All night long the Nancy Bell sailed
back and forth within sight of the light that marked
the mouth of the river. Soon after day-light a
pilot-boat was seen approaching her in answer to the
signal which was flying from the main rigging.
As the boat ran alongside, a colored pilot clambered
to the deck and declared it did him good to see a big
schooner waiting to come into the St. Mark’s
once more.
“Uster be a plenty of ’em,”
said he to “Captain Li,” “but dey’s
scurcer’n gole dollars now-adays, an’ I’se
proud to see ’em comin’ ag’in.”
By the time breakfast was over and
the Elmers came on deck, they found the schooner running
rapidly up a broad river, between wide expanses of
low salt-marshes, bounded by distant pine forests,
and studded here and there with groups of cabbage
palms. The channel was a regular zig-zag, and
they ran now to one side and then far over to the other
to escape the coral reefs and oyster bars with which
it is filled. This occupied much time; but the
breeze was fresh, and within an hour they had run
eight miles up the river, and were passing the ruins
of the old Spanish Fort of St. Mark’s.
A few minutes later sails were lowered, and the schooner
was moored to one of the rotten old wharves that still
remain to tell of St. Mark’s former glory.
“And is this St. Mark’s?”
asked Mrs. Elmer, looking with a feeling of keen disappointment
at the dozen or so tumble-down frame buildings that,
perched on piles above the low, wet land, looked like
dilapidated old men with shaky legs, and formed all
that was to be seen of the town.
“Yes, miss,” answered
the colored pilot, who seemed to consider her question
addressed to him. “Dis yere’s St.
Mark’s, or what de gales has lef’ of hit.
’Pears like dey’s been mighty hard on de
olé town, sence trade fell off, an’ mos’
of de folkses moved away. Uster be wharves all
along yere, an’ cotton-presses, an’ big
war’houses, an’ plenty ships in de ribber;
but now dey’s all gone. Dem times we
uster hab fo’ trains of kyars a day; but
now dere’s only one train comes tree times in
de week, an’ hit’s only got one kyar.
Olé St. Mark’s a-seein’ bad times
now, for sho.”
As soon as he could get ashore, Mr.
Elmer, accompanied by Mark and the captain, went up
into the village to find out what he could regarding
their destination and future movements. In about
an hour he returned, bringing a package of letters
from the post-office, and the information that Uncle
Christopher Bangs’s place was at Wakulla, some
six miles farther up the river. As the river
above St. Mark’s is quite crooked, and bordered
on both sides by dense forests, and as no steam-tug
could be had, the captain did not care to attempt
to carry the schooner any farther up. Mr. Elmer
had therefore chartered a large, flat-bottomed lighter,
or scow, to carry to Wakulla the cargo of household
goods, tools, building material, etc., that they
had brought with them.
As “Captain Li” was anxious
to proceed on his voyage to Pensacola as quickly as
possible, the lighter was at once brought alongside
the schooner, and the work of discharging the Elmers’
goods into her was begun.
“By-the-way, Mark,” said
Mr. Elmer, as the schooner’s hatches were removed,
“I am just reminded that this is Christmas-day,
and that there is a present down in the hold for you
from your Uncle Christmas. It will be one of
the first things taken out, so see if you can recognize
it.”
He had hardly spoken before the sailors,
who had gone down into the hold, passed carefully
up to those on deck a beautiful birch-bark canoe,
with the name Ruth painted on its bows.
“That’s it, father! that’s
it! I’m sure it is. Oh! isn’t
she a beauty?” shouted Mark, wild with delight.
“Oh! father, how did he know just exactly what
I wanted most?” and the excited boy rushed down
into the cabin to beg his mother and Ruth to come
on deck and see his Christmas present.
The canoe was followed by two paddles
painted a bright vermilion, and as they were placed
in her, and she was laid to one side of the deck,
she was indeed as pretty a little craft as can be imagined,
and one that would delight any boy’s heart.
“I knew we were going to live
near a river, my dear,” said Mr. Elmer, in answer
to his wife’s anxious expression as she looked
at the canoe, “and as Mark is a good swimmer
and very careful in boats, I thought a canoe would
afford him great pleasure, and probably prove very
useful to all of us. So when Uncle Christopher
asked me what I thought the boy would like most for
a Christmas present, I told him a canoe.”
“Well, I hope it will prove
safe,” sighed Mrs. Elmer; “but I wish it
were flat-bottomed, and built of thick boards instead
of that thin bark.”
“Oh, mother!” said Mark,
“you might as well wish it were a canal-boat
at once.”
“Yes, I believe canal-boats
are generally considered safer than canoes,”
answered his mother with a smile. “By-the-way,
Mark” and she turned to her husband “one
of the letters you brought was from Uncle Christopher,
and he says he thinks he forgot to tell us that there
is a house on his place, which he hopes we will find
in a fit condition to occupy.”
Mr. Elmer had expected to have to
build a house, and had accordingly brought with him
sashes, doors, blinds, the necessary hardware, and
in fact everything except lumber for that purpose.
This material was now being transferred from the schooner
to the lighter, and now it seemed almost a pity to
have brought it; still they were very glad to learn
that they were likely to find a house all ready to
move into.
It wanted but two hours of sundown
when the last of the Elmers’ goods were stowed
in the lighter, and as there was nothing to detain
him any longer, “Captain Li” said he should
take advantage of the ebb tide that night to drop
down the river and get started for Pensacola.
As rowing and poling the heavy lighter up the river
would at best prove but slow work, and as there was
no hotel or place for them to stay in St. Mark’s,
Mr. Elmer thought they too had better make a start,
and take advantage of the last of the flood tide and
what daylight still remained.
So good-byes were exchanged, and feeling
very much as though they were leaving home for the
second time, the Elmers left the comfortable cabin
that had sheltered them for nearly a month. Followed
by Jan, they went on board their new craft, and the
lines were cast off. The crew of four strong
colored men bent over the long sweeps, and followed
by a hearty cheer from the crew of the schooner, the
scow moved slowly up the river. In a few minutes
a bend hid St. Mark’s and the tall masts of the
Nancy Bell from sight, and on either side of them appeared
nothing but unbroken forest.
The river seemed narrow and dark after
the open sea to which the Elmers had been so long
accustomed, and from its banks the dense growth of
oak, cedar, magnolia, palm, bay, cypress, elm, and
sweet gum trees, festooned with moss, and bound together
with a net-work of vines, rose like walls, shutting
out the sunlight. Strange water-fowl, long-legged
and long-billed, flew screaming away as they advanced,
and quick splashes in the water ahead of them told
of the presence of other animal life.
At sunset they were nearly two miles
from St. Mark’s, and opposite a cleared spot
on the bank, where was piled a quantity of light-wood
or pitch-pine. Here the captain and owner of
the lighter, who was a young white man named Oliver
Johnson, proposed that they should tie up for the
night.
To this Mr. Elmer consented, and as
soon as the boat was made fast to the bank, active
preparations were begun for cooking supper, and for
making everything as snug and comfortable as possible.
A large sail was stretched across
some poles, in the form of a tent, over the after-part
of the lighter, and beneath this two comfortable beds
were made up from the abundant supply of mattresses
and blankets belonging to the Elmers. Jan Jansen
and Captain Johnson, who, Mark said, must be related,
as their names were the same, spread their blankets
in the forward end of the boat. On shore the negro
crew built for themselves a thatched lean-to of poles
and palm-leaves beside the fire, that was already
throwing its cheerful light across the dark surface
of the river.
While the men were busy arranging
the shelters and bedding, Mrs. Elmer and Ruth, assisted
by one of the negroes, were cooking supper over a
bed of coals that had been raked from the fire.
A huge pot of coffee sent forth clouds of fragrant
steam, and in two frying-pans some freshly caught
fish sizzled and browned in a most gratifying and
appetizing manner. In a couple of kettles hung
over the fire hominy and sweet potatoes bubbled, boiled,
and tried to outdo each other in getting done.
Fresh-made bread and a good supply of butter had been
brought from the schooner. When the supper was
all ready, and spread out on a green table-cloth of
palm-leaves, Mark and Ruth declared that this picnic
was even jollier than the one on the island of the
Florida Reef, and that this was after all one of the
very best Christmases they had ever known.
After supper, and when the dishes
had all been washed and put away, the Elmers, Captain
Johnson, and Jan sought the shelter of the canvas
awning from the heavy night-dew which had begun to
fall as soon as the sun went down. They lifted
the sides, so that they could look out and see the
fire around which the crew were gathered. After
a while one of these started a plaintive negro melody,
which sounded very sweetly through the still air.
The others took it up, and they sang for an hour or
more, greatly to the delight of the children, to whom
such music was new. Many of the words were composed
as they sang, and Mark and Ruth could not help laughing
at some of them, which, though sung very soberly,
sounded funny. One song which they afterwards
remembered was:
“Oh, dey put John on
de islan’
When de Bridegroom
come;
Yes, dey put John on de islan’
When de
Bridegroom come;
An’ de rabens come an’
fed him
When de
Bridegroom come;
Yes, de rabens come an’
fed him
When de
Bridegroom come.
An’ five of dem
was wise
When de
Bridegroom come;
Yes, five of dem was
wise
When de
Bridegroom come;
An’ five of dem
was foolish
When de
Bridegroom come;
Yes, five of dem was
foolish
When de
Bridegroom come.
Oh, gib us of yo’
île
When de
Bridegroom come;
Oh, gib us of yo’
île
When de
Bridegroom come;
Fo’ you’ll nebber
get to heaben
When de
Bridegroom come;
No, you’ll nebber get
to heaben
When de
Bridegroom come;
Aless you’s île
a-plenty
When de
Bridegroom come;
Aless you’s île
a-plenty
When de
Bridegroom come.”
In the midst of the singing a voice
called out from the tree-tops,
“Who, who, who, who’s there?” or
at least so it sounded.
Immediately the singing stopped, and one of the negroes
answered,
“Some folkses from de Norf,
Marse Owl, an’ Cap’n Johnsin, an’
me, an’ Homer, an’ Virgil, an’ Pete.”
“What does he mean by that?” asked Mr.
Elmer of the captain.
“Oh,” answered he, “it’s
one of their superstitions that they’ll have
bad luck if they don’t answer an owl politely
when he asks ’Who’s there?’ and
give the names of all the party, if they know them.”
Soon after this all hands sought their
blankets, good-nights were said, the fire died down,
and all was quiet in the camp, though several times
some sleepy negro roused himself sufficiently to answer
the owl’s repeated question of “Who’s
there?”
It must have been nearly midnight
when the camp was startled by a crash, a series of
smothered cries, and a loud splashing in the water.
It was evident that something serious had happened,
but what it was no one could make out in the darkness.