It was some days before the children
were tired of talking over Ben’s birthday party;
for it was a great event in their small world; but,
gradually, newer pleasures came to occupy their minds,
and they began to plan the nutting frolics which always
followed the early frosts. While waiting for
Jack to open the chestnut burrs, they varied the monotony
of school life by a lively scrimmage long known as
“the wood-pile fight.”
The girls liked to play in the half-empty
shed, and the boys, merely for the fun of teasing,
declared that they should not, so blocked up the doorway
as fast as the girls cleared it. Seeing that the
squabble was a merry one, and the exercise better
for all than lounging in the sun or reading in school
during recess, Teacher did not interfere, and the
barrier rose and fell almost as regularly as the tide.
It would be difficult to say which
side worked the harder; for the boys went before school
began to build up the barricade, and the girls stayed
after lessons were over to pull down the last one made
in afternoon recess. They had their play-time
first; and, while the boys waited inside, they heard
the shouts of the girls, the banging of the wood, and
the final crash, as the well-packed pile went down.
Then, as the lassies came in, rosy, breathless, and
triumphant, the lads rushed out to man the breach,
and labor gallantly till all was as tight as hard blows
could make it.
So the battle raged, and bruised knuckles,
splinters in fingers, torn clothes, and rubbed shoes,
were the only wounds received, while a great deal
of fun was had out of the maltreated logs, and a lasting
peace secured between two of the boys.
When the party was safely over, Sam
began to fall into his old way of tormenting Ben by
calling names, as it cost no exertion to invent trying
speeches, and slyly utter them when most likely to
annoy. Ben bore it as well as he could; but fortune
favored him at last, as it usually does the patient,
and he was able to make his own terms with his tormentor.
When the girls demolished the wood-pile,
they performed a jubilee chorus on combs, and tin
kettles, played like tambourines; the boys celebrated
their victories with shrill whistles, and a drum accompaniment
with fists on the shed walls. Billy brought his
drum, and this was such an addition that Sam hunted
up an old one of his little brother’s, in order
that he might join the drum corps. He had no sticks,
however, and, casting about in his mind for a good
substitute for the genuine thing, bethought him of
bulrushes.
“Those will do first-rate, and
there are lots in the ma’sh, if I can only get
’em,” he said to himself, and turned off
from the road on his way home to get a supply.
Now, this marsh was a treacherous
spot, and the tragic story was told of a cow who got
in there and sank till nothing was visible but a pair
of horns above the mud, which suffocated the unwary
beast. For this reason it was called “Cowslip
Marsh,” the wags said, though it was generally
believed to be so named for the yellow flowers which
grew there in great profusion in the spring.
Sam had seen Ben hop nimbly from one
tuft of grass to another when he went to gather cowslips
for Betty, and the stout boy thought he could do the
same. Two or three heavy jumps landed him, not
among the bulrushes, as he had hoped, but in a pool
of muddy water, where he sank up to his middle with
alarming rapidity. Much scared, he tried to wade
out, but could only flounder to a tussock of grass,
and cling there, while he endeavored to kick his legs
free. He got them out, but struggled in vain
to coil them up or to hoist his heavy body upon the
very small island in this sea of mud. Down they
splashed again; and Sam gave a dismal groan as he
thought of the leeches and water-snakes which might
be lying in wait below. Visions of the lost cow
also flashed across his agitated mind, and he gave
a despairing shout very like a distracted “Moo!”
Few people passed along the lane,
and the sun was setting, so the prospect of a night
in the marsh nerved Sam to make a frantic plunge toward
the bulrush island, which was nearer than the mainland,
and looked firmer than any tussock round him.
But he failed to reach this haven of rest, and was
forced to stop at an old stump which stuck up, looking
very like the moss-grown horns of the “dear departed.”
Roosting here, Sam began to shout for aid in every
key possible to the human voice. Such hoots and
howls, whistles and roars, never woke the echoes of
the lonely marsh before, or scared the portly frog
who resided there in calm seclusion.
