<h2 class="nobreak"><SPAN name="CHAPTER_I" id="CHAPTER_I">CHAPTER I.</SPAN><br/> <small>MR. SIP’S APPEARANCE AND DISAPPEARANCE—PHILIP AND GERALD BREAK ICE IN SUMMER.</small></h2></div>
<p class="cap">Mr. Patrick Sip had seated himself by
the side of the brook that purled through
the deep green ravine lying about three miles
back of the Ossokosee House. Mr. Sip was not
a guest at that new and flourishing summer resort.
Mr. Sip, indeed, had hardly found himself
a welcome guest anywhere within five or six
years. He possessed a big, burly figure, a very
unshaven and sunburnt face, and a suit of
clothes once black, when upon the back of an
earlier wearer, but long since faded to a dirty
brown. Mr. Sip never used an umbrella nowadays,
although he exercised much in the open
air. Upon his unkempt hair slanted a tattered<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[10]</SPAN></span>
straw hat. Beside him lay a thickish walking-stick
without any varnish. There was one
thing which Mr. Sip had not about him, as any
body would have inferred at a glance, although
it is often difficult to detect by sight—a good
character. In short, Mr. Sip looked the complete
example of just what he was—a sturdy,
veteran tramp of some thirty summers and winters,
who had not found through honest labor
a roof over his head or a morsel between his
bristly lips since his last release from some one
of the dozen work-houses that his presence had
graced.</p>
<p>“Humph!” said Mr. Sip, half aloud, as he
changed his position so as to let his bare feet
sink deeper in the rippling creek (Mr. Sip was
laving them), “I see plenty o’ water around
here, but there aint nothin’ in sight looks like
bread. Plague them turnips! Raw turnips
aint no sort o’ a breakfast for a gentleman’s
stomach. Is they, now?”</p>
<p>He splashed his feet about in the pure cold
water, by no means to cleanse them from the
dust of the highway, but simply because it was
easier to drop them into the stream than to hold
them out as he sat on the abrupt bank. He<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[11]</SPAN></span>
whistled a part of a tune and seemed to forget
having put his question to the wrens and wagtails
in the sassafras.</p>
<p>“If, now, I could jist stick out my hand and
pull a ham sangwich off o’ that there useless
little tree,” pursued Mr. Sip, complainingly;
“or if you could sort o’ lay here an’ meditate
an’ presen’ly find a good-sized pan o’ cold victuals
a-comin’ a-floatin’ up.”</p>
<p>Neither of these attractive phenomena seeming
likely to occur immediately, Mr. Sip sighed
as if injured, shook his head, and said with decided
temper, “Ugh, natur’! They talk so much
about natur’ in them books an’—an’ churches,
an’ p’lice courts, an’ sich. What’s there nice
about natur’, I’d like to know, when a man can
keep company with natur’ as stiddy as I do an’
never git so much as his reg’lar meals out o’
her one day in the week? Natur’, as fur as I’ve
found out, don’t mean nothing ’cept wild blackberries
in season. I don’t want no more to do
with natur’!” Mr. Sip concluded with an angry
slap at a huge horsefly that had lighted upon
his ankle, and uttered his favorite exclamation,
“My name aint Sip!”—which, although he
meant the phrase merely as an expletive when<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[12]</SPAN></span>
he was particularly put out over any matter,
happened to be the case.</p>
<p>Just at that moment Mr. Sip looked across
to the opposite bank of the creek and discovered
that he and the horsefly were not alone. A boy
was standing rather further up the stream with
a fishing-rod in his hand observing the odd figure
this wandering philosopher upon nature
cut. The boy appeared to be in the neighborhood
of twelve years of age. He had a trim
figure and fair hair, and the sunlight on it and
through a green branch of a young maple behind
him made the brightest spots of color in the
somber little chasm. On his young face were
mingled expressions of amusement and disgust
as to Mr. Sip. Across his arm was a basket.
A napkin dangled out of this suggestively.</p>
<p>“Come here, sonny,” invited Mr. Sip in an
amiable tone, and with a leer of sudden good
feeling—for the luncheon basket.</p>
<p>“What did you say?” the boy called back
rather timidly, without moving toward his new
acquaintance.</p>
<p>“I said, ‘Come here,’” repeated Mr. Sip,
sharply, drawing his feet out of the water and
beckoning. He took a hasty glance up and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[13]</SPAN></span>
down the stream. “How many nice little fishes
has you and that pa o’ yourn caught since
morning? Ten?”</p>
<p>“I haven’t caught any fish so far,” replied the
lad, “and my father isn’t here. He’s up in Nova
Scotia, thank you.”</p>
<p>“O,” Mr. Sip responded, “Nova Scotia? I
remember I heard o’ his goin’ there. Say,
sonny,” he went on, wading out to the middle
of the creek with an ugly expression deepening
over his red face as he realized that the bearer
of the basket was alone, “What time is it?”</p>
<p>The boy retreated a few steps, pulling out a
neat little silver watch, too polite to refuse the
information. “Half past eleven,” he said, in
his pleasant accent.</p>
<p>“O, but is that there watch correck?” inquired
the evil-faced gentleman, taking several
steps in the water toward that margin from
which the lad had drawn back prudently.
“Let me come up and see it for myself, wont
you? That looks like a new watch.”</p>
<p>“I say, keep off!” cried the owner of the
watch, all at once suspecting the designs of Mr.
Sip and turning slightly pale. “Keep off,
there, I say!” The intrepid little fellow<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[14]</SPAN></span>
dropped his rod and caught up a stone that lay
near. “I—I don’t like your looks! I’ll throw
this at you if you come any closer.”</p>
<p>The boy’s face was whiter at each word, although
his spirit gave a ring to his threat. But
Mr. Sip had invaded too many kitchens and
terrified far too many helpless servant-maids to
allow himself to be daunted by a boy well
dressed and carrying a watch and a basket of
good things. He uttered an angry oath and
splashed violently toward the lad, stumbling
among the sharp flints of the creek. It was
open war begun by hot pursuit.</p>
<p>The path by which Gerald Saxton (for that
happened to be the name of the solitary little
fisherman) had made his way to the creek was
steep and irregular. He ran up it now, panting,
with Mr. Sip in stumbling chase, the latter
calling out all manner of threats as he pursued.
The boy was frightened greatly, but to be
frightened is not to be a coward, and he knew
that the path led into Farmer Wooden’s open
meadow.</p>
<p>Through the green underbrush he darted,
running up along the slope of the ravine, prudent
enough not to waste his wind in cries that<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[15]</SPAN></span>
would not be at all likely to reach the farm-house,
until he should dash out in the field itself,
and planting his small feet carefully.</p>
<p>“If he catches up to me,” thought Gerald,
“he will knock me over and get the watch and
be off before I can help it! I <em>must</em> make the
meadow!”</p>
<p>On hurtled Mr. Sip, floundering up the
narrow path, still giving vent to exclamations
that only quickened Gerald’s flight. Suddenly
Mr. Sip saw an opportunity for a short cut by
which Gerald might yet be overtaken. He
bounced into it. Just as Gerald shot forth into
the long meadow the furious philosopher found
himself hardly ten yards in arrear.</p>
<p>“<em>Now</em> I’ve got yer!” he called, too angry to
observe that the farm-house was in sight. “You
drop—that basket—an’ that watch—or—”
Now Gerald shouted lustily, still flying ahead.</p>
<p>But Mr. Sip did not finish. A new figure
came into action.</p>
<p>“What under the canopy is that?” cried a
boy who was so much older and larger than
little Gerald that he might almost have been
called a young man. He was standing by the
well up in the Woodens’s dooryard waiting for<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[16]</SPAN></span>
the horse he had been driving to finish drinking.
In another moment he grasped the situation
and was leaping swiftly and noiselessly
down the long slope over the stubble.</p>
<p>Tramps had been plentiful lately. His voice
rang out to comfort Gerald and warn Mr. Sip.
Gerald looked up, but with a white, set little face
ran past him. Mr. Sip, taking in the height,
weight, and courage of the frightened boy’s
new ally, turned and began running toward the
low oak trees.</p>
<p>A strong ash stick, thrown with excellent
aim, struck Mr. Sip squarely in the small of his
back. He staggered for an instant, but rallied,
and, a coward to the last, vanished in the
thicket with a parting curse. Within an hour
he might have been seen drinking buttermilk
thirstily at a cottage a mile away. The good-humored
farmer’s daughter gave it to him,
pitying a man who was “walking all the way
from Wheelborough Heights to Paterson, in
Jersey, marm, to find my old boss and git a job
he’s promised me.”</p>
<p>And now good-bye, Mr. Sip! You have done
something to-day that would surprise your lazy
self immensely. You have done a stroke of<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[17]</SPAN></span>
work. Thanks to your being a brutal vagrant,
there is just coming about an acquaintance that
is of the utmost import in the carrying on of
this story—without which it would never have
been worth writing or reading.</p>
<p>“Well, upon my word!” ejaculated the new-comer,
wheeling about as if disposed to waste
no more pains upon a man of Mr. Sip’s kidney,
and coming back to Gerald Saxton. “I am
very glad I heard you! What did that rascal
want of you? His kind have been uncommonly
thick this autumn.”</p>
<p>“Why—he was after my watch, I think,”
replied Gerald, sitting down on a flat rock, a
smile re-appearing upon his startled face. “I
was standing down at the bottom of the path
in the glen when he began talking to me.
First thing I knew I saw that he meant mischief.
I suppose it wasn’t wonderfully brave
of me to run from him.”</p>
<p>“Brave in you!” exclaimed merrily the solid-looking
older lad. “As if a brute like that was
not as big as six of you! You acted precisely
as any sensible fellow of your size would do.
‘He who fights and runs away,’ you know.
Did he do you any harm?”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[18]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“Not a bit, thanks. He didn’t get close
enough to me”—this with a chuckle.</p>
<p>“Were you fishing down in that lonely glen?
It is a very fair spot for bass.”</p>
<p>“Yes; Mr. Wooden took me down into the
ravine quite a little way above it. Do you
know the place, sir?”</p>
<p>“O, yes, sir; I know the place very well,
sir,” answered Gerald’s defender, with a quizzical
twinkle in his eyes as he repeated those
“sirs.” Then they both laughed. Gerald
slyly compared their respective heights. His
new friend could not be so very much taller.
Certainly he was not over seventeen.</p>
<p>“You see, I was raised here—after a fashion,”
went on the latter in his clear, strong
voice. “You are one of the guests over at our
Ossokosee House, aren’t you? I think I’ve
seen you on the piazza.”</p>
<p>“Yes; I’ve been stopping there while my
father is away. My name is Gerald Saxton,
though almost every body calls me Gerald.”</p>
<p>“And mine is Philip Touchtone, but every
body calls me Philip, and you needn’t call me
‘sir,’ please. I know Mr. Marcy, who keeps
the Ossokosee, very well. It was to deliver a<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[19]</SPAN></span>
message from him to the Woodens about the
hotel butter that I stopped here this afternoon.
But do tell me how that scamp dared run after
you? The minute I saw him and you, even as far
off as Mrs. Wooden’s back door, I suspected that
it was a tramp, and I didn’t hesitate very long.”</p>
<p>“No, you didn’t,” answered Gerald. And he
walked along, swinging his arm manfully and
fighting over again for Philip Touchtone’s
benefit those details of the brief skirmish between
himself and Mr. Sip that had hurriedly
followed one another previous to Philip’s advent.
He continued his furtive observation of
his new friend all the time. Touchtone had
gained about five feet four of his full height,
with a broad, well-developed chest, active legs,
and a good straight way of carrying himself
that reminded one of his sharp, pleasant way of
speaking. His hair was dark enough to pass
for black, as would his eyes and eyebrows, although
they were actually brown, and full of
an honest brightness. As for his face, it was
rather long, full, and not particularly tanned,
though the sun was well acquainted with it. The
most attractive feature of it was a mouth that
expressed good humor and resolution. In short,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[20]</SPAN></span>
Gerald might have easily made up his mind that
Philip Touchtone was a person born to work
for and get what the world held for him.</p>
<p>“Whew!” exclaimed he, as Gerald reminded
him, “I forgot Mrs. Wooden’s carpet-beater!
I threw it after your friend down there. He
got the full benefit of it.”</p>
<p>“And I forgot my rod! I dropped it when
I thought it was best to run.”</p>
<p>“Wait a minute and I’ll get both,” said
Philip. “I know that identical rock where you
say you stood—at the foot of the path.” And
before Gerald could remonstrate Philip ran from
his side and darted down into the glen where
Mr. Sip must have still lurked in wrath. But
sooner than Gerald could feel alarm for him
Philip came back with rod and beater.</p>
<p>“We need never expect to see him again,”
he said, breathlessly. “But—halloa! There
are Mrs. Wooden and Miss Beauchamp, who
boards with her. She teaches the district
school here, and it’s just begun. They must be
wondering what has become of me. Suppose
we hurry up a trifle. You can ride back to the
hotel with me, unless you care to stay and fish—for
more tramps.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[21]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“No, I thank you,” answered Gerald. “You
would be nowhere near to help me fight them.”
