world/ is perhaps the smallest and meanest of them all ; ruled by the very lowest and most contemptible of all ambitions, — a desire to be considered knowing, and a wish to be at once fast and fashionable. Judge from your own experience of ' the world/ Allan. Do you think that every one you know acts from mean motives ? " " No, indeed, sir ; not you, nor grandma, nor my uncle. Mr. Do Forest did n't. Don't you THE SILVER EIFLE. 57 remember what the expressman told us this morn- ing ? " Here a gentleman entered, who wished to speak to Mr. Fitz Adam in private. " You had better ask your uncle what he can tell you about this matter, Allan," said his father, as he went into the inner room. " I can tell you one thing," said Dr. Fenton, " that there is nothing which so blinds people's eyes to the truth of things as this assumption, that all motives of action, however good and generous the deed, are low and interested. There is nothing which tends more to prevent any real knowledge of men, and of the world, than that view of life. For the most part, especially in the case of a foolish boy like Gus Marshall, it is just an affectation ; and too often it is because the speaker judges his fellow-men by himself. I remember reading a magazine article once where the writer showed how mean and selfish and foolish he had been when a child, and therefore drew the conclusion that all children are incapable of generosity or real affection. He showed one thing very conclusively, and that was that he had not grown up to be much more intelligent as a man than as a child." " I remember grandma being so disgusted with 58 THE SILVER EIPLE. that/' said Allan. " But, Uncle Fenton ; does n't it aggravate you to hear people talk in that way ? " " Yes, Allan. If there is anything that vexes me more than another, it is a habit of always assigning low motives for good deeds ; and it is rather a besetting sin of our times. I often wish that some paper would make it a business to chronicle all the good, unselfish, heroic actions that one hears of every day, as carefully as the newsmen do the murders, and scandals, and rob- beries. Humanity is very mean sometimes, and very grand at other times; but we have one per- fect model of what it can be ; and trust me, we shall never attain to his likeness by despising and thinking the worst of our fellow-men, for whom He died." Here Mr. Fitz Adams came out of the inner room with the gentleman with whom he had been conferring. "You'll see that it's done," said the gentle- man. " Yes, if it must be," said Mr. Fitz Adam, rather reluctantly. " It must," said the gentleman, smiling, and he went away. " There, Allan," said Mr. Fitz Adam, as the THE SILVER RIFLE. 59 door closed on his client. "There is a case in point. If I tell you the story, don't repeat it. That man has for years been trying to save money to take himself and his wife to Europe. They are not very rich ; and he has two or three times had losses which prevented them from going. Just now, however, he thought that he could afford the journey. He had put the sum laid aside in certain investments, which are in my hands, and which could be turned into money directly, and they expected to start next month. But a nephew of his, a good sort of man enough, but not very bright, has been unfortunate in his business, and will be utterly ruined, unless he can have immediate help. So Mr. and Mrs. Dale have made up their minds to sacrifice their trip, and take the money, laid aside, to help their rela- tion. For years they have looked forward to this journey, and gone over it all in imagination. It is a very great sacrifice to give it up ; but they do it without a word of complaint. I presume the nephew will never know anything about the matter." " How kind ! " said Allan. " I wish I could just give them the money, and tell them to go by the next steamer." " He would not take it, if you could." (JU THE SILVER RIFLE. " Did you try to see if he would, Fitz ? " said Dr. Fenton, quietly. "Well, what of it?" said Mr. Fitz Adam, colouring. " I Ve always known about him." " Law is a very hardening sort of a profession," said the doctor, with a smile. " Well, Allan, I think you may go home comforted a little about your fellow-creatures in a general way." " Father," said Allan, that evening. " Do you think it would be right if I were to give Gus Marshall part of the things Mr. De Forest left me?" " Why ? " asked his father, surprised. « Why, Allan ! " exclaimed John, before his brother could answer. " What do you think he would do with them ? He can no more throw a fly than I can read Hebrew." " Well, you see," said Allan, " I suppose he thinks he should have had something : and after all, Mr. De Forest was his uncle, and not mine ; and I was pretty short with him, to-day. I know I was." " But, Allan, Gus Marshall ! " said John. Mr. Fitz Adam paused, before he answered. " It is a kind thought," he said, at last; "and if it were any other boy, I think perhaps I should tell you to do it. But Gus never showed THE SILVER EIFLE. 61 the least affection for his uncle ; and then, as John says, those things would be quite lost upon him. Besides, a large sum comes to the family from the estate. Then our old friend gave you the things because he knew you would value and care for them ; and, perhaps, it would have been his wish that you should keep them. Your feeling in the matter would be quite thrown away upon Gus." "Yes!" said John. "He'd be sure to find some little mean reason for it." " So, on the whole," said his father, " perhaps you had better not do it. It is not as if there was nothing coming to him from the estate ; and I don't think he would value the gift as a mere remembrance of his uncle." " Not he ! " said Everard. " I have heard him talk quite shamefully about Mr. De Forest. I would n't have much to do with him, if I were you, boys. I 've seen him coming out of places where nobody would go that had much respect for his own character, and going about in very bad company." " 1 'm sure I never want to have anything to do with him," said John. "JS r or I!" said Allan. "Now I think of it, I 'm not sure but I told him so." "That was hardly worth while," said his G 62 THE SILVER RIFLE. father. " I am rather sorry to hear that he is going up north, too ; but it will be easy to keep out of his way." " I don't know about that/' said John, " if Everard is along. Gus is very anxious to be intimate with him." " Oh, that 's all for my aunt Lily's sake," said Everard, referring to his father's sister, Mrs. Harold, who was rather a fashionable, and very much of a fine lady. " Aunt Lily is afraid of the Marshalls. I believe she ran away from Saratoga last year, just to avoid them ; and they did persecute her. It was quite pathetic to hear her tell the story." "What did she stand it for?" said John. " Why, you know how good-natured she is ; and she could bear almost anything rather than be rude ; and it is not a mere hint that will answer with the Marshall race. Uncle Fitz, what a miserable thing it is, that ambition to be fine and genteel, and this caring for nothing but just amusement ! " " Oh, wise young judge ! Have you just found that out?" said Mr. Fitz Adam. "A most miserable ambition it is, indeed : but come, I think we have abused our neighbours cpiite enough for one night. Take pen and paper, THE SILVER RIFLE. 63 Everard, and make out a list of what we shall want, and to-morrow we will set about the pre- parations in real earnest. Your father leaves everything to me with such perfect confidence, that I want to be sure and have things as com- fortable for him as I can, without overloading ourselves." CHAPTER III. THE WOODS. niHE middle of the next week saw Mr. Fitz -*L Adam, Dr. Fenton, and the three boys, at " Baker's," which was then by no means the place of resort it has since become. In their younger days, both the lawyer and the clergyman had had considerable experience of out-door life, and had known what to take on such an expe- dition, and also what not to take, which is per- haps more important still. All of the party were quite resolved to go into the real wilderness. At that period the hunting and fishing around "Baker's" was better' than at present, as the tourist had not yet invaded the region to any great ex- tent. The boys, however, felt that they should not be satisfied until they were quite out of sight of a house. They longed to get away from the comfortable table, and the beds of the little hotel, into the actual wilderness, where they could build their own shanty, make their own fires, cook for 6i THE SILVER RIFLE, 65 themselves the trout and venison which they ex- pected to catch, and sleep in the open air. Their desire to get away was shared by their elders, and was by no means diminished by the arrival of Master Gus Marshall, in company with two other young " men" a good deal older than himself. The manners and customs of these young persons were so exceedingly distasteful to Mr. Fitz Adam and the Doctor, that, during the one day they remained at the hotel, they avoided the company of Gus and his companions as much as possible. But Gus was not a person easy to avoid, and he was determined, if he could, to strike up an intimacy with Everard Fenton. Everard was exceedingly good-natured. He could not bear to wound any one's feelings in the slightest degree. He felt sorry to see a mere boy like young Marshall on the high road to ruin. His companions were evidently making a tool of him ; while he, flattered by the attentions of those whom he thought " knowing " and " fashionable fellows," followed them in any direction they chose. They used his things, and forgot to re- turn them ; they borrowed his money, and forgot to pay it back ; and they won it from him at cards, where he was invariably beaten, no matter what the game; and flattered and laughed at 66 THE SILVER RIFLE. him by turns, as suited their purposes or incli- nation. Gus, charmed at finding himself in such " fashionable " society, and with " sporting-men," thought the delight cheaply purchased at any expense. For all the distinction which he supposed him- self to have achieved, Gus was by no means com- fortable, either in mind or body. He was noth- ing of a sportsman in reality. To the great dis- gust of the two Fitz Adams, he had come unpro- vided with any weapon but a huge fowling-piece, fit for nothing but the heaviest " bay shooting." With this gun he blazed away at everything, — crows, owls, small birds, and woodchucks, — scat- tering immense quantities of shot, but doing little damage, as he invariably shut his eyes whenever he fired. His companions laughed at his want of success, and left him a good deal to himself. The hotel- keeper overlooked him ; the mosquitoes bit him savagely ; the guides and hunters, with whom he attempted conversation, snubbed him unmerci- fully, and, I regret to say, told him so many and such wonderful stories of wolves, bears, and panthers, that he was almost afraid to go out of sight of the house. THE SILVER EIPLE. 67 A dozen times Gus wished himself back in the city ; but he dared not say so to his companions, and consoled himself in his sufferings by thinking he was in the same party as Lieutenant Cameron and Tom Edmonds. Lieutenant Cameron had been an officer in the army, but had resigned his commission for reasons best known to himself and the officers of his regiment, and was now said " to live by his wits," and on an allowance from his family, to whom he was at once a misery and a disgrace. Tom Edmonds's father was a man of great wealth, and a leader in the sort of society to which the ambition of the Marshalls aspired. Tom had been expelled from Everard's college; but so far from being ashamed of his disgrace, he was wont to make a boast of how he had " been too much for the college faculty." Mr. Marshall knew perfectly well the character of Messrs. Edmonds and Cameron, but he was pleased to have his boy associate with those whom he supposed to be fashionable young men, of what- ever style the fashion might be. Mr. Marshall was the son of a tailor, in a little country village; so — by a common method of self-betrayal — he naturally looked down upon " persons in trade," and was so exceedingly aris- 68 THE SILVER EIFLE. tocratic as to be quite alarming to simple-minded people. The "aristocratic manner" on which Gus prided himself was entirely lost on the society at " Baker's/' and the boy really dreaded going out into the woods and mountains. He had no love for the wild life of the region ; he had no eye for natural beauty, and no skill with the gun or the rod ; and whatever bait he tried, the trout obsti- nately refused to be caught. Poor Gus had had an idea that fly-fishing was a genteel thing to do, and had provided himself with several surprising specimens of flies, selected without regard to the time of year or the kind of fish for which they were intended. He was utterly ignorant of the art, which requires intelligence and a deft and skilful hand, and had succeeded in catching nothing but himself and his companions. At the end of two days there were few parts of his clothes, his hands or his face, into which he had not stuck the hook. Flies and broken lines hanging upon trees, or floating on the stream, attested his various failures. When he had utterly destroyed three rods, — two of his own and one of his friend's, — he gave up the matter in de- spair, and contented himself with eating the fish which others caught. THE SILVER RIFLE. 69 The Fitz Adam party meant to start for their first camp at night ; and on the evening of the day on which Gus arrived, they had gone to the lower Saranac, about two miles from " Baker's," where they intended to take their boats and fol- low the chain of lakes. At that day this region was unfrequented, except by the hunter, and a few gentlemen who cared too much for its wild glories, and its plentiful fishing and hunting, to advertise it in book or newspaper. It had hardly been supposed possible that a lady could make her way through the wilderness, or " camp out." Then you might journey for miles, and not meet a canoe, or see a human being but those of your own party, or some wandering trapper or Indian. Now the case is very different ; and some people who remember the Saranac in the old days, think that the wilderness was pleasanter then than now. It was a bright moonlight night, and the lake lay glittering and rippling with a light breeze from the north. The frosts had held off wonder- fully, and the air was cool but not chill. The mountains stood up in blue-black shadow, and silver light hung here and there with slow trail- ing wreaths of whitening mist. The boys, how- ever, were too full of high spirits and the delight- 70 THE SILVER RIFLE. ful excitement of actually setting off, to be much impressed by the solemn beauty of the scene. Michael Heath, the guide, was skilfully pack- ing the baggage in the little canoes, by the light of the fire which John had built on the shore, partly because it is the nature of a boy to make a fire out of doors whenever he can, and partly to keep off the mosquitoes. Mr. Fitz Adam and the doctor were sitting together on a fallen pine, chatting to each other, and smiling now and then at John and Everard, who were, as boys say, " skylarking " about, and making the woods ring with their laughter at everything and nothing. Sam Irmelin, the boy who accompanied Michael, was feeding the fire ; and Allan, who thought he should have time for a cast, had put together his rod, and had flung out his favourite "white miller," managing it in a way which had caused Michael to remark, approvingly, that he was "a smart boy, and would know something in time." None of the party were greatly delighted to see Mr. Cameron and Gus Marshall make their ap- pearance. One of Michael's dogs ran forward growling and barking at the strangers, while the other, more experienced, kept his place near the lire, and only lifted his large intelligent eyes to THE SILVER RIFLE. 71 see what his young friend was making such an ado about. The case was altered, however, when Gus gave the advancing dog a heavy kick, which made him howl piteously. Old Sport sprang up, with erected bristles, and showing his fangs with a savage snarl, darted forward to take his friend's part. Michael called him back, and he obeyed, but very unwillingly, and growled fiercely as the two, followed by one of the guides from the hotel, came into the circle, lit up by the fire. John and Ever- ard desisted from their romping ; and the former took up his rifle which he had left leaning against the log beside his father. Mr. Cameron, who was heartily tired of his companion's society, bowed to the two gentlemen, and remarking carelessly to Gus that " there was not room for three," stepped into the canoe which the guide unfastened from the bank and pushed off into the lake. Poor Gus was greatly mortified. Mr. Cameron was going after deer in the fashion technically known as "jack shooting," that is, attracting the deer by a light, and shooting at the gleam re- flected in the creature's eyes. Gus had not been asked to go ; but he had walked the two miles from the hotel in the hope of an invitation, and 72 THE SILVER RIFLE. now to be left behind in that fashion was any- thing but pleasant. The walk had been a very uncomfortable one for him, for Mr. Cameron and the guide, out of sheer mischief, had beguiled the way with tales of wolves which followed travel- lers through the woods ; bears that came out of thickets and around corners, and, worst of all, wily and savage panthers which lay in wait on trees ready to pounce from overhead, and able to carry away a man as easily as a cat carries a mouse. Gus had been so alarmed by these tales that, young man, as he supposed himself to be, he was just ready to cry, and heartily wished him- self at home. No amount of " style " will con- sole that unhappy mortal who is clawed by a panther or chased by a bear, and of such mis- fortunes Gus felt himself to be in great danger. He started at every sound and every crackling twig, saw a wild beast in every stump and log, and heard the howl of the wolf or the scream of the panther in every noise. That, after under- going all this, he should be left to wait by the shore of the lonely lake, or to make his way back through all the dangers of the road, was cruel indeed. He knew that he was not very welcome to the THE SILVER RIFLE. 73 Fitz Adam party ; but he was glad to see them, nevertheless, though he trembled to think what would become of him when their boats should push off, and he be left to the mercies of the panthers. Poor Gus's excited imagination represented to him the said panthers as plentiful as grasshoppers in a pasture ; and he felt equally afraid to wait for Mr. Cameron or go back without him. " I wish you 'd make your cur behave himself," he said, snappishly, to Michael. " I '11 shoot him if he runs at me again that way." " Humph ! " said Michael. " I don't own no cur that I know of, and if I did, I guess he would n't be in very much danger." " Those low-bred dogs are always snarling and snapping," said Gus, in a tone of contempt; for he was in a greatly irritated state of mind, partly from the fear he had undergone and partly from the slight put upon him by his friend. ""Wow that just shows how much you know," said Michael, calmly. " There is n't a better bred dog in the country than old Sport, and if you knew much about dogs, you 'd see it. But then nobody expects boys from the city to know any- thing." 7 ?4 THE SILVER RIFLE, " Thank you, Mr. Heath," said Everard, lift- ing his cap and bowing politely. " Well, you're not just exactly a boy ; and your cousins there have been taught something ; but there 's an odds in folks in the city as well as here, is n't there ? " " Yes, there certainly is," said Everard ; and Michael, who was a man of few words, turned back to his work, taking no further notice of Gus. Everard, who felt sorry for the boy, addressed some kind words to him ; but he got very short answers. Gus was watching Allan, who had landed a fine trout, rather to his own surprise, as angling from the shore is not always very success- ful in lake fishing. " What bait have you got ? " asked Gus. " No bait at all," said Allan, good-naturedly, taking his tone from his cousin. " It 's only this white miller." "White miller? What? Those things that fly round the candle? I shouldn't think you could catch enough of them." " I did n't catch it," said Allan, laughing. " It was made. It's only good for night fishing. Some people say trout don't care what they bite at, and will jump at anything ; and maybe they THE SILVER RIFLE. 75 don't in England ; but they know more here ; any- way, I think so." " I don't care much for bothering with flies," said Gus, loftily. The boys smiled slightly, but Everard re- marked : " I set out to learn the art under Allan and my uncle, but as I discovered that it would take all the time I should have in the woods to find out how much I did not know, I concluded that I preferred fish to science, and am content to catch trout, if I can, with an inglorious worm, or a grasshopper, or even to eat those caught by some one else." " It 's so much the nicest way of fishing," said Allan, who had in vain tried to make Everard as enthusiastic as himself. " I can't bear to handle those cold slippery worms, and stick hooks into the little squirmy wretches. Ugh ! " " I suppose you think the trout like it ? " said Everard. " No, I don't suppose they do ; but they are always eating each other; and then I don't let them choke to death on the land. I think it's mean. I kill them as soon as I get them ashore." "Well," remarked Everard, "the truth is, I 76 THE SILVER RIFLE. was so much impressed in my childhood with the story of the bad boy who would go fishing, and was afterward, in poetical justice, caught on a meat-hook himself, that I have never felt quite easy in my mind about the matter, and feel almost sure that if I were to catch too many fish, I should be caught on a meat-hook too. I see you have your rod, Gus ; why don't you try ? " " I believe I will," said Gus ; and he baited a hook almost big enough to catch a halibut, and standing where his shadow fell directly upon the water, flung the bait into the lake with a tre- mendous splash. Allan looked reproachfully at his cousin, and reeled up his line and unjointed his rod. " I don't think I shall have another bite," he remarked, dryly. " Have you had any luck with your wonderful rifle ? " asked Gus of John, with a half sneer. " I 've not been out with it yet," said John, good - naturedly enough. " Why, Gus, you '11 never get anything, thrashing round in the water like that; and what are you after with such a hook — sharks ? " " Opinions differ about such things," said Gus, with an air of experience. " Do you think a smaller one would do better ? " he asked, care- THE SILVER RIFLE. 77 lessly, longing to catch a fish, and ashamed to confess that he did not know how. " I say, Gus, let me fix it for you," said John. " I '11 give you a hook ! " and John took out one of his own, and with Gus's consent fastened it in the place of the big one. " There, now, bait that, and stand where your shadow won't fall right on the water, and keep still ; and maybe you '11 get some fishing while you are waiting for Mr. Cameron to come back." " Are you going right away ? " said Gus, terri- fied at the thought of being left alone. " Yes, just as soon as the boats are ready. I say, Michael, can we help you? I 'in in a hurry to start." Michael stood up and faced the company, as one who intends to make a speech. " Gentlemen," he said, solemnly, " I regret to say — " here every one started, and looked anxious, fearing some serious accident. " I regret to say — that the black pepper has been forgotten." The boys drew a long breath. " Is that all ? " said Mr. Fitz Adam. « I con- cluded that the boats were all in holes, or that several bears were coming down upon us. Is the black pepper essential ? " " Well, squire," — for so Michael had entitled 7 * 78 THE SILVER RIFLE. Mr. Fitz Adam, — " that is the question. I don't believe in taking too much into the woods ; but then again I don't believe in too little ; and pep- per and salt is good with fish. Now the question is, whether we shall go without it, or whether Sam here shall run back to the hotel and get it. He can be back before long ; and there is n't any such mighty hurry." The boys would have gone without pepper, or anything else, so anxious were they to set off; but their elders decided to send back Sam, not sorry to spend a little longer time by the lake shore. " I think I '11 go back with Sam," said Gus, hastily rolling up his line, and glad to have com- pany through the woods. Moreover, it had just occurred to him that he should like to have a little private talk with the boy who was to be the companion of the two Fitz Adams in the wilder- ness. The politeness of the young people had made no impression upon Gus. The boy was in an evil frame of mind. He was provoked that John and Allan should have seen him slighted by Mr. Cameron, of whose intimacy with himself he had often boasted; he was envious of them as the owners of his uncle's rod and rifle; and he had THE SILVER RIFLE. 79 worked himself into the idea that he had been greatly abused by his relative's will. He bade the boys a sullen good-night ; replied only with a nod to the polite good-by of the two elder gentlemen, and set off on his way back to the hotel, with some difficulty keeping up with Sam, who was a rapid walker. " Poor Gus ! " said compassionate Everard. " It was mean in Cameron to go off and leave him so. He was half frightened to death at the idea of staying here alone." " He thinks the woods are all full of panthers !" said Allan, laughing. " The men have told him such a heap of stories. There are none about here, are there, Michael ? " " Not very often ! " replied the cautious old guide. " I won't say but I have shot a painter within a mile of this place ; but they ain't quite as common as blackberries ; and half the time they are more afraid of you than you are of them, unless they are uncommon fierce ; or it's a she one with young ones. Mr. De Forest he's shot more 'n one with that very rifle. I espect you 'd like to do the same thing, young gentleman." " Of course I should," said John, with a glance of affection at his rifle. " Well, I give you fair warning. You won't 80 THE SILVER RIFLE. get a chance if I can help it. They are not nice customers when they are in a corner; not the kind of thing for boys to go for." " Don't you think I could hit one ? " asked John, a little mortified, and fervently hoping that a " painter " might come in his way. " I don't say but you could ; but you see I 'd be afraid he might hit you first. You come here three or four years from now, and keep up your shooting," said Michael, consolingly, "and I don't say but I might scare up one for you and your brother among the rocks." " When and how was it that Mr. De Forest shot the panthers ? " asked John, as Michael lit his pipe, and sat down on the shore to wait for Sam. " Oh, once, when I was with him, he shot one ; and then another time, when he was alone, he killed another." " But tell us about it, please," persisted Allan. "Why, that's all there is to tell," replied Michael, who, as he expressed it, was " no great hand to talk." "One was up a tree, and the other one on a rock in the country just north of Nodoneyo, — Mount Seward, most of the folks call it now ; and he saw them, and shot them." " Were they big ones ? " THE SILVER EIFLE. 