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  • 1916
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string of home-cured deer skin. “And if you are short, Bob, we’ll go down into this poke and see what there is left.

“I came down to Chicago to see about a piece of timber that’s owned by some sharps on Jackson Street. I didn’t know but I might get to cut that timber. I’ve run it careless-like, and I know pretty near what there is in it. So I said to Kate:

“‘I’ll see Bob and his wife, and the little nipper—–“

“Goodness!” ejaculated Nan, under her breath.

Uncle Henry’s eyes twinkled and the many wrinkles about them screwed up into hard knots. “Beg pardon!” he exclaimed, for his ears were very sharp. “This young lady, I should have said. Anyhow, I told Kate I’d see you all and find out what you were doing.

“Depending on mills and such for employment isn’t any very safe way to live, I think. Out in the woods you are as free as air, and there aren’t so many bosses, and you don’t have to think much about ‘the market’ and ‘supply and demand,’ and all that.”

“Just the same,” said Mr. Robert Sherwood, his own eyes twinkling, “you are in some trouble right now, I believe, Hen?”

“Sho! You’ve got me there,” boomed his brother with a great laugh. “But there aren’t many reptiles like old Ged Raffer. And we can thank a merciful Creator for that. I expect there are just a few miserly old hunks like Ged as horrible examples to the rest of us.”

“What is the nature of your trouble with this old fellow?” asked Mr. Robert Sherwood.

“We’ve got hold on adjoining options. I had my lines run by one of the best surveyors in the Peninsula of Michigan. But he up and died. Ged claims I ran over on his tract about a mile. He got to court first, got an injunction, and tied me all up in a hard legal knot until the state surveyors can go over both pieces of timber. The land knows when that’ll be! Those state surveyors take a week of frog Sundays to do a job.

“I can’t cut a stick on my whole piece ’cause Ged claims he’ll have a right to replevin an equal number of sticks cut, if the surveyors back up his contention. Nasty mess. The original line was run years and years ago, and they’re not many alive today in the Big woods that know the rights of it.

“I expect,” added Uncle Henry, shaking his bushy head, “that old Toby Vanderwiller knows the rights of that line business; but he won’t tell.

Gedney Raffer’s got a strangle hold on Toby and his little swamp farm, and Toby doesn’t dare say his soul’s his own.

“Well!” continued the lumberman, with another of his big laughs. “This has nothing to do with your stew, Bob. I didn’t want to come to the house last night and surprise you; so I stayed at the hotel. And all the time I was thinking of this little nip, Beg pardon! This young lady, and how smart and plucky she was.

“And lo and behold,” pursued Uncle Henry, “she turns out to be my own niece. I’m going to take her back with me to Pine Camp. Kate’s got to see and know her. The boys will be tickled out of their boots to have a girl like her around. That’s our one lack at Pine Camp. There never was a girl in the family.

“Seems that this was just foreordained. You and Jessie have got to go ‘way off, over the water; can’t leave this plucky girl alone. Her old uncle and aunt are the proper folks to take care of her. What do you say yourself, young lady?”

Nan had liked the big man from the very beginning. She was a sensible child, too. She saw that she must settle this matter herself, for it was too hard a question for either Momsey or Papa Sherwood to decide. She gained control of herself now; but nobody will ever know how much courage it took for her to say, promptly:

“Of course I will go home with you, Uncle Henry. It will be fun, I think, to go into the woods in the winter. And, and I can come right back as soon as Momsey and Papa Sherwood return from Scotland.”

So it was settled, just like that. The rush in which both parties got under way on Monday made Nan’s head whirl. Momsey was to buy a few necessary things in New York before she boarded the steamer. Nan had a plentiful supply of warm winter clothing, and she took a trunkful.

Mrs. Joyce was left to take a peep at the little, locked cottage on Amity Street, now and then. Nan could say “Goodbye” only very hastily to Bess Harley and her other school friends. Her school had to be broken off at a bad time in the year, but there was the prospect of a change in Nan’s method of education the next fall.

Momsey and Papa Sherwood took the train east an hour before Nan and Uncle Henry boarded that for Chicago. All went with a rush and clatter, and Nan found herself at last rumbling out of Tillbury, on her way to the northern wilderness, while a thin drive of fine snowflakes tapped on the car windows.

Chapter X
GEDNEY RAFFER

It was fortunate for Nan Sherwood that on the day of parting with her parents she had so much to do, and that there was so much to see, and so many new things of which to think.

She had never traveled to Chicago before, nor far from Tillbury at all. Even the chair car was new to the girl’s experience and she found it vastly entertaining to sit at a broad window with her uncle in the opposite chair, gazing out upon the snowy landscape as the train hurried over the prairie.

She had a certain feeling that her Uncle Henry was an anomaly in the chair car. His huge bearskin coat and the rough clothing under it; his felt boots, with rubber soles and feet; the fact that he wore no linen and only a string tie under the collar of his flannel shirt; his great bronzed hands and blunted fingers with their broken nails, all these things set him apart from the other men who rode in the car.

Papa Sherwood paid much attention to the niceties of dress, despite the fact that his work at the Atwater Mills had called for overalls and, frequently, oily hands. Uncle Henry evidently knew little about stiff collars and laundered cuffs, or cravats, smart boots, bosomed shirts, or other dainty wear for men. He was quite innocent of giving any offence to the eye, however. Lying back in the comfortable chair with his coat off and his great lumberman’s boots crossed, he laughed at anything Nan said that chanced to be the least bit amusing, until the gas-globes rang again.

It seemed to Nan as though there never was such a huge man before. She doubted if Goliath could have looked so big to young David, when the shepherd boy went out with his sling to meet the giant. Uncle Henry was six feet, four inches in height and broad in proportion. The chair creaked under his weight when he moved. Other people in the car gazed on the quite unconscious giant as wonderingly as did Nan herself.

“Uncle Henry,” she asked him once, “are all the men in the Big Woods as tall as you are?”

“Goodness me! No, child,” he chuckled. “But the woods don’t breed many runts, that’s a fact. There’s some bigger than I. Long Sam Dorgan is near seven feet he isn’t quite sure, for he’s so ticklish that you can’t ever measure him,” and Uncle Henry’s chuckle burst into a full-fledged laugh. “He’s just as graceful as a length of shingle lathing, too. And freckles and liver spots on his hands and face, well, he certain sure is a handsome creature.

“He went to town once and stayed over night. Wasn’t any bed long enough at the hotel, and Sam had got considerably under the weather, anyhow, from fooling with hard cider. So he wasn’t particular about where he bedded down, and they put him to sleep in the horse trough.”

“The horse trough!” gasped Nan.

“Yes. It was pretty dry when Sam went to bed; but right early in the morning a sleepy hostler stumbled out to the trough and began to pump water into it for the cattle. Maybe Long Sam needed a bath, but not just that way. He rose up with a yell like a Choctaw Indian. Said he was just dreaming of going through the Sault Ste. Marie in a barrel, and he reckoned the barrel burst open.”

Nan was much amused by this story, as she was by others that the old lumberman related. He was full of dry sayings and his speech had many queer twists to it. His bluff, honest way delighted the girl, although he was so different from Papa Sherwood. As Momsey had said, Uncle Henry’s body had to be big to contain his heart. One can excuse much that is rough in a character so lovable as that of Uncle Henry’s.

The snow increased as the train sped on and the darkness gradually thickened. Uncle Henry took his niece into the dining car where they had supper, with a black man with shiny eyes and very white teeth, who seemed always on the broad grin, to wait upon them. Nan made a mental note to write Bess Harley all about the meal and the service, for Bess was always interested in anything that seemed “aristocratic,” and to the unsophisticated girl from Tillbury the style of the dining car seemed really luxurious.

When the train rolled into the Chicago station it was not yet late; but it seemed to Nan as though they had ridden miles and miles, through lighted streets hedged on either side with brick houses. The snow was still falling, but it looked sooty and gray here in the city. Nan began to feel some depression, and to remember more keenly that Momsey and Papa Sherwood were flying easterly just as fast as an express train could take them.

It was cold, too. A keen, penetrating wind seemed to search through the streets. Uncle Henry said it came from the lake. He beckoned to a taxicab driver, and Nan’s trunk was found and strapped upon the roof. Then off they went to the hotel where Uncle Henry always stopped when he came to Chicago, and where his own bag was checked.

Looking through the cab windows, the girl began to take an immediate interest in life again. So many people, despite the storm! So many vehicles tangled up at the corners and waiting for the big policemen to let them by in front of the clanging cars! Bustle, hurry, noise, confusion!

“Some different from your Tillbury,” drawled Uncle Henry. “And just as different from Pine Camp as chalk is from cheese.”

“But so interesting!” breathed Nan, with a sigh. “Doesn’t it ever get to be bedtime for children in the city?”

“Not for those kids,” grumbled Uncle Henry. “Poor creatures. They sell papers, or flowers, or matches, or what-not, all evening long. And stores keep open, and hotel bars, and drug shops, besides theatres and the like. There’s a big motion picture place! I went there once. It beats any show that ever came to Hobart Forks, now I tell you.”

“Oh, we have motion picture shows at Tillbury. We have had them in the school hall, too,” said Nan complacently. “But, of course, I’d like to see all the people and the lights, and so forth. It looks very interesting in the city. But the snow is dirty, Uncle Henry.”

“Yes. And most everything else is dirty when you get into these brick and mortar tunnels. That’s what I call the streets. The air even isn’t clean,” went on the lumberman. “Give me the woods, with a fresh wind blowing, and the world looks good to me,” then his voice and face fell, as he added, “excepting that snake-in-the-grass, Ged Raffer.”

“That man must make you a lot of trouble, Uncle Henry,” said Nan sympathetically.

“He does,” growled the lumberman. “He’s a miserable, fox-faced scoundrel, and I’ve no more use for him than I have for an egg- sucking dog. That’s the way I feel about it.”

They reached the hotel just then, and Uncle Henry’s flare of passion was quenched. The hostelry he patronized was not a new hotel; but it was a very good one, and Nan’s heart beat high as she followed the porter inside, with Uncle Henry directing the taxicab driver and a second porter how to dispose of the trunk for the night.

Nan had her bag in which were her night clothes, toilet articles, and other necessities. The porter carried this for her and seated her on a comfortable lounge at one side while Uncle Henry arranged about the rooms.

To do honor to his pretty niece the lumberman engaged much better quarters than he would have chosen for himself. When they went up to the rooms Nan found a pretty little bath opening out of hers, and the maid came and asked her if she could be of any help. The girl began to feel quite “grown up.” It was all very wonderful, and she loved Uncle Henry for making things so pleasant for her.

She had to run to his door and tell him this before she undressed. He had pulled off his boots and was tramping up and down the carpeted floor in his thick woolen socks, humming to himself.

“Taking a constitutional, Nan,” he declared. “Haven’t had any exercise for this big body of mine all day. Sitting in that car has made me as cramped as a bear just crawling out of his den in the spring.”

He did not tell her that had he been alone he would have gone out and tramped the snowy streets for half the night. But he would not leave her alone in the hotel. “No, sir,” said Uncle Henry. “Robert would never forgive me if anything happened to his honey- bird. And fire, or something, might break out here while I was gone.”

He said nothing like this to Nan, however, but kissed her good night and told her she should always bid him good night in just that way as long as she was at Pine Camp.

“For Kate and I have never had a little girl,” said the big lumberman, “and boys get over the kissing stage mighty early, I find. Kate and I always did hanker for a girl.”

“If you owned a really, truly daughter of your own, Uncle Henry, I believe you’d spoil her to death!” cried Nan, the next morning, when she came out of the fur shop to which he had taken her.

He had insisted that she was not dressed warmly enough for the woods. We see forty and forty-five below up there, sometimes,” he said. “You think this raw wind is cold; it is nothing to a black frost in the Big Woods. Trees burst as if there were dynamite in ’em. You’ve never seen the like.

