It was early of a Saturday afternoon,
warm and sultry. Everything in the neighbourhood
of the Half Way House seemed inclined to drowsiness.
Even the stream flowing by at a little distance moved
as though its waters were lazy. The birds and
the cattle kept their respective places silently,
in the treetops and beneath the shade. Only the
flies, buzzing about the ears of Colonel Witham’s
dog that lay stretched in the dooryard, were active.
They buzzed about the fat, florid
face of the colonel, presently, as he emerged upon
the porch, lighted his after-dinner pipe and seated
himself in a big wooden arm-chair. But the annoyance
did not prevent him from dozing as he smoked, and,
finally, from dropping off soundly to sleep.
He enjoyed these after-dinner naps,
and the place was conducive to them. The long
stretch of highway leading up from Benton had scarcely
a country wagon-wheel turning on it, to stir the dust
to motion. In the distance, the mill droned like
a big beehive. Near at hand only the fish moved
in the stream the fish and a few rowboats
that swung gently at their ropes at the end of a board-walk
that led from the hotel to the water’s edge.
The colonel slumbered on. But,
far down the road, there arose, presently, a cloud
of dust, amid which there shone and glittered flashes
of steel. Then a line of bicyclists came into
view, five youths, with backs bent and heads down,
making fast time.
On they came with a rush and whirr,
the boy in front pointing in toward the Half Way House.
The line of glistening, flying wheels aimed itself
fair at Colonel Witham’s dog, who roused himself
and stood, growling hoarsely, with ears set back and
tail between his legs.
Then the screeching of five shrill
whistles smote upon the summer stillness, the wheels
came to an abrupt stop, and the five riders dismounted
at a flying leap at the very edge of Colonel Witham’s
porch. The colonel, startled from sweet repose
by the combined noise of whistles, buzzing of machines,
shouts of the five riders and the yelping of his frightened
dog, awoke with a gasp and a momentary shudder of
alarm. He was enlightened, if not pacified, by
a row of grinning faces.
“Why, hello, Colonel Witham,”
came a chorus of voices. “Looks like old
times to see you again. Thought we’d stop
off and rest a minute.”
Colonel Witham, sitting bolt upright
in his chair, and mopping the perspiration from his
brow with an enormous red handkerchief, glared at
them with no friendly eyes.
“Oh, you did, hey!” he
roared. “Well, why didn’t you bring
a dynamite bomb and touch that off when you arrived?
Lucky for you that dog didn’t go for you.
He’ll take a piece out of some of you one of
these days.” (Colonel Witham did not observe
that the dog, at this moment, tail between legs, was
flattening himself out like a flounder, trying to
squeeze himself underneath the board walk.) “What
do you want here, anyway?”
“Some bottled soda, Colonel,”
said the youngest boy, in a tone that would seem to
indicate that the colonel was their best friend.
“Bottled soda for the crowd. My treat.”
“Bottled monkey-shines and tomfoolery!”
muttered Colonel Witham, arising slowly from his chair.
“I wish it would choke that young Joe Warren.
Never saw him when he wasn’t up to something.”
But he went inside with them and served
their order; scowling upon them as they drank.
“What are you doing?” he asked.
“Making a fifty mile run, Colonel,”
replied one of the boys, whose features indicated
that he was an elder brother of the boy who had previously
spoken. “Tom and Bob you remember
them are setting the pace on their tandem
for Arthur and Joe and me. Whew, but we came up
a-flying. Well, good day, we’re off.
You may see Tim Reardon by and by. We left him
down the road with a busted tire.”
They were away, with a shout and a whirl of dust.
“Hm!” growled the colonel.
“I’ll set the dog on Tim Reardon if he
comes up the way they did. Here, Cæsar, come
here!”
The colonel gave a sharp whistle.
But Cæsar, a yellow mongrel of questionable
breeds, did not appear. A keen vision might have
seen this canine terror to evildoers poke a shrinking
muzzle a little way from beneath the board walk, emit
a frightened whine and disappear.
Colonel Witham dozed again, and again
slumber overtook him. He did not stir when Grannie
Thornton, recovered from her attack of rheumatism,
appeared at a window and shook a table-cloth therefrom;
nor when Bess Thornton, dancing out of the doorway,
whisked past his chair and seated herself at the edge
of the piazza.
The girl’s keen blue eyes perceiving,
presently, an object in the distance looking like
a queer combination of boy and bicycle, she ran out
from the dooryard as it approached. Tim Reardon,
an undersized, sharp-eyed youngster, rather poorly
dressed and barefoot, wheeling his machine laboriously
along, was somewhat of a mournful-looking figure.
The girl held up a warning hand as he approached.
“Hello,” said the boy. “What’s
the matter?”
The girl pointed at the sleeping colonel.
“Said he’d set the dog
on you if you came around the way the others did,”
replied Bess Thornton. “They woke him up.
My! wasn’t he mad? Here,” she added,
handing a small box to the boy, “George Warren
left this for you. Said they wanted to make time.
That’s why they didn’t stop for you.”
“Thanks,” said the boy.
“Thought I’d got to walk clear back to
Benton. But I was going to have a swim first.
Guess I’ll have it, anyway. It’s
hot, walking through this dust.”
“I’ll tell you where to
go,” said the girl. “Do you know what’s
fun? See that tree way up along shore there,
the one that hangs out over the water? Well,
I climb that till it bends down, and then I get to
swinging and jump.”
Tim Reardon gave her an incredulous
glance, with one eye half closed.
“Oh, I don’t care whether
you believe it or not,” said the girl. “But
I’ll show you some time. Can’t now.
Got to wash dishes. Don’t wake him up,
or you’ll catch it.”
She disappeared through the doorway,
and Tim Reardon, leaving his wheel leaning against
a corner of the house, went up along shore. In
another half hour he returned, took from his pocket
the box the girl had given to him, got therefrom an
awl, a bottle of cement and some thin strips of rubber,
and began mending the punctured tire of the bicycle.
The tire was already somewhat of a patched affair,
bearing evidences of former punctures and mendings.
“It’s Jack’s old
wheel,” he remarked by way of explanation to
Bess Thornton, who had reappeared and was interestedly
watching the operation. “He’s going
to give me one of his new tires,” he added, “the
first puncture he gets.”
“Why don’t you put a tack
in the road?” asked the girl promptly.
Tim Reardon grinned. “Not for Jack,”
he said.
“Say,” asked the girl,
“what’s Witham mad with those boys about?
Why did he send ’em out of the hotel the other
night?”
“Oh, that’s a long story,”
replied Tim Reardon; “I can’t tell you
all about it. Witham used to keep the hotel down
to Southport, and he was always against the boys,
and now and then somebody played a joke on him.
Then, when his hotel burned, he thought the boys were
to blame; but Jack Harvey found the man that set the
fire, and so made the colonel look foolish in court.”
But at this moment a yawn that sounded
like a subdued roar indicated that Colonel Witham
was rousing from his nap. He stretched himself,
opened his eyes blankly, and perceived the boy and
girl.
“Well,” he exclaimed,
“you’re here, eh? Wonder you didn’t
come in like a wild Indian, too. What’s
the matter?”
“Got a puncture,” said Little Tim.
The colonel, having had the refreshment
of his sleep, was in a better humour. He was
a little interested in the bicycle.
“Queer what new-fangled ideas
they get,” he said. “That’s
not much like what I used to ride.”
Little Tim looked up, surprised.
“Why, did you use to ride a wheel?” he
asked.
“Did I!” exclaimed Colonel
Witham, reviving old recollections, with a touch of
pride in his voice. “Well, now I reckon
you wouldn’t believe I used to be the crack
velocipede rider in the town I came from, eh?”
Little Tim, regarding the colonel’s
swelling waist-band and fat, puffy cheeks, betrayed
his skepticism in looks rather than in speech.
Colonel Witham continued.
“Yes, sir,” said he, “there
weren’t any of them could beat me in those days.
Why, I’ve got four medals now somewhere around,
that I won at county fairs in races. ’Twasn’t
any of these wire whirligigs, either, that we used
to ride. Old bone-shakers, they were; wooden wheels
and a solid wrought iron backbone. You had to
have the strength to make that run. Guess some
of these spindle-legged city chaps wouldn’t make
much of a go at that. I’ve got the old
machine out in the shed there, somewhere. Like
to see it?”