81 " The first one was pretty big, and the other one not so big as I Ve seen 'em." " Did you ever kill one yourself? " questioned John. " Yes," replied Michael, patiently. "More than one?" " Well, yes ; quite a little pocketful of them, first and last." " What a nice pocketful ! " said John. " But, Michael, do tell us how you did it?" " Why, I took my gun, and shot at them, and hit them ; and it killed 'em." " At the first shot ? " " No, not always." " Did they ever hurt you ? " " One give me a kind of scratch once ; but it did n't amount to much." " Oh, how was it ? " said the three boys, eagerly. " With its claws." " Come, boys," said Dr. Fenton, " let Michael smoke his pipe in peace. Allan, you'll have time before Sam comes back with the pepper. Try another cast, and we shall have your fish for supper. I '11 come with you ; " and the doctor took up his rod and went off with his nephew along the shore, followed by John. Mr. Fitz Adam and Everard remained behind. F 82 THE SILVER EIFLE. " You must not let the boys trouble you/' said Mr. Fitz Adam to Michael. " They are quite wild for stories of all sorts ; and I don't know but ours is rather a talking family." " Bless you, squire, they don't bother me," said Michael, good-naturedly. " I have n't the gift to make a long story out of nothing, like some of the men. They '11 reel 'em off for you by the yard. I hope to show those boys of yours some sport. They 're just the kind to bring into the woods ; and I like 'em partly for the old gentle- man's sake and part for their own. They 're un- common smart with their guns and tackle for their age." " I am glad you think so," said Mr. Fitz Adam, pleased. "They used to go about a good deal with Mr. De Forest." " I 've heard him speak of them. I tell you, squire, I miss the old gentleman. We 've been together a great deal. He was an educated man, and I was n't ; but we kind of suited one another." " He has often spoken to me about you, and your kindness to him." " Well, I wonder what it was. He was always just so to me. Those boys of yours have got something of his ways; so have you, sir. Did he leave any relations ? " THE SILVEE EIFLE. 83 " None nearer than a niece, a Mrs. Marshall. That young man who went back with Sam is her son." " You don't say so ! I would n't have thought there was a bit of De Forest in him," said Michael, with emphasis. " There is n't much," said Mr. Fitz Adam. " He 's only a boy ! " said Everard. " Maybe he '11 do better as he gets older." " He 's not on the way to it, the company he keeps," said Michael. " That Mr. Cameron is a good shot enough ; but I should n't want a boy of mine round with him, nor that other young fel- low. I 'm glad the old gentleman left the silver rifle to your son, and not to him." " Perhaps some people would have thought it rather imprudent to allow such a boy as John to bring so costly a piece into the woods," remarked Mr. Fitz Adam ; " but John values it as he does the apple of his eye, and knows pretty well how to handle it." " I see he does," said Michael, approvingly. " He does n't play any silly, fool-hardy tricks as most boys do, — pointing at folks, and such non- sense. The moonlight looks kind of nice on the lake, don't it, sir," said Michael to Everard, fear- ing, with the natural courtesy which belonged to 84 THE SILVER RIFLE. him, that the young gentleman might feel him- self left out of the conversation. " Oh, it 's beautiful here," said Everard, who had a keen feeling and real love for natural beauty. " Look, Uncle Fitz, where the ripple breaks up against the shore, just showing a silver edge." And in the delight of his heart and his youth, Everard, in his sweet tenor voice, began to sing " The Shining Shore," then just beginning to be heard. Mr. Fitz Adam, who could sing well, joined in, and the music rang out sweetly over the lake. Then they passed on to the " Gloria in Excelsis Deo." Everard belonged to a musical society, whose members were fonder of the old schools of music than of any new ones. Mr. Fitz Adam could not often find time to attend the meetings of the Union, as he would have liked ; but he was a sort of honorary member. He and Everard were fond of singing together, and often did so in the family meetings. They did not murder this most beautiful of all chants by uniting it to any opera air, or by ruining words and sense for the sake of sound. They sang it as all sacred music ought to be sung, — with reverent gladness of heart; and the old guide listened with pleasure, THE SILVER RIFLE. 85 though he did not understand the Latin words which they had happened to use. " May I ask what that is, sir ? " he asked, as the last note died away. " It r B a hymn, is n't it ? though I don't understand the language." " Sing it in English, Everard," said his uncle. Everard willingly complied. " We praise thee, we bless thee, we worship thee, we glorify thee, we give thanks to thee for thy great glory." " I like that, sir," said Michael, after a few moments of silence, when the music was ended. " I don't know but it 's as good a place here to sing that as it would be in a church. When a man has time to sit down and think, the moon and the mountains make it seem kind of solemn," concluded the old guide, who had an appreciation of natural beauty, which is, by no means, com- mon to those who spend their lives out of doors and among wild scenery. Just then, however, John and Allan rushed upon the scene, eagerly telling the story of how their uncle had gone out on a log " ever so far," and thrown his line, and how " no end of a big fish " had taken the hook, and how the said fish had been successfully landed, and proved to be all of two pounds and a half in weight. " To 86 THE SILVER RIFLE. them enter " the Rev. Dr. Fenton, carrying the fish, and not unelated with his own unexpected success. The " solemnity " of the moon and the mountains to which Michael had referred was quite put to flight by the capture of the big trout. The chatter of the boys, and their " fighting the battle over again " for their father's benefit, fully occupied the time, till Michael began to wonder what had become of Sam. Just as he was grow- ing impatient, however, the boy made his ap- pearance. " What kept you so long ? " said Michael, rather shortly. " That young gentleman," replied Sam, laugh- ing, but rather embarrassed. " He could n't keep up ; and he was afraid to walk behind, for fear something would catch him ; and he got entirely out of breath, and I had to wait for him. He 's safe at ( Baker's' now. I guess he isn't much of a hand for the woods." " Well, now, gentlemen," said Michael, " if you are ready, we '11 start. Come, dogs." The party embarked, to the great delight of the boys, and was soon gliding swiftly onward toward the head of the lower Saranac. The fire which they had left on the shore gradually died out, and silence settled on the THE SILVER EIFLE. 87 place lately so full of life and bustle. On their way the party met Mr. Cameron and his guide, who were coming back successful, having in tow a fine deer. " Ah, you are off, are you, Mr. Fitz Adam," said the young man, courteously enough. " I wish you good luck, I am sure." " Thank you. You seem to have had it your- self." " Pretty fair, sir," said Mr. Cameron, carelessly. " What did you do with Gus Marshall ? " he added, laughing, and addressing Dr. Fenton. " We were obliged to send to the hotel ; and he went back with the boy. Really, Mr. Cameron, it was hardly fair to leave him there." " If you were as tired of that boy as I am, Dr. Fenton," said the young man, in a tone of ex- cuse, " you would hardly blame me. Gentlemen, won't you turn in to the shore, and divide my venison with me ? " John, who was in the boat with his father, pinched him violently, in sign of disapproval. " Thank you," said Mr. Fitz Adam, smiling ; " but my boy here would hardly forgive me, if I ate any venison that was not of our own shoot- ing ; and we have been delayed already." " At least take these to add to your supper, if 88 THE SILVER RIFLE. the young gentlemen should have bad luck," said Mr. Cameron, lifting a brace of ducks from the bottom of the canoe, " Come, doctor," he add- ed, leaning over the side of his boat, and speak- ing in a low voice, "you might let me do as much as that for you, for the sake of old times." The doctor, who remembered the pale, dissi- pated-looking young man as a bright-faced little boy, was a good deal touched. "Surely I will, and thank you, Lewis," he said, bringing the canoe, which he was paddling himself, alongside of Mr. Cameron's. " Come and see me, will you not, when you come back to town, and we will talk over those old times. I am glad you remember them." " Too late, sir," said the young man, half scorn- fully, half sadly. " Good-night, and a pleasant journey to you, gentlemen. Give way," and the canoe shot off over the lake. " Poor fellow ! " said Everard, looking after him. " He has some flashes of good in him yet, has n't he, father ? " " Yes, Everard," said the doctor ; " the trouble is, they are all flashes in the pan." CHAPTER IV. IN THE WILDEKNESS. IT was the second day after the Fitz Adam party had left the northern end of the lower Saranac. They had had a delightful journey ; the weather having been the very perfection of September. The boys had enjoyed every minute of the time ; the voyage in the canoes ; the night spent in the open air ; the feast partaken of by the camp- fire ; even the " carry," usually thought so tedious, had been matters of delight to John and Allan. John had achieved one object of his ambition, and shot a deer, furnishing the first venison for the party, to his own unspeakable satisfaction. Allan had caught trout innumerable, some of them two and a few three pounders ; and even Everard, who cared more for sketching and run- ning about the woods than he did for hunting or fishing, had contributed several partridges to the camp feasts. 8* 89 90 TUE SILVER RIFLE. The doctor and Mr. Fitz Adam began to feel themselves growing young again. I fear that many people, who entertain very high ideas of the " dignity proper for a clergyman," would have been quite shocked at the way the doctor played with the boys, climbed rocks, built fires, paddled the canoe, and delighted in his own success with the rod. The brothers-in-law, each overworked in his profession, enjoyed their va- cation as only busy men can, and gave themselves up to the spirit of their life in the woods with a certain boyish simplicity and, if I may use the word, " friskiness," which I think is rather a peculiarity of Americans when they surrender themselves to " having a good time." They had reached the night before a point near the northern end of the upper Saranac, where they intended to make their permanent camp. They had built their shanties with rather more care than usual, as they were to serve for a home for some time. Michael was just then engaged in covering the roof of one with strips of bark, to keep off the rain if it should fall ; and the boys under his direction were doing the same thing for the other, taking great pains. They delighted to " help " Michael whenever he would let them. Such, THE SILVER RIFLE. 91 however, was not always the case ; the old guide often devising some good-natured excuse to send the young gentlemen out of the way on such oc- casions. Michael, however, was fond of the boys, and took a great deal of pains to please them, com- plying with all their wishes, and going wherever they asked him, like a respectable old deerhound surrendering himself to the guidance of two frisky, half-grown terriers. The boys' more frequent companion, however, was Sam Irmelin. Sam was nearly nineteen, and tall and strong of his age. The Fitz Adam party had overtaken him first on the ride from Keeseville to " Baker's." He had set out to walk the whole distance; and Mr. Fitz Adam, pleased with the boy's looks, had offered him a seat in one of their two wagons, which Sam had accepted with thanks. He had made himself very agreeable during the drive, giving intelligent answers to all questions ad- dressed to him, and showing a readiness to please, and a knowledge of the woods, which recom- mended him to the whole party, especially to the boys. He had an agreeable, frank manner, equally removed from subserviency or undue familiarity; 92 THE SILVER RIFLE. and when he had hinted a wish to join the party, Mr. Fitz Adam had felt very much inclined to engage his services, rather than those of an older guide. Michael, on being questioned about him, had said that he " knew no harm of the boy," which, from so cautious a person, might be con- sidered as positive praise. John, Allan, and Everard had been eager to have Sam go with them ; and as there seemed no reason why he should not, he had been engaged to accompany the party into the wilderness. No one had seen any reason to regret the ar- rangement. Sam was always willing to do any- thing, for anybody, at any time of the day or night. He made himself very useful to Michael, showed a great talent for cookery, cleaned the guns for the two elder gentlemen, and for Allan and Everard, when the two cousins were too tired or too indolent to do it themselves. He would have done the same for John, had that young gentleman been willing to trust his beloved rifle to any other hands than his own. Sam was never heard to use any bad language. He could sing a good song, had innumerable stories to tell of adventures in hunting, fishing, and wandering through the woods and mountains. In short, he was a companion entirely to the boys' taste, and THE SILVER RIFLE. 93 the three cousins became really attached to their guide. If he flattered them, it was done so care- fully that they did not know it • and John, Allan, and Everard looked upon Sam as quite a model of excellence, and a hero in his own line of life. Sam, of course, found many advantages in his association with the young gentlemen, who were quite willing to share with him all their own pos- sessions ; but he was so obliging, so good tem- pered, and so willing to do much more than fell within the contract of his duties as guide, that the boys perhaps received as much in return as they gave. Dr. Fenton and Mr. Fitz Adam were much pleased with the boy, and resolved to make him a handsome present, over and above his wages, on getting back to "Baker's." " What are you going to do to-day ? " asked Mr. Fitz Adam of his brother-in-law. The doctor was lying on the grass watching Michael and the boys at work, or glancing up at the blue sky through the flickering branches overhead. " I don't think that I want to do anything just now," said the doctor. "I want just to keep quiet, and enjoy the delightful idea that the thing is possible. I wish to realize that I shall not be interrupted by any persevering young man who 94 THE SILVER EIFLE. wants subscribers for some book in which I am expected to take an interest, because it is on some religious subject which the author knows nothing about. I want to enjoy, to the full, the delight- ful thought that I shall not be invaded by some man, or, worse still, some woman, armed with a paper signed by some one wholly unknown to me, and certifying that the wonderful virtues of the bearer are only equalled by his or her misfor- tunes, and that he or she must be ruined and reduced to despair if not immediately furnished with one dollar." "And all of them," said Everard, "appealing to the Rev. Dr. Fenton's well-known philanthro- phy, etc. If you are weak - minded enough to give to one, you immediately have a swarm come down on you ; and if you refuse, they make pathetic reflections on the hard hearts of this world, and you never can help feeling a little mean to say ' No,' though you know perfectly well you ought to." " Yes ; for there is about one chance in fifty that there may be something in the story ; and you always have an uncomfortable feeling that you may possibly have denied yourself to a case of real distress." "And then if there has been an address THE SILVER RIFLE. 95 given," said Everard, "father always sends me to look for it; and I never found the man or woman yet." " As if you were not more ready to go than he was to send you/' said his uncle. " Do I not remember your being so moved by the tears of old Mrs. Rooney, and so shocked at your mother's doubting her pathetic story about her dying husband and starving children, that nothing would do but you must set out at eleven o'clock at night to find them, making me go with you through a snow-storm, after I had been in court all day." " Do him justice, Fitz. He did n't make you go," observed the doctor. " Well, I could not let him go alone into such a den," said Mr. Fitz Adam ; " so it was all the same thing ; and never a Mrs. Rooney did we find where she gave us the address, but stumbled by accident upon her and the dying husband entertaining a party of friends with roast turkey and whiskey." " And father's got no referee cases to hear, and no young lawyers to keep in order," said Allan. " My ! How I have heard them go on sometimes when I 've been in the office, — about whether it 96 THE 6ILVER RIFLE. was the right thing for a witness to answer a question." "And you, I suppose, think you have no lessons/' said his father. " In short, we have all got a play spell ; and I hope we shall all improve it to the best of our ability. What do you want, boys ? " " Oh, father," said Allan, " we do want some- thing ; but I don't know whether you will let us or not." "Then it must be something very outrageous," said Dr. Fenton. " Now, uncle ; just as if we always had our own way." Dr. Fenton's elder sister, Mrs. Barker, had once given Mr. Fitz Adam quite a lecture on the " over-indulgence " which he showed to his boys ; and it had ever since been a standing joke in the family to represent John and Allan as spoiled children. " When, since we came out here, have you not had it ? ' I shall by and by really feel it my duty to remonstrate,' " said the doctor, quoting Mrs. Barker. " You do not think, Fitz, that what you call the pretty playful ways of innocent child- hood will seem very different at fifty or sixty ? " "Well, I don't know," said John. "Father THE SILVER RIFLE. 97 has a pretty good chance to see how they '11 seem, Uncle Fenton, if he only looks at you." " Did you make a remark, Johnny ? " said the doctor, looking up through the trees. " She was n't down on "us a bit more than she was on Everard," said Allan; "and it was all because we harnessed our dog to the tea-tray and drew Lois round the back-yard on the snow, and made believe we were Arctic explorers, and Ever- ard and Jeanette were Esquimaux; and Ever- ard pretended to be an old conjuring-man, and got up on the dog-kennel, for the top of the lodge, and tooted on Joe's tin trumpet, and made believe to call the spirits as they do, and he only called her." " I 'm sure I was as much surprised as the poor Mandan medicine man, who was trying to raise the rain, and saw the first steamboat coming up the river." ' " Dear ! what a fuss she did make ! " said John ; " and she said we were acting a lie, and that we should all do all sorts of awful things when we grew up, if we were let to go on like that now ; and Jeanette cried, and little Lois was so mad, and Aunt Caroline came out and took our part." " I 've never seen her that she has n't spoken 9 G 98 THE SILVER EIFLE. about it," said Everard, "and that was three years ago. Well, I know I ought not to talk so, father; I won't again, if I can help it." " I believe I am quite as much to blame as you are in the matter," said the doctor. " It must be confessed your aunt Lavinia is peculiar; but here, while you have been fighting your bat- tles with her over again, we have not heard whether these two children wish to set off for the summit of Tahawus all alone by themselves, or want to go into the Dismal Wilderness for a panther, or down to the bottom of the lake after trout." " Now, Uncle Fenton, it is nothing of the kind ; we only want to take Sam, and go up to the top of that mountain by the lake, and see what we can see. Sam says you can see seven- teen different lakes from there." "What's the name of that summit?" asked Mr. Fitz Adam of Sam. " Well, it has n't any name in particular, sir ; most of the hills has n't." " What do you say, Michael?" asked Mr. Fitz Adam, turning to the elder guide. " Would it be a safe expedition for the boys to undertake by themselves ? I was going with you up the lake for a deer myself; but I suppose we might take THE SILVEK KIFLE. 99 the dogs, and perhaps find one in that direc- tion ? " " Well, no, sir ; not very likely. You see the deer like these meadows along the lake and woods lower down ; and that mountain is all rocks, and precipices, and such. There's some pretty tough climbing ; but Sam 's a safe kind of boy for his age, and your sons understand them- selves pretty well. I don't see why they might not go there as well as anywhere else." " There, father ! " said Allan, eagerly. " Now you see it's all right; and just think how we run about the hills round the Hickories ? " " Yes ; but the gravel hills of the southern tier are rather different climbing from these sharp- topped rocky mountains. However, if Michael thinks it 's safe, I 've no objection to your trying it ; though I don't feel very much disposed to go up a mountain myself this morning. Allan, do you think your ankle will stand it?" This weak ankle of Allan's was a sore point in more ways than one. The summer before the two brothers had had a passionate quarrel, almost their only one in their lives. In the affray, John had thrown his brother down a steep bank, and not knowing that he was hurt, had run away and left him, helpless and alone, with a broken arm and 100 THE SILVER RIFLE. a sprained ankle. A storm had come up, and Allan had lain for some time unable to move, and exposed to a drenching rain. A long illness had been the consequence. The broken arm had recovered itself sooner than the ankle, which had been badly twisted, and for several weeks Allan had not been allowed to take a step. Even now it would sometimes pain him if he over-walked ; but Allan would never complain if he could possibly help it, for John's self-reproach had been extreme ; and he never could think of what he had done in his anger, without a pang of remorse. As his father spoke, a shadow fell on John's face, and he turned away. " Oh ! yes, sir," said Allan, hastily. " Indeed, it has n't pained me a bit, oh, not this long time. We may go then ? " " Yes," said Mr. Fitz Adam, smiling ; " only I 'd like to know when one may expect to see you home." " Not much before night, sir," said Sam. " It 's quite a roundabout way to get to the top of that mountain, and some considerable climbing ; and we 've got to come down a Silfarr Btflf 'Hurra, hecried; he is safe!' p. 110. THE SILVER RIFLE. Ill Allan sprang up, almost overcome by the shock and the sudden relief. " Where ? How can he be ? " he asked, trem- bling from head to foot, and making a vain attempt to steady his nerves. "He's caught in a tree, and holding on. Come here, but take care. The rock don't hang over here, so there 's no danger, if you look out for yourself. Hold on, John," he shouted, in an encouraging tone. " You are safe now." John was indeed safe, in so far that he was yet in the land of the living ; but otherwise he was in great peril. The overhanging stone on which he had carelessly stepped without noticing the wide crack behind him, being heavier, had of course fallen faster than himself. It had crashed through without demolishing the wide- spread branches of the projecting hemlock, which had intercepted John's fall, and which he had clutched in desperation. He had managed with the instinct of self-preservation to swing him- self astride of a tolerably stout limb, and, blind and dizzy with the fall, had but just sense enough left to hold to his insecure perch. The tree projected from a little rocky shelf about ten feet below where the two boys were standing. The rock hardly afforded foothold 112 THE SILVER RIFLE. for a bird; and Sam saw at once that it would be a matter of serious difficulty to rescue the boy from his perilous position. " We '11 soon have him up," he said, cheerfully, to Allan, wishing to encourage both the boys, and knowing how much depended on the state of their nerves. " Look up, John," he called aloud. " Can you hear me ? Are you hurt ? " " No," said John, speaking faintly, but begin- ning to recover himself in some degree at the sight of his two companions and the sound of their voices. " You hold on tight, and don't move about, and don't look down ! " said Sam. " I '11 go and get a pole, and have you up. Our guns are not long enough to reach you." " Oh, if we only had a rope ! " said Allan. " Sam, where are you going ? " " I must go down the hill and cut a good stout pole," said Sam ; " and I may be gone a minute or two. Now look here, Allan, your brother's life depends on your keeping your wits about you a good deal. You sit down here, where he can see you ; but don't you go nearer the edge till I come back. Speak to him now and then, and kind of encourage him. Do you see? Because there 's no fear but what I can help him now ; THE SILVER RIFLE. 