“Of course the back of winter’s about broken now. But we may have some cold snaps yet. Anyhow, you look warmer than you did.”

And that was true, for Nan was dressed like a little Esquimau. Her coat had a pointed hood to it; she wore high fur boots, the fur outside. Her mittens of seal were buttoned to the sleeves of her coat, and she could thrust her hands, with ordinary gloves on them, right into these warm receptacles.

Nan thought they were wonderfully served at the hotel where they stopped, and she liked the maid on her corridor very much, and the boy who brought the icewater, too. There really was so much to tell Bess that she began to keep a diary in a little blank- book she bought for that purpose.

Then the most wonderful thing of all was the message from Papa Sherwood which arrived just before she and Uncle Henry left the hotel for the train. It was a “night letter” sent from Buffalo and told her that Momsey was all right and that they both sent love and would telegraph once more before their steamship left the dock at New York.

Nan and Uncle Henry drove through the snowy streets to another station and took the evening train north. They traveled at first by the Milwaukee Division of the Chicago and Northwestern Railroad; and now another new experience came Nan’s way. Uncle Henry had secured a section in the sleeping car and each had a berth.

It was just like being put to sleep on a shelf, Nan declared, when the porter made up the beds at nine o’clock. She climbed into the upper berth a little later, sure that she would not sleep, and intending to look out of the narrow window to watch the snowy landscape fly by all night.

And much to her surprise (only the surprise came in the morning) she fell fast asleep almost immediately, lulled by the rocking of the huge car on its springs, and did not arouse until seven o’clock and the car stood on the siding in the big Wisconsin city.

They hurried to get a northern bound train and were soon off on what Uncle Henry called the “longest lap” of their journey. The train swept them up the line of Lake Michigan, sometimes within sight of the shore, often along the edge of estuaries, particularly following the contour of Green By, and then into the Wilderness of upper Wisconsin and the Michigan Peninsula.

On the Peninsula Division of the C. & N. W. they did not travel as fast as they had been running, and before Hobart Forks was announced on the last local train they traveled in, Nan Sherwood certainly was tired of riding by rail. The station was in Marquette County, near the Schoolcraft line. Pine Camp was twenty miles deeper in the Wilderness. It seemed to Nan that she had been traveling through forests, or the barren stumpage where forests had been, for weeks.

“Here’s where we get off, little girl,” Uncle Henry said, as he seized his big bag and her little one and made for the door of the car. Nan ran after him in her fur clothing. She had found before this that he was right about the cold. It was an entirely different atmosphere up here in the Big Woods from Tillbury, or even Chicago.

The train creaked to a stop. They leaped down upon the snowy platform. Only a plain station, big freight house, and a company of roughly dressed men to meet them. Behind the station a number of sleighs and sledges stood, their impatient horses shaking the innumerable bells they wore.

Nan, stumbling off the car step behind her uncle, came near to colliding with a small man in patched coat and cowhide boots, and with a rope tied about his waist as some teamsters affect. He mumbled something in anger and Nan turned to look at him.

He wore sparse, sandy whiskers, now fast turning gray. The outthrust of the lower part of his face was as sharp as that of a fox, and he really looked like a fox. She was sure of his identity before uncle Henry wheeled and, seeing the man, said:

“What’s that you are saying, Ged Raffer? This is my niece, and if you lay your tongue to her name, I’ll give you something to go to law about in a hurry. Come, Nan. Don’t let that man touch so much as your coat sleeve. He’s like pitch. You can’t be near him without some of his meanness sticking to you.”

Chapter XI
PINE CAMP AT LAST

It was the first shade upon Uncle Henry’s character that displeased Nan. He was evidently a passionate man, prone to give way to elemental feelings, literally, “a man of wrath.”

Gedney Raffer, weazened, snakelike, sly, and treacherous, had doubtless wronged Uncle Henry deeply., But this fact could not excuse the huge lumberman’s language on the platform of the Hobart Forks station.

