Some light-wood splinters were quickly
thrown upon the smouldering remains of the fire, and
as it blazed up brightly, the lighter, in which the
whites had been sleeping, was seen to be on its beam
ends. One side rested high up on the bank and
the other down in the mud at the bottom of the river,
just on the edge of the channel. Some little
distance down stream a sorry-looking figure, which
was hardly recognizable as that of Jan, was floundering
through the mud and water towards the bank. On
the lower side of the lighter the canvas, that had
been spread like a tent over the afterpart, had broken
from its fastenings, and was now tossing and heaving
in a most remarkable manner. From beneath it
came the smothered cries of the Elmers, who had been
suddenly wakened to find themselves mixed together
in the most perplexing way, and entangled in their
blankets and the loose folds of the canvas.
Captain Johnson seemed to be the only
person who had his wits about him, and who was in
a condition to render any assistance. As soon
as he could pick himself up he made his way to the
other end of the boat and dragged the canvas from
off the struggling family. First Mr. Elmer emerged
from the confusion, then Mrs. Elmer and Ruth were helped
out, and last of all poor Mark, who had been buried
beneath the entire family, was dragged forth, nearly
smothered and highly indignant.
“It’s a mean trick, and
I didn’t think ” he began, as
soon as he got his breath; but just then his eye fell
upon the comical figure of Jan. He was walking
towards the fire, dripping mud and water from every
point, and Mark’s wrath was turned into hearty
laughter at this sight. In it he was joined by
all the others as soon as they saw the cause of his
mirth.
After the Elmers had been helped up
the steep incline of the boat, and were comfortably
fixed near the fire, Captain Johnson and Jan, who said
he didn’t mind mud now any more than an alligator,
took light-wood torches and set out to discover what
had happened. As Jan climbed down the bank into
the mud, and held his torch beneath the boat, he saw
in a moment the cause of the accident, and knew just
how it had occurred.
As the tide ebbed the lighter had
been gradually lowered, until it rested on the upright
branches of an old water-logged tree-top that was
sunk in the mud at this place. The water falling
lower and lower, the weight upon these branches became
greater and greater, until they could support it no
longer, and one side of the lighter went down with
a crash, while the other rested against the bank.
Jan, who had been sleeping on the upper side of the
boat, was thrown out into the water when it fell,
as some of the Elmers doubtless would have been had
not their canvas shelter prevented such a catastrophe.
The rest of the night was spent around
the fire, which was kept up to enable Jan to dry his
clothes. By daylight the tide had risen, so that
the lighter again floated on an even keel. By
sunrise a simple breakfast of bread-and-butter and
coffee had been eaten, and our emigrants were once
more afloat and moving slowly up the tropical-looking
river.
About ten o’clock Captain Johnson
pointed to a huge dead cypress-tree standing on the
bank of the river some distance ahead, and told the
Elmers that it marked one of the boundary-lines of
Wakulla. They gazed at it eagerly, as though
expecting it to turn into something different from
an ordinary cypress, and all felt more or less disappointed
at not seeing any clearings or signs of human habitations.
It was not until they were directly opposite the village
that they saw its score or so of houses through the
trees and undergrowth that fringed the bank.
As the Bangs place, to which the children
gave the name of “Go Bang” a
name that adhered to it ever afterwards was
across the river from the village, the lighter was
poled over to that side. There was no wharf,
so she was made fast to a little grassy promontory
that Captain Johnson said was once one of the abutments
of a bridge. There was no bridge now, however,
and already Mark saw that his canoe was likely to prove
very useful.
The first thing to do after getting
ashore and seeing the precious canoe safely landed
was to find the house. As yet they had seen no
trace of it, so heavy was the growth of trees every-where,
except at the abutment, which was built of stone,
covered with earth and a thick sod. From here
an old road led away from the river through the woods,
and up it Mr. and Mrs. Elmer and Captain Johnson now
walked, Mark and Ruth having run on ahead. The
elders had gone but a few steps when they heard a
loud cry from Ruth, and hurried forward fearing that
the children were in trouble. They met Ruth running
back towards them, screaming, “A snake! a snake!
a horrid big snake!”
“I’ve got him!”
shouted Mark from behind some bushes, and sure enough
there lay a black snake almost as long as Mark was
tall, which he had just succeeded in killing with
a stick.
Mrs. Elmer shuddered at the sight
of the snake, though her husband assured her that
it had been perfectly harmless even when alive.
Not far from where the snake had been
killed they found a spring of water bubbling up, as
clear as crystal, from a bed of white sand, but giving
forth such a disagreeable odor that the children declared
it was nasty. Mr. Elmer, however, regarded it
with great satisfaction, and told them it was a sulphur
spring, stronger than any he had ever seen, and that
they would find it very valuable. They all drank
some of the water out of magnolia-leaf cups; but the
children made faces at the taste, and Mark said it
made him feel like a hard-boiled egg.
A path leading from the spring at
right angles to the road from the river took them
into a large clearing that had once been a cultivated
field, and on the farther side of this field stood
the house. As they approached it they saw that
it was quite large, two stories in height, with dormer
windows in the roof, but that it bore many signs of
age and long neglect. Some of the windows were
broken and others boarded up, while the front door
hung disconsolately on one hinge.
The house stood in a grove of grand
live-oaks, cedars, and magnolias, and had evidently
been surrounded by a beautiful garden, enclosed by
a neat picket-fence; but now the fence was broken
down in many places, and almost hidden by a dense
growth of vines and creepers. In the garden,
rose-bushes, myrtles, oleanders, and camellias grew
with a rank and untrained luxuriance, and all were
matted together with vines of honeysuckle and clematis.