He hardly expected any reply but the
astonished “Caw!” of the crow, who sat
upon a fence watching him with gloomy interest; and
when a cheerful “Hullo, there!” sounded
from the lane, he was so grateful that tears of joy
rolled down his fat cheeks.
“Come on! I’m in
the ma’sh. Lend a hand and get me out!”
bawled Sam, anxiously waiting for his deliverer to
appear, for he could only see a hat bobbing along
behind the hazel-bushes that fringed the lane.
Steps crashed through the bushes,
and then over the wall came an active figure, at the
sight of which Sam was almost ready to dive out of
sight, for, of all possible boys, who should it be
but Ben, the last person in the world whom he would
like to have see him in his present pitiful plight.
“Is it you, Sam? Well,
you are in a nice fix!” and Ben’s eyes
began to twinkle with mischievous merriment, as well
they might, for Sam certainly was a spectacle to convulse
the soberest person. Perched unsteadily on the
gnarled stump, with his muddy legs drawn up, his dismal
face splashed with mud, and the whole lower half of
his body as black as if he had been dipped in an inkstand,
he presented such a comically doleful object that
Ben danced about, laughing like a naughty will-o’-the-wisp
who, having led a traveller astray then fell to jeering
at him.
“Stop that, or I’ll knock
your head off!” roared Sam, in a rage.
“Come on and do it; I give you
leave,” answered Ben, sparring away derisively
as the other tottered on his perch, and was forced
to hold tight lest he should tumble off.
“Don’t laugh, there ’s
a good chap, but fish me out somehow, or I shall get
my death sitting here all wet and cold,” whined
Sam, changing his tune, and feeling bitterly that
Ben had the upper hand now.
Ben felt it also; and, though a very
good-natured boy, could not resist the temptation
to enjoy this advantage for a moment at least.
“I won’t laugh if I can
help it; only you do look so like a fat, speckled
frog, I may not be able to hold in. I’ll
pull you out pretty soon; but first I’m going
to talk to you, Sam,” said Ben, sobering down
as he took a seat on the little point of land nearest
the stranded Samuel.
“Hurry up, then; I’m as
stiff as a board now, and it’s no fun sitting
here on this knotty old thing,” growled Sam,
with a discontented squirm.
“Dare say not, but ‘it
is good for you,’ as you say when you rap me
over the head. Look here, I’ve got you
in a tight place, and I don’t mean to help you
a bit till you promise to let me alone. Now then!”
and Ben’s face grew stern with his remembered
wrongs as he grimly eyed his discomfited foe.
“I’ll promise fast enough
if you won’t tell anyone about this,” answered
Sam, surveying himself and his surroundings with great
disgust.
“I shall do as I like about that.”
“Then I won’t promise
a thing! I’m not going to have the whole
school laughing at me,” protested Sam, who hated
to be ridiculed even more than Ben did.
“Very well; good-night!”
and Ben walked off with his hands in his pockets as
coolly as if the bog was Sam’s favorite retreat.
“Hold on, don’t be in
such a hurry!” shouted Sam, seeing little hope
of rescue if he let this chance go.
“All right!” and back
came Ben, ready for further negotiations.
“I’ll promise not to plague
you, if you’ll promise not to tell on me.
Is that what you want?”
“Now I come to think of it,
there is one thing more. I like to make a good
bargain when I begin,” said Ben, with a shrewd
air. “You must promise to keep Mose quiet,
too. He follows your lead, and if you tell him
to stop it he will. If I was big enough, I’d
make you hold your tongues. I ain’t, so
we’ll try this way.”
“Yes, Yes, I’ll see to
Mose. Now, bring on a rail, there’s a good
fellow. I’ve got a horrid cramp in my legs,”
began Sam, thinking he had bought help dearly, yet
admiring Ben’s cleverness in making the most
of his chance.
Ben brought the rail, but, just as
he was about to lay it from the main-land to the nearest
tussock, he stopped, saying, with the naughty twinkle
in his black eyes again, “One more little thing
must be settled first, and then I’ll get you
ashore. Promise you won’t plague the girls
either, ’specially Bab and Betty. You pull
their hair, and they don’t like it.”
“Don’t neither!