Nan wanted to stop her ears with her fingers and run from the spot. The tough fellows standing around enjoyed the war of words hugely. Mr. Sherwood was too big to strike Gedney Raffer, and of course the latter dared not use his puny fists on the giant.

The blunt club of the lumberman’s speech was scarcely a match for the sharp rapier of Raffer’s tongue. As the crowd laughed it was evident that the fox-faced man was getting the verbal best of the controversy.

Nan’s ears burned and tears stood in her eyes. Uncle Henry descended to personal threats and the smaller man called out:

“You jest put your hand on me, you big, overgrown sawney! That’s all I’m a-waitin’ for. You ‘tack me and I’ll have you in the caboose, sure’s my name’s Gedney Raffer. Try it!”

The quarrel was most distressing. Nan pulled at her uncle’s coat sleeve. The rough men eyed her curiously. She had never felt so ashamed in her life.

“Do come, Uncle Henry,” she whispered. “I’m cold.”

That statement started the fuming giant at once. Nan’s sensitiveness to a rude quarrel did not impress the man; but her sensitiveness to the weather shocked him immediately.

“My goodness, girl! We’ll go right up to the hotel,” he said, kindly. “Any of you fellows seen Rafe or Tom in town this morning with the sled and roans?”

“Hey, Hen!” cried the station master, waving a yellow paper. “Here’s a telegraph despatch for you.”

It was really for Nan, and from Papa Sherwood filed just before the Afton Castle sailed from New York:

“Momsey and papa send love and kisses. Be cheerful and good. Write often. We think of you always. Kind wishes for Henry, Kate and boys. We look forward to fair voyage and safe landing. Will cable from other side. Expect happy meeting in spring. R. and J. Sherwood.”

“They got a good start,” commented Uncle Henry, putting all thought of his quarrel with Ged Raffer behind him at once. “We’ll hope they have a safe voyage. Now! Where are those boys of mine?”

The town of Hobart Forks was by no means a lumber town. Millions of feet of timber was boomed on the river within the limits of the town every season, and there were great mills along the banks of the stream, too. But there were other industries, as well as churches, amusement places and many pleasant dwellings. It was no settlement of “slab shanties” with a few saloons and a general store. Nan had yet to see this latter kind of settlement.

But what she saw about the central market place of Hobart Forks opened her eyes considerably to an appreciation of the rough country she had come to, and the rough people to be met therein.

The storekeepers she saw through the frosted windows were dressed like storekeepers in Tillbury; and there were well dressed women on the streets, a few, at least.

But most of the men striding through the snow were as roughly dressed as her uncle, and not many were as good looking as Mr. Sherwood. Some who came out of the swinging doors of saloons staggered, and were very noisy in their speech and rude in their actions. Of course nobody spoke to Nan, or troubled her; Henry Sherwood was undoubtedly a man of standing in the settlement and highly respected.

Not far from the market place they came upon a sprawling old tavern, with a fenced yard at one side. As they approached, a sled drawn by a wild looking pair of rough, red-roan ponies, dashed out of the yard and stopped at the broad front portico of the hotel.

“Hey, Tom! What’s the matter with you?” called Uncle Henry. “Here we are!”

The driver turned a broad, good-humored face to look over his burly shoulder. Nan saw that Tom Sherwood strongly resembled his father.

“That you, Dad?” he drawled. “I’d about given you up. I didn’t want to drive down to the depot with these crazy creatures. And if I’d left ’em standing they’d have kicked Phil’s shed to pieces, I do believe. The train’s been in half an hour and more.”

“I know,” said his father. “I had a mess of words with Ged Raffer. That delayed me.”

“You ought to give him the back of your hand, and say no more about it,” declared Tom, in a tone that showed he warmed in his bosom the family grudge against the fox-faced man.

“Here’s your Cousin Nan, Tom,” said his father, without making rejoinder to the young man’s observation. “She must go into Phil’s and get warm and have a cup of hot coffee. I’ll take some in a new-fangled bottle I bought down in Chicago, so we can all have a hot drink on the way home.”

“‘Twon’t keep warm twenty miles,” said Tom.

“Yes ’twill. It’ll keep HOT for twenty miles and more. They call it a thermos bottle. It’ll keep coffee hot, or cold, for a day, just as you please.”

“Jehosaphat, Dad! What kind of a swindle’s that? How does the bottle know whether you want your drink hot or cold? Huh! Those city folks couldn’t make me believe any such thing,” objected the son.

Nan had to giggle at that, and Uncle Henry demanded: “Did you ever see such a gump? Go on down to the station and tell Abe to fling that trunk and the bags into the back of the sled. We’ll have our coffee, and get the thermos bottle filled, too, by the time you come back.”

Nan liked tom Sherwood. He was about nineteen and almost as big as his father. He was gentle with her, and showed himself to be an expert driver of the roan colts. Otherwise Nan might have been much afraid during the first mile of the journey to Pine Camp, for certainly she had never seen horses behave so before.

“Haven’t been out of the stable for a week,” explained Tom cooly as the roans plunged and danced, and “cut up didos” generally, as Uncle Henry remarked.

“We had a big fall of snow,” Tom went on to say. “Bunged us all up in the woods; so Rafe and I came in. Marm’s all right. So’s everybody else around the Camp, except Old Man Llewellen. He’s down with rheumatism, or tic-douloureux, or something. He’s always complaining.”

“I know,” said Uncle Henry, and then went on to relate for his son’s benefit the wonderful thing that had happened to his brother and his brother’s wife, and why Nan had come up into Michigan without her parents.

“We’ll be mighty proud to have her,” said Tom simply. He was only a great boy, after all, and he blushed every time he caught Nan looking at him. The girl began to feel very much grown up.

They were glad of the hot coffee, and Tom was shown how and why the mysterious bottle kept the drink hot. They only made that single halt (and only for a few minutes for the horses to drink) before reaching Pine Camp. They traveled through the snow- covered woods most of the way. There were few farms and no settlements at all until they reached Pine Camp.

The road was not well beaten and they could not have got through some of the drifts with less spirited ponies than the roans. When they crossed the long bridge over the river and swept into the village street, Nan was amazed.

Likewise, her heart sank a little. There was not a building in the place more than a story and a half in height. Most of them were slab cottages. Few yards were fenced. There were two stores, facing each other on the single street of the town, with false-fronts running up as tall as the second story would have been had there been a second story.

The roans dashed through the better beaten path of the street, with everybody along the way hailing Henry Sherwood vociferously. The giant waved his hand and shouted in reply. Nan cowered between him and Tom, on the seat, shielding her face from the flying snow from the ponies’ hoofs, though the tears in her eyes were not brought there only by the sting of the pelting she received.

Chapter XII
“HOME WAS NEVER LIKE THIS”

The roan ponies dashed through the slab settlement, past the blacksmith and wheelwright shop and the ugly red building Tom told Nan was the school, and reached a large, sprawling, unpainted dwelling on the outskirts of the village.

There were barns back of the Sherwood house; there was no fence between the yard and the road, the windows of the house stared out upon the passerby, blindless, and many of them without shades. There was such a painful newness about the building that it seemed to Nan the carpenters must have just packed their tools and gone, while the painters had not yet arrived.

“Well! Here we are,” announced Mr. Henry Sherwood, as Tom held in the still eager ponies. He stepped out and offered Nan his hand. “Home again, little girl. I reckon Kate will be mighty glad to see you, that she will.”

Nan leaped out and began to stamp her feet on the hard snow, while Uncle Henry lifted out the trunk and bags. Just as the ponies sprang away again, a door in the ugly house opened and a tall, angular woman looked forth.

“Bring her in, Hen!” she cried, in a high-pitched voice. “I want to see her.”

Nan went rather timidly up the path. Her aunt was almost as tall as her husband. She was very bony and was flat-chested and unlovely in every way. That is, so it seemed, when the homesick girl raised her eyes to Aunt Kate’s face.