The front porch of the house was so
rotten and broken that, after forcing their way through
the wild growth of the garden, the party had to cross
it very carefully in order to enter the open door.
The interior proved to be in a much better condition
than they had dared hope, judging from the outside
appearance of the house. It was filled with the
close, musty odor common to deserted buildings, and
they quickly threw wide open all the windows and doors
that were not nailed up. On the first floor were
four large rooms, each containing a fireplace and
several closets, and up-stairs were four more, lighted
by the dormer windows in the roof. A broad hall
ran through the house from front to rear, opening
upon a wide back porch which was also much out of
repair. Beneath this porch Mr. Elmer discovered
a brick cistern half full of dirty water, which he
knew must be very foul, as the gutters along the roof
were so rotten and broken that they could not have
furnished a fresh supply in a long time.
Behind the main house, and surrounded
by large fig-trees, they found another building, in
a fair state of preservation, containing two rooms,
one of which had been the kitchen. In the huge
fireplace of this kitchen they were surprised to see
freshly burned sticks and a quantity of ashes, while
about the floor were scattered feathers and bones,
and in one corner was a pile of moss that looked as
though it has been used for a bed. Beyond the
kitchen were the ruins of several out-buildings that
had fallen by reason of their age, or been blown down
during a gale.
Having thus made a hasty exploration
of their new home, the party returned to the landing,
to which their goods were being unloaded from the
lighter by Jan and the crew. Leaving Mrs. Elmer
and Ruth here, Mr. Elmer and Mark crossed the river
to the village to see what they could procure in the
way of teams and help.
Of the twenty houses in the village,
many of which were in a most dilapidated condition,
only two were occupied by white families, the rest
of the population being colored. There were no
stores nor shops of any kind, the only building not
used as a dwelling-house being a small church very
much out of repair. The white men living in the
village were away from home, but from among the colored
people, who were much excited at the arrival of strangers
in their midst, Mr. Elmer engaged two men and their
wives to cross the river and go to work at once.
He also engaged a man who owned a team of mules and
a wagon, and who would go over as soon as the lighter
was unloaded and could be used to ferry him across.
On its return to the other side, the
canoe was followed by a skiff containing the newly
engaged colored help, whose amazement at everything
they saw, and especially at the canoe, was unbounded.
One of the men expressed his wonder at the little
craft by saying, “Dat ar trick’s so light,
I reckon it’s gwine leab de water some fine day,
an’ fly in de yair, like a duck.”
Mrs. Elmer provided the women with
brooms, mops, and pails, and took them up to the house,
where they proceeded to put the lower story in order
for immediate occupation. Mr. Elmer armed the
men with axes, and soon had them engaged in a struggle
with the tangled growth in the front yard, through
which they cut a broad path to the house. While
they were doing this, Mr. Elmer and Jan cut and placed
in position some temporary supports under the rickety
porches, and Mark was set work at the windows.
From these he knocked away all the boards, letting
in floods of blessed sunlight, that drove from their
snug retreats numbers of bats and several comical
little owls.
One of the colored women “Aunt
Chloe Cato,” as she called herself, because
she was Cato’s wife was sent into
the kitchen to clean it and to make a fire in the
great fireplace. She could not explain the traces
of recent occupation, but “’lowed ’twere
de ghoses, kase dis yere olé Bang place
done bin hanted.”
“Well, it’ll be ‘hanted’
now by the Elmer family,” said Mark, who overheard
her, “and they’ll make it lively for any
other ‘ghoses’ that come round.”
“Don’t ye, now, honey
I don’t ye go fo’ to set up yo’sef
agin de ghoses, kase dey’s powerful pernickety
when dey’s crassed,” said the old woman,
whom Mark, with his love for nick-names, had already
called “Olé Clo.”
At noon all hands stopped work to
eat a hasty lunch, and soon afterwards the lighter,
being unloaded, was poled across the river for the
team. With the help of Captain Johnson and his
crew, who had agreed to remain over that night, most
of the household goods were moved up to the house
during the afternoon and placed under shelter.
While this work was going on, one
of the white men from the village came over to see
his new neighbors. He brought with him a wild-turkey,
half a dozen ducks, and a string of freshly caught
fish, as cards of introduction. His name was
Bevil, and he welcomed the Elmers most heartily, and
said that he considered their coming a sign of better
times for that section of the country. He told
Mr. Elmer that the Bangs place used to be considered
one of the finest plantations in the county, and that
its lands were as rich now as ever.
Before night the lower story of the
old house looked quite comfortable, and almost homelike;
and when the family sat down to dinner, it was with
the keen appetites resulting from hard work. The
dinner was a bountiful meal, largely composed of Mr.
Bevil’s game and fish; and before they ate it
Mr. Elmer offered up a heart-felt thanksgiving for
the mercies that had been granted them thus far, and
prayed for a blessing on their new home.
That evening he arranged with Captain
Johnson to start at daylight and go with his lighter
to the nearest saw-mill, sixty miles away, for a load
of lumber and shingles. He also commissioned him
to buy and bring back a large skiff, such as were
used on the river.
The tired household went early to
bed that first night in their new home, and though
their beds were made down on the floor, they all slept
soundly.
All but Mark, who, after sleeping
for some hours, woke suddenly to find himself sitting
bolt-upright in bed, and staring at the broken window
in front of him, through which a flood of moonlight
was pouring. He was as certain as he could be
of anything that he had seen a face at that window
as he started up a wild, haggard face, framed
by long unkempt hair. He sprang from his bed
and looked out, but could see nobody, and heard no
unusual sound except the distant “who-who-whoo”
of an owl.