113 but if he loses his head, he'll fall. Do you understand ? " " Yes," said Allan, making an effort to com- pose himself, and succeeding in some degree. " Go, Sam ; but, oh, be quick." " No fear. I '11 be back in a minute or two, John," he called aloud, in a cheery voice. " Keep a good heart, and sit still. Just think you are sitting on top of a fence, and don't look down, and there 's no danger," and Sam sped down the hill, bounding from rock to rock like a deer. " You take care, Allan ! " called John, who was beginning to recover his presence of mind. " Don't you fall down, too ! " "No danger. This is the solid rock. That old stone you stood on was loose. I hope it 's cracked all to bits," said Allan, quite spitefully. " I don't believe it is. It could stand such a fall better than I could. You thought I was gone, did n't you ? " " Yes. Oh, John, it was horrible ! Thank God, you are in the land of the living ! " " We ought to thank him ! " said John, very earnestly. " I believe I did, when I first found I was alive. Don't worry, Allan. It's just as easy sitting here as it is on the bar at the gym- 10* H 114 THE SILVER RIFLE. nasium, only it 's a little higher, if only the limb don't break. I wish I was on the trunk." " Don't try to move till Sam comes back," said Allan, alarmed. " I don't mean to ; but if I was once at the root of the tree, and had a pole, I could scramble up easily. I only hope they can't see us from camp with their glasses." " I don't think they can. I 'm sure I hope not. It would be a little too interesting. You are just like that fellow in Anne of Geierstein, that the mountain tumbled down with, only there 's no young lady here." " No, and I 'm glad of it. Do I look very badly scared ? " " No, not now." " Well, I feel so," said John, honestly ; " but I 'm not going to give up to it. I tell you what it is, adventures are a great deal pleasanter to read about than they are to have." " So it seems. I can't take my eyes off from you. It seems almost as if you had come back from the dead. Oh, here comes Sam." Sam just then came in sight below, bearing over his shoulder a stout sapling, the branches of which he had trimmed away with his knife, leaving the spikes of two of the largest at one end. It was THE SILVER RIFLE. 115 not so easy to come up the hill as it had been to go down, and with all the haste Sam could make, it was two or three minutes before he stood beside Allan on the rocky summit. "All right!" he said, cheerfully, to the boys. " Now, Allan, I 'm going to give the forked end of this to him to hold, and let him work his way along carefully till he gets to the trunk. It is n't more than a foot, I'm thankful to say," said Sam, who feared greatly that the limb would break. " I want you, Allan, to hold me, so 's to keep me from going over, if there should be any sudden pull. Do you understand ? So : so as to make it safe, and yet not hinder." "I see," said Allan, obeying directions in a way that did him credit, though his heart beat hard, and there was a ringing in his ears. " Now, you see, John," said Sam, cautiously extending the pole, " the danger in this matter is about that limb. You hold on fast to the pole, and work your way along careful to the trunk. I dare say you 've done the like up in a cherry- tree." " I see," said John, whose gymnasium training stood him in good stead. Resolutely he bent his will to the one effort of reaching the trunk, trying to forget the depth 116 THE SILVER RIFLE. below and the awful possibilities of a fall. He had all but reached the main stem, when he felt the bough bend beneath him ; with one hasty movement he flung himself forward on the trunk, and at that instant the limb broke with a loud snap, and whirling round and round in the air was dashed on the rocks below. John lost his hold of the pole, grew pale, and closed his eyes. " All right ! " called Sam, cheerfully. - " You did n't go with it you know ; a miss is as good as a mile. You are as safe now as if you were sit- ting before the fire in the camp." John did not feel so by any means ; but, ashamed that he should seem so much moved before Sam, he collected himself once more, and said in a rather faint but steady voice : " What 's to be done next ? " " Can't you get to the root ? There is a little shelf there you can stand upon." John did so, though with some difficulty. Allan watched his progress in breathless sus- pense. " It 's just like climbing a tree anywhere else, if you only think so," said Sam. " There you are ; all right now. I '11 put the pole down to you. Try that little rock just above you, and THE SILVEK EIFLE. 117 see if it holds. Sure it holds ? Very well : keep tight hold of the pole, and get your foot on that, and then I can reach you." John obeyed the directions given, and in a few minutes was safe beside his brother, who held him so tight as nearly to deprive him of what little breath he had left. " Oh, John ! " he said, and then, to his great annoyance, Allan burst into a passion of tears, and sobbed like a child. John sat down on a stone, and leaned his head on a rock behind him. " Why, Allan ! " he said, with a faint smile. " It 's all over now. Sam, you '11 think we are no better than a pair of babies. I was scared." " I don't wonder," said Sam, who was a good deal moved himself. " Thank the Lord, you 're safe." " I hope I do," said John ; " and I thank you, too. It 's your doing, Sam," he continued, hold- ing out his hand ; " and we won't forget it in a hurry, will we, Allan ? " " No, indeed ! I am sure I never could have got him up alone ; and you were so cool, too. Oh, Sam, what should we have done without you ? " Sam received the thanks and praises of the two boys with great embarrassment. 118 THE SILVEE RIFLE. " It was no more than any one would do," he said, looking down and coloring ; " and it was my carelessness letting you step on that stone, so near the edge," " Just as if you were engaged to follow me round like a nurse after a child," said John. " I might have looked myself." Allan dashed away his tears, and tried to com- pose himself. " You '11 think I 'm a perfect baby," he said ; " but it was so horrible, to think he had fallen down there. I never could have gone back to father without him.''" " I don't wonder you feel a good deal shaken," said Sam. "Anybody might. If he'd been killed, I never would have dared to show myself to Mr. Fitz Adam or Michael. I'd have run away, and quit the country. Don't you want to come down into the woods and eat something? The wind begins to blow pretty cold." The beys, whose delight in the view had been quite overcome by what they had gone through, did not feel inclined to stay longer on the sum- mit, and began their descent of the mountain. They soon re-entered the woods, where the air felt warm and still, after the keen breeze which had begun to range about the more exposed THE SILVEE ElFLE. 119 summit. Sitting down by a clear, bubbling spring, they ate the luncheon which they had brought with them, and felt greatly refreshed. Boys, for the most part, are made of very elastic material. They had been greatly moved by their adventure. It had been terrible while it lasted. John was sincerely grateful to Provi- dence for his escape from a dreadful death, and Allan was very thankful to have his brother again by his side. But it was all safely over, and the young gentlemen began to feel as though it was rather a distinction, than otherwise, to have been concerned in anything so interesting. Then the woods and the hills were all around them, and the sweet inspiriting mountain air blew away the last cloud of their recent trouble. In short, they were boys full of health and spirits, and not half an hour after they had finished their luncheon, they were chattering away as though nothing had occurred, and making the woods ring with their shouts and laughter. " I wish we had n't been in such a hurry to come down," said John to Sam. " I wanted to ask you the names of some of those hills and lakes we could see from the top." " Most of them have n't got any name," said Sam. " But if you want another lookout, I can 120 THE SILVER RIFLE. show you a place a rod or two from here where you can see a good deal." The boys followed Sam among the trees and rocks for a little distance, till, turning round a huge boulder, they found themselves on the little platform of a crag that overhung a ravine below, and in front of them was spread a wide expanse of lakes and mountains, while to the southwest, like a silver ribbon, ran Racket River. " There ! " said Sam, pointing to the north-west. " You see those first three hills that stand to- gether and make a circle ? " "Yes," said Allan. "They look almost as if one could reach them." " Well, you can't see it," continued Sam ; " but down between those hills is the prettiest little lake you ever saw ; and it 's the greatest place for trout. Gentlemen don't go there generally ; for, in the first place, it is not every guide that knows about it, and, in the next place, we don't always want to spoil all our own fishing, you under- stand." " Yes," said Allan, pleased that he and John should be distinguished from the multitude of sportsmen. " Is it a good place for trout ? " " First-rate. I 've been there two or three times myself; and I 've seen the trout at evening THE SILVER RIFLE. 121 just jump, jump, jump all over it like so many grasshoppers, — big ones, too." " I wish we could go there," said John, eagerly. " Well, I was thinking," said Sam, " it is n't such a very hard place to get to ; only it 's rather out of the way. There 's one carry, and something of a rapid, but not much of a one. If your father would let you, we might go there to-morrow night, and come back next day. We could camp out, and have a good time j just you and I." The boys, of course, caught eagerly at the notion. " Oh ! it would be splendid ! " said Allan. " I dare say father won't object. We can ask him, anyway." "We will," said John. "What's the name of the lake, Sam?" " It has n't any that ever I heard of," said Sam, looking out toward the three hills, and nibbling a little twig. " You can give it one if you want to, and I '11 try to make it stick." "Allan," said John, struck with a sudden thought, " Let 's call it Lake Lois, after grandma. Don't you think it sounds well ? " " By all means," said Allan, equally pleased. " Lake Lois, you remember, Sam." "Yes," said Sam, "I'll remember. It's a 11 122 THE SILVER RIFLE. good name, too, to hold on by, because it 's got a kind of ring to it. Come, now, I guess it 's about time we were on our way home." " Yes, I begin to want my supper," said John. " I hope father had good luck." " Young gentlemen," asked Sam, as they made their way down the mountain, " do you mean to tell your father about what happened up top there ? " " Why not ? " said John, surprised. " Well, you see," said Sam, rather embar- rassed, "it's all over now, and you are safe. You told me your father came up here because he was n't very well. Now, if you tell him about it, every time you 're out of his sight he won't be able to help feeling kind of worried, for fear something like it is happening to you again. It is n't like there will, but he '11 sort of feel that way ; and it will trouble him, and rather spoil his pleasure, for your father thinks a sight of you two." " That 's true," said Allan, greatly struck by this view of the matter; " and John does n't mean to tumble off a mountain again, do you, John ? " " No ; and well, on the whole, perhaps we hadn't better say anything about it till we get home. We '11 tell him then." THE SILVER RIFLE. 123 " Yes," said Allan ; " I do believe that will be the best way." " And then," said Sam, " I don't really feel as if it was my fault." " Of course not, certainly not," protested both the boys, eagerly. "But Michael he'd give it to me like any- thing, if he knew ; and the story might get about, — and things get so big in the telling, — and, first I know, some one will be saying of me, ' That 's the fellow that got the two Fitz Adam boys into such a scrape ; ' and all we guides have to depend on, you know, is our reputation." "I'm sure we wouldn't injure you for the world, Sam," said John, warmly. " You saved my life; and I want father to know that some- time ; but I do think we '11 keep it to ourselves till we get back to ' Baker's.' " Perhaps both the boys felt that if the story was known it might be an obstacle in the way of the projected expedition to " Lake Lois," or of other rambles with Sam. But if this motive influenced them, they did not acknowledge its control, even in their own minds. It was rather one of those hidden feelings which we keep in some sort of cupboard in our brains, and of whose existence we are only half conscious. 124 THE SILVER RIFLE. They did not want their father to be troubled ; they did not want Michael to find fault with Sara. Accordingly, when they reached the camp, though they had a great deal to say about the delight of their expedition, the splendid view from the mountain-top, and the lake which they had named after their grandmother, they never so much as hinted at the peril in which John had been placed, and his merciful escape. CHAPTER V. LAKE LOIS. niHE next morning the boys laid before their -L father their proposed expedition to the lake among the three hills, and eagerly awaited his decision. " It appears, to me/' said Mr. Fitz Adam, smiling, " that you young gentlemen are getting very independent in your ideas." Here Everard made a reference to the pro- verbial independence of a frog on the ice, who, if he cannot stand up, can always fall down. " You see they think our company is too frivol- ous," said Dr. Fenton ; " and they want to go away, and meditate, and improve their minds." " Now, uncle, we -don't, either ! " said Allan, repelling the charge as something quite inju- rious. " But Sam says it 's a splendid place for trout; and we just want to see how it seems to go oif and spend a night by ourselves in the woods." 11 * 125 126 THE SILVER RIFLE. " Well," said the indulgent father, " we will ask Michael about it, and see what he says." " And then you and my uncle, or Michael, can come over in the morning," said John ; " and we can all come back together." The boys hurried away to put up their things, for they had little doubt of Michael's sanction. " If he thinks it is safe for them," said Dr. Fenton, " we will go over in the morning, and see how it seems, too. Do you remember, Fitz, how, when we were at school in Canandaigua, we went out to one of the little islands on the lake, to spend the night and see how Robinson Crusoe felt?" " I do, distinctly ; and I also remember how a thunder-storm came up, and the wind blew, and how exceedingly scared we were, under those circumstances; and glad enough we were to get back to school the next day." "And what did they say to you?" asked Everard. " On the whole, perhaps that part of the matter had better be passed over," said his father ; " but we were little fellows then, of ten and twelve, and not quite so well able to take care of ourselves as those two. Fitz, they are just now like what I can imagine we might be, if we found ourselves THE SILVEB RIFLE. 127 suddenly endowed with wings. We should be trying some pretty wild flights, just to see how it seemed." Here Michael, who had been building what are called " smudges/' - — a defence, alas ! too neces- sary in those regions, — came up, and Mr. Fitz Adam told him what the boys had planned, and asked him if he thought they could safely be trusted to make such an expedition under Sam's guidance. Sam, who was preparing some wild ducks for dinner at a little distance, looked up anxiously, but did not speak. Michael, instead of answering Mr. Fitz Adam's question, turned to the boy and asked what lake he meant. " I mean that little one among the three hills, sir, about three miles north-west of here. You know what sort of a place it is." " Ever been there yourself? " asked Michael. " Oh, yes, sir, several times. I know the way quite well. You know I could show the young gentlemen some good sport ; and I thought per- haps you and the other gentlemen would come over iu the morning." " You are quite sure you know the way ? " " Oh, yes, sir," said Sam, smiling. " Because it would be an unpleasant thing to get lost in the woods," said Michael. "Well, 128 THE SILVER RIFLE. squire, I don't see anything against it, if you feel to have the young gentlemen go. It's sort of nature for boys to like to get off by themselves ; and lots of scrapes they get into that way some- times, too. Your sons have been more used to running round the woods than most boys of their age, or I would n't advise you to let them go. But they 're both pretty fair shots ; and I really think they've got some considerable sense for their age, though they are so frisky. And if they 've very much set on it, and I suppose they are, I don't see anything against it." These remarks, coming from Michael, might be taken as exceedingly complimentary to the young gentlemen, and Mr. Fitz Adam was naturally pleased. " Very well, then," he- said. " I suppose they will have to go." " Only this, squire," said Michael. " You 'd better tell them not to go rambling off any- where else. There 's a pretty wild country round north and south of there; and though I know the hills round here as well as any one, there 's places there I 've never been in, and a great lot of hills and mountains all lying round loose, where any one might lose themselves, and never be found again. Where do you mean to make THE SILVER RIFLE. 129 your camp, Sam, so that I can find you when we come 9» " Well, sir, I thought we 'd go to that little rocky headland on the west side of the lake ; and you could n't well miss us any way, for the lake is n't more than two miles round ; and you can see the whole of it." " Very well," said Michael. " Be sure you go there, and nowhere else ; and young gentlemen," he added, as the two boys came out of the shanty, " don't you go wandering off into the woods by yourselves." " No, boys, remember you don't," said Mr. Fitz Adam ; " and promise me that you will go straight to this ' Lake Lois ' of yours, and nowhere else." "Yes, sir," said both the brothers. "And you '11 come over in the morning ? Everard, why won't you come?" " You never asked me." " Why, when we said we boys, we meant you, of course," said John. " Thank you. No, on the whole, I think I won't. The boat won't hold four comfortably; and if we take the two, it will make the carry too tiresome. I '11 come over in the morning." Everard Would have liked very well to join the expedition. He did not care much for the I 130 THE SILVER RIFLE. fishing to which the boys looked forward; but he would have liked to see the little lonely lake among the hills by moonlight. In spite of his twenty-one years, he felt something of the boy- ish wish to get off by himself. But though Dr. Fenton had not hinted that he did not wish his son to go, Everard fancied that his father would be a little uncomfortable if he went. He did not feel that he was making any great sacrifice ; but still he would have been glad to accompany his cousins. " Why did n't you say you would go ? " asked the doctor, as the boys ran away to talk over the matter with Sam. " Oh, I did n't care so very much about it," said Everard, lightly. " If you care at all, go by all means," said his father. " If your uncle can let Allan and John go at their age, it would be rather absurd for me to fidget about you." " But yet you would, sir," thought Everard to himself; and he answered aloud : " Oh, I shall enjoy it more going in the morn- ing. And I really don't care to fish, though I have n't courage to acknowledge as much to the boys." It was noon when John and Allan left the THE SILVER RIFLE. 131 camp under Sam's guidance. They carried no baggage but their guns and rods, a little hard biscuit, a small piece of pork, and some coffee, a little kettle, and an axe. They landed on the shore of the lake about a mile above their camp, and then carried their boat, by a rough and wild way through the deepest woods, to a little foam- ing, dashing stream, which, as Sam assured them, ran into Lake Lois. They had not followed the brook for more than a mile when they heard the roar of a waterfall, and were told by Sam that they must again land, and carry the boat round. " Why, Sam ! " said John. " I thought you said there was only one carry ? " " Well, we don't generally reckon more than one, because a good many people shoot that fall." " Oh, let us do it," said John, eagerly. " No, sir" said Sam, with emphasis. " I 'd a good deal rather not. It 's pretty steep ; and we three are a little heavy for this bit of a thing, and you are not used to the work ; and if there was to be an accident, it would be bad ; " and, in spite of the boys' supplications, Sam steered the boat to the bank. " Michael might well say you are careful," said Allan, half provoked. " You are a perfect old granny." 132 THE SILVER RIFLE, " Just you look at the fall, and see," said Sam, good-naturedly. The boys did so, and could not but acknowl- edge to themselves that Sam was right. The water fell full twenty feet, almost sheer down ; and was dashed into foaming spray on sharp black rocks, which stood up out of the water as though ready to tear in pieces any boat daring enough to venture down. " Well, I should n't think anybody could shoot that fall," said John. "Why, they'd be all dashed to pieces at the bottom." " 'T is rather a particular piece of work," said Sam. " I never tried it alone, and only once with old George Flint ; and I tell you I was n't sorry when we got to the bottom. You would n't like to have your silver rifle lying down there ? " " No, indeed ! " said John, to whom it appeared almost incredible that any boat could make such a descent, and live. But he knew that men ac- customed to handling a canoe could do wonderful things, and he never thought of doubting Sam's word. " Well," said Allan, " I suppose if it is carry, why, carry we must. Is it long, Sam ? " " Not more than half a mile." It was a half mile, however, that rather tasked THE SILVER RIFLE. 133 the boys' powers of endurance. It was up hill, and through deep, wild woods and among huge rocks, where it seemed almost as if no one had been since the creation of the world ; so utterly lonely and wild was the way. To the boys' sur- prise, they did not follow the stream they had just left, but turned oif into the wilderness. " I thought you said the brook we left ran into ' Lake Lois'?" said Allan, to the guide. " It does, sir ; but when we get over this little hill, we '11 come on a better one, that runs with a smoother, deeper channel, and then we '11 go right straight along. If you don't like to go on, young gentlemen, — and it is kind of a lonesome place for any one that isn't used to the woods, — why, we can turn back." Sam spoke with the most perfect simplicity, and stood still, as though only waiting for the word to turn about and retrace his steps. The boys, of course, scorned to confess, even to themselves, the sort of eerie impression which the dark, unknown path had made upon their feel- ings. The idea of going back, and acknowledg- ing — especially to Everard and Michael — that they had done so because the woods were darker and deeper than they had expected, was not to be thought of for a moment. 12 134 THE SILVER RIFLE. " What nonsense ! " said Allan, colouring. " Do you think we are afraid ? Go ahead ! " "And we are more used to the woods than you think/' said John, a little annoyed. " We used to run round a great deal on the hills about Mr. De Forest's ; and there are some pretty wild places there, I can tell you;" and John began to whistle. Sam smiled to himself, for he quite understood the state of the young gentlemen's minds ; but he never hinted that such was the case. Never had he made himself more agreeable than during the remainder of that half-mile walk. He sang, and talked, and told his best stories, and when they reached the banks of the stream where they were once more to embark, the boys had quite forgotten their momentary feeling of discomfort, and were in high spirits. The stream on which they now launched their canoe was narrow, but deep, and ran with a rapid current, which carried the boat swift- ly along. It wound through deep pine woods which the axe had never invaded ; by rocky, wild nooks, each more beautiful than the other; and once, for some distance, through a dark defile, shut in by black cliffs and full of perpetual shadow, for, above, the trees on each side the narrow ravine interlaced their branches. Here not a sound was THE SILVER RIFLE. 135 heard but the rush of the wind and water, and once or twice the wild, screaming voice of the great owl. Now and then, however, the silence was pierced by the slow, sweet, monotonous song of the bird that some call the " Canada Whistler," and others " the sleepy bird." " Well," said John, at last, " this is certainly the longest three and a half miles I ever went over. It will be twilight before we get there." "Oh, I meant three and a half miles straight, sir," said Sam. " We could have gone straight, but it would have been a great climb ; and we could n't have taken the boat." " All right ! " said Allan, accepting the ex- planation. "But when are we going to get there?" " In a few minutes," returned Sam ; " and then, young gentlemen, I think you will say it was worth coming for." In five minutes more the stream, making a sudden turn, swept round the foot of a craggy hill, and the lake opened before them. The boys gave a cry of delight. The sheet of water was almost an oval in shape ; near where the stream entered, the banks were low, and a level, park-like expanse dotted with great oaks and maples ran back to the hills. 136 THE SILVER KIFLE. A little farther on, however, the hills came close to the water, and at the farthest end towered into a wild, rocky mountain, whose summit was crowned by one sharp, gray peak, clearly defined against the eastern sky. The shadows were beginning to fall, and a broad band of rose color, shading into gray, was drawn along the eastern horizon, But it is to be feared that the beauty of the landscape did not so much attract the boys as the innumerable circles which dimpled the water in all directions ; for from the centre of each sudden ring sprang and fell a fish, " There, now ! " said Sam. " This is rather nice ; is n't it ? " " Nice ! " said John, with enthusiasm. " I should think it was ! Push out, and let us begin — " " Well, I guess we 'd better land the kettle and things first, and make our fire," said Sam, " and then it will be all ready to broil our fish." Rather unwillingly, the boys complied; but in a few minutes their fire was built, a shelter of boughs hastily erected, and then they entered the canoe, and pushed out into the lake, Allan left his gun on shore, but John put his into the canoe. THE SILVER RIFLE. 