That face was as brown as sole-leather, and the texture of the skin seemed leathery as well. There was a hawklike nose dominating the unfeminine face. The shallows below the cheekbones were deep, as though she had suffered the loss of her back molars. The eyebrows were straggly; the eyes themselves of a pale, watery blue; the mouth a thin line when her colorless lips were closed; and her chin was as square and determined as Uncle Henry’s own.

As Nan approached she saw something else about this unlovely woman. On her neck was a great, livid scar, of a hand’s breadth, and which looked like a scald, or burn. No attempt was made to conceal this unsightly blemish.

Indeed, there was nothing about Aunt Kate Sherwood suggesting a softening of her hard lines. Her plain, ugly print dress was cut low at the throat, and had no collar or ruff to hide the scar. Nan’s gaze was fastened on that blemish before she was half way to the door, and she could see nothing else at first.

The girl fought down a physical shudder when Aunt Kate’s clawlike hands seized her by both shoulders, and she stooped to kiss the visitor.

“Welcome, dear Nannie,” her sharp voice said, and Nan thought that, with ease, one might have heard her in the middle of the village.

But when Aunt Kate’s lips touched the girl’s forehead they were Warm, and soft as velvet. Her breath was sweet. There was a wholesome cleanliness about her person that pleased Nan. The ugly dress was spotless and beautifully laundered. She had a glimpse of the unplastered kitchen and saw a row of copper pots on the shelf over the dresser that were scoured to dazzling brightness. The boards of the floor were white as milk,. The big, patent range glistened with polish, and its nickel-work was rubbed till it reflected like a mirror.

“Welcome, my dear!” said Aunt Kate again. “I hope you will be happy while you stay with us.”

Happy! With Momsey and Papa Sherwood on the ocean, and the “little dwelling in amity” closed and deserted? Nan feared she would break down and cry.

Her Aunt Kate left her to herself a minute just then that she might overcome this weakness. Uncle Henry came up the path with the bags, smiling broadly.

“Well, old woman!” he said heartily.

“Well, old man!” she returned.

And then suddenly, Nan Sherwood had a new vision. She was used to seeing her pretty mother and her handsome father display their mutual affection; it had not seemed possible that rough, burly Uncle Henry and ugly Aunt Kate could feel the same degree of affection for each other.

Uncle Henry dropped the bags. Aunt Kate seemed to be drawn toward him when he put out his hands. Nan saw their lips meet, and then the giant gently, almost reverently, kissed the horrid scar on Aunt Kate’s neck.

“Here’s Nan!” cried the big lumberman jovially. “The pluckiest and smartest little girl in seven states! Take her in out of the cold, Kate. She’s not used to our kind of weather, and I have been watching for the frost flowers to bloom on her pretty face all the way from the forks.”

The woman drew Nan into the warm kitchen. Uncle Henry followed in a minute with the trunk.

“Where’ll I put this box, Kate?” he asked. “I reckon you’ve fixed up some cozy place for her?”

“The east room, Hen,” Aunt Kate replied. “The sun lies in there mornings. I took the new spring rocker out of the parlor, and with the white enameled bedstead you bought in Chicago, and the maple bureau we got of that furniture pedlar, and the best drugget to lay over the carpet I reckon Nannie has a pretty bedroom.”

Meanwhile Nan stared openly around the strange kitchen. The joists and rafters were uncovered by laths or plaster. Muslin, that had once been white, was tacked to the beams overhead for a ceiling. The smoke from the cookstove had stained it to a deep brown color above the stove and to a lighter, meerschaum shade in the corners.

The furniture was of the rudest plainest kind much of it evidently home-made. Uncle Henry was not unhandy with tools. She learned, later, that he and the boys had practically built the house by themselves. They were finishing it inside, as they had time. In some of the rooms the inside window and door frames were not yet in place.

There was an appetizing smell from the pots upon the stove, and the long table was set for dinner. They would not let Nan change from her traveling dress before sitting down to the table. Tom and Rafe came in and all three men washed at the long, wooden sink.

Rafe was of slