During the three days that passed
before Mr. Elmer’s return, the large field was
made ready for ploughing, most of the post-holes were
dug, the soil being so light as to make that an easy
matter, and Mark and Jan had cut a number of cedar
posts, and got them ready to be rafted down the river.
During this time, also, Frank March
had improved so rapidly that he was able to sit up
and take an interest in what was going on. He
had become much attached to Mrs. Elmer, and seemed
very happy in her company. Neither she nor the
children had asked him any questions concerning his
past life, preferring to wait until he should tell
the story of his own accord.
On the third evening of his being
with them he was helped into the sitting-room, and
lay on the sofa listening intently to Mrs. Elmer as
she read to Mark and Ruth a chapter from a book of
travels that they had begun on the schooner.
As she finished and closed the book, the boy raised
himself on his elbow, and said,
“Mrs. Elmer, I want to tell
you something, and I want Mark and Ruth to hear too.”
“Well, my boy,” said Mrs.
Elmer, kindly, “we shall be glad to hear whatever
you have to tell, if it won’t tire and excite
you too much.”
“No, I don’t think it
will,” replied Frank. “I feel as if
I must tell you what a bad boy I have been, and how
sorry I am for it. More than a month ago I stole
father’s gun and dog, and twenty dollars that
I found in his desk, and ran away from him. Ever
since then I have been living in the woods around
here, hunting and fishing. When the weather was
bad I slept in the kitchen of this house, and when
you folks moved in, it seemed almost as if you were
taking possession of what belonged to me. The
first night you were here I crept into the kitchen
and stole a loaf of bread and a duck.”
“There!” interrupted Mark,
“now I know where I saw you before. It was
you who looked into the window and frightened me that
first night, wasn’t it?”
“Yes,” said Frank; “and
I meant to scare you worse than that, and should have
if the alligator hadn’t caught me. I saw
you and your father go down the river that morning,
and heard him say he was going to Tallahassee, and
I waited then for you to come back alone. I drew
out the shot from one barrel of my gun, and was going
to fire a charge of powder at you when you got close
to the point. I thought perhaps you would be
so scared that you would upset your canoe and lose
your rifle overboard. Then I thought I might
get it after you had gone, for the water is shallow
there, and I wanted a rifle awfully.”
“Oh! what a bad boy you are,”
said Ruth, shaking her pretty head. “Yes,
I know I am,” said Frank, “but I ain’t
going to be any longer if I can help it.”
“How did that alligator get
you, anyway?” asked Mark, who was very curious
upon this point.
“Why, I pulled off my boots
because they were wet and hurt my feet; then I lay
down to wait for you, and went to sleep. I suppose
the ’gator found it warm enough that day to
come out of the mud, where he had been asleep all
winter. Of course he felt hungry after such a
long nap, and when he saw my bare foot thought it
would make him a nice meal. I was waked by feeling
myself dragged along the ground, and finding my foot
in what felt like a vise. I caught hold of a tree,
and held on until it seemed as though my arms would
be pulled out. I yelled as loud as I could all
the time, while the ’gator pulled. He twisted
my foot until I thought the bones must be broken,
and that I must let go. Then you came, Mark,
and that’s all I remember until I was in the
canoe, and you were paddling up the river.”
“Was that the first time you
were ever in that canoe?” asked Mark, a new
suspicion dawning in his mind.
“No; I had used her ’most
every night, and one night I went as far as St. Mark’s
in her.”
“What made you bring the canoe
back at all?” asked Mrs. Elmer.
“’Cause everybody round
here would have known her, and known that I had stole
her if they’d seen me in her,” answered
the boy.
“And did you shoot poor Bruce?” asked
Ruth.
“Who’s Bruce?”
“Why, our dog. He came
to us more than a week ago, shot so bad that he could
hardly walk.”
“Yes, I shot him because he
wouldn’t go into the water and fetch out a duck
I had wounded; but his name is Jack. I didn’t
kill him though, for I saw him on your back porch
last Sunday when you were all over the river, and
he barked at me.”
“My poor boy,” said Mrs.
Elmer, “you have certainly done very wrong;
but you have been severely punished for it, and if
you are truly sorry and mean to try and do right in
the future, you will as certainly be forgiven.”
So saying, the kind-hearted woman went over and sat
down beside the boy, and took his hand in hers.
At this caress, the first he could
ever remember to have received, the boy burst into
tears, and sobbed out,
“I would have been good if I
had a mother like you and a pleasant home like this.”
Mrs. Elmer soothed and quieted him,
and gradually drew from him the rest of his story.
His father had once been comfortably well off, and
had owned a large mill in Savannah; but during the
war the mill had been burned, and he had lost everything.
For some years after that he was very poor, and when
Frank was quite a small boy, and his sister a baby,
his father used to drink, and when he came home drunk
would beat him and his mother. One night, after
a terrible scene of this kind, which Frank could just
remember, his mother had snatched up the baby and
run from the house. Afterwards he was told that
they were dead; at any rate he never saw them again.
Then his father left Savannah and came to Florida
to live. He never drank any more, but was very
cross, and hardly ever spoke to his son. He made
a living by doing jobs of carpentering; and, ever
since he had been old enough, Frank had worked on
their little farm, about twenty miles from Wakulla.
At last he became so tired of this sort of life, and
his father’s harshness, that he determined to
run away and try to find a happier one.
Mark and Ruth listened in silence
to this story of an unhappy childhood, and when it
was ended, Ruth went over to the sofa where her mother
still sat, and taking Frank’s other hand in hers,
said,
“I guess I would have run away
too, if I’d had such an unpleasant home; but
you’ll stay with us now, and let mother teach
you to be good, won’t you?”
For answer the boy looked up shyly
into Mrs. Elmer’s face, and she said, “We’ll
see when father comes home.”
At this moment Bruce began to bark
loudly, and directly a sound of wheels was heard.
Then a voice called out,
“Halloo! Go Bang, ahoy! Bring out
a lantern, somebody.”
“It’s father! it’s
father!” exclaimed Mark and Ruth, rushing to
the door with shouts of welcome. Mrs. Elmer followed
them, leaving Frank alone in the sitting-room.
“How glad they are to see him,”
thought the boy. “I wonder if I should
be as glad to see my father if he was as good to me
as theirs is to them?”
While Frank’s mind was full
of such thoughts, he heard a quick step at the door,
and looking up, saw the very person he had been thinking
of his own father!
“Frank, my boy!” exclaimed
Mr. March, “can it be you? Oh, Frank, I
didn’t know how much I loved you until I lost
you, and I have tried in every way to find you and
beg you to come home again.” With these
words Mr. March stooped down and kissed his son’s
forehead, saying, “I haven’t kissed you
since you were a baby, Frank, and I do it now as a
sign that from this time forward I will try to be a
good and loving father to you.”
“Oh, father,” cried the
happy boy, “do you really love me? Then
if you will forgive me for running away and being
such a wicked boy, I will never, never do so again.”
“Indeed I will,” answered
his father. “But what is the matter, Frank?
Have you been ill? How came you here?”
While Frank was giving his father
a brief account of what had happened to him since
he ran away from home, the Elmers were exchanging the
most important bits of news outside the front gate.
They waited there while Mr. Elmer and Jan unhitched
from a new farm-wagon a pair of fine mules that the
former had bought and driven down from Tallahassee
that day.
When the children ran out to greet
their father, one of the first things Ruth said was,
“Oh, we’ve got a new boy, father, and he’s
in the sitting-room, and his name’s Frank March,
and an alligator almost dragged him into the river,
and Mark shot it.”
Almost without waiting to hear the
end of this long sentence, a stranger who had come
with Mr. Elmer opened the front gate, and quickly
walking to the house, disappeared within it.
“Who is that, husband, and what
has he gone into the house for?” asked Mrs.
Elmer, in surprise.
“I don’t know much about
him,” answered Mr. Elmer, “except that
his name is March; and as he was recommended to me
as being a good carpenter, I engaged him to come and
do what work was necessary to repair this house.”
“I wonder if he is Frank’s
wicked father?” said Ruth; and then the whole
story had to be told to Mr. Elmer before they went
into the house.
When he heard of Mark’s bravery,
he placed his hand on the boy’s shoulder and
said, “My son, I am proud of you.”
As they went in and entered the sitting-room,
they found Mr. March and Frank sitting together on
the sofa, talking earnestly.
“I hope you will excuse my leaving
you and entering your house so unceremoniously, Mr.
Elmer,” said Mr. March, rising and bowing to
Mrs. Elmer; “but when your little girl said
a boy named Frank March was in here I felt sure he
was my son. It is he; and now that I have found
him, I don’t ever intend to lose him again.”
“That’s right,”
said Mr. Elmer, heartily. “In this country
boys are too valuable to be lost, even if they do
turn up again like bad pennies. Master Frank,
you must hurry and get well, for in his work here your
father will need just such a valuable assistant as
I am sure you will make.”
“Now, wife, how about something
to eat? I am almost hungry enough to eat an alligator,
and I expect our friend March would be willing to
help me.”
Aunt Chloe had been busy ever since
the travellers arrived, and supper was as ready for
them as they were for it. After supper, when they
were once more gathered in the sitting-room, Mr. Elmer
said, “I got a charter granted me while I was
in Tallahassee can any of you guess for
what?”
None of them could guess, unless,
as Mark suggested, it was for incorporating “Go
Bang,” and making a city of it in opposition
to Wakulla.
“It is to establish and maintain
a ferry between those portions of the town of Wakulla
lying on opposite sides of the St. Mark’s River,”
said Mr. Elmer.
“A ferry?” said Mrs. Elmer.
“A ferry?” said Ruth.
“A ferry?” said Mark;
“what sort of a ferry steam-power, horse-power,
or boy-power?”
“I expect it will be mostly
boy-power,” said Mr. Elmer, laughing. “You
see I kept thinking of what Mr. Bevil told us last
Sunday, that what Wakulla needed most was a bridge
and a mill. I knew we couldn’t build a
bridge, at least not at present; but the idea of a
ferry seemed practicable. We have got enough
lumber to build a large flat-boat, there are enough
of us to attend to a ferry, and so I thought I’d
get a charter, anyhow.”
Mark could hardly wait for his father
to finish before he broke in with,
“Speaking of mills, father,
your ferry will be the very thing to bring people
over to our mill.”
“Our mill!” repeated his father.
“What do you mean?”
“Why, Jan and I discovered an
old mill about half a mile up the river, while we
were out looking for cedar. It’s out of
repair, and the dam is partly broken away; but the
machinery in it seems to be pretty good, and the wheel’s
all right. I don’t believe it would take
very much money to fix the dam; and the stream that
supplies the mill-pond is never-failing, because it
comes from a big sulphur spring. We found the
man who owns it, and had a long talk with him.
He says that business fell off so after the bridge
was carried away that when his dam broke he didn’t
think it would pay to rebuild it. He says he will
take five hundred dollars cash for the whole concern;
and I want to put in my hundred dollars salvage money,
and Ruth’ll put in hers, and Jan’ll put
in his, and mother says she’ll put in hers if
you think the scheme is a good one, and we’ll
buy the mill. Now, your ferry can bring the people
over; and it’s just the biggest investment in
all Florida. Don’t you think so, father?”
“I’ll tell you what I
think after I have examined into it,” said Mr.
Elmer, smiling at Mark’s enthusiasm. “Now
it’s very late, and time we all invested in
bed.”
That night Mark dreamed of ferry-boats
run by alligator-power, of mills that ground out gold
dollars, and of “ghoses” that turned out
to be boys.