“Masterson, did you say, Bristles?”
Fred asked, hurriedly, as he closed the communicating
door between the two rooms, and came back to the side
of his chum.
“Yep, that’s it,”
replied the other, briskly, proud of having solved
what promised to be a puzzle. “He used to
live in Riverport years ago, when I was a kid; he
and his girl Sarah.”
“Is he any relation to Squire
Lemington, do you know?” asked Fred.
“Sure, that’s a fact,
he is; a nephew, I reckon,” answered Bristles,
thoughtfully. “I remember there was some
sort of talk about this Arnold Masterson; I kind of
think he got in a fuss with the Squire, and there
was a lawsuit. But shucks, that don’t matter
to us, Fred, not a whit. These people are up
against it, hard as nails, and we’ve just got
to do something for ’em when we get back.”
“That’s right, we will,” asserted
Fred.
He was thinking hard as he said this.
Was it not a strange thing that he should in this
way place another Masterson under heavy obligations?
He had done Hiram a good turn that won the gratitude
of the man from Alaska; and now here it was a brother
and a niece who had cause for thanking him.
Perhaps there was something more than
accident in this. If Hiram ever did return, which
Fred was almost ready to doubt, he would be apt to
hear about what had happened at the lonely farmhouse;
and if he cared at all for his folks, his debt must
be doubled by the kind deed of the Fenton boy.
“And believe me,” Bristles
went on, not noticing the way Fred was pondering over
the intelligence he had just communicated; “we
just can’t get busy collecting some grub for
this poor family any too soon. Why, they’re
cleaned out, that’s what! Never knew anybody
could live from hand to mouth like this. Why
couldn’t they get that German farmer, who lives
a mile or two away, to haul some stuff from Grafton,
if the girl couldn’t walk there?”
“You forget that the man said
he didn’t have even a dollar, when those tramps
threatened to torture him, to make him tell where he
had his treasure; and Bristles, it takes cold cash
to buy things these days. Old Dog Trust is dead,
the merchants say. But hurry that coffee along.
Hello! here’s a part of a can of condensed milk,
and some sugar. That’s good!”
Fred went into the other room about
that time; for hearing voices, he imagined the girl
must have put on some dry clothes hurriedly, and once
more descended to be with her sick father.
She looked better, Fred thought, and
there was even a slight color in her cheeks.
He was afraid, however, of what the long exposure might
bring, and determined that Doctor Temple must hear
of the case. A little care right then might be
the means of warding off a severe illness.
“Please go in the kitchen, and
stand near the stove all you can, miss,” he
said.
“But I am not cold any longer,”
she replied, giving him a smile that told of the gratitude
in her heart.
“You need all the warmth you
can get,” he insisted. “As soon as
the coffee is ready, you must swallow a cup or two
of it, piping hot. And I think it would do your
father good, too.”
Accordingly, as there seemed to be
a vein of authority in his voice, the girl complied.
She found that the coffee was already beginning to
simmer, and send out a fragrant smell; for Bristles
had made a furious fire, regardless of consequences.
“Hope I don’t burn your
house down, Sarah,” he said. “Excuse
me, but I used to know you a long time ago, when you
lived in Riverport. My name is Bris that
is, at home they call me Andy Carpenter.”
“Oh! I do remember you
now,” she replied, quickly; “but it is
so long ago. Father never mentions Riverport
any more; he seems to hate the name. I think
some one wronged him there, and it must have been my
uncle, because every time I happened to speak of him,
he would grow angry, and finally told me never to
mention that name again. But you have made this
coffee very strong, Andy.”
“Fred told me to; he said you
both needed it,” answered the boy. “And
I wouldn’t worry if I was you, because I used
up all there is. We’re going to see that
more comes along this way, and that before night.”
“Oh! it makes me feel ashamed
to think that we are going to be objects of charity,”
the girl commenced to say, when Bristles stopped her.
“Now, that isn’t it at
all, Sarah!” he declared, with vehemence; “your
pa is a sick man, and unless he gets a doctor soon
you may lose him. So I’d just pocket that
pride of yours, and let the neighbors do what they
want. And if you’ve been fleeced by that
shark of a Squire Lemington, why, there are a lot
of others in the same fix. I’d like to see
them run him out of town; but he owns a heap of property
around Riverport, and that would be hard to do, I
suppose. Say, don’t that coffee smell good
though; you know the kind to get, seems like.”
“Johann Swain brought that over
the last time he came,” she replied, somewhat
confused on account of having to make the confession
that they were already indebted to another for favors.
When the coffee was done Fred came
out and secured a cup of it for the sick man; while
Sarah sat down at the kitchen table to drink her portion.
Bristles was almost famishing for a taste, but he would
not have accepted the first drop, had it smelled twice
as good.
After making the two as comfortable
as possible, the two boys once more prepared to start
on their run toward home. Of course they must
expect to come in the very last of all, owing to all
these delays; but it was little they cared.
“Expect company before long,”
sang out Bristles, as, having shaken hands with the
sick man and Sarah, they turned to wave farewell to
the girl, standing in the open door, and with something
approaching a smile on her wan face.
Fred made a proposition before they
had gone more than fifty yards.
“What’s the use of our
finishing, Bristles?” he remarked. “We’re
hopelessly beaten right now. Suppose we head for
home, and get busy going around to speak to a few
of our friends about these people here. I want
Doc. Temple to come out; and I know Flo will insist
on it when she hears about that poor girl.”
“Three to one she comes with
him; and that the buggy is crammed full of all the
good things they’ve got at home,” asserted
Bristles; “because there never was a girl with
a bigger heart than Flo.”
Fred was of the same opinion himself,
though he only nodded, and smiled.
“You see your father, and then
drop in to talk it over with several others,”
he went on to say. “Leave Judge Colon for
me. I want to ask him a few questions about what
happened between Arnold Masterson and his rich uncle,
to make Sarah’s father hate him so, and avoid
Riverport in the bargain.”
When they arrived home the boys quickly
changed their clothes, and then started in to tell
the story of their recent remarkable experience.
Fred, first of all, enlisted the good will of his own
mother, who hurried over to another neighbor to start
the ball rolling, with the idea of having a wagon
with supplies sent out to the Masterson farm that
very afternoon.
His visit to the Temple home was a
pleasant affair with Fred. Just as he had expected,
Flo was immediately concerned about the family, and
asked numerous questions while they were waiting for
the genial old doctor to come in at noon from his
morning round of sick calls.
Then the doctor drove up, and as soon
as he entered the house heard Fred’s amazing
story. He was quite concerned about it.
“Of course I’ll go out
there the first thing after lunch, and bring them
both through, if I can,” he declared, just as
Fred had expected would be the case. “Those
tramps ought to be followed up, and caged; they’re
getting bolder every day. I expect that some fine
morning we’ll find our bank broken open, or
else somebody kidnapped, and held for a ransom.”
“And I’m going along with
you, daddy,” said Miss Temple, with an air that
announced the fact that she usually had her own way
with her parent.
“Did you know this Arnold Masterson,
sir; and is he a nephew of the Squire?” asked
the boy.
“Yes, to both of your questions,
Fred,” replied the doctor. “Years
back there was a quarrel between them, and a lawsuit
that went against Arnold, who disappeared soon afterward.
I did not know he still lived within five miles of
Riverport, because he is never seen on the streets
here. But he was an honest man, which is more
than some people think can be said of his rich uncle.”
That was all Fred wanted to know,
and he took his departure, well satisfied with the
way fortune had treated him that morning.
Later on he heard that the people
of Riverport had carried enough supplies out to the
Masterson farm to last until Christmas. And Doctor
Temple reported that not only would Sarah escape any
ill results from her experience in the cold waters
of the well, but the sick man was going to come around,
in time, all right.