A determined flash came into the boy’s countenance,
such as he had shown when he caught
up the bit of rock in defiance of the ragged Sip.</p>
<p>“O, I beg your pardon,” he went on in
his odd, rather grown-up manner; “I haven’t
said how much obliged to you I am for coming
down there.”</p>
<p>“You are quite welcome,” laughed his new
friend, looking down with frank eyes upon the
younger boy.</p>
<p>“Perfectly welcome, ‘Gerald,’ you were going
to say,” added his companion, simply, feeling
as if he had known for years this winning
new-comer, who seemed not so much boy or
man, but a confusion of both, that made up
some one with whom he could speedily be on
familiar terms. “Hark! Mrs. Wooden is calling
you. That horse of yours is eating an
apple out of Miss Beauchamp’s hand, too.”</p>
<p>The two Woodens and their boarder, Miss
Beauchamp, walked forward to meet the boys
as they advanced from the lane.</p>
<p>“Well, Philip,” was the white-headed old
farmer’s greeting, “where did you fly to so<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[22]</SPAN></span>
sudden? Neither wife, here, nor I could set
eyes on you. And so you’ve struck up an
acquaintance with Master Gerald, have you?”</p>
<p>“Well, yes; and struck an acquaintance of
his in the middle of his back,” responded
Philip. “How do you do, Miss Beauchamp?
Didn’t you, any of you, see the fight?”</p>
<p>“Fight!” cried Mrs. Wooden, clapping her
fat hand to her bosom and nearly dropping
the wooden tray of fresh butter she held.
“Why, Philip Touchtone! Who has been
a-fightin’? Not you—nor you?” she added,
turning to Gerald.</p>
<p>“We all have been fighting, I’m afraid, Mrs.
Wooden,” said the latter—“three of us.”</p>
<p>After this preamble there had to be an account
of the skirmish. Miss Beauchamp and
Mrs. Wooden alike decided it was “shocking.”</p>
<p>“He might have drawn a pistol on both of
you!” exclaimed Miss Beauchamp, “and a
great deal more might have come of it.”</p>
<p>“Well,” Gerald protested, “the only thing
that’s come of it is that I have met a friend of
yours here.”</p>
<p>“And you couldn’t do a better thing, Gerald!”
exclaimed Mrs. Wooden, beginning to<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[23]</SPAN></span>
stow away butter and eggs in the spring-wagon
from the Ossokosee House. “Mr.
Philip Touchtone is a particular pet of Miss
Beauchamp’s and mine when he is a good
boy—as he almost always is,” the farmer’s fat
wife lightly added.</p>
<p>“And a capital friend,” added the grave
Miss Beauchamp, with a smile, “for a boy
about the age and size of one I know to have
on his books. You ask Mr. Marcy over at the
hotel all about him, Gerald. Now, you do
that for me soon.”</p>
<p>“O, pshaw, Miss Beauchamp!” Philip interrupted,
his wide-awake face rather red, and
straightening himself up to endure these broad
compliments, “you and Mrs. Wooden ought
to remember that people who praise friends to
their faces are said to be fond of slandering
them behind their backs. Come, Mr. Wooden,
I promised Mr. Marcy to be back as soon as I
could. Jump in, Gerald.”</p>
<p>The boy swung his slender figure up to the
cushioned seat. Philip quickly followed after
a few more words with the farmer. Then the
wagon rattled out into the road and was soon
bowling along to the Ossokosee. Philip favored<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[24]</SPAN></span>
the baskets and bundles in the back of
the spring-wagon with a final glance, and then
turned to Gerald with the manner of a person
who intends asking and answering a large
number of questions. And Gerald felt quite
eager to do the same thing.</p>
<p>Why each of these lads, so entirely out of
his own free will, should have mutually confided
details of their two histories, when each
was so much a stranger, met to-day, and perhaps
never sitting again within speaking-distance
after to-morrow, was a riddle to both of
them. But the solution of it is as old as the
rocks in Wooden’s Ravine, perhaps older. We
may keep our lives and thoughts under a lock
and key as tightly as we like until the day comes
when, somewhere along this crowded highway
called Life, we all at once run square against
some other human creature who is made by
fate to be our best friend. Then, take my
word for it, whether he is younger or older,
he will find out from our own lips every thing
in the bottom of our hearts that he chooses
to ask about; and, what is more, we ought to
find ourselves glad to trust such a person with
even more than the whole stock that is there.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[25]</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />