The next day after breakfast was over the Slow Poke took up her journey again. It had been decided that the proper thing to do was to get up the river to the neighborhood of Peekskill where, according to Roy, there was fishing to be had. “Besides,” said Chub, “we want to get away from all these towns. Civilization is wearying. I pine for the virgin forest.” “I don’t believe you’ll find much of that around Peekskill,” responded Dick. “Look at the map!” “Oh, you mustn’t believe all you see on the map,” answered Chub, cheerfully. “Something tells me—” placing a finger on the chart—“that here I shall find virgin forest. Also trout. Let us up and away.” They chugged unhurriedly up the river all the morning, the engine much to Dick’s delight, working “I’d hate to travel on that,” said Chub, pointing with his fork to a steamer which was gliding by out in the river. “It goes so fast those people can’t begin to see the beauties of the country. Now with us it’s different. We catch sight of an object of interest at ten in the morning. At eleven we approach it. At twelve we reach it. At one we are by but still have it in plain sight. It fades from view at four in the afternoon. That’s something like. We have time to study and—er—assimilate, you see. Why, every feature of the landscape we have passed is indelibly engraven on my memory.” “Oh, come now,” laughed Roy, “the Slow Poke hasn’t done so badly. We’ve come a good thirteen miles since breakfast.” “What I’m afraid of,” said Dick, “is that if we keep on going like this we’ll be at the end of the river before we know it. How much more is there?” “Only about two hundred and twenty-five miles,” replied Roy, dryly. “If we keep on at “Oh, that’s all right, then. Because we are going to stop, of course.” “We’re going to do more stopping than anything else,” said Chub. “House-boats are intended primarily to stop in. As—as vehicles of travel they are not to be taken seriously.” “My!” murmured Dick, “what a college education does do for a fellow!” “English A is a great course,” agreed Roy, smilingly. “You’ll be so happy next year with your little daily themes, Dick!” Dick groaned. They wandered on again in the afternoon, Roy taking another lesson on the gas-engine, and stopped for the night in a little cove on the east side near Cortlandt. As it still lacked almost an hour of supper-time, they left the boat to stretch their legs on shore. They found a road and tramped along it for a quarter of an hour without finding anything more interesting than a farm-house. But the farm-house put an idea into “Milk,” he ejaculated. “Yes, but we didn’t bring anything to put it in,” Roy objected. “It doesn’t matter. They’ll lend us a can, maybe. Come on.” So they trudged up the long lane and knocked on the front door. Receiving no answer after a decent interval of waiting, they proceeded around back. At a little distance stood a big barn. Near-by was a well with a number of big milk cans beside it. “There you are,” said Chub. “Maybe they’ll lend us one of those. Come on.” The back door was open and from the little covered porch they had a glimpse of a very clean and tidy kitchen. Chub knocked. There was no answer. “All out, it seems,” he muttered. He knocked again and then raised his voice. “Any one at home?” he asked. There was. A big, rough-coated yellow dog bounded across the yard, the hair along his back “I say!” gasped Chub. “Did you see him? Isn’t he an ugly brute?” “He certainly is,” agreed Dick, with an uneasy laugh. “Hear him, will you?” The dog was growling savagely and sniffing along the bottom of the door. “Nice doggie,” called Chub, soothingly. “Nice doggie! Go away, Rover!” “Try ‘Prince,’” Roy suggested. “Try it yourself! I wonder if there’s any one in here. You fellows look after the door and I’ll go and see.” Chub walked through the kitchen into a little narrow entry and called loudly. But there was no answer. He returned to the others. “Still there?” he asked, in a whisper. “I don’t know,” muttered Roy. “I don’t hear Chub walked over to the nearest casement and looked out. “He’s lying on the porch with his nose about half an inch from the door,” he reported, disgustedly. “He’s a Saint Bernard, I guess.” “I don’t care what he is,” said Roy. “He’s a nuisance. What shall we do?” “Put your head out of the window and yell,” suggested Dick. “They’re probably in the barn.” “All right, but not that window,” Chub answered. He went to the farther side of the kitchen, raised the window there and yelled loudly. “Hello! You in the barn! Call off your dog! Hello! Hello!” But the dog started such a barking that Chub’s efforts were quite wasted. “I suppose we’ll just have to make ourselves comfortable and wait for Mr. Farmer to come back,” he said, closing the window again. “I tell you what,” said Dick, in a hoarse whisper. “We’ll get out the front door. If we close it quietly he won’t hear us.” They looked at each other doubtfully. The plan didn’t seem to awaken much enthusiasm. “That’s all right,” said Roy, “but if he did hear us—” “I don’t believe he’d actually attack us,” said Dick. “It didn’t look like it, did it?” asked Chub, sarcastically. “Oh, no, he’s a nice little playful pet, he is.” “Well, we can’t stay here all night,” said Dick. “And for all we know there may not be anybody in the barn.” “Of course there is! Do you think they’d go away and leave the back of the house all open like this?” “Well, with that animal out there I guess they’d be safe to put the family silver on the front piazza,” retorted Roy. “But I guess there’s some one around somewhere. There’s a fire in the stove and that looks as though they meant to get supper.” The mention of supper brought back Chub’s valor. “Well, come on, and let’s try the front-door trick. Go easy, fellows.” They tiptoed across the kitchen, through the “Sometimes they hang it on a nail alongside the door,” muttered Chub, running his hand around the frame. “Or put it under the mat,” said Roy. “There isn’t any mat. Let’s try a window. Come on in here.” He led the way into a dim and deserted parlor, a stuffy, uncanny apartment in which the curtains were closely drawn at the three windows. “See if you can see Fido,” counseled Chub. Roy raised the shade at one of the windows on the front of the house and looked out. Beneath was a bed of purple phlox and beyond was a walk and a little space of grass. At the right was the lane—and safety. “He isn’t in sight,” Roy answered in whispers. “But he may come.” “That doesn’t matter,” answered Chub, recklessly. “I want to go home to supper. Push up the window.” Roy obeyed. The sash creaked and screamed as he forced it up and they paused and held their “You go first, Roy,” said Chub. “Dick and I can run faster than you.” “Want me to have the first bite, eh?” laughed Roy, as he put a knee over the sill. “Be quiet! Don’t make so much noise,” said Chub. “Get on out.” Roy was sitting on the sill, his feet dangling above the flower bed. “That’s all right,” he muttered, “but—say, Dick, go back and take a peek out of the window and see if he’s still there.” “All right.” Dick tiptoed back to the kitchen. “I don’t know,” said Chub, “that I should want the family to walk in now and discover us. We might have some difficulty in—Hello!” He darted away from the window, leaving Roy blankly confronting a very tall man with a tangled black beard, who had suddenly and noiselessly come around the corner of the house. He wore dirty brown jumpers, carried a single barreled shot-gun, and wasn’t at all prepossessing. And beside him, still growling and bristling, was the yellow dog. Roy stared silently with open mouth. |