A short time later, and once more
Larry loosened the rope that held the motor boat to
the bank; so that the swift current taking hold, commenced
to carry the craft down stream. Then Phil started
operations; and the merry popping of the noisy exhaust
told that they were being urged on at a faster gait
than the movement of the stream could boast.
Tony had curled up in the sun, just
like a dog might have done. He seemed to be
asleep; and the two other boys talked in low tones
as they continued to glide on down the winding river;
now under heavy trees, and again passing through an
open stretch, where the turpentine industry had killed
the pines years back; so that only a new growth was
coming on.
Perhaps Phil might have thought it
a bit singular had he known that Tony did not sleep
for a single minute as he lay there; but was from
time to time observing his new friends from the shelter
of his arms, on which his head lay.
Phil had reached under the deck of
the boat and brought forth a splendid gun of the latest
model. It was a Marlin repeater, known among
hunters as a pump gun; and could be fired six times
without reloading, the empty shells being thrown out
from the side instead of in the marksman’s face.
This fine weapon had been a present
to the boy from his father on the preceding summer,
when he had a birthday; and as yet he had found no
opportunity to test its shooting qualities. Still,
his father had once been something of a true sportsman,
and knew more or less about the value of firearms;
so that Phil never feared but that it would prove to
be an excellent tool.
“I’ve got some buckshot
shells along with me, you remember, Larry,” he
was saying as he guided the boat, and tried to keep
her in the middle of the widening stream. “And
I fetched them in the hope of meeting up with a Florida
deer, or perhaps a panther; which animal is found down
here. If a fellow can’t carry a rifle these
buckshot shells answer pretty well. I got my
deer up in the Adirondacks last year with one, fired
from my old double-barrel.”
“How about grizzly bears and
wildcats and coons?” asked Larry, not in the
least ashamed to show his utter ignorance about all
such matters, in his quest of knowledge.
At that Phil laughed out loud.
“The bobcat and coon part is
all O. K., Larry,” he said; “but you’re
away off when you think we’re going to rub up
against a grizzly bear down in Florida. They
have got a specimen of the breed here, but it’s
only a small black fellow, and not particularly ferocious,
they tell me. But we’ll ask Tony about
all these things later on; he ought to know.”
“Yes, and perhaps he can help
us go ashore, and get a fine deer once in a while!”
exclaimed Larry, who loved to enjoy the good things
of life almost as much as he did to exploit his ability
as a cook. “Yum! yum, a real venison steak,
cooked on the spot where the animal was shot what
a treat for hungry fellows, eh?”
“Wait,” said the other,
nodding. “You may change your mind before
a great while. For instance, venison ought to
hang quite a time before being eaten. I’m
afraid you’re going to be disappointed, Larry,
and that if we’re lucky enough to get a deer
you’ll find it as tough and dry as all get-out.”
“Then things ain’t all
they’re cracked up to be,” declared the
other. “I always read that things tasted
just dandy in camp; and here you spoil all my illusions
right off the reel.”
“They taste good because the
appetite is there,” remarked Phil. “A
fellow gets as hungry as a bear in the spring after
he comes out from his hibernating. But already
you ought to know that, because you’re eating
half again as much as you do up home. And of
your own cooking too.”
“That stamps it gilt-edged,
A Number One,” laughed Larry. “But
here’s Tony beginning to wake up. Come
and join us, Tony. We want to ask you heaps
of things about the animals of the timber and the swamps;
also something about your people. You see, we
ain’t down here just for our health or the fun
of ft. Phil here has got a mission to perform,
that concerns the terrible McGee they told us about
up in the river town.”
Again did Tony send that questioning
look at Phil Lancing; and there was something besides
inquiry in his manner. Doubtless the words so
carelessly uttered by good-natured Larry had stirred
up mingled emotions in the breast of the swamp boy,
and he was wondering what sort of a message the son
of the man who now owned all that wild country below,
could be carrying to the giant shingle-maker, leader
of the whole McGee clan.
“If I c’n tell you anything
jest ask me, sah!” he remarked, in his
singularly smooth and even voice. “I sure
ought tuh be ready tuh ’blige after all yuh
done foh me. But I wisht you’d done never
come down thisaways, case they’s hard men, the
McGees, an’ I reckons as how they ain’t
got any reason tuh think kindly o’ your governor.”
As he said this bluntly, Tony looked
squarely into the face of Phil; who however only smiled
as he made reply.
“I see you have heard my name
before, Tony? Well, you never heard anything
bad in connection with it, I’ll be bound.
It’s true that my father did come into possession
of ten thousand acres or more of land and swamp, lying
along this same little river a year or two ago.
And he’s taken a notion that something ought
to be done to make it more profitable than it seems
to be now. That’s one of the reasons I’m
down here. My father don’t like the idea
of having squatters on his lands. He wants to
make a change.”
Tony squirmed uneasily, and the look
on his face was really painful to see. At one
instant it seemed as though defiance ruled; only to
give way to distress; as in imagination he saw these
new-found friends, who had been so very kind to him,
in the hands of his infuriated clansmen, and being
roughly treated.
“Better not keep on down-river,
sah!” he muttered. “They all
knows that name o’ Lancing. Sure I’ve
heard many a shingle-maker curse it, an’ say
what he’d do tuh the new owner, if ever he dared
show his face on the river. An’ what they’d
do tuh your dad they’d like enough do tuh you.
That’s why I asks yuh to turn aroun’ an’
go back, while yuh has the chanct.”
“Why, you don’t mean to
say your people would try to harm us?” asked
Larry, his round face showing signs of uneasiness.
“They sure would, if they knowed
his name was Lancing,” replied the other, doggedly.
“They’s a tough lot, seein’ as how
they lead a hard life, an’ they think they got
a right to the land they built ther shanties on.
More’n once the sheriff he tried tuh git his
man down yonder. Sho! they jest rode him on
a rail, an’ warned him if ever he showed his
face thar again they’d sure tar and feather him.
An’ let me tell yuh, he ain’t come back
from that day to this’n.”
“Well,” Phil went on,
coolly, “I’ve heard all those things from
the people of the town. They haven’t one
good word to say for McGee and his tribe. But
somehow I’ve got a notion that your folks ain’t
as black as they’re painted. And I’m
banking on that idea just enough to take the risk
of going on down there, even if it is bearding the
lion in his den.”
Tony shook his head dismally, and looked disappointed.
“Wisht yuh wouldn’t,”
he muttered. “Yuh been good to me, an’
I’d hate tuh know anything happened.”
“Oh! that’s all right,
Tony,” said Phil, cheerfully. “Nothing’s
going to happen nothing bad, I mean.
I’m not afraid to meet the terrible McGee face
to face. I just want to tell him something that
will make him change his mind pretty quick, I guess.”
“And when they see that we’ve
been good friends to you, Tony,” remarked Larry,
“they couldn’t think to injure us.
We come not in war but in peace. Phil, my chum,
has got an idea he can fix up this whole matter without
a fight; and that when he comes away again, there won’t
be a single squatter on the ten thousand acres his
dad owns.”
“Perhaps yuh mean well, but
they wouldn’t understand,” said the swamp
boy, laying a hand on the sleeve of Phil. “If
yuh kept your name secret nothin’ might happen;
but oh! just as soon as they learn that Dr. Lancing
is your dad they’re sure tuh go crazy.
Then it’ll be too late. Even the McGee
himself couldn’t hold ’em back then, big
as he is, and the strongest man in all Florida.”
His pleading did not seem to have
any effect however. Evidently Phil had the utmost
confidence in himself, and his mission as well.
He knew what he was carrying in his pocket, and had
faith to believe that it would win for him a welcome
entirely the opposite of the rough greeting Tony predicted.
But then Phil had never met the lawless McGees, who
snapped their impudent fingers at the sheriff of the
county, and did just about as they liked; owning allegiance
only to their terrible leader, whose name was the
most hated one known along the upper reaches of the
river.
“There seems to be something
of war between your people and these folks up in this
section of the country,” Phil remarked, wishing
to change the conversation. “Has that
always been so, and do they come to actual blows occasionally?”
“Huh! none o’ the McGees
ever comes up thisaways; they knows better. And
they ain’t a single critter belongin’ tuh
the upper river as dast show so much as the tip o’
his nose down thar. They’d string him up;
or give him a coat o’ feathers. That’s
why my dad, he let me bring the little sister up;
when he said as how he’d come hisself, mam and
all the rest wouldn’t hear o’ it nohow;
case they just knowed they’d never see him any
more. If the sheriff didn’t git him, some
o’ these cowards would, with a bullet.”
“Your father, then, must be
hated almost as much as the McGee himself?”
observed Larry.
The swamp boy looked confused, and
then hastily muttered:
“I reckons as how he is, more p’raps.”
“And you’ve never been up in this region
before, Tony?” asked Larry.
“Never has, sah.
I wuks with the men, cuttin’ shingles.
It’s the on’y way we has of getting money.
Twict a yeah a boat creeps up the river from the
gulf and we loads the stacks o’ shingles on her.
More’n a few times it been a tug that kim arter
the cypress bunches. Onct I went down on a boat;
and dad he took me tuh Pensacola. That’s
sure been the on’y time I ever was in a city.
I got two books thar.”
He said this last as though it might
have been the most important part of his visit to
civilization; and Phil smiled as he watched the varying
emotions on the eager face of the swamp boy whom he
only knew as Tony.
Then, as though he might have some
reason for so doing, Phil once more returned to the
subject that seemed to be of prime importance in his
sight.
“Now about this big McGee,”
he remarked; “is he such a terrible fellow,
of whom even his own family keeps in terror?”
“That’s what every one
says, sah,” returned the boy, quickly; “but
’taint right tuh jedge a man by what his enemies
tells. McGee is a big man, a giant; he’s
strong as an ox; and his people they looks up tuh
him right smart. He’s knocked a man down
more’n once, with a blow from his fist; but
’twas when he needed a lesson. The McGee
has a heart, sah, I give yuh my word on that.
He keers a heap foh his wife and his chillen.”
“Oh! then he has a wife and
children?” remarked Phil, “and he thinks
considerable of them, does he? Perhaps, after
all, he may be more sinned against than sinning.
You know of your own account that he cares for these
children, do you?”
“Sure I do,” replied the
other, eagerly, and for the moment forgetting his
caution. “I tell yuh, sah, that if
it hadn’t been foh all o’ the lot that
wrastled with him, he would a-come up hisself with
the little gal, ‘stead o’ lettin’
me do that same.”
“Oh! you mean with Madge, your
sister Madge?” cried Phil.
The boy nodded his head, a little
sullenly, as though realizing what a mess he had made
of the secret he had thought to keep a while longer,
at least.
“But why should the terrible
McGee bother his head about you and Madge?”
Phil demanded, smiling in Tony’s face.
Thereupon the swamp boy drew himself
up proudly, as though he were about to announce himself
the descendant of a race of kings, while he replied:
“Because, sah, the McGee
is Madge’s dad, an’ mine! I’m
Tony McGee!”