137 " Are you going to shoot trout, sir ? " asked Sam. " I don't like to let my rifle out of my sight," said John, laughing. " My ! what a big fellow that was that jumped there." The boys had excellent sport catching such trout as they had never before seen ; and, after a couple of hours on the water, returned tired, hungry, and happy to the little point where the glimmer of the fire seemed to invite them. They were in a high frolic, cooking their fish and chattering among themselves, when they suddenly heard from over the water a long, wild, shrieking laugh like that of a crazy person. Though they knew what it was, they all three started. " It 's only a loon," said Allan, recovering himself. " I never heard one so loud or so near : he must be a big fellow." "See, there he is!" said John, pointing out a black speck on the water. " See him dive ! I wonder they don't choke to death. There he goes again ! " as the laugh again rang out, and was answered by another. " My dear friend," said Allan, addressing the loon, which was coming nearer, "what is the use of making such a noise as that ? I should n't 12* 138 THE SILVER RIFLE. think it would recommend you to society in general." The loon screamed more frantically than ever ; and another making its appearance farther up the lake, the two united in a concert, which, heard in a lonely place, was really horrible. " I can't bear those critters," said Sam. " It always seems just as if they were mocking at me," and Sam took Allan's gun and fired at the nearest bird, which merely dived under the water, and, reappearing a little farther away, whooped and laughed like a maniac. " Oh, let him laugh ! " said John. " He has a right, if he likes ; it 's niore his place than it is ours. Come, sit down, and get your supper." " I don't wonder people say ' as crazy as a loon,' " said Allan, as the three sat down to their feast. " "What a horrible noise it is ! I don't envy Mrs. Loon, if that's the gentleman's usual style at home; but I dare say she thinks it's beautiful." " Just like Aunt Elsie pretending to admire Lyman's singing," said John; "and she knows he can't sing, just as well as the rest of us know it. I don't think anything ever was quite so nice as this trout. I wish Everard had come with us." THE SILVER RIFLE. 139 " So do I," said Allan. " Why, John, you are not going to clean that everlasting rifle of yours to-night, are you ? You make as much fuss over it as Aunt Elsie over her children." " No ; I don't mean to give it a regular clean- ing," said John, refilling the kettle with water after the coffee was made ; " only just wipe out the barrels." " I '11 do it for you," said Sam. " You must be rather tired." "No, thank you," said John; "it won't take me but a minute or two." "Well, mine will keep till morning," said Allan, yawning ; " it wants a cleaning too. I think a good deal of my gun, but I don't make quite such an idol of it as John does." . " I '11 clean it for you now," said Sam ; " and then if you want to use it in the morning you can." " Oh, you don't want to bother with it now," said Allan, reluctant to trouble Sam too much, but willing to escape a piece of work which he disliked. " Oh, I rather like to clean a gun ! " said Sam, who had finished his supper, and he took up Allan's pretty little, light rifle, — his father's gift on his last birthday, — and began to clean it with skill and care. 140 THE SILVER RIFLE. " You see your brother is willing to trust me," he said to John, half laughing, half in earnest. " Oh, you know it is n't that ! " said John. " But I know how Mr. De Forest loved this ; and it's just a notion of mine to take care of it myself. Why did n't you bring your gun ? " " Oh, we did n't expect to hunt any, you know; and we had things enough to carry, and two guns were plenty. Don't you begin to feel ready to go to bed?" " Yes, indeed ! " said Allan, sleepily. " Don't you?" " I think I shall keep watch," said Sam. " Why," said John, " we don't in the camp. What is there to be afraid of?" " Oh, nothing ; only it 's a lonely kind of place, and I feel a little responsible." The boys were rather pleased than otherwise, with the idea of a watch being kept. " But you must n't sit up alone all night," said John ; " we can divide the night in three." " You can take the first turn if you like, and then Allan, and then I ; qx just as you please." " Oh, I don't a bit mind sitting up," said Sam. " You 've had a pretty good tramp, and are tired." THE SILVER RIFLE. 141 The boys, however, protested so vehemently, and were so determined to take their turn in the watch, that Sam gave way, and promised to call one of the brothers at midnight. " You can take my rifle in case any bears should come," said Allan. " Come, John, or I shall go to sleep sitting up." The two boys, with another charge to Sam to be sure to wake them, entered the little shelter of boughs which had been put up. They said their usual prayers, and lying down on the fra- grant couch of hemlock twigs which Sam had prepared, they covered themselves with their blankets, and were sound asleep in two minutes. When Allan first woke it was bright daylight, and his brother was asleep by his side. " There, now ! " said Allan, quite provoked. "Sam never called us after all; and he said he certainly would. John, wake up; it's morn- ing ! " " Morning ! " said John, starting up. " Why did n't you call me ? " " Because I 've only just waked up this minute myself. If I don't give it to Sam for serving us such a trick : I don't see him either," con- tinued Allan, looking out. " Hop up, John, and let 's find him." 142 THE SILVER EIFLE. John turned to take up his rifle, which, accord- ing to custom, he had laid down at night within reach of his hand : it was gone. " Why, where 's my rifle ? " he said, startled. " Sure enough," said Allan ; " and where 's my rod ? I stood it right there, last night." The boys sprang up, and, moved by the same impulse, rushed out of the little shed. The last embers of a fire that had not been fed for hours were dying on the ground. The canoe was gone from the shore, and Sam was nowhere to be seen. The boys looked at each other in amazement. " Where can he have gone?" said Allan. " Wherever he went, he had no business to take my rifle," said John, much annoyed. " I have refused to lend it to him before, and told him the reason. And, why, Allan, he had your rifle, too ! " " Look for your rod," said Allan, in a troubled voice. John's rod was nowhere to be found ; and as the boys looked farther, they discovered that the kettle, and more than half their provisions, had disappeared, and Allan's fly-book had been taken from his pocket. " Oh, John," said Allan, in dismay, " can it be THE SILVER RIFLE. 143 possible that he has robbed us, and gone off and left us?" " I can't, I won't believe it ! " said John, vehemently. " Nobody could be so wicked. Per- haps he has been carried off by some wild beast." " No bear or panther would have carried off the other things ; and if there had been any strug- gle, we should have heard it; and there are no tracks on the sand, only of our own feet. How could he do it ? Oh, how could he ? " and Allan turned away with a quivering lip, hurt to his very heart by the sense of his friend's baseness and treachery, and regret for his beloved rod. " The mean little villain ! " said John, fiercely. "Oh, if I could just catch him! But there's no telling which way he 's gone. My rifle ! my poor rifle ! I hope it will go off and shoot him ! " and John paced to and fro in a tumult of passion, bitter with the sense of betrayal and the loss of his most cherished possession. " Don't give it up for lost, John," said Allan, trying to comfort his brother. " When Michael comes over, he will be able to track Sam, I dare say, and will get the things back." " Perhaps so ! " said John, a little relieved by this view of the case. " But if it had been any one else, I should n't have minded half so much ; 144 THE SILVER RIFLE. though I 'd rather have lost anything else I have in the world ; but that he should be so mean, after all ; and we 've been together so much, and I thought he was just all he ought to be. Why, Allan, I 'd as soon have expected you or Everard to steal from us." " Yes ; I can't hardly believe it, even now. I never shall know how to trust any one again. Let 's call, John ; maybe he 's only done it for a trick." " Pretty trick S " said John. " We can try ; but I know it 's no use ; " and the two united their voices, and called Sam again and again, but there was no answer but the echo from the hills. " Well, it 's no use to cry for spilt milk," said John, trying to be heroic. " What we 've got to do is to get our breakfast. We've got fish enough left. Oh, dear ! oh, dear ! I canH bear it ! " said John, suddenly breaking down in a eob. "To steal that gun away from us while we were asleep, and leave us not one thing." " Don't grieve so, John," said Allan, putting his arm round his brother. " It is almost too bad to bear ; but I hope we can get the things again. I wonder he didn't take our watches, too." " He could n't get them without waking us, I THE SILVER RIFLE. 145 suppose," said John, dashing away his tears. " If I was to see him, I believe I could just kill him." " Oh, John ! " said Allan, who was of a more placable temper than his brother. "We ought not to say that." " I could ! " said John, savagely. " There ! Let 's have breakfast. We can't have any coffee, for that mean scamp has taken the kettle, too." The boys cooked their breakfast of fish in gloomy silence, and sat down on the shore of the lake to wait for their father and Michael, whom they had expected by nine o'clock, at the very latest. * As the sons of a lawyer in large practice, and dwellers in a great city, John and Allan had, of course, known of the existence of crime, wicked- ness, and treachery in the world. They had heard and read of trusted clerks who had robbed their employers; servants who had deceived their masters ; even of sons who had stolen from their fathers. But all these matters had been to them mere stories. Sam's baseness was the first thing that had ever brought home to them the real sense of the actual nature of wickedness ; and they felt almost overcome and crushed by the bitter knowledge of the evil that is in the world. 13 K 146 THE SILVER RIFLE. That the hoy with whom they had played, and fished, and hunted; to whom they had looked up as a model of excellence in all relating to his way of life; whom they had trusted so frankly, should have betrayed, robbed, and forsaken them, seemed to the two brothers something almost too monstrous to be true. The whole world was changed. Then there was the irreparable loss of their old friend's gifts, — valuable in themselves, and ten times more valued as having been his legacy. It was a calamity which would have severely tried older people than the two lads ; and it is no wonder that, helpless as they were to recover their lost treasures, with nothing to do but to sit down and wait by the lonely shore, they felt their courage and spirits give way. The weather began to change, and gray clouds rolled down from the mountain, blotting out the landscape and covering the lake with mist. Presently the rain began to fall, driving the two boys for shelter under the little cabin of boughs. It had been very hastily erected, and was no pro- tection. John and Allan were soon quite wet through. Chilled, lonesome, and miserable, they sat to- gether, holding each other's hands and growing THE SILVER RIFLE. 147 more eager every minute for the arrival of their friends. The slow hours crept on, and still no one came. John and Allan began to feel very anxious. "It's eleven o'clock," said Allan, at last; " and father said he should certainly be here early. I can't understand it." " Allan," answered his brother, struck with a sudden thought, "suppose they had tried to come the other way, and been wrecked in shooting that fall?" " Don't say such horrid things ! " returned Allan, turning pale. " Look here, John; do you think that Sam meant to do this when we started ? " John rose, and walked up and down trying to warm himself a little by motion. " I 've been thinking it over," he said ; " and I believe we have just been made fools of. I be- lieve he meant to do it that day we went up on the mountain, only I left the rifle at home; and, Allan, I do think that was the reason he did n't want us to tell father about my falling. He knew that if father heard how careless we 'd been, he would n't let us go off with him again." " Serves us right, then, for keeping anything away from our father," said poor Allan, passing 148 THE SILVER RIFLE. a very hard judgment on himself and his brother. "We ought to have told him. .But, oh! why don't he come ? He 's always so particular to be just the time he says he will. If he only knew !" The poor boys waited in vain. Noon came and passed ; the afternoon crept by ; the evening shadows settled dark over the lonely lake ; night came down black with rain and mist, and there was no sign of any human presence but their own. Time and again they raised their voices and called aloud ; but there was no answer, only the echo from the hills, and the long, wild, mock- ing laugh of the loon. CHAPTER VI. A LONG NIGHT. THEY won't come ! " said John, sadly, when night began to close in, dark and chill. " I wish we 'd started to get home this morning, and we should have been there now." " Oh, if we only were ! " said Allan, almost overcome at the remembrance of the cheerful camp-fire, his father, and his friends. "I'm so afraid something's happened to father." " There 's no use to look on the darkest side," said John, trying to be cheerful. " Come, Allan, let 's try to make a fire. We Ve got to stay here to-night, at all events." " It 's dreadfully lonesome ! " said Allan, who was very sensitive to all outward influences, and whose vivid imagination began to bring up to him all the horrors of which he had ever heard. " I hate the sight of it ; and I won't call such a detestable place after grandma at all." "Well, don't, if it makes you feel any better. 13* 149 150 THE SILVER RIFLE. Let 's try for a fire ; though everything is so wet, it will be hard to find anything to burn. If we only had the axe ; but he must take that too ! Well, something will come after him ! That 's one comfort." " I 'm glad, if it is to you," said Allan, rather snappishly. " It 's none to me. If a dozen bears went after him, it would n't bring back the rod and the silver rifle." " Now look here, old fellow, don't be cross ; we are badly enough off without that." " I 'm not cross ! " retorted Allan, sharply. " You always say I 'm cross, John Lyndon Fitz Adam ; but I 'm so wretched about father." " And I suppose you think I don't mind," said John, who was used to his brother's little freaks of temper, and quite understood that Allan's irritation was directed, not toward himself, but toward their common causes of trouble. " Oh, John ! I 'in a wretch ! I 'm a perfect brute ! " said the poor boy, turning his anger against himself. " And I 've got no more sense than that old pig-headed loon in the lake, to go and snap at you." " I should like to see a pig-headed loon ; but I do wish " he 'd stop that noise of his. It does sound so — though I am a fool to mind it. Shoo, THE SILVER RIFLE. 151 you old nuisance ! " and John threw a stone at the loon, which, as though aware that the guns were gone, only dived, and came up nearer the shore, repeating its savage laugh, as though it were really mocking the misery of the two deso- late boys. "Just you wait till I have a gun over here some time, you hoo-hooing old thing ! " said Allan, really angry with the bird. " I '11 make you laugh in a different fashion. Pooh, what a fool I am ! Well, here goes for a fire. We 've got our knives left, any way, and the matches are in a tin box in my pocket, or they'd be soaked." After great trouble, and several failures, the boys succeeded in building a fire under the shelter of a rock, where they were less exposed to the rain and the wind, which now began to come down cold from the mountain. They ate their supper of salt pork and hard biscuit, con- suming all they had ; for they were very hungry. They tried to dry their clothes and their blankets at the blaze, but succeeded only in part ; for the things were very wet, and they had not been able to get dry wood of sufficient size to make such a roaring fire as they had seen Michael build with hemlock boughs and logs. 152 THE SILVER RIFLE, " We 'd better keep watch by turn/' said John, " and keep up the fire. If there are any wild creatures round here, it will keep them off. He might have left us one gun. I wonder how he came to leave your powder-horn." " Because it hung right over my head," said Allan, " and he could n't get it without waking me, the little villain. Why, John, he 's only nine- teen ! " " I know. Well, if he don't catch it, there 's no justice anywhere," said the other. "He's a perfect Judas !" " Only he won't ever bring anything back, nor go and kill himself, as Judas did j but I don't want to talk hardly about him, for I did like him so much." " What an odd boy you are ! That 's just the reason I can't bear him now. I feel as if he had taken me in, and made a fool of me ; and I can't forgive him. I can't ! I can't ! " said John. " But we ought to, you know," said Allan, who always stood in some dread of his brother's latent fierceness of temper. " You would n't want him to be sent to prison ? " " Would n't I ? " exclaimed John, with em- phasis. " And father was so good to him, too. THE SILVER RIFLE. 153 Oh, Allan ! if we only knew where he was," said John, hiding his face. " Oh, some little thing prevented his coming," said Allan, trying to speak cheerfully. "Some little thing never prevented his keep- ing a promise yet; and he would have sent Michael, or uncle and Everard would have come. Well, it 's no use to fret. There, the blankets are about dry now. Lie down, Allan, and sleep if you can ; I '11 sit up the first part of the night." " No," said Allan, " let me sit up first. I 'in in such a fidget now, I know I could n't sleep. You lie down, and let me have my way." "Very well," said John, the more willingly, as he remembered to have heard that the morn- ing watch was the hardest. "But, John," said Allan, rather timidly, as his brother prepared to lie down, " don't you mean to say your prayers?" " Allan," said John, after a moment's silence, " I can't. I never hated any one before in all my life, though I 've been angry at people. But now I feel as if I could do anything, if I could only pay that fellow off as he deserves." "But we ought not to feel so," said Allan. " Well, suppose it 's so. Did you never do any- thing you ought not ? " 154 THE SILVER RIFLE. " You know I have : that 's the reason. You know father would say this was the very time of all others when we ought to ask God to take care of us." " Look here," said John ; " if I could just give that fellow one good thrashing, I might forgive him afterward ; but I can't now." Allan was somewhat amused at this theory of forgiveness. " I know how you feel," he said. " No, you don't. You are so sweet-tempered, you don't know what it is to feel real ugly." "I sweet-tempered!" said Allan. "Well, that 's a new idea ! " " Oh, you scold a little, and make a fuss ; but you don't feel as I do, — savage all the way through, and fit to kill somebody. I hope he'll lose his way in the woods, and the bears will eat him." " Now, you know you don't ! If you found him in any trouble, you 'd be the first to help him." " I would n't," said John, quite shortly. " Indeed, you would. Were you not just as angry with Mr. Curtis? And, when he was sick, did n't you go to see him, and take him grapes, and books, and everything ? " THE SILVER RIFLE. 155 " Mr. Curtis said he was sorry ; and he had n't injured us like this." " And you said some pretty hard things to me last summer," said Allan, coloring; " not but what I deserved them ; and did n't you make a perfect slave of yourself to me all the time I was sick ? " " I acted like a fool," said John, turning away ; " and you are my own brother." "But, John— " " Well, there then, have your own way ! " said John, with a compliance half sulky, half affectionate. " I can say the rest of the Lord's prayer any way ; if I can't that, and, — well, yes, I'll try, — and that's all you can expect of me." Allan felt that it was indeed all that could be expected under the circumstances. The two brothers knelt on the wet ground, and repeated their usual evening prayer with all sincerity. Allan tried to put up a special petition for his father; but his voice faltered, he could not speak the words; but could only murmur, " for Christ's sake. Amen ! " " That is a kind of a comfort, any way," said John, after a few minutes' silence. " I tell you, Allan, people may say what they like, — I don't pretend to see why things should be as they are, I can't, and I don't ; — but I do know there 's some one to hear and answer one's prayer just 156 THE SILVER RIFLE. as well as I know you answer when you speak to me : somebody that loves us." It was a great deal for John to say, for he, like most boys, and also men, of his temperament, was very shy of expressing his deeper feelings. " Yes," said Allan : " it 's so. Lie down now and go to sleep. I dare say we shall find every- thing all right at the camp in the morning." John wrapped his blanket, now quite warm and dry, around him, lay down under the shelter of the rock, and soon fell asleep, leaving Allan to keep up the fire. It was a lonely watch. The fire burned low in fitful flashes, hardly able to maintain itself against the rain, which continued to fall in fine steady drops. The light of the blaze only illumined a small circle, and beyond that was the dense black shadow of the woods on one side, and on the other, the cold white curling mists of the lake, and then darkness. Out of the forest came the choked, gurgling laugh of the little screech owl, the wild halloo of the great barred owl, voices which Allan knew very well, but which sounded inexpressibly dis- mal in that lonesome place and the night. There were other sounds too which he did not know. Wild screams, as of agony and triumph, repeated THE SILVER RIFLE. 157 again and again, and ending, as it seemed, in loud laughter. These cries too were those of the owls, of which birds there are many kinds in that, region, all of them greatly enjoying the sound of their own voices, and capable of making noises quite unimaginable to those who have never heard them. Then there were other noises, howls and yells, and, as it almost seemed, articulate words, music such as that with which your own soft-voiced pussy will make night hideous, only louder and wilder. These sounds came from above Allan's head, on the hillside, and presently ended in a furious yelling and spitting, as of two wild cats having a difference of opinion, which was in fact the case. The boy knew that the creatures would not be likely to attack him if he did not molest them ; but still their near neigh- bourhood was not pleasant. Then the loons, who either did not feel the necessity of going to bed, or else sat up all night to watch the two boys, kept up their concert, and shrieked and laughed frantically from one to another. The air was full of rustling whispers, the water lapped on the shore, the rain dripped from the trees. It was no wonder that Allan grew nervous. He was not afraid of anything in particular, but the loneliness of the place, the dreariness of their 14 158 THE SILVER RIFLE. situation, his anxiety about his father, all com- bined to act on an excitable imagination, and made him wish, as he had never wished before, for the morning. He made an effort to overcome his terrors, and repeated to himself all the verses he could remem- ber from the Testament and Psalms, and hymns familiar to him in church and at home. Then he tried to reason with himself. They had no guns, to be sure ; but Michael had often told him that, unless very much pressed by hunger, hardly any wild animal will come within the circle of the fire to attack a man. It was not the time of year for any bear or panther to be very much famished. Moreover, bears and panthers were few and far between. The noises made by the owls were dismal enough ; but after all they were only owls. The two wild cats, which had raced away to renew their dispute farther off, were too much occupied with each other to trouble him, even if they were so disposed, and the loons were only water fowl. " But, oh dear ! " said poor Allan to himself. " I do wish they would hold their tongues ; for it does seem as if I should go crazy. If we'd only brought the dog ; " and with that Allan thought of his own beloved little Spry at home, THE SILVER RIFLE. 159 the tiny spaniel that slept on his bed, and regu- larly came to kiss him every morning ; and the thought was almost too much for his manhood. He would not give way, however, though his overstrained nerves thrilled and quivered, and his excited brain worked wildly, presenting to him one dismal picture after another. " I 'm no better than a baby," said the boy, provoked at himself. " A pretty soldier I should make, to be sure ! " Allan did not know that many a soldier on a night-watch has experienced the same sensations. He paced to and fro, and wrapped his blanket round his shoulders more closely. He sat down, and pressed his hands to his temples to still their th robbings. The hours crept on, and it was midnight, and Allan felt thankful that he might wake his brother and hear the sound of his voice. Undis- turbed by loons, owls, or cats, John had slept on, hardly moving. Allan bent over him, and, much as he longed to hear him speak, felt reluctant to wake him. When John had lain down in his damp clothes, he had wrapped his warm blanket closely around him, and being in a great degree sheltered from the rain, he had gradually grown warm, and had fallen into as profuse a per- 160 THE SILVER RIFLE. epiration as though he had been in a water-cure pack. " If he gets up now," thought Allan to him- self, " and conies out into this cold air, it will be enough to give him his death ; and if I wake him, why get up he will. I '11 let him sleep, and stand it out till morning," and with an unselfish- ness which might truly be called heroic, Allan rose softly from his brother's side, and nervous, lonesome, and wretched as he was, prepared to encounter the long hours that must pass before the dawn. As he paced to and fro, a sudden rustling in the thicket startled him, and, looking up, he saw the light of the fire reflected on two green glaring circles, the eyes of some wild beast. "An owl," was Allan's first thought, deter- mined not to be alarmed, though his heart beat fast. The next moment the gaunt, savage head of a wolf peered cautiously from the bushes. Like many people of sensitive nerves and strong imagination, Allau had great presence of mind in real danger. The sight of the wolf at once restored him to himself. He caught up the powder-horn, which he had hung round his neck, and, pouring some of the powder on a stone, touched it oif with a coal from the fire. THE SILVER RIFLE. 161 The wolf vanished in an instant, and Allan shouted at the top of his voice, and flung on the fire a branch of hemlock which had been cut the night before for their cabin. John sprang up wide awake in a moment. " What 's the matter? " he said, instantly put- ting out his hand for his lost rifle. " Nothing much. I thought I saw something in the bushes. Lie down again, and cover your- self up. You are just as wet as if you had been in a pack. Now, John, do. Suppose you were to get sick here ? " " Allan Fitz Adam S " said John, imperatively, " tell me this minute what made you touch oif that powder ? " " Well, if you will know, a wolf stuck his head out of that bush. He 's gone now." " A wolf!" cried John, jumping up. " Do keep yourself wrapped up, John," im- plored Allan. " Just see what a state you 're in, and suppose you get inflammation of the lungs or something, here ? " " Oh, you fuss ! " said John, wrapping himself up, however. "How wise you are all of a sudden ! Are you sure it was a wolf? " " Quite sure. I thought it was an owl till I saw his head. It was n't handsome. I don't think 14* L 162 THE SILVER RIFLE. there is any great danger. There are too many deer for him to be very hungry ; and Michael says they are not dangerous, unless in winter, and a good many of them together ; and he '11 never know we have n't got a gun. If we 'd had any fire to speak of, he would n't have shown himself." " Well, you are a cool hand ! " said John. " It 's a cool night," said Allan, smiling ; "but I 've had the fidgets dreadfully, I can tell you ; and I tried to say over something to put them out of my head, and all the forlorn pieces of poetry I ever read kept coming up, and saying themselves over to me, like the Ancient Mariner, and things I had n't thought of for years. I '11 never read any more poetry again," said Allan, in irritation. " What's the use of it? A lot of stuff strung together just to come and make a fellow miserable when he don't want to remem- ber it." " It must be time for my turn now," said John. " Never mind if it is ! Lie still till you are quite dry. Keep awake, and talk if you like; but I am sure I could not go to sleep if I lay down." " But it seems so mean," remonstrated his THE SILVER RIFLE. 163 brother, "for me to be lying here warm and comfortable, and you out there in the wet." " I 'm not so wet now. I think the rain is holding up ; and it will seem a good deal meaner, if you are sick ; and we 've got a pretty hard walk before us to get back to camp." About three o'clock John insisted on getting up, and making his brother lie down. In spite of his " fidgets," Allan fell asleep in a few min- utes. John was less susceptible than his brother ; but when the long hours had crept on in dark- ness, he was not sorry to see the first streak of dawn. Gradually the mists in the valley lifted themselves and rolled away; the mountain tops came out through the folds of vapor, and the sunlight fell upon the lake. John thougJit he would let his brother sleep for a while longer. He cut a pole in the wood, found a long piece of string in his pocket, bent a pin for a hook, and, baiting it with a worm, betook himself to fishing in the lake for their breakfast. It was a great coming down from his usual style of angling to be sure, but the scientific sportsman was conquered, or rather annihilated, by the hungry boy. " Not to leave us so much as a fish-hook ! " 164 THE SILVER RIFLE. thought John, with a new feeling of anger at Sam ; for they had left their spare hooks and Al- lan's precious " fly-book " in the pockets of their loose shooting-coats, which they had thrown aside on going to rest, and the robber had probably thought it a pity to part the rods and the hooks. The trout, however, proved not particular, and John had the satisfaction of landing three moder- rate-sized fish with his primitive apparatus. Pres- ently he was joined by Allan, who looked very pale and tired. " Fishing with a crooked pin ! " he said, with a faint smile. " That 's science to be sure." " No : it 's breakfast," said John. " How tired you look ! I do wish we had any way to heat some water and make a cup of coffee. What an idiot I am to be sure ! We 've got our tin cups." " So we have ; and Sam left us coffee enough for breakfast, any way. How considerate ! Clean your fish, and I '11 heat the water and make what we can." While they were preparing their scanty meal, the boys kept watch on the entrance to the lake, hoping in vain to see their father's boat glide round the turn. " It 's no use to look that way," said John, with a sigh. " Eat your breakfast, and then THE SILVER RIFLE. 165 good-by to ' Lake Lois.' It 's a pretty place, but I hate it." To John's surprise, Allan sprang up, and stamped his foot in sudden passion. " John ! John ! " he said, in great excitement. " This is no more ' Lake Lois ' than it is Lake Leman ! I know it." " Why, how ? " asked John, but with a sudden conviction that his brother was right. "That was between three hills. Don't you remember the three sharp peaks he showed us from the hill-side ? He did tell us there was only one carry ; and he never said a word about its being three and a half straight, and longer by the stream; and I no more believe any canoe ever shot those falls than it could shoot Niagara. Here are dozens of hills, and one great moun- tain, and where is the ' rocky headland ' where he said he meant to camp ? Here we are flat on the shore." " Sure enough," said John ; " and we went nearer seven miles than three and a half." " And father and the rest will have gone over there, and not found us ; and they'll think we 've broken our word, and run off somewhere else; and father will be so worried," said Allan, greatly troubled ; " and they '11 look all over for us." 166 THE SILVER RIFLE. " Well, we can tell them how we were deceived, when we get back," said John. " But I 'rn glad to know the state of the case ; for now I need n't think anything has happened to father. But what in the world did that fellow lead us astray for?" " Why, don't you see," said Allan, with a full understanding of Sam's yillany, " so that father and Michael should n't know for ever so long, and he get the start of them, and get away." " Oh, he 's a nice young man ! " said John, bitterly. " He 's a credit to his sex ! " said Allan, feeling that he had said something very severe indeed. " But it is a comfort to think we 've no reason to suppose anything has happened to father ; but, oh, how troubled they will be ! Michael might well say that boys get into lots of scrapes when they go off by themselves." " It all comes from our not telling about my fall," said John. . " I '11 never keep anything away from my father again. See if I do." " And to think how he persuaded us not to tell ! Do you think he could have been planning it then ? " " I 've not a doubt of it," said John, with de- cision ; " and that we should have been so con- THE SILVER RIFLE. 167 siderate for him and his reputation, and walked into the trap with our eyes open." " I 'in afraid it was n't all consideration for him," said Allan, in a low voice ; " I 'm afraid I thought if father knew how careless we 'd been up there on the mountain, he would n't trust us off with Sam again." " I don't know but there was a little something of that sort," acknowledged John. " But we 're punished for it now." " And to think how pleasant he was that day, and all the time he was planning this piece of wickedness ! But, John, I can see ever so many little things now. His always wanting to get hold of your gun ; his putting it into our heads to come away by ourselves ; and his telling us that we 'd better take off our coats before we lay down, and, oh ! ever so many things." " I can see, too, now it \s too late ; but who ever could have suspected him of such a thing beforehand ? " " I do wish he was n't so bad," said Allan, regretfully. " I never liked any boy better than I did him. I can't bear to think he is as he is." " I don't see how we can help thinking so," said John, who felt that the extremest view of 168 THE SILVER RIFLE, Sam's crime justified his own resentment. "He's left us as bad off as we can be." " No j we might be worse." " I don't see how." ' " We might be in his place instead of our own. I 'd rather be where we are." " That 's so. But come, if we 've finished breakfast, we '11 start. Look here, Allan, let 's leave the blankets : they are such heavy things to carry ; and we can get them again when we come back with Michael." " All right," said Allan, approvingly ; for he felt that it would take all his strength to reach his father's camp on the Saranac, without burden- ing himself with any load. " We 've nothing else but the powder-horn and the tin-cups. Light marching order, to be sure." " You are quite certain we can find the way?" " Oh, yes ! Why not ? You see we Ve nothing to do but to follow the stream up till we come to the place where we put in the canoe. I 'm quite sure I remember it ; and then across to the other stream that he said went into the ' Lake Lois/ and then the way 's straight enough." " Very well," said John, folding up the blankets, and hiding them away in the bushes. " Fortunately, we 're on the right side of the THE SILVER RIFLE. 169 stream, and sha'n't have to swim across. Go ahead ! " The boys had a long and toilsome walk up the solitary stream. "There!" said Allan, stopping at last. "I am sure this is the place where we struck the stream." " Yes," said John ; " I remember those three big pines, and that pile of rocks, that you said looked like a Druid's altar." They struck off into the forest, and continued their weary way through the deep, dark woods, dank with the last night's rain. " John," said Allan, at last, " I think it 's time we heard those falls, or struck the stream." " I think so too. I wish we had a compass. There 's no seeing the sun here." " Well, there is nothing to do but go on," said Allan, whose weak ankle began to pain him cruelly. A few minutes more and the brothers found themselves on the margin of a deep and wide morass, surrounded by barren, lonely hills. " We never came past any such place as this," said John. " No," said Allan ; " I don't think we did ; " 15 / 170 THE SILVER RIFLE. and he sat down on a stone, utterly tired and dis- couraged. John walked up and down, pondering their situation in his own mind. " Brother," he said, finally, " I tell you what we VI better do. We 'd better make our way back to that lake we came from, and stay till they come after us, as I think they will be sure to do. We left our blankets there ; and I guess we can get fish enough to live on." " Well," said Allan, " that will be best, perhaps ;" and he rose, though his heart died within him at the thought of retracing that long, weary way. The boys turned back, as they supposed. After a few steps, John noticed that Allan walked lame. " Your ankle hurts you, don't it ? " he said, in a troubled voice. " Go on," said Allan, trying to speak cheer- fully, " and let 's get out of this as soon as we can." The boys went on, Allan's ankle paining him more and more at every step. The woods grew darker and deeper. There was no trace of a path. At the end of an hour's hard labour, they came upon a little stream, which they followed through a rocky channel for some distance. THE SILVER RIFLE. 171 Presently they heard the sound of falling water, and, with some faint hope that they might have reached the falls of the day before, they hurried forward. They found themselves standing on a little rocky platform, from which the stream fell a descent of a few feet, and beneath them lay the same wild desolate morass. The boys looked at each other in horror. " John," said Allan, turning pale, as the dread- ful suspicion, which had been growing upon his mind, deepened into certainty. "John, we are lost ! " CHAPTER VII. THE SEARCH. >Y seven o'clock on the morning of the day after the boys left the camp on the Saranac, Mr. Fitz Adam, Michael, and Dr. Fenton were on their way to " Lake Lois : " Everard remained behind to take care of the camp, and, being greatly interested in a sketch he was making, did not care to join the expedition. The way to " Lake Lois " was by the stream which the boys had first followed. There was only one carry, that around the fall where Sam had turned off; for not the boldest boatman on the lakes would ever have dreamed of shooting the cata- ract. From thence a mile of easy paddling led into the little lake among the three hills. Michael led the way to the headland of which Sam had spoken ; but there was no sign of a camp ; and the little sheet of water, shut in among its mountains, looked as though no paddle had ever before broken its solitude. 172 THE SILVER RIFLE. 173 " Well, now, that is n't right in Sam," said Michael, displeased. "He told ine he'd cer- tainly be here ; and now we shall have to go all round to look for the camp." " I don't exactly see where you are to look," said Dr. Fenton, surveying the whole circle of the shore, which was plainly visible from the place where they were. " I see no sign of a camp anywhere." " No more there is n't," said Michael ; " but maybe they 've gone oif into the woods a little way, and we shall find the boat drawn up on the shore." The party made the circuit of the lake, grow- ing more silent and anxious every minute as they found no sign of any human creature having visited the place that year at least, "If I don't give it to Sam," said Michael, sharply. " He has gone oif somewhere." "The boys should have known better," said Mr. Fitz Adam, at once displeased and anxious. " I charged them the last thing to go nowhere else, and to be certain to make their camp in the appointed spot." " It is very unlike them to disobey you, Fitz," said the doctor ; " after having given you their word so particularly. The thing troubles me, I confess." 15* 174 THE SILVER RIFLE. " Excuse me, squire," said Michael, resting on his paddle ; " but I 'd like to ask you one ques- tion." "What is it, Michael?" " Were the young gentlemen, as a general thing, given to minding you ; because you know all boys ain't?" said Michael, apologizing for such an inquiry. " I think I may say they are," said Mr. Fitz Adam. " Since they were large boys, I cannot say that I ever knew them to break a promise deliberately given to me." " That is certainly so," said Dr. Fenton ; "and I remember John saying the last thing, ' You will find us where Sam says in the morn- ing/ It would have been very wrong, to be sure, but I wish I knew for certain that they had forgotten their promise, in boyish heedless- ness, and gone off somewhere else." "Where could they - go, Michael ? " said Mr. Fitz Adam, who began to feel greatly troubled. " What other lake is there ? " "Well, squire, there's a great many other lakes. There 's one leads right out of this ; and then there 's two more little ones out of that ; and then, if you like to make a carry, there 's a pretty considerable big one, and so on." THE SILVER RIFLE. 175 " What would you advise ? " said Mr. Fitz Adam. " I guess we 'd better go on through the out- let," said Michael, sending the birch canoe for- ward again with rapid strokes. " I don't know as there's any particular call to be uneasy, squire," continued the guide, who at heart felt a good deal troubled. " You see, your boys under- stand themselves pretty well, and so does Sam ; and the young gentlemen had their guns." " Look here, Michael," said Mr. Fitz Adam ; " tell me the exact truth. What do you think has become of the boys ? " " Squire," answered Michael. " The fact is, I don't know what to think ; but if Sam's gone and led them into a scrape through not minding me, if I don't give him a piece "of my mind when I meet him ! If I thought anything had come to your boys, I 'd tell you. They can swim, and, even if the canoe had been overturned, it 's next to impossible they could all have been drowned. There 's no robbers round these parts ; and no wild critters would ever have attacked and carried off the three of them. I 'm puzzled, I confess." " Suppose we do not find them," said the doc- tor, " in any of these places where you are taking us ; what will you do ? " 176 THE SILVER RIFLE. " Well, sir," said Michael, " I 'd have one of you gentlemen go back to ' Baker's,' and set all the men I could find looking after them; and I 'd take to the woods myself; and I 'd never look Mr. Fitz Adam in the face again till I could bring him news of his boys." Mr. Fitz Adam knew that Michael regretted having said anything to forward the expedition. " I am sure I do not blame you, Michael," said the anxious father. " The boys have often been out by themselves, and spent a night in the woods about their grandmother's home. Tell me, what do you know about Sam Irmelin ? " " Nothing against him, squire. His father 's a respectable man; works in a tannery over at Keeseville. Sam 's been a guide here for the last two summers, and every one 's liked him ; and he has an uncommon knowledge of the places for such a young fellow. He 's never taken a party all alone on his own responsibility ; he 's been with some of the older men. Old George Flint liked him first-rate, only he said Sam was just a leetle too fond of money ; but we 've all got our faults. Wherever your sons are, Sam is, you may depend." " Do you think Sam could get lost himself? " " Not unless he struck off into some part of THE SILVER RIFLE. 177 the country where he 's never been ; then he might. But the young gentlemen have their guns and rods, and there is n't any starving while there 's fish in the water." " That 's true," said Dr. Fenton, a little com- forted. Vain was the search for the missing boys through the little chain of lakes connected with ' Lake Lois/ Michael, Dr. Fenton, and Mr. Fitz Adam called, and shouted, and fired their guns repeatedly, but there was no answer. " What is to be done ? " said Mr. Fitz Adam at last, when the search had been prolonged until almost nightfall. " Well, sir," said Michael, " I 'm really afraid the young gentlemen are lost ; though how they could be, passes me to tell. This is a lonesome part of the country ; and not but very few hunt- ers come here, because it 's no run for the deer ; and it's out of the way of the gentlemen that come fishing. It beats all, that Sam can have carried them so far off. I do think you gentle- men, or one of you at any rate, had better go back to ' Baker's,' and set all the men you can to hunt- ing. They '11 do it willing enough." " I '11 offer a reward," said Mr. Fitz Adam. " No need, sir ; there won't be a soul in the M 178 THE SILVER EIFLE. woods that won't be ready to do all they can for you, and will soon find them. Don't you be afraid but what we '11 have them back to camp by morning. 'T is n't as if they were just helpless, shiftless city boys, like that young Marshall." "And what will you do?" said Dr. Fenton. " I, sir? I '11 hunt for them K two boys till I 'm gray, but I '11 find them," said Michael, with energy. " Dear little fellows ! I think a sight of them boys, squire ; and I wish, as things have turned out, that I VI been deaf and dumb before I 'd said what I did. But I don't really think there 's any danger, on account of their having their guns. If they had n't, I should feel anxious." " Let me go with you," said Mr. Fitz Adam, who, distressed as he was, kept himself very composed. " My brother-in-law will go back to ( Baker's.' Offer any reward you like from me." " I will join you, of course," said the doctor, who was very fond of his nephews, and full of anxiety and distress on their account and sym- pathy for his friend. " I will go directly," he said. " I don't really feel that there is any reason to be anxious." " But yet we all are," said Mr. Fitz Adam, with a faint smile. " You '11 do all you can, I know." "That I will. God bless you, Fitz; we shall THE SILVER RIFLE. 179 have John and Allan all safe to-morrow morning, and laugh at our fears for them. We will meet at the camp, I suppose ? " "Yes." " Good-by, and God keep you and the children, wherever they are!" and the doctor turned his canoe and sent it flying oif over the water with all the skill of a practised hand. " And now, where ? " said Mr. Fitz Adam. They were on a little lake, a mere pond in the midst of the woods. "Well, sir/' said Michael, "if you'll be guided by me, you '11 come on shore, and let me build a fire, and make some tea, and eat a bit of supper. We 've had a long day, and you ; ve taken nothing since morning ; and we 've got a long walk before us." " I believe you are right," said Mr. Fitz Adam ; " though I cannot bear to be still." " We '11 find them, squire," said Michael, cheer- fully. "And if we don't, other folks will. The whole country '11 turn out to look for them." Michael built a fire on the shore, boiled the water in the kettle he had brought, and, going out on the lake, caught the fish for supper in a few minutes. Mr. Fitz Adam exerted himself to eat something, and drank some tea, Michael 180 THE SILVER RIFLE. waited on him with unobtrusive sympathy and courtesy. " Suppose we try firing again," said Mr. F'itz Adam, as they were about to set out once more. " You can, if you like, squire," said Michael ; and then, as the sharp report of the rifles rang through the air, two shots replied to the sig- nal. Michael shouted, and was answered by a long wild call. " That 's not them, squire," said Michael. " It 's some of the Indian hunters. I 'm glad to meet them, though." The call sounded again nearer, and presently two young men came out from among the trees, dressed in deer-skin hunting-shirts and leffgines, and carrying their guns over their shoulders. " I know them," said Michael. " It \s Peter Sanantone (St. Antoin), and his brother. Nice young fellows, too. How are you, boys ? Have you seen anything of Sam Irmelin, and two boys with him ? " "Not a bit," said the elder. "What's the matter ? " In a few words Michael told him, and asked his help in finding the lost ones. " Of course ! of course ! " said both the brothers, THE SILVER RIFLE. 181 earnestly. " Your sons ? " asked the elder, of Mr. Fitz Adam. " Yes. I assure you I will make it worth your while." " Oh, that 's no matter," said the younger, with a smile. " We find the boys, of course." " Guess we find 'em," said Peter. " We know the woods pretty well." The two brothers held a consultation with Michael, and with a renewed promise to Mr. Fitz Adam to pursue .the search, they turned away into the woods, and disappeared. "That's good help, sir," said Michael, in a tone of encouragement. " They 're two fine fel- lows ; though they will drink now and then, but not much for Indians." " Have you any idea which direction the boys could have taken ? " asked Mr. Fitz Adam. " No, sir. If they did come here, it 's a very long carry to the next lake, and a hard one. I can't think they 'd have done it ; and I don't see how they could, not unless they travelled all last night. There 's another lake off that way, if we go to the one they called 'Lake Lois.' Called it after their grandmother, they did. I hope the old lady won't hear anything about it till it 's over." 16 182 THE SILVEE RIFLE. ' 1 1 hope not, for they are very dear to her," said Mr. Fitz Adam, with a thrill at the thought of what he might have to write to his mother-in- law. "How far is it to this lake you speak of?" "It's all of twelve hours' journey from here, and a hard road. I have n't been over it in years ; and I don't think there 's any likelihood of their being there. I 'd rather keep on a little more to northward, sir, if you are agreeable. There 's a wonderful good place for trout up among the hills, a few miles farther on ; and it 's just possible we may find them there." They reached the lake, or rather pond, to which Michael had referred, by a little after midnight. They found there a hunter's camp occupied by three men, who all declared that they had seen and heard nothing of the boys or Sam Irmelin. Mr. Fitz Adam was worn out with fatigue, anxiety, and grief, and the failure of this last hope was very hard to bear. He sat down, and covered his face with his hands. The men around him exchanged glances of sympathy and pity. " Now, look here, sir," said one, a wiry, gray- haired old man, with a face like a polished brown knot of wood, " you are about beat out, you and Michael ; and no wonder ! Just you stay here and rest ; and we '11 turn out and hunt different THE SILVER KIFLE. 183 ways. It 's uncommon strange about Sam Irmelin." " Thank you," said Mr. Fitz Adam. " I be- lieve I must accept your kindness for the present. Any reward that I can offer — " " Bless you, sir," said the old man, " nobody would ask a reward for helping a man to find his children ! I 've got boys myself." " Were your sons about fifteen or seventeen, or along there ? " asked another. " One of them black hair and eyes, and the other kind of light complected and curly, fair hair ? ". " Yes," said Mr. Fitz Adam ; " have you seen them?" " I saw them at i Baker's,' sir. Nice boys they are, too. One of them had old Mr. De Forest's silver rifle. Ezra," said the hunter, turning to his companion, who had not yet spoken, "you re- member the old gentleman?" " Yes. Any relation of his, sir ? " " He was my old friend," said Mr. Fitz Adam. " He left his rod and rifle to my boys." " All right, sir ! " said the old man. " Any of the boys 'round will do all they can for any friend of the old gentleman's. Michael, there 's the coffee and stuff; make yourself and the gen- tleman to home. Keep a good heart, sir ; and I 184 THE SILVER RIFLE. hope we '11 get track of your sons. Come along, boys." The men called their dogs, and went. Worn out as he was with fatigue and anxiety, Mr. Fitz Adam fell into a troubled sleep, which lasted till morning. The boys had left their father's camp at about one o'clock, p.m., on Tuesday. It was now Thurs- day morning : one of the three hunters returned about nine o'clock, and reported that he had seen and heard nothing of the missing ones ; and that he thought it -useless to prosecute the search farther to the north. They had hitherto worked on the theory that the party must have gone from the Saranac to " Lake Lois ; " but Michael now be- gan to think that such could not have been the case. " There is a lake," said the guide, " about four miles south-west of the one they set out for ; but I can't think they would have gone to it from there, for it's a hard road,, — two big hills to climb" and go down ; and they never would have taken the canoe. But if they turned off at the falls, it 's a half a mile carry, and a pretty rough one, to a stream that runs into the lake. But what should take them there ? " " What should take them anywhere but to the THE SILVER RIFLE. 185 place they promised to go?" said Mr. Fitz Adam. " Let us go to this lake, Michael, and see what we can find." " I guess we might as well, squire ; though the shortest way, but not the nearest, will be to go back to the falls, and turn off. I expect there 's parties out looking for them now that we don't know of. You would n't think news would go in this country, but it does some way; and I would n't wonder at all if it got to ' Baker's ' be- fore Dr. Fenton did." Mr. Fitz Adam and Michael turned back, and retraced their way to the falls. The rain which had fallen had quite obliterated any trace which Michael might otherwise have noticed. It was five o'clock on Thursday evening before he and Mr. Fitz Adam reached the camp which the boys had left in the morning. It looked dreary enough. The black embers of the extin- guished fires lay before the little shelter of boughs and beneath the overhanging rock where John and Allan had passed the second night. The extempore fishing-pole, with its string and crook- ed pin, lay on the ground. " Can this have been their camp ? " said Mr. Fitz Adam. Michael replied by holding up the two 16 * 186 THE SILVER RIFLE. blankets which he 'had found hidden in the bushes. " Don't these belong to our young gentle- men ?" he asked. Mr. Fitz Adam recognized them in a moment. They were crimson Mackinaw blankets, fine, soft, and thick. The words, " Know now whether it be thy son's coat or not," came into his mind. " I bought those myself," he said. " There is the mark on the corner. J. F. A." " Well, it passes me what to think," said Michael. " Why did they leave their blankets? and where is Sam's ? " " And why should they be fishing with a crooked pin and a worm ? " " As to that, Sam left his rod ; and he may have fixed that up just to see what he could do with such a contrivance." Mr. Fitz Adam walked up and down, consider- ing the case in his own mind. He was a lawyer, accustomed to weighing and comparing evidence. A sort of suspicion of the truth began to grow upon him. Michael carefully examined the traces the boys had left behind them, — the blackened circles and ashes, the fishing-pole, the little cabin, and the two couches of hemlock, now damp and sodden, THE SILVER RIFLE. 187 on which John and Allan had passed their first night. " I 'm pretty sure," said he, at last, " that there were three people here Tuesday night, and only two last night. And what puzzles me is, that this lire here by the shelter was a regular big, respect- able camp fire, such as Sam would build ; and this was just a kind of blaze made with small branches, and such as any one could pick up ; and here's bits of such wood lying by it, and this young hemlock cut with a knife and not an axe ; and here's the same thing again; and here's where a tree was cut down with an axe." "That might be," said Mr. Fitz Adam. " The children would naturally take their knives to help Sam." "Oh, but you see, squire, the tree was cut down all of twenty-four hours the first. I know because of the wood turning colour so much more. I 'm dreadful afraid the folks that built that second fire had n't no axe ; no, nor yet no rods." " Where do you think the canoe is ? " asked Mr. Fitz Adam, whose suspicions grew stronger ; but who did not care to express them till he had heard Michael's opinion. Michael sat down, and began to whittle a little stick quite furiously. 188 THE SILVER RIFLE. "I can't just say," he answered. "You see, the rain and the lake washing up has smoothed out all the tracks on the sand and the marks of the canoe. You're used to putting things to- gether, squire. What do you make of it ? " " I begin to fear," said Mr. Fitz Adam, in a low voice, " that there has been something worse than we have imagined. I fear that there has been treachery." " It does look bad," said Michael, in a troubled voice. " I 'm nigh about sure Sam was n't here last night, and I 'in pretty certain your sons were. But I hate to think the boy could be so awful mean as to run off and leave them. And what had he to gain by it ? " " Their guns and rods, and the silver rifle," said Mr. Fitz Adam. " If he 's done that," said Michael, striking the butt of his gun fiercely on the ground ; " if he 's done that, he '11 find it 's the worst day's work he ever did in his life. If it 's that, squire, depend upon it he 's led them wrong on purpose, and told them they were coming to ' Lake Lois.' He might call this one by that name just as well as another." The more Mr. Fitz Adam thought of the matter, the stronger did the probability of Sam's treachery appear. THE SILVER RIFLE. 189 " And the boys would expect us, and wait for us all day Wednesday," he said, in a tone which he tried in vain to render steady ; " and they were here alone, unarmed, in the midst of all that rain, and have tried to find their way back to camp and been lost in the woods, unprovided with anything." " Well, squire," said Michael, " it 's a thing that won't bear thinking on. We won't condemn Sam till we know ; but I 'm awful afraid there 's some truth in what you think." The old guide neither swore nor exclaimed. His ordinarily good-natured face grew stern and cold. He looked carefully to his rifle, and made sure that his pistols were loaded. His mouth was set, his gray eyes shone bright. He looked decidedly dangerous. " I guess," said he, quietly, " that if I should catch that young man with that rifle, I should make things unpleasant for him." This threat does not sound very awful in words, but the manner was everything. " Take care what you do, Michael," said Mr. Fitz Adam. " The first thing is to find the boys." " Don't you be afraid, squire," returned Michael. " I 'm a law-abiding citizen, I am, and I expect to stay so. But we guides and hunters 190 THE SILVER RIFLE. have got our own laws too; and if Sam Irme- lin has done this thing, he'll stand a first-rate good chance to find out what we mean by them. I think, sir, I '11 go back to camp after the dogs. I wish I 'd had them with us to start with. If there 's a dog can follow their trail, it will be my old Sport," " See ! " said Mr. Fitz Adam, starting. " There 's two canoes now coming up the lake." The boats drew nearer. One contained Peter Sanautone and his brother. The other canoe, which Michael instantly i^ecognized as his own, was paddled by an old Indian. " That 's old Tin Kettle, over from Chateau Gay," said Michael. "He's one of the know- ingest old fellows there is anywhere; but I haven't seen him round these parts for along time. But what's he doing with my boat ? " "This yours?" called the younger Sanantone, the moment they were within hail. " Yes ; where did you find it ? " " Hid in ? e bushes . t'other end lake," said the old Indian, in the softest, sweetest voice. "You no find your boys yet?" he asked Mr. Fitz Adam, gently. " No, not yet," he answered, with a sigh. " We have found their camp." ffiljE Silfarr J&tfle. " Vou no find your boys yet?" p. iflo. THE SILVER EIFLE. 191 The two boats drew up on the shore, and the Indians got out. " Look here, men," said Michael ; " you would n't believe it ; but the fact is, we 're afraid there 's been foul play." " Me know it," said the old man, in a tone of quiet conviction. "He's. got a story to tell you, sir," said Peter Sanantone, respectfully, to Mr. Fitz Adam. It appeared that Tin Kettle had been, on Wednesday morning, coming through the woods to the south of the lake, where the party then was. That on the way he had met a boy whom all recognized by his description as Sam Irmeljn. He had carried, besides a rifle very much orna- mented with silver, a second and lighter one, tied together with two well-made fishing-rods, over his shoulder. The Indian had asked him how he came to be so well provided ; and Sam had told him that the guns and rods belonged to a party of gentlemen on Racket River, who had sent him over to the Saranac for these things, which they had left in possession of some friends with whom they had parted at " Baker's." Tin Kettle, who had seen Mr. De Forest several times, had recognized the silver rifle, which he greatly admired, and had been told by Sam that 192 THE SILVER RIFLE. it now belonged to a young gentleman, a relation of Mr. De Forest's. " So then he say in a hurry, and go on ; and me come this way," concluded the old man. " Then me meet the boys, and they tell me story. Then me know he 'teal him rifle. Wish me shoot him," concluded the Indian, not angrily, but rather as one who regrets having neglected a duty. " Oh, that would n't do at all," said Peter San- antone, who could speak good English if he chose, and was of the new generation. But, on the whole, Peter seemed to be rather sorry than otherwise that it would not do. Tin Kettle only uttered a contemptuous grunt in reply. Michael and the two guides were very bitter against Sam. It was not only the utter mean- ness and heartlessness of his crime, but the slur on their profession which they resented. Among the guides of that region there might possibly be found those who would now and then shirk their duties, or tell rather large stories, or lead the inexperienced away from, rather than to- ward, those deer which they preferred to shoot themselves. But, as a rule, they were and are a very respectable, honest set of men ; and they were THE SILVER RIFLE. 193 full of wrath, uot only at the injury done to their professional reputation, but at the baseness of a member of their class. The younger Sanantone and old Tin Kettle set off instantly in pursuit of the culprit, while Peter and Michael remained to prosecute the search for the boys. Sanantone had his dog with him; but Michael would fain have gone back for old Sport, on whose sagacity and ex- perience he greatly relied. Sanantone, however, like every young man, firmly believed that his dog could do anything that any other dog could do. To Mr. Fitz Adam every minute seemed an hour ; and Michael did not like to insist on a delay which he did not feel to be absolutely necessary. Sanantone made the dog, a fine, intelligent- looking hound, smell at the blankets, and talked to him in a language which the creature seemed to understand. He sniffed, and snuffed, and whimpered, and ran hither and thither, and finally, with one ringing bark, sprang forward on the trail. 17 N CHAPTER VIII. LOST IX THE WILDERNESS, WHEN John and Allan first made the dis- covery that they were lost, they had been overcome by the sense of their desolate condition. Tired out, and almost awe-struck in the midst of the wild solitude, they had dropped down on the little rocky ledge overhanging the morass, and, with their arms round each other, had remained for a few minutes silent in grief and dismay. But the two Fitz Adams were not boys to sit helplessly down and starve to death in the wil- derness without an effort to save themselves. Allan was the first to speak. " There 's no good in this," he said, with deci- sion. " What 's to do next ? " " We can go no farther to-night," said John. " I 'm tired out, and you 're lame. Does your ankle hurt you very much ? " " No, nothing to speak of," said Allan, bravely 194 THE SILVER RIFLE. 195 trying to suppress all signs of the pain, which was growing sharper every moment. " It ? s a good deal to feel, though," said John, looking at his brother more attentively. " It 's half killing you." " It 's worse now I 've stopped walking. Don't fret, John. I tell you what: just wet my hand- kerchief in the brook, and take off my boot if you can, and the sock, and wrap the wet cloth round ; and I '11 cover it up warm with my coat, and give it a pack, and it will be all right soon." John obeyed his directions, only that he took off his own coat to wrap over the wet bandage, and then sat down holding his brother's head on his knee. " We 've got to stay here all night, for all I see," he said. " Somebody will be out after us before this time, and will find us after awhile, I dare say." Allan thought of more than one story that he had heard of children who, lost in the woods, had never been seen again, in spite of all the search- ing parties sent out ; but very wisely he kept the remembrance to himself. He was one of those persons who come out strong in emergency or danger. A troublesome lesson, a cold in his head, some little annoyance or disappointment, 196 THE SILVER RIFLE, would make him fume and fret and scold. But when seriously ill he was quite a model of pa- tience, and now that helpless, unarmed, and suf- fering he was lost in the wilderness, he was calm, self-possessed, and did not utter a word of com- plaint. " We 'd better take stock," said John, " and see what we 've got between us." The boys took out, and laid on the rock, all the contents of their pockets, which proved to be as follows : Two hard biscuits. One little flat cushion full of different sized pins, which Jeanette had given John on his going away from home. Allan had had one, too, but had lost it. Two pocket-knives, one good large jack-knife, the other smaller. Two pocket-book diaries, kept at most irregular intervals, containing a little loose change, and a lock of their dead mother's beautiful long hair. Two lead-pencils, and, to the boys' great delight, Allan found one small fish-hook in the bottom of his pocket. One small tin box containing twenty-five matches. " We must be very careful of them," said Allan, " for they are what we shall have to depend upon. John, I am ever so hungry. Do you think we might eat these two biscuits?" THE SILVER RIFLE. 197 " Break one in two, and keep the other for morning," said John, again packing up their small possessions. "There's no trout in that brook, I know," he added, looking with disgust at the stream which trickled at their feet. It was not a dancing, leaping mountain brook of clear, sparkling water. It soaked down black and impure from a bog higher up on the hill-side, and found its fitting grave in the marsh beneath. The place where the boys found themselves was inexpressibly wild and dreary. At their feet lay the dreary morass, a wide expanse of sullen pools of dark water, blue-green flag beds and black mud, looking like a ruined lake. " This is a horrid place," said John, with a little shudder. " Well, I may as well make the fire, but these wet things will be hard to burn. Plow sorry I am we left the lake." " Yes, we 're like ' poor Thomas ' that ' went from bad to worse,' " said Allan. " How sorry I am we left the blankets. They 'd feel good now." " Well, there 's plenty of dry wood at all events," said John, looking at the only advantage their situation afforded ; and he rose and began to gather the dead branches for their fire, and soon had a crackling, roaring blaze. 17* 198 THE SILVER RIFLE. " This is good/' said Allan, holding his chilled hands over the flame. " You '11 have to be watchman to-night, John, for I can't walk now ; but I can keep up the fire. Let us have half a biscuit, since that 's all we 've got." The boys shared their scanty meal, and reso- lutely put the other biscuit away for morning. " Dear me ! " said John. " I don't wonder people steal when they are hungry." " Nor I," replied Allan. " It 's growing dark again, is n't it ? It seems like three years since we left the camp. If we only had our guns, I would not mind half so much." " No. We could provide for ourselves then," said John. " Have you the least idea which way we are from the Saranac ? " "Not a bit," said Allan. "We've twisted about so; but I certainly thought we knew where to turn off there by the three pines and the rocks; but then there are a great many pines and rocks in this country." "And we were talking and laughing so when we came along that we never noticed the way much," said John. " What a noise the frogs make in the marsh," said Allan ; and indeed the air rung with the clamour of voices, from the deep bass of the bull- frog to the shrill treble of the smaller species. THE SILVER RIFLE. 199 "I wish," said John, "that I didn't keep thinking all the time about all the things I 've ever had to eat. I can just see the dining-room there at Saratoga, and how nice everything was." " Saratoga!" cried Allan, suddenly raising him- self from the ground. " Why, John, look here. Don't you remember how the waiter brought us frogs, and how good they were. It was the legs," cried Allan, in a state of great excitement; "and father said it was only the big green ones that people ate." "So he did," said John, jumping up ; "and when we were at Lake George, I saw a boy get- ting them in the marsh, for the hotel. I know what kind they were. I '11 go after some straight, before it gets quite dark. Give us a sharp stick ; and you sit still. Hurrah ! we '11 have some sup- per after all." John soon found a weapon, and with some difficulty descended to the level of the morass. Allan leaned anxiously over the rock and watched him. " Take care you don't get mired," he called. " I will. There's lots of them here; but the thing is to catch them." John found it much more difficult than he had expected to catch the frogs. They were very nimble, and quite at home in the marsh, whereas 200 THE SILVER RIFLE. he could hardly make his way, and was in con- stant dread of losing his footing. At the end of half an hour, however, he re- turned, having killed six frogs. The boys cooked the hind legs — the only part that is eaten — by toasting them on the coals. They were not pre- pared or served up in Saratoga style ; but they were food, and tasted very good to the hungry boys, who had eaten nothing since morning but half a biscuit. As Allan was picking out the last little bone, he suddenly burst out laughing. " Well, it 's you to find amusement," said John. "What's the joke?" " Only I was thinking of the difference between this and Saratoga. That great dining-room, and all the black waiters in their white jackets, and the ladies in their fine things, and the tables set so elegantly; and now here we are sitting among the stones picking away at the bones, — which is verse, though such was n't my intention." " Well, if I ever go there again, I '11 give that waiter something handsome ; for it was his bring- ing the frogs' legs to us that day that made us think of it. They are not bad little birds, at all. The frogs, I mean, not the waiters." " No, indeed ; only there is n't quite enough of THE SILVER RIFLE. 201 them. I 'd have caught some more, only I was so hungry. Come, Allan, pick out a soft stone, and go to sleep if you can. I 'm going to sit up to-night, and keep up the fire. I '11 go and get some more wood." John collected a large quantity of the dry wood, and then the two boys knelt together on the stones and repeated their usual evening prayer. They asked for deliverance and protec- tion in all dangers of the coming night, and com- mended themselves to the care of their heavenly Father. Allan lay down as near the fire as he could, and tried to go to sleep, but almost in vain. The night was chilly, and they had no covering but their coats. Allan's ankle pained him ; but he would not complain. The frogs, and the owls from the woods, filled the air with their wild cries ; and in the dreary solitude in which they found themselves, the boys felt as if shut out from the living world. It was a long, weary night. Toward morning Allan did fall into a troubled sleep. John, after a desperate effort to keep awake, yielded at last to fatigue, and fell fast asleep by his brother's side. Nothing, however, came near to harm the' two boys, and it was bright morning when they both awoke, roused by a wild scream from overhead. 202 THE SILVER RIFLE. John sprang up rubbing his eyes, wakened from a dream of home to find himself in the lonely wilderness. The noise which had roused him was the shriek of an eagle which had been flying round and round above their heads in ever narrowing circles. As John sprang up, the great bird rose and sailed away over the hills. John covered his face with his hands. " He can fly, and we can't. It 's too bad ! It 's too hard ! Oh, father ! father ! " Allan put his arms round his brother and kissed him. " Do you know," he said, " what that makes me think of? How He said, ' Foxes have holes, and the birds of the air have nests ; but the Son of man hath not where to lay his head.' He knows how we feel." " Yes," said John, sadly ; " but his Father was always with Him." " Is n't his Father our Father too ? " " I can't feel it," said poor John. " But He does, whether we do or not." " Well, I won't break down, and pull you with me," said John. " You 're stronger than I am. How 's your ankle ? " "Better. It doesn't pain me a bit," said Allan, showing his brother that he could stand THE SILVER RIFLE. 203 and walk. " Let 's make the fire, and catch the breakfast that is hopping round in the swamp there. It rather goes against me to kill the poor fellows, for I have a respect for frogs ; but I don't see but we must." " "Why, I dare say they 'd eat us if they liked us, and could get us," said John, who was too hungry to be very considerate for the frogs. " So here goes." " Practice makes perfect," even in the catching of frogs. The boys made for themselves quite a good breakfast, and then began seriously to con- sider what they had better do next. " I tell you," said John, " I think we had best stay still where we are. Depend upon it all the world will be out looking for us, and we may just be running away from them. Somebody says when you don't know what to do, do nothing. Here is wood : by-the-by, we must n't let the fire out, on account of saving the matches. There 's a spring up on the hill, and we can get our living out of the swamp." " But it seems so stupid to sit down and do nothing to help ourselves out of the scrape." " But it would be a great deal stupider to help ourselves into a worse scrape ; and we did that when we left the lake. Besides, we need n't sit 204 THE SILVER RIFLE. down and do nothing. We can go up to that big rock, that will keep the wind off, and build up a little shelter with these flat stones, and cut a lot of spruce twigs for beds, and make ourselves comfortable." "Well, I believe you are right. Let's set to work, for I hate to sit down and think, worse than anything." The two boys began to make their camp, and growing occupied and interested in their work, the whole morning passed away. They built up against a rock two parallel walls of stones, laid across them some of the partially-charred trunks for rafters, and then went in among the spruce trees to cut boughs for roofing and twigs for their beds. The boys were in quite good spirits when they went into the little spruce thicket, and, laughing and talking with each other, had soon collected a large quantity of boughs. On their way back to their shelter, they passed a pile of rocks where two huge stones inclined together at their tops, leav- ing between their gray sides a little arched cave. Allan stooped and looked into it. " Oh, John ! " he cried ; " come here. What is this funny little beast ? " The " little beast," a rolly-pooly, black, furry THE SILVER RIFLE. 205 creature, came out, grunting good-naturedly, to meet the boys, and poked them with its nose in quite an affectionate manner. " You cunning little thing ! " said Allan, taking it up in his arms, where it nestled quite con- tentedly. " Is n't it pretty ? What is it ? " " Why, Allan, it 's a bear's cub," said John, startled. " I tell you we 'd better get out of this. If the old lady comes back, it won't be nice at all." " That 's so," said Allan, alarmed ; " and we 'd best be quick, too. She can't be far off." " Good-by, you queer small beast," said John, rather touched by the way in which the little creature clung to Allan, like a kitten reluctant to be put down. " Yes. Tell your mammy we did n't hurt you," said Allan, putting back the little cub in its bed ; " and I advise you not to put so much confidence in all strangers," he added, as they hurried back to their shelter, which they were re- luctant to leave after all their labour. " It'll never do for us to stay here," said John. " I 've always heard that a bear with cubs was more savage than any other creature; and when she comes home she '11 be after us, and what could we do?" 18 206 THE SILVER RIFLE. " Not much, in our condition. It 's a wonder she never came after us last night. We have n't much to pack up." " I 'm sorry to go, too," said John, as they once more turned away to wander through the wilder- ness. " It seemed quite like home." " Suppose we meet the bear ? " " I don't think we shall. I noticed her tracks going the other way." " Good for you. John, it 's the greatest wonder in the world that she did n't find us last night. We were taken care of wonderfully." " Where shall we go ? " " Well, as long as we don't know where any- thing is, we shall do as well to go one way as another. Let 's strike off round the shoulder of this hill, and see where we shall get to." With a look of regret at their abandoned cabin, the two brothers once more set out on their wander- ings, going at every step farther and farther into the trackless wilderness. CHAPTER IX. THE HAIR-LINE. I CAN'T go one step farther, John," said Allan, sitting down and covering his face with his hands. John threw himself down beside his brother, and for some minutes neither spoke a word. For the first time the two boys gave themselves up to despair. They began to feel that their case was hopeless, and that they should die in the wilder- ness. They had wandered all day Friday. Hop- ing that if they climbed a hill they would see some familiar landmark by which to direct their steps, they had with great difficulty ascended the nearest elevation. When, after a toilsome climb, worn and exhausted, they at last came out upon the bare, wind-swept summit, they saw a chaos of mountains and woods spread out before them, but nothing that they could recognize. Tired, hungry, and worn out as they were, the descent had been harder than the climbing up. 207 208 THE SILVER RIFLE. When they had come to the bottom, they had found themselves in a wild, dark ravine, where it seemed as if no human being had ever before stood. A water-fall sprang from the rocks above, and not far from its foot was a deep, still pool, where the boys hoped to find some trout. But their string-line had been too weak, and the first fish which took the bait had carried away the cord and the crooked pin they had used, as Allan had prudently refused to risk their only hook on so slender a line. They had passed the lonesome night cold and hungry, and the morning found them more tired out in body and mind than ever before. John had made a bow and arrow with his knife ; but he had nothing to point it with but a crooked pin. More than one rabbit had crossed their path. The partridge had whirred up from before them, and the quail had piped in the open places near the edge of the woods ; but both bird and rabbit had escaped unharmed by John's ineffectual weapon. All day Saturday they wandered, growing more and more silent and hopeless, and less able to bear up under the long fatigue and suffering. Night found them faint for want of food, tired out in body and mind. THE SILVER RIFLE. 