“I know where it is,”
said Bess Thornton. “I can ride it.”
“You ride it!” exclaimed
Colonel Witham, staring at her in amazement.
“What?”
“Yes,” replied the girl;
“but only down hill, though. It’s
too hard to push on the level. I’ll go
and get it.”
“Well, I vum!” exclaimed
Colonel Witham, as the girl started for the shed.
“That girl beats me.”
“Look out, I’m coming,”
called a childish voice, presently.
The door of the shed was pushed open,
and Bess Thornton, standing on a stool, could be seen
climbing into the saddle of what resembled closely
a pair of wagon wheels connected by a curving bar of
iron. She steadied herself for a moment, holding
to the side of the doorway; then pushed herself away
from it, came down the plank incline, and thence on
to the path leading from the elevation on which the
shed stood, at full speed. Her legs, too short
for her feet to touch the pedals as they made a complete
revolution, stuck out at an angle; but she guided the
wheel and rode past Tim Reardon and the colonel, triumphantly.
When the wheel stopped, she let it fall and landed
on her feet, laughing.
“Here it is, Colonel Witham,”
said she, rolling it back to where he stood.
“Let’s see you ride it.”
Colonel Witham, grasping one of the
handle-bars, eyed the velocipede almost longingly.
“No,” he said. “I’m
too old and stout now. Guess my riding days are
over. But I used to make it go once, I tell you.”
“Go ahead, get on. You
can ride it,” urged Tim Reardon. “It
won’t break.”
“Oh no, it will hold me, all
right,” said Colonel Witham. “We didn’t
have any busted tires in our day. Good iron rim
there that’ll last for ever.”
“Just try it a little way,” said Bess
Thornton.
“I never saw anybody ride that had won medals,”
said Tim Reardon.
Colonel Witham’s pride was rapidly getting the
better of his discretion.
“Oh, I can ride it,” he
said, “only it’s it’s
kind of hot to try it. Makes me feel sort of
like a boy, though, to get hold of the thing.”
The colonel lifted a fat leg over
the backbone and put a ponderous foot on one pedal,
while the drops of perspiration began to stand out
on his forehead.
“Get out of the way,”
he shouted. “I’ll just show you how
it goes hanged if I don’t.”
The colonel had actually gotten under way.
Little Tim Reardon doubled up with mirth, and rolled
over on the grass.
“Looks just like the elephant at the circus,”
he cried.
“Sh-h-h, he’ll hear you,” whispered
Bess Thornton.
Colonel Witham was certainly doing
himself proud. A new thrill of life went through
him. He thought of those races and the medals.
It was an unfortunate recollection, for it instilled
new ambitions within him. He had ridden up the
road a few rods, had made a wide turn and started
back; and now, as he neared the hotel once more, his
evil genius inspired him to show the two how nicely
he could make a shorter turn.
He did it a little too quickly; the
wheel lurched, and Colonel Witham felt he was falling.
He twisted in the saddle, gave another sharp yank
upon the handle-bars and lost control of
the wheel. A most unfortunate moment for such
a mishap; for now, as the wheel righted, it swerved
to one side and, with increased speed, ran upon the
board walk that led down to the boat-landing.
The walk descended at quite a decided
incline to the water’s edge. It was raised
on posts above the level of the ground, so that a fall
from it would mean serious injury. There was
naught for the luckless colonel to do but sit, helpless,
in the saddle and let the wheel take its course.
Helpless, but not silent. Beholding
the fate that was inevitable, the colonel gave utterance
to a wild roar of despair, which, together with the
rumbling of the wheels above his head, drove forth
his dog from his hiding-place. Cæsar, espying
this new and extraordinary object rattling down the
board walk, and mindful of the agonizing shrieks of
his master, himself pursued the flying wheel, yelping
and barking and adding his voice to that of Colonel
Witham.
There was no escape. The heavy
wheel, bearing its ponderous weight of misery, and
pursued to the very edge of the float by the dog, plunged
off into the water with a mighty splash. Colonel
Witham, clinging in desperation to the handle bars,
sank with the wheel in some seven feet of water.
Then, amid a whirl and bubbling of the water like a
boiling spring, the colonel’s head appeared
once more above the surface. Choking and sputtering,
he cried for help.
“Help! help!” he roared. “I’m
drowning. I can’t swim.”
“No, but you’ll float,”
bawled Little Tim, who was darting into the shed for
a rope.
Indeed, as the colonel soon discovered,
now that he was once more at the surface, it seemed
really impossible for him to sink. He turned on
his back and floated like a whale.
And at this moment, most opportunely,
there appeared up the road the line of bicyclists
returning.
They were down at the shore shortly Tom
Harris, Bob White, George, Arthur and Joe Warren just
as Little Tim emerged from the shed, with an armful
of rope.
“Here, you catch hold,”
he said, “while I make fast to the colonel.”
The next moment, he was overboard, swimming alongside
Colonel Witham.
“Look out he don’t grab
you and drown you both,” called George Warren.
Little Tim was too much of a fish
in the water to be caught that way. The most
available part of Colonel Witham to make fast to, as
he floated at length, was his nearest foot. Tim
Reardon threw a loop about that foot, then the other;
and the boys ashore hauled lustily.
The colonel, more than ever resembling
a whale but a live one, inasmuch as he
continued to bellow helplessly came slowly
in, and stranded on the shore. They drew him
well in with a final tug.
“Here, quit that,” he
gurgled. “Want to drag me down the road?”
The colonel struggled to his feet, his face purple
with anger.
“Now get out of here, all of
you!” he roared. “There’s always
trouble when you’re around. Tim Reardon,
you keep away from here, do you understand?”
“Yes sir,” replied Tim
Reardon, wringing his own wet clothes; and then added,
with a twinkle in his eyes, “but ain’t
you going to show us those medals, Colonel Witham?”
It was lucky for Tim Reardon that
he was fleet of foot. The colonel made a rush
at him, but Tim was off down the road, leaping into
the saddle of his mended wheel, followed by the others.
“Don’t you want us to
raise the velocipede, so you can ride some more?”
called young Joe Warren, as he mounted his own wheel.
The colonel’s only answer was
a wrathful shake of his fist.
“Colonel Witham,” said
Grannie Thornton, as her employer entered the hotel,
a few minutes later, “here’s a note for
you, from Mr. Ellison. Guess he wants to see
you about something.”
“Hm!” exclaimed the colonel,
opening the note, and dampening it much in doing so,
“Jim Ellison, eh? More of his queer business
doings, I reckon. He’s a smart one, he
is,” he added musingly, as he waddled away to
his bed-room to change his dripping garments; then,
spying his own face in the mirror: ’What’s
the matter with you, Daniel Witham? Aren’t
you smart, too? In all these dealings, isn’t
there something to be made?’
Colonel Witham, rearraying his figure
in a dry suit of clothing, was to be seen, a little
later, on the road to the mill, walking slowly, and
thinking deeply as he went along. He was so engrossed
in his reflections that he failed to notice the approach
of a carriage until it was close upon him. He
looked up in surprise as a pleasant, gentle voice accosted
him.
“Good afternoon, Colonel Witham,” it said.
The speaker was a middle-aged, sweet
faced woman the same that had appeased
the wrath of her husband against Bess Thornton.
She leaned out of the carriage now and greeted Colonel
Witham with cordiality.
“Oh, how-dye-do,” replied
Colonel Witham abruptly, and returning her smile with
a frown. He passed along without further notice
of her greeting, and she started up the horse she
had reined in, and drove away.
Only once did Colonel Witham turn
his head and gaze back at the disappearing carriage.
Then he glowered angrily.
“I don’t want your smiles
and fine words,” he muttered. “You
were too good for me once. Just keep your fine
words to yourself. I don’t want ’em
now.”
Colonel Witham, in no agreeable mood,
went on and entered at the office door of the mill.
A tall, sharp-faced man, seated on a stool at a high
desk, looked up at his entrance. One might see
at a glance that here was a man who looked upon the
world with a calculating eye. No fat and genial
miller was James Ellison. No grist that came from
his mill was likely to be ground finer than a business
scheme put before him. He eyed Colonel Witham
sharply.
“Aha, Colonel,” he exclaimed,
in a slightly sneering tone, “bright and cheery
as ever, I see. I thought I’d like to have
you drop in and scatter a little sunshine. Sit
down. Have a pipe?”
Colonel Witham, accepting the proffered
clay and and the essentials for loading it, sat back
in a chair, and puffed away solemnly, without deigning
to answer the other’s bantering.
James Ellison continued figuring at his desk.
“Well,” said Colonel Witham
after some ten minutes had passed, “Suppose
you didn’t get me down here just to smoke.
What d’ye want?”
“Oh, I’m coming to that
right away,” replied Ellison, still writing.
“You know what I want, I guess.” He
turned abruptly in his seat, and his keen face shaded
with anger. He pointed a long lean finger in the
direction of the town of Benton. “You know
’em, Dan Witham,” he said, “as well
as I do. Though you didn’t get skinned as
I did. You didn’t go down to town, as I
did twenty odd years ago, with eight thousand dollars,
and come back cleaned out. You didn’t invest
in mines and things they said were good as gold, and
have ’em turn out rubbish. You didn’t
lose a fortune and have to start all over again.
But you know em, eh?”
Colonel Witham nodded assent, and
added mentally, “Yes, and I know you, too.
Benton don’t have the only sharp folks.”
“And now,” added James
Ellison, “when I’ve got some of it back
by hard work, you know how I keep it from them, and
from others, too. Well, here’s some more
of the papers. The mill and a good part of the
farm and some more land ’round here go to you
this time. All right, eh? You get your pay
on commission. Here’s the deeds conveying
it all to you for valuable consideration valuable
consideration, see?”
The miller gave a prodigious wink
at his visitor, and laughed.
“You don’t mind being
thought pretty comfortably fixed, eh all
these properties put in your name? Don’t
do you any harm, and people around here think you’re
mighty smart. Your deeds from me are all recorded,
eh? People look at the record, and what do they
see? All this stuff in your name. Well,
what do I get out of that? You know. There
are some claims they don’t bother me with, because
they think I’m not so rich as I am. There’s
property out of their reach, if anything goes wrong
with some business I’m in.
“Why? Well, we know why,
all right, you and I. Here’s the deeds of the
same property which you give back to me. Only
I don’t have them put on record. I keep
them hidden up my sleeve clear
up my sleeve, don’t I?”
“You keep ’em hidden all
right, I guess,” responded Colonel Witham; and
made a mental observation that he’d like to know
where the miller really did hide them.
“So here they are,” continued
the miller. “It’s a little more of
the same game. The property’s all yours and
it isn’t. You’ll oblige, of course,
for the same consideration?”
Colonel Witham nodded assent, and
the business was closed.
And, some time later, as Colonel Witham
plodded up the road again, he uttered audibly the
wish he had formed when he had sat in the miller’s
office.
“I’d like to know where
he keeps those deeds hidden,” he said, apparently
addressing his remark to a clump of weeds that grew
by the roadside. The weeds withholding whatever
information they may have had on the question, Colonel
Witham snipped their heads off with a vicious sweep
of his stick, and went on. “I don’t
know as it would do me any good to know,” he
continued, “but I’d just like to know,
all the same.”
And James Ellison, his visitor departed,
wandered about for some time through the rooms of
his mill. One might have thought, from the sly
and confidential way in which he drew an eye-lid down
now and again, as he passed here and there, that the
wink was directed at the mill itself, and that the
crazy old structure was really in its owner’s
confidence; that perhaps the mill knew where the miller
hid his papers.
At all events, James Ellison, sitting
down to his supper table that evening, was in a genial
mood.
“Lizzie,” he said, smiling
across the table at his wife, “I saw an old
beau of yours to-day Dan Witham. He
didn’t send any love to you, though.”
“No,” responded Mrs. Ellison,
and added, somewhat seriously, “and he has no
love for you, either. I hope you don’t have
much business dealing with him.”
“Ho, he’s all right, is
Dan Witham,” returned her husband. “He’s
gruff, but he’s not such a bad sort. Those
old times are all forgotten now.”
“I’m not so certain of that, James,”
said Mrs. Ellison.