Wouldn’t touch that Bab for a dollar; she scratches
and bites like a mad cat,” was Sam’s sulky
reply.
“Glad of it; she can take care
of herself. Betty can’t; and if you touch
one of her pig-tails I’ll up and tell right out
how I found you snivelling in the ma’sh like
a great baby. So now!” and Ben emphasized
his threat with a blow of the suspended rail which
splashed the water over poor Sam, quenching his last
spark of resistance.
“Stop! I will! I will!”
“True as you live and breathe!”
demanded Ben, sternly binding him by the most solemn
oath he knew.
“True as I live and breathe,”
echoed Sam, dolefully relinquishing his favorite pastime
of pulling Betty’s braids and asking if she was
at home.
“I’ll come over there
and crook fingers on the bargain,” said Ben,
settling the rail and running over it to the tuft,
then bridging another pool and crossing again till
he came to the stump.
“I never thought of that way,”
said Sam, watching him with much inward chagrin at
his own failure.
I should think youd written Look before you leap, in your copy-book often
enough to get the idea into your stupid head. Come, crook, commanded Ben,
leaning forward with extended little finger. Sam obediently performed the
ceremony, and then Ben sat astride one of the horns of the stump while the muddy
Crusoe went slowly across the rail from point to point till he landed safely on
the shore, when he turned about and asked with an ungrateful jeer,
“Now what’s going to become
of you, old Look-before-you-leap?”
“Mud turtles can only sit on
a stump and bawl till they are taken off, but frogs
have legs worth something, and are not afraid of a
little water,” answered Ben, hopping away in
an opposite direction, since the pools between him
and Sam were too wide for even his lively legs.
Sam waddled off to the brook in the
lane to rinse the mud from his nether man before facing
his mother, and was just wringing himself out when
Ben came up, breathless but good natured, for he felt
that he had made an excellent bargain for himself
and friends.
“Better wash your face; it’s
as speckled as a tiger-lily. Here’s my
handkerchief if yours is wet,” he said, pulling
out a dingy article which had evidently already done
service as a towel.
“Don’t want it,”
muttered Sam, gruffly, as he poured the water out of
his muddy shoes.
“I was taught to say ‘Thanky’
when folks got me out of scrapes. But you never
had much bringing up, though you do ’live in
a house with a gambrel roof,’” retorted
Ben, sarcastically quoting Sam’s frequent boast;
then he walked off, much disgusted with the ingratitude
of man.
Sam forgot his manners, but he remembered
his promise, and kept it so well that all the school
wondered. No one could guess the secret of Ben’s
power over him, though it was evident that he had gained
it in some sudden way, for at the least sign of Sam’s
former tricks Ben would crook his little finger and
wag it warningly, or call out “Bulrushes!”
and Sam subsided with reluctant submission, to the
great amazement of his mates. When asked what
it meant, Sa, turned sulky; but Ben had much fun out
of it, assuring the other boys that those were the
signs and password of a secret society to which he
and Sam belonged, and promised to tell them all about
it if Sam would give him leave, which, of course,
he would not.
This mystery, and the vain endeavors
to find it out caused a lull in the war of the wood-pile,
and before any new game was invented something happened
which gave the children plenty to talk about for a
time.
A week after the secret alliance was formed, Ben ran in one evening with a
letter for Miss Celia. He found her enjoying the cheery blaze of the
pine-cones the little girls had picked up for her, and Bab and Betty sat in the
small chairs rocking luxuriously as they took turns to throw on the pretty fuel.
Miss Celia turned quickly to receive the expected letter, glanced at the
writing, post-mark and stamp, with an air of delighted surprise, then clasped it
close in both hands, saying, as she hurried out of the room,
“He has come! he has come!
Now you may tell them, Thorny.”
“Tell its what? asked Bab, pricking up her cars
at once.
“Oh, it’s only that George
has come, and I suppose we shall go and get married
right away,” answered Thorny, rubbing his hands
as if he enjoyed the prospect.
“Are you going to be married?
asked Betty, so soberly that the boys shouted, and
Thorny, with difficulty composed himself sufficiently
to explain.
“No, child, not just yet; but
sister is, and I must go and see that all is done
up ship-shape, and bring you home some wedding-cake.
Ben will take care of you while I’m gone.”
“When shall you go?” asked
Bab, beginning to long for her share of cake.
“To-morrow, I guess. Celia
has been packed and ready for a week. We agreed
to meet George in New York, and be married as soon
as he got his best clothes unpacked. We are men
of our word, and off we go. Won’t it be
fun?”
“But when will you come back
again?” questioned Betty, looking anxious.
“Don’t know. Sister
wants to come soon, but I’d rather have our
honeymoon somewhere else, Niagara, Newfoundland,
West Point, or the Rocky Mountains,” said Thorny,
mentioning a few of the places he most desired to
see.
“Do you like him?” asked
Ben, very naturally wondering if the new master would
approve of the young man-of-all-work.
“Don’t I? George
is regularly jolly; though now he’s a minister,
perhaps he’ll stiffen up and turn sober.
Won’t it be a shame if he does?” and Thorny
looked alarmed at the thought of losing his congenial
friend.
“Tell about him; Miss Celia
said you might”, put in Bab, whose experience
of “jolly” ministers had been small.
“Oh, there isn’t much
about it. We met in Switzerland going up Mount
St. Bernard in a storm, and
“Where the good dogs live?”
inquired Betty, hoping they would come into the story.
“Yes; we spent the night up
there, and George gave us his room; the house was
so full, and he wouldn’t let me go down a steep
place where I wanted to, and Celia thought he’d
saved my life, and was very good to him. Then
we kept meeting, and the first thing I knew she went
and was engaged to him. I didn’t care,
only she would come home so he might go on studying
hard and get through quick. That was a year ago,
and last winter we were in New York at uncle’s;
and then, in the spring, I was sick, and we came here,
and that’s all.”
“Shall you live here always
when you come back? asked Bab, as Thorny paused for
breath.
“Celia wants to. I shall
go to college, so I don’t mind. George
is going to help the old minister here and see how
he likes it. I’m to study with him, and
if he is as pleasant as he used to be we shall have
capital times, see if we don’t.”
“I wonder if he will want me
round,” said Ben, feeling no desire to be a
tramp again.
“I do, so you needn’t
fret about that, my hearty,” answered Thorny,
with a resounding slap on the shoulder which reassured
Ben more than any promises.
“I’d like to see a live
wedding, then we could play it with our dolls.
I’ve got a nice piece of mosquito netting for
a veil, and Belinda’s white dress is clean.
Do you s’pose Miss Celia will ask us to hers?”
said Betty to Bab, as the boys began to discuss St.
Bernard dogs with Spirit.
“I wish I could, dears,”
answered a voice behind them; and there was Miss Celia,
looking so happy that the little girls wondered what
the letter could have said to give her such bright
eyes and smiling lips. “I shall not be
gone long, or be a bit changed when I come back, to
live among you years I hope, for I am fond of the
old place now, and mean it shall be home,” she
added, caressing the yellow heads as if they were
dear to her.
Oh, goody! cried Bab, while Betty whispered with both arms round Miss
Celia,
“I don’t think we could
bear to have anybody else come here to live.”
“It is very pleasant to hear
you say that, and I mean to make others feel so, if
I can. I have been trying a little this summer,
but when I come back I shall go to work in earnest
to be a good minister’s wife, and you must help
me.”
“We will,” promised both
children, ready for any thing except preaching in
the high pulpit.
Then Miss Celia turned to Ben, saying, in the respectful way that always made
him feel at least twenty-five,
“We shall be off to-morrow,
and I leave you in charge. Go on just as if
we were here, and be sure nothing will be changed as
far as you are concerned when we come back.”
Ben’s face beamed at that; but
the only way he could express his relief was by making
such a blaze in honor of the occasion that he nearly
roasted the company.
Next morning, the brother and sister
slipped quietly away, and the children hurried to
school, eager to tell the great news that “Miss
Celia and Thorny had gone to be married, and were coming
back to live here for ever and ever.”