209 " Brother," said Allan, at last, " I don't see but it 's all up with us now." " I 'm afraid it is," said John. " If we die here, we shall have been murdered more cruelly than if that wretch who led us astray had shot us as we slept. I wish he had. It would have been easier." " God forgive him ! " said Allan. John was silent. He could not say the words, and he would not trouble his brother. "Your ankle is very lame, isn't it?" he said. " Yes. Never mind, John. It won't hurt me long." " Oh, Allan ! Allan ! " said John, in bitterness of spirit. " What have you done that you should suffer like this? If I only knew that you were safe with father, it seems to me I would not care much for myself. And no one will ever know how we were robbed, and left helpless to starve to death, and that fellow will get off safe." " Don't let us talk about him now," said Allan, with a shiver. " How cold it grows ! There will be a heavy frost to-night. I hope we shall go to sleep." John looked at his brother, and felt that if Allan fell asleep, the probabilities were that he would never wake. He was pale as death ; his 18* 210 THE SILVER RIFLE. features were pinched and sharp. He looked as though their four days' wandering had done the work often years. As, faint for want of food, he lay back on the ground and closed his eyes, he seemed like one dying or dead. Both boys presented a most forlorn appearance. Their clothes had been torn almost to shreds among the bushes, briers, and rocks through which they had forced their way ; and their shoes had all but fallen to pieces. Their faces and hands were burnt by the sun and wind and torn by the brambles. Grief, hunger, and fatigue had so changed them, that it seemed almost as though their own father would not have known them for the two handsome, sturdy boys who had set out four days before from the camp on the Saranac. John was stronger than Allan, and had yet enough force left to collect a few sticks and kindle a lire ; but it was very hard work ; and he had to sit down several times to rest before he could accomplish his purpose. Then utterly worn out he threw himself on the ground beside his brother, and holding each other close, the two boys waited in silence for the end, which seemed so hopelessly near. They had suffered much that day. Notwithstanding the repeated assertion that it is impossible to catch cold in the woods, THE SILVER RIFLE. 211 the boys, lying out on the ground without their blankets, had done it. Both, especially Allan, had felt a separate pain in every bone, and had been tormented by feverish thirst and head- ache. But as the flame of life burnt lower and lower, a sort of apathy seemed to creep over them. As death drew nearer he laid aside his terrors, and became almost a friend and deliverer. John's feeling of hatred toward their false guide seemed to dissolve and float away like a morning mist before the great change which he felt was close at hand. They thought of their father and his grief; but all suffering appeared like a passing cloud before the sense of the presence in which they must soon stand; and both felt that strange peaceful assurance which often makes death so much easier to the dying than the living. They were on a little grassy platform part way up the side of a high hill. The grass was dry and brown and soft. Great gray rocks lay scat- tered here and there. The tufts of the golden rod waved to and fro in the sunshine, and two great red and brown butterflies sailed happily about from one flower to another. Through the little meadow ran a stream that made a succession of cascades from the hill above, and, after water- 212 THE SILVER RIFLE. ing the little green plain, sprang from stone to stone into the wooded ravine below. There was a deep, still pool near where the boys had built their fire, and as the shadows began to fall, more than one fish leaped and glanced from the clear water. It crossed Allan's mind that if they had a line they might yet be saved ; but in his then state of mind he did not seem to care very much about his life, and he lay still, and did not speak. John, who was not so weak as his brother, re- membered his diary in his pocket ; and it occurred to him in a half-dreaming way that he might write a line or two, which, if ever their bodies were found, would tell their sad story to their friends. He took out the little book and found the pencil in its pocket. There also was a paper carefully wrapped about a lock of his dead mother's hair. Mrs. Fitz Adam had had re- markably long dark-brown hair. This tress was fully a yard and a quarter in length, soft and fine. John kissed it softly, and then an idea came into his mind which once more made his heart beat with the hope that there remained some pos- sibility of saving his brother's life and his own. He shook out the lock of hair to its full length. THE SILVER RIFLE. 213 " Allan," he said, faintly, " see here I " Allan carried the hair to his lips with a trem- bling hand. " It 's mother's," he said, faintly. » Do you think she'll know us? I hope it's not very far to go," he continued, his mind wandering a little. " I can't go far : I 'm so tired." " Allan, dear," said John, quietly, " listen to me. I want you to help me plait this into a line, and fasten that one hook securely ; and if we can do that, I think our lives will be saved. Yes, I know it's mother's hair; but she'd be glad if it kept us alive for father. Think, Allan 1 Try and be yourself. He has no children but our- selves. See the trout leap ! We have no right to lie down here to die as long as there is any chance left." "I'm very tired and sleepy," said Allan, in a dreamy voice. « Won't it do after I wake ? " " My dear boy, if you go to sleep now, you '11 never wake," said John. "Come, Allan!" he added, more imperatively. " Our lives are worth trying for. Think of father, and all of them." Allan made an effort to rouse himself from the sort of lethargy that was stealing over him, and tried to understand what John meant. When he at last comprehended his intention, the faint 214 THE SILVER RIFLE. hope thus kindled seemed to rally his failing strength. He tried to sit up, but fell back on the grass. John, who was not so utterly ex- hausted, raised himself, and leaned against a stone at his back. He divided the hair carefully into two parts. " The trouble will be in joining," he said; " and you know how to tie the knots better than I do. If you can't do it yourself, show me how." It was an hour before the boys accomplished their task. Allan's hand, weak as it was, had not forgotten its old cunning, and he joined the two lengths of hair securely together, and, after a great deal of trouble, fastened on the hook. More than once the boys were obliged to stop and rest; and it was all they could do to resist the faintness which they felt stealing over them. But John's resolute will conquered. He talked to and encouraged his brother, half persuading, half commanding. He held himself up ;*he closed his ears to the voice that whispered that all was useless, and that nothing was left but to lie down and die. When the line was finally woven, he managed, he hardly knew how, to cut a pole from the nearest thicket, baited the hook with a small grasshopper, which opportunely presented itself, and, sitting down by the edge of the little pool, THE SILVER RIFLE. 215 he dropped the hook gently on the water. He had hardly done so before the bait was taken, with a force which almost pulled the whole from the boy's trembling hands. He held it, however, and once more animated with the hope of life, he seemed for the moment to feel stronger. In his heart he thanked Mr. De Forest for the instructions which had taught him to use skill rather than strength ; and in a few minutes he landed a moderate sized trout. " Thank God ! " he said, and then for the first time he began to cry, and kissed the hair-line over and over. " Mother 's saved our lives," he said, as he went back to his brother. The boys ate their fish with small dressing or cooking. Allan hardly seemed to know what he was doing for a few minutes. For two days the boys had had nothing to eat but half a biscuit apiece, and some sassafras leaves. It was too early for nuts, even had there been any nut-trees in the high desolate region into which they had come, and too late for berries. As Allan's fainting strength revived, his mind in some degree recovered its tone. "I believe I have got my wits back agaiu," he said, with a little smile : " all there is left of 216 THE SILVER RIFLE. them. Do you know, when you were talking to me, and making me work at this, it seemed to me as if you were very silly to take so much trouble for nothing ? " John drew a long breath of relief, for he had heard stories of people lost in the woods, whose minds had given way under the pressure of hunger and loneliness, and he felt thankful to hear his brother's natural voice once more. " You did seem a little queer," he said ; " but you were so faint. Do you feel better ? " " Yes. Are there any more fish in that brook, do you suppose? I never tasted anything so de- lightful." " Let me try for another? " " Are you strong enough ? " " I guess so ; if you can find another grasshop- per. You blessed little fish - hook ! If ever I get home safe, I '11 have you put in a frame." The fish in the little pool were evidently quite unsophisticated, for they sprang with frantic eager- ness, even at a bit of John's torn handkerchief, and in a few minutes the boys had caught trout enough for a fine supper. Not being quite so starved as when they made their first capture, they dressed their fish, and, broiling it on the coals, held a feast which they greatly enjoyed, and once THE SILVER RIFLE. 217 more, as Allan said, began to feel quite like them- selves. " We had best stay where we are," said John. " It 's a better place than any we 've seen. We only get worse and worse off as we go on." "Yes," said Allan; "and nothing can come near us in this open place without our seeing it. There 's no use in your trying to keep awake to watch. You '11 certainly go to sleep. Make up as big a fire as you can, and then let us lie down. This dry grass is better than the bare rock, or the damp moss in the woods last night." " I '11 take my knife and cut down as much as I can," said John, " and spread it over us. It will be something toward keeping us warm." " You are too tired. I would n't. I can't take a step, for my ankle is all swelled up as big as two." John persisted, nevertheless, and collected several armfuls of the dry grass for bed and covering. Then he made up the fire as well as he could, and, nestling in the hay beside his brother, was soon fast asleep. They slept on soundly till toward midnight, when Allan woke, and replenished the dyiDg fire. As he did so, he thought he heard from some- where, not far oil', a sound like the groaning of 19 218 THE SILVER RIFLE. some one in distress. He listened, but it was not renewed ; and he had been used to hear so many strange noises, that this made little impression upon his mind. " It 's only an owl, or a coon, or something," thought Allan, and he fell asleep again, and did not wake till morning. CHAPTER X. THE PANTHER. WHEN Allan woke, a great hawk, with a partridge in his claws, was sitting on a stone opposite, apparently wondering who and what the two boys could be. Allan shouted and clapped his hands, and the startled bird dropped his prey, and rose on his wings. Allan jumped up and seized the dead partridge before he could pounce again, and the hawk, with a scream, sailed away. John woke with the noise, and Allan held up his prize in triumph. " So much for breakfast," he said. " It was n't quite fair to take'it, to be sure ; but he can catch another easier than we can." " That 's quite splendid," said John, rising to collect more wood for the fire, while Allan began to pick the partridge. " It 's like the ravens that fed Elijah." " Only I 'm afraid the hawk won't come back. How do you feel this morning ? " 219 220 THE SILVER RIFLE. " How do you ? " " Better; only I 'ni rather lame yet. That grass kept us so nice and warm last night; it really seems quite as if we had been to bed : but I 'm tired, and I don't want to set off after any new adventures to-day." " Nor I. If the adventures will let me alone, I '11 let them alone after this. I really did n't think you 'd be alive this morning," said John, with emotion. " I do think I was very near gone," said Allan. " I shall never be afraid of death again, if it is as easy as it seemed last night ; but I 'm glad I did n't leave you here all alone." " I should n't have been long after you ; but some way I feel more encouraged this morning than I have at all, though I am so tired. We were saved so wonderfully last night. It was just as though some one had whispered to me about making that line ; and we 've come through so much. I feel as if it was not meant we should die here. To-day 's Sunday, is n't it ? " " Yes ; and let us make it a real day of rest, for I am sure we need it. Have some nice coals, John, and we'll have a breakfast worth while, thanks to the hawk." The buys cooked their bird, and enjoyed it THE SILVER RIFLE. 221 greatly. Then having taken a bath in the brook, and shaken the dust and dirt out of their ragged clothes, they sat down by the fire, and, as a sort of exercise for the day, began to repeat to each other all the verses from the Bible which they could remember. " I must get some more wood," said John, at last, rising from his place. " It won't do to let the fire go out, and use up our precious matches. What a mercy it is the weather keeps so pleasant." " Yes. We '11 build up some kind of a shelter, to-morrow. Where are you going ? " for John was preparing to descend the bank that led to the bottom of the little fall. " I 've got to go down a little bit for more wood. I 've used up about all there is right here. You sit still, and rest your foot. I '11 be back in a minute." " I can't bear to have you out of sight," said Allan, nervously. "It's been a perfect night- mare to me all the time, for fear that I should lose you." " I won't go only just down on this next ledge. There 's a big tree there fallen down. I 'm on the brook, and can't lose the way so long as I know water won't run up hill." " Well ; but call now and then, will you ? " 19* 222 THE SILVER RIFLE. " Yes/' said John, and disappeared down the little ravine. He called to his brother two or three times, and then there was a longer interval of silence, and Allan grew anxious. He shouted aloud. The next instant he heard a wild cry of " help ! help ! " Then there was a long, savage yell, half animal, half human, and almost simultaneously two shots in rapid succession, and the sound of a heavy fall. Greatly startled and alarmed, Allan dragged himself to the edge of the little descent, calling wildly again and again on his brother. As he was about to throw himself down, careless of his lame foot, he heard his own name. To his unspeakable relief, John made his appearance round a huge rock. Allan gave a cry of delighted surprise, for his brother bore in his hand the silver rifle. The next instant, however, he started, for it flashed across his mind that John had encountered their false guide, and that Sam had been shot in the struggle. " Oh, John ! " he cried. " You have n't killed him?" " Quite the contrary," said John, in a tone of repressed excitement. " Then you are hurt yourself? " THE SILVER RIFLE. 223 "Not a bit. Come down here, if you can. Let me help you." Allan asked no more questions, but hurried down the rocks heedless of his lameness. John caught his hand, and, holding it very tight, led him round the rock upon a wide craggy platform that jutted over the brook at a height of perhaps ten feet. On this platform lay Sam Irmelin, quite insensible. Allan's rifle, and the rods tied together, were near him, and close by the tawny body of a huge panther yet quivering in death. " Is Sam dead ? " said Allan, in an awe-struck whisper. " No ; I think he 's fainted. Did n't you hear him call ? " " I thought that was you," said Allan, with a shudder. " Oh, it was so horrible ! But the panther ? " " He 's dead enough. I '11 tell you," said John, who was remarkably calm and self-pos- sessed. " I came down here after wood, and just as I got to that big rock we passed round, I heard the call, and ran round the corner and saw him lying as he is there, and the panther on that log opposite, just getting ready for a spring. The rifle, thank God, lay right there at my foot, where he 'd dropped it. I caught it up and fired, and 224 THE SILVER RIFLE. hit the creature in the breast. He gave a yell, and gathered himself for a spring, and I gave him the other barrel. Thank heaven, they were both loaded, and he made one bound and dropped there." And trembling from head to foot, John sat down on a stone and leaned his head against his brother. In his joy and thankfulness, Allan kissed first John and then the rifle. "So you 've really killed a panther?" he said, " Yes," said John, and then he rose and knelt down by Sam. " He 's not dead. He 's only in a faint," he said. "He must have fallen over the bank. Help me bring him to himself. He 's hurt some way. I guess he 's got his flask with him." " Yes," said Allan, putting his hand in Sam's pocket, and drawing out a wicker-covered bottle with a little spirits in it. The boys tried to force a little of the cordial between Sam's lips, and bathed his face with water from the brook. Presently he opened his eyes, but closed them again with a groan as he recognized the boys. " Do you know me, Sam ? " said John, not harshly, but rather coldly. " Yes," said Sam, hiding his face with his hands. THE SILVER RIFLE. 225 "The panther is dead," said Allan. "See, there he lies." " Who killed him ? " asked Sam, faintly. "John did. He saved your life. Oh, Sam Irmelin ! What ever had we done to you that you should treat us like this ? " " How did you come here ? " said Sam, still hiding his face. " We lost our way trying to get back to father's camp. We Ve been wandering about ever since. We have been almost starved. How could you ? " " I don't know," said Sam. " I should n't, if it had not been for that Marshall boy." " Gus Marshall ! " cried both the brothers at once. " Why, what had he to do with it ? " " That night I went back with him to ' Ba- ker's,' he told me that he would give me twenty dollars, if I would put the silver rifle into his hands. I promised I would ; but after I got it and the other things, I wanted to keep them for myself." The boys looked at each other in horror, quite aghast at such wickedness. "Who could have thought Gus Marshall was as bad as that?" said Allan. " But what did you think was to become of us, all alone in the woods without our guns ? " 226 THE SILVER RIFLE. " I thought your father would come for you." " That was n't our lake where you took us, was it ? " said John, quietly. " No, sir : I wanted time to get off. I started over the hills for Racket River ; and I meant to get over to Canada : but, young gentlemen, — I don't know as you '11 believe me, — when I came to think how mean I'd been, I couldn't go on; and finally, day before yesterday, I started back for the Saranac, to give myself up and bring back your things ; but I lost my way, too. I fell down here yesterday afternoon, and have lain here ever since. I don't know what I 've done to my- self. I don't seem to have broken any bones ; but I can't move or stir, only my arms ; and I saw the panther, and could n't reach the rifle. It 's the judgment of God upon me for my wicked- ness ; but, oh, young gentlemen, don't leave me here alone to die, though I deserve no better at your hands." " We never could think of such a thing," said John. " I can forgive you now, Sam, though I could n't before." " Yes," said Allan. " We did forgive you last night, when we thought we were going to die ; so say no more about it. John, I wish we could get him up i:he. bank. It 's a great deal more com- THE SILVER RIFLE. 227 fortable there than in this damp place ; and, be- sides, I have heard that where there was t one panther, there would be another ; and where we are, it is all open, so that we can see what is coming." " I can't take one step," said Sam. " I 'm not in any pain, but I can't move nor raise myself. It seems a sort of numbness." Fortunately, there was an easier slope at a little distance, and up this, with a great deal of labour and often stopping to rest, the two boys conveyed Sam. Having reached their fire, they laid him on their bed of hay, and covered him over with his blanket. During the whole time Sam never spoke a word. John loaded his beloved rifle, greatly rejoiced at having it once more in his own hands. Allan collected their other possessions, and among them the kettle, which he filled with water and set on the fire to boil, " simply to see how it looked," for they had neither coffee nor tea. " If you 'd get the panther's skin," said Sam, timidly, as though fearing to address the boys, " it would be worth keeping ; and if you have to stay here any time, it would keep you warm." " I 'm afraid we should only spoil it," said John. 228 THE SILVER RIFLE. " I guess I could tell you/' said Sam. " I 've got, my hunting-knife." By attending to Sam's directions, the two boys did manage to get the panther's skin, and, having done so, began to wonder whether a panther-steak might be eatable. " They do eat them," said Allan, " in South America. It 's in Darwin's Voyage. He says it is n't bad. Let 's try." The boys selected a portion, and on questioning Sam learned that he had heard the older hunters talk of eating panther meat, though he had never done so himself. Indeed, he had never before seen a panther alive. Hungry as the boys were, they found their new dish so exceedingly tough and strong, that they gave up the attempt to eat it in despair, and con- cluded that Mr. Darwin's panther must have been younger than theirs. " We must have something," said Allan : " Sam is faint for want of food. It don't seem right to go fishing and hunting on Sunday ; but as long as we can't live any other way, it is like the disciples picking the ears of corn. I heard a partridge drum up in the woods there this morning. Go and see if you can find a bird or two, John, and I '11 get some fish. Have you got my fly-book, Sam ? " THE SILVER EIFLE. 229 " Yes, sir/' said Sam, colouring crimson. " It 's in my pocket. You '11 have to lift me, for I can't stir, not one bit." Allan gently moved the helpless boy, and took from his pocket the precious fly-book, quite safe. "Poor fellow!" said Allan, pitying him. "I wish I knew what to do for you." " Oh, sir ! If you would n't be so kind," said Sam, in a faltering voice. " Your brother saved my life; and now you both stay here, when you might find your way back." " We did n't mean to go on to-day, at all events," said John; "and I think we'd best stay still, for whenever we 've made a move, it 's been for the worse ; and of course we should n't go off and leave you. Don't cry, Sam," for the helpless figure was shaken with sobs. " I 'm sure you '11 never do such a thing again." " He '11 be better when he gets something to eat," said Allan, kindly. " Now, John, don't you go too far off." " I won't. I'll just go straight up the hill. I 'm sure I '11 find something in those open woods ; and you get some fish, and we '11 have a good dinner." Pretty soon John's gun was heard from the 20 230 THE SILVER RIFLE. wood, and he reappeared, bringing with him two brace of birds. " They are as plenty as blackberries up there," he said ; " and I saw marks of deer, too. There 's no danger of our starving." Sam ate the food which the boys prepared for him with tolerable appetite. He did not com- plain of any pain, only the strange numbness and helplessness. The boys, who had heard of such cases before, and felt that it was very probable he would never walk again, were full of pity for his wretched condition, and tended him with a kindness which seemed to make a deep impression on the unhappy young man. " Young gentlemen," he said, after a long silence, " I should like to tell you all about it." "Don't trouble yourself," said Allan. "We know you are sorry now. You don't want to go over it." " I 'd rather, sir ; for I don't think you know anything how mean I have been. It began the first night we started, when Michael sent me back to ' Baker's ' for the pepper. You know young Marshall went with me ; and he kept telling me all the way how you and your father had cheated THE SILVER RIFLE. 231 him out of his uncle's property, and especially the silver rifle." " It 's no such thing/' said Allan, with great indignation. "He left the Marshalls ever so much more than the old house is worth ; and father never knew a word about the will until it was read after the funeral ; and as to the rifle and things, what use would they have been to Gus ? " "Hush, Allan," said John. "Let Sam tell his story." " Well, you see, he kept telling me about your rifle, and how valuable it was, and what his uncle had done with it ; and I 'd always heard the men talk about it. Finally, he offered me twenty dollars if I 'd bring it to him at a place on the lake, near where we set sail. "Well, I would n't listen to him at first ; but he kept on, and the more he talked, the more I thought what a fine thing it would be to get so much money all at once, and finally I part promised to do it." "But, Sam," said Allan, greatly disgusted, "you needn't have been so mean because he was." " I know, sir. It don't make a wicked thing any better because there 's two people in it instead of one. I don't mean to excuse myself. Do you remember the day after we camped, the two hunt- 232 THE SILVEE EIFLE. ers that came up the lake in a boat, I told you one of them was old George Flint ? " " Yes/' said John. " I hope he was n't con- cerned in the matter ? " " He, sir ! " said Sam. " No, indeed ! George would never touch a pin that did n't belong to him ; but he brought me a note from Mr. Mar- shall, and in it he said he 'd give me double what he 'd promised, if I 'd only put the silver rifle into his hands. I believe old George would have killed me, if he 'd guessed what it was he carried." " Have you got that note about you ? " said John. " Yes, sir," said Sam, taking a folded paper from the little pocket in the breast of his hunting- shirt. Gus Marshall's note ran as follows : — " If you will bring me the gunn, I will make it wurth your wile, and give you dubble what I promiced. Augustus Marshall, Esq." for stupid Gus could not forbear the dear delight of his flourishing signature even to such a docu- ment. " That 's Gus, sure enough," said Allan ; " both the hand and the spelling. The miserable fellow! Well, go on." " I tried to get hold of the rifle, if you remem- THE SILVER EIFLE. 233 ber, more than once," said Sara, addressing John ; ' but you were so careful of it I could n't. That day we went up on the mountain I should have done so only that you left it in camp ; and then I made up the plan I carried out ; but I thought you would get back, or that your friends would come and find you. I never thought you might get lost, though I might have done so. Now I see what you've been through. I wonder I have n't got your deaths to answer for as well. All that Mr. Marshall had said to me set me to thinking how much I should like to have the silver rifle and your rod, Allan, for my own, and how easy it would be to get away and get over to Canada ; and I thought you had so many things, and your father was rich, and all ; but I had n't half made up my mind I 'd really do it, not even when we got over there to the lake, not even when you went to bed and left me to watch. And then when I was alone, it kept coming up to me, just as though something kept whispering in my ear, how easy it would be to take the things, and get off with them. I thought I could get over to Canada, and go up the Saguenay : and I meant to sell your rifle, Allan, and your brother's rod ; and that the things were worth so much more to a poor boy like me." 20* 234 THE SILVER RIFLE. " But, Sam/' said John, " seems to me that was a very short-sighted plan on your part. You must have known you could never come back here, and your reputation as a guide would be gone, and you could n't come back to your friends. If it was n't for anything but the money, I should think your good name would have been worth more to you than the rifle." "Yes, sir," said Sam, with, a sigh. "I saw that when it was too late; but I was just blinded by covetousness. Don't think I 'm excusing my- self, young gentlemen ; I 'm only telling you what I thought. Finally, I went in where you were sleeping, and the sight of the things was too much for me. If I had n't gone and looked at them, I don't think I should have given myself up to my wickedness, even then. Someway, almost before I knew, I found myself in the canoe with your guns and the other things. Half a dozen times, before I reached the other end of the lake, I was a mind to turn back. Oh, how I wish I had ! But I did n't. I hid the canoe at the foot of the lake, and struck across the country for Racket River. I'd never been through there, but I thought I could find the way. I never was afraid in the woods before, but now it seemed as if there was something walking eluse behind me all the 20* THE SILVER KIFLE. 235 time, and every step I took I expected to see some one start out, and ask me what I was doing with your guns and rods. I met an old Indian ; and I think he suspected me, for he looked at the things curiously, and asked me some questions, but I put him off with some made-up story, and went on a ways. But then it came up to me more and more how mean I 'd been, and every kind word you'd said to me, and how the doctor and your father and Mr. Everard had treated me so well, and how bad you 'd feel when you woke up and found you 'd been robbed. It was just like some one talking to me ; and finally I made up my mind I'd just go straight back to the Saranac and give myself up, and take back the things ; and I started for your father's camp ; but I was in such a worry and trouble of mind, I suppose I had n't kept the bearings right, for I lost my way. Yesterday afternoon I fell over the rock. I guess I must have lain in a fit or something for a while, for when I came to my- self, it was growing dark. I tried to get up, but I found I could n't stir, only move my arms. Oh, I tell you, gentlemen, I suffered misery ! I couldn't do anything, only lie still and think what I 'd done, and how no one would ever know that I 'd tried to bring the things back, and how 236 THE SILVER RIFLE. I should leave my bones for the wild creatures, and how my poor father and mother would feel. I might have thought of them before I disgraced a respectable name ; but, oh, it was dreadful ! " " You poor fellow ! " said John, quite melted. " How I wish I had known you were there last night. I wonder you didn't hear us." " The water-fall makes such a noise," said Allan ; " and he could n't see our fire down there. I thought I did hear a queer sound last night ; but there are so many noises in the woods, and I was so tired." " And then in the morning before you came, I think I fell into some sort of sleep or swoon, and when I came to myself, there was the painter couched just ready for its spring, lashing its tail like a cat. And there lay both rifles loaded just out of reach of my hand ; but they might as well have been ten miles off, for I could n't move. And the beast seemed to know how helpless I was, for it crouched and drew back, and put its head on one side, and made believe it was going to jump, just as I 've seen a cat do with a mouse she 'd caught. I called, though I did n't think there was a living soul anywhere near; and then I heard the shot, and I never knew anything more till I found you both over me. I 've THE SILVER RIFLE. 237 treated you awful bad ; but I don't think you 'd want me to suffer any more than I did last night and this morning." " Oh, Sam," said Allan, greatly moved. " We did n't want you to suffer at all. Did we, John?" " I did at first," said John. " I felt as if nothing could be too bad ; but I 've got all over it now." " I suppose I 've stolen more than enough to send me to State's prison," said Sam, after a silence. " Oh, father will never prosecute, if he gets us and the things back safe ; and, besides, you repented, and were coming back with what you had taken. That makes it very different. Don't it, Allan?" " Of course it docs. I 'm so glad you did, for I liked you so well, Sam. I could n't bear to think of your doing such a thing. There ! there ! It 's all made up now ; and if matters were ever so much worse, who could come down on you, now you are so helpless ? " " What do you think is the matter with me, sir ? " asked Sam, as Allan sat down beside him. " I 'm afraid you have hurt your back some way," said Allan, gently; " but I hope it will be better after a little." 238 THE SILVER RIFLE. " Are your parents over in Keeseville ? " asked John. "Yes, sir; and I've done what will go nigh to kill them. I had as good a home and as kind a father and mother as any boy need have. I've got no excuse, for I was brought up respectable, and taught to be honest. If I 'd minded my father and mother, I need n't have been in trouble. Father always said I was too fond of money, and would some time do something mean for the sake of it ; and many 's the time mother's said it was hard for any one to keep on the straight line that was as anxious to lay up money as I was ; but I thought I knew more than they did." " You are really sorry, I am sure," said John, who felt embarrassed, and hardly knew what to say. " Sorry ! " said Sam, with a groan. " Well, there 's no use talking : I deserve all I 've got." The boys looked at each other. They longed to comfort Sam, but hardly knew how. " Sam," said Allan, taking the boy's hand, " why don't you ask God to forgive you "? " " It don't seem as if he could," said Sam, draw- ing his hand away; "and my hand isn't fit for any gentleman to touch." THE SILVER RIFLE. 239 " Don't you believe we forgive you, when we say we do ? " said John, bending over him. " Yes, sir ; but it 's more than I can under- stand. It is n't only what I ' ve got to go through, and the disgrace, and all : for there won't be a man round that will speak to me: but it's think- ing how mean I was to you, that trusted me so. I 'm as bad as Benedict Arnold." " But God will forgive you if you truly repent. Won't he, John ? " "To be sure," said John. " Why, the Bible is all full of it ; and I 'm sure you were trying to do your best to make up for what you had done." " And if we two boys that were so angry with you can get over it," said Allan, " why certainly our Father in heaven will. Ask him, Sam. If you would, you'd feel better." " I '11 try, sir," said Sam, humbly enough, and he turned his face away and was silent. That night, as the boys were preparing their supper, they heard a sudden rustling in the woods beneath them. Their first thought was that the panther's mate had come to look for him, and they sprang up rifle in hand. The next minute an old Indian came out of the thicket upon the little plain. With a polite 240 THE SILVER RIFLE. nod and smile to the boys, he called to some one beneath him in his own language. Instantly he was joined by the younger Sanantone, who, on seeing the boys, sprang forward with a triumphant whoop. " You the lost boys ? " he said. "That we are," said Allan, joyfully. "Did you come to look for us ? " " No ; we were hunting that little scoundrel that robbed you," said Sanantone, and then seeing Sam, who hid his face, the Indian looked at the three in wonder. " He started to bring the things back," said Allan, hastily, "and lost his way, and fell down and hurt himself; and we 've got the rifle and all. Where 's our father?" " Out looking for you. I would n't wonder if you saw him before long, if the dog follows your trail. You mean little villain ! " continued San- antone, turning fiercely on Sam. " I 'in a great mind to shoot you as ever I had to shoot a wolf." "Oh, now," remonstrated Allan. "There's no use in that." " JSTo," said John. " And he was trying to find his way over to our camp, and take back the tilings. Were you not, Sam ? " " Yes, sir," said Sam, faintly ; " but I don't THE SILVER RIFLE. 241 expect any one will believe me after what has happened." "I should think not," said Sanantone, haugh- tily. " It 's easier to lie than it is to steal." " Well, we believe him," said John, who had not thought of doubting the truth of Sam's story. " And, any way, nobody hits a man when he is down, you know." Sanantone tossed his head, snuffed the air like a young colt, and turned from Sam with a gesture of contempt. Old Tin Kettle had, in the meantime, been examining the panther-skin, which the boys had fastened down to dry at a little distance. " Who kill um painter ? " he asked, in his sweet voice. " My brother did," said Allan, proudly. " It was just going to spring on Sam, when he saw him." " Pretty smart boy ! " said the venerable sage, in a tone of approval. " Pretty well ! " and then he added, in his softest, most insinuating tones, "you no got sixpince for poor Ingin?" Young Sanantone, who prided himself on his civilization, and could read and write, looked somewhat shocked at this appeal ; and as Allan poured the money from his pocket-book into the 21 Q 242 THE SILVER RIFLE. old man's hand, he feigned to be wholly ignorant of the transaction. " Do you really think/' said John, " that our father will be here ? " " 'Spose he find your trail, guess he will," said old Tin Kettle, well pleased. " Dis young man's brother he take dog. Dis young man he take me. He pretty good on trail ; but not so good as ole Ingin. He waste him time, learn your books, make black marks on paper, write and read you say," and the old gentleman, with a grunt expressive of contempt for those frivolous accomplishments, squatted down before the fire and lighted his pipe. He took no more notice of Sam than if he had been a log, and Sam kept his head under the blanket, and pretended to be asleep. But his heart was full of bitter self- reproach and sorrow, for he well knew how differ- ently the two men would have met him in his helplessness had they not known his story. Then the old man would have pitied him, and young Sanantone would have been kind as a brother. " Perhaps I can find a deer somewhere about," said Sanantone. " I rather think I can shoot a little, though I have wasted my time," he added, with perfect good-nature. " Will one of you young gentlemen come with me ? " THE SILVER RIFLE. 243 " I will," said John. " My brother's ankle is a little weak ; and it has pained him a good deal. I think he 'd better keep still." Allan yielded the more readily that he did not quite like to leave Sam alone with the old Indian. " I wish," said John, as he went away with Sanantone, " that you 'd believe that poor fellow when he says he was coming to give himself up. I 'm sure he 's telling the truth." Sanantone smiled slightly, and made no answer. He would not contradict John ; but in his heart he thought that Sam had imposed upon the pity and inexperience of the boys with a made-up tale. John saw that it was useless to argue the ques- tion ; but he was convinced that poor Sam in his helplessness had told the truth, and determined to stand by his friend. The deer hunt was successful, to John's great satisfaction, and in little more than an hour he and Sanantone returned to the camp-fire with a fine piece of venison. They found Allan with his boot off; and indeed it was as well off as on, for it had become the mere shadow of a boot, the boys for the last two days having been barefoot in all but name. The old Indian was rubbing the swollen ankle softly with his long thin fingers, and murmuring 244 THE SILVER EIFLE. over it certain mysterious sounds supposed to be highly efficacious in aboriginal practice. Then he wrapped it up in some leaves dipped in warm water, and assured Allan that presently it would be " a heap better." Whether it was the rubbing the leaves, or the charm, or all combined, certain it is that in a little while Allan found his lame- ness greatly diminished, and by morning he could walk with perfect ease. The two Indians looked at one another as John raised poor Sam in his arms, and tried to make him eat a portion of the supper which he was too miserable to touch; but neither the old nor the young man made any comment, and Sam did not dare to address them. About nine o'clock that evening, a big hairy animal bounded into the circle of the camp-fire, jumped upon John, and knocked him down, and went tearing about from one to the other, bark- ing, whining, yelping, and dancing in an ecstasy of delight. "Why," cried Allan, "it's Michael's old Sport !" and to the surprise of the two Indians, the boys hugged and kissed the old dog, almost as much beside themselves as he. Sport dashed back into the bushes, and presently returned with Michael, Sanantone the elder, and Mr. Fitz Adam. THE SILVER RIFLE. 245 The other men, with true delicacy of feeling, withdrew to a little distance, and talked to one another until the father and sons could a little recover from the joy and emotion of reunion. Then the boys had to shake hands with every one, and hear the story of the search, and tell the tale of their wanderings. They softened Sam's crime as much as possible, and told how he had been tempted by Gus Marshall, for whom they felt by no means so much compassion. They insisted on the fact that he had repented, and was on his way to restore the stolen property. But they were sorry to see that not one of the men would believe this part of the story, resting as it did only on the word of one who had been guilty of such treachery. Seeing, however, that the boys would really be troubled if they gave way to their indignation against Sam, and having beside a half-contemptu- ous pity for his helpless condition, the men were silent on the subject, and ignored Sam's exist- ence. Mr. Fitz Adam went and knelt down beside him, where he lay motionless, wishing that the earth would open and swallow him up. " Are you very much hurt ? " he asked, rather coldly. 21* 246 THE SILVER RIFLE. " Not hurt, sir ; only I can't move," said Sam, in a whisper. - " Oh, father ! " said Allan. " Don't be hard on him : I know he did mean to bring the things back." " Yes, sir, I did," said Sam, sadly ; " but I don't expect any one can believe anything I say. It's no wonder." Mr. Fitz Adam felt some softer feeling stirring within him as he looked at the helpless boy, so little while ago a model of strength and activity, and noticed his utter misery and humiliation. The stolen property was safe. His boys were beside him uninjured, and had, as he thought, shown great courage and manliness in the way they had borne themselves during their perilous journey. God had preserved and given him back his sons, and had matters been much worse than they were, Mr. Fitz Adam was not a man to be hard on the broken-hearted creature before him. " Well, well, my poor fellow," he said. " You have hurt yourself more than you have me. If the boys can forgive you, I can." There was so much to hear and tell on both sides, that it was long before any one thought of going to bed. CHAPTER XI. CONCLUSION. T11HE next morning the boys were carried back -&- to the Saranac in triumph, and were sur- prised to find that they were not more than six miles from their father's camp. Sam, still quite helpless, was borne on a litter hastily constructed of branches. He did not speak one word until they reached the lake, and Michael and Sanantone lifted him to lay him in the canoe. " I wish you 'd drown me and have done with it," he said, despairingly. " No," returned Michael, dryly. " That would make the boys uncomfortable." " Do you suppose my father knows ? " " I expect he 's down at the camp," said Michael, more gently. " He thought you were lost." " I 'm sorry for him" said Sanantone. Poor Sam looked up imploringly into Michael's face. 247 248 THE SILVER RIFLE. " I know I don't deserve that any one should take my word/' he said. " But, indeed, I was on my way back when I fell down." " Well, maybe he was," said Sanantone, relent- ing a little. " I 'd be glad to think so," said Michael ; " but how is a man to believe any one that laid such a plan as he did, and against two innocent young fellows like John and Allan, that trusted him like a brother ? Nobody in the country ever did such a mean thing before." Sam turned his face away, and said no more. I need not tell of the warm welcome which the brothers received from every one, of the feast that was made, the pancakes that were baked, and the stories that were told. Sanantone the younger was sent down to " Baker's " with orders for the best dinner the hotel could supply, to which all in that neigh- bourhood who had joined in the search were invited. Gus Marshall and his friends had gone away, which was fortunate for Master Gus, for great was the indignation against him when the story was known. It is not wholly impossible that had he been present " things might," as Michael said, " have been made unpleasant for him." THE SILVER RIFLE. 249 As to John and Allan, a change of clothes, a good night's rest, the sense of home and safety, quite restored the health and spirits of those young gentlemen. When their father, supposing that they had had enough of the wilderness, proposed on the next day to start for home, they protested quite vehemently- against going back in ten days, when they had come to stay a month. " We sha' n't go off and get lost in the woods again," said John. " And, father, you and uncle want the rest now more than ever you did," said Allan ; " and, oh, let us stay a few days longer any way, and have a good time." " And of course," as Everard said, " the boys had their own way." Sam's meeting with his father was very pain- ful to both. Mr. Irmelin had indignantly refused to believe the report of his son's baseness, and had supposed that he had gone astray ; knowing, however, that Sam was armed, and thinking that he knew the woods, Mr. Irmelin had not felt much anxiety until the third day, when, having business at " Baker's," he had gone from thence to the camp 250 THE SILVER RIFLE. on the Saranac, intent on disproving what he con- sidered a slander on his son's fair name. His grief, on discovering that the story was true, was extreme. He could not reproach one so helpless, and indeed no reproaches were neces- sary to bring Sam to a sense of his own sin. Mr. Fitz Adam and Dr. Fenton tried to find some comfort for the unhappy father in pointing out that Sam was young, and that he had been tempted by another. " No, gentlemen," said Mr. Irmelin. " It 7 s kind in you to say so ; but I can't shut my eyes, and think it's any better for him because some one else is as bad. Besides, he did not mean to go back to young Marshall ; and it 's no use my say- ing the other boy's talk put the notion into his head. He 'd no business to keep it there; but I always told him he was too fond of money. And to lay such a plot against the boys that had been so kind to him, and that trusted him ! " " But," said Allan, " he was coming to confess, and bring the things back." " I wish I was sure of that, sir," said Mr. Irmelin ; " but the trouble is, I don't know how to believe him now." " Well, sir," said Mr. Fitz Adam, " I am a lawyer, accustomed to weighing and judging THE SILVER RIFLE. 251 evidence, and those who give it ; and if it is any comfort to you, I tell you that I think your son speaks the truth." " Do you, really, sir ? " said Mr. Irnielin, look- ing relieved. " Yes : I certainly do. I think the poor boy is truly sorry for his wrong-doing, because he does not try to throw the blame on young Mar- shall, or to excuse himself in any way. I assure you he has our full forgiveness, and I wish he might have yours." " And he saved my life up there on the moun- tain," said John ; " and we 've come home all right, and he is so sorry." " And he feels so badly," said Allan, " and is so helpless. Please don't scold him, sir." " No," said Mr. Irmelin. " I certainly sha' n't ; but I 've got to take him home to his mother. I '11 have to ask some of the men to help me, for, though not one of them will speak to him, I know they '11 have a kind of feeling for us." Old George Flint, Sam's former friend, offered to help Mr. Irmelin take his son to " Baker's," from whence he could go by carriage to Keeseville. The two boys and Everard, who pitied poor Sam with all their hearts, did all they could to make him comfortable for the journey. 252 THE SILVER RIFLE. " Will you shake hands with me, young gentle- men, before I go?" said Sam, wistfully, as he was laid in the canoe. "I don't deserve it, I know ; but — " " Why, of course we will," said John. " Did n't you save my life up there on the mountain. I 'm not going to forget that." " And really," said Allan, " now it is all over, do you know I can't help being rather glad it happened. It 's better to look back upon than it was to go through, to be sure ; but after all, John never would have shot the panther if we had n't been lost." Sam smiled faintly. " You 're very good," he said, as the boys gave him their hands in token of free forgiveness. " God bless you, young gentlemen. Don't you worry about me : I 've got no more than I deserve ; but it 's very hard on father." " Oh, my boy," said Mr. Irmelin, " I hope you '11 get better before long, when mother gets hold of you. I can't find out as you are hurt anywhere." " Ah ! " said old George, aside to Everard, "that's the worst of it. He'd better a great deal have broken a bone or two. I don't believe THE SILVER RIFLE. 253 he '11 ever take a step again ; but it 's no use to tell his father so, nor him, poor fellow ! " " We '11 stop and see you when we come back," said Allan. " I hope you '11 be better then. Are you sure you are not cold? Good-by, Mr. Irmelin. Take good care of him, George." The boat pushed off, and the three cousins stood watching it till a bend in the lake hid it from their sight. Sam was taken to his home in Keeseville. After the Fitz Adams went home, Dr. C , taking a vacation himself, went up to " Baker's " for a few days. The boys, hearing of his intended trip, begged him earnestly to stop at Keeseville long enough to see Sam Irmelin. The kind physician com- plied willingly with their request. Not even his skill, however, was of any avail in poor Sam's case, and he could do nothing but earnestly recommend Mr. Irmelin not to suffer his son to be tortured by useless or painful quackery. For a wonder Mr. Irmelin had the sense to take the advice, which probably spared the helpless boy much needless suffering. It was months before Sam left his bed, and then it was only to be lifted into a wheel-chair which the Fitz Adams sent to him. 22 254 THE SILVER RIFLE. So long as he lived, he never walked a step or stood upon his feet. The injury to the nerves of the spine had been such as to cause complete paralysis of the lower part of the body. Happily, he retained the use of his hands, and being very ingenious with his knife, he managed to add something to the income of the family by the manufacture of trifles carved in wood, and by making fishing-rods. He procured a set of carving tools, and showed so much taste and in- genuity, that his works found a ready sale in New York and at the principal points of travel in that region. It was a sad change from the free out-door life of the woods and waters to such close imprison- ment ; but Sam bore it very bravely and patiently, and hardly ever uttered a complaint. At first, all his former friends among the guides and hunters had nothing better to say than " served him right." Then, by and by, some one remarked that after all that other boy was the meanest of the two, — not that that was any excuse for Sam, though. Next, it occurred to another gentleman that Sam was only nineteen, and that it was hard on a young fellow to be shut up like that, though he might deserve it. THE SILVER RIFLE. 255 Then Michael told the story of how Sam had turned back to surrender himself, and restore the stolen property, and said that he ; Michael, had n't believed it then ; but it might be true after all : he guessed it was. Then Sanantone the elder said that, suppose a fellow had done wrong, he could n't do any more than Sam had tried to do, could he? To which the younger responded that he certainly could not, and that it was n't the poor boy's fault if he fell over the rock. Next, it occurred to some one that Mr. Irmelin was a man who had to support himself by his daily labour, and that his son's illness must make things very hard for him. It was also suggested that Sam's mother was a " real nice woman." When public opinion had reached this stage, it took up a subscription, and sent the money to Mr. Irmelin for Sam's benefit, with a kind message. As for Gus Marshall, shortly after the return of Mr. Fitz Adam to the city, that young person went abroad to a school in France. Mr. Mar- shall gave as a reason for this step that he did not think the American system of education just the thing to " form the manners of a perfect gen- tleman and a young man of family." Perhaps an interview with Mr. Fitz Adam, and a note from the principal of the institute 256 THE SILVER RIFLE. where Gus had been a pupil, had something to do with Mr. Marshall's opinion of the two systems. Gus never went to " Baker's " again. Had he done so, I fear he would have met with an un- civil reception. Whether Gus Marshall ever improved, and re- pented of his sin, I am unable to say ; but I fear that one so " exercised with covetous practices " when young would not be very likely to walk in the ways of honor when old. Envy of another, coveting another's possessions, had led the wretched boy to tempt Sam to betray his trust, and had nearly cost John and Allan their lives. Had Sam not been, as his mother said, just a little too fond of money, he would never have been prevailed on to commit the crime which resulted in his being a helpless cripple for life. It is not money, but the "love of money," which is the root of all evil; wherefore I entreat all who read my story to " beware of covetous- ness, wherein is idolatry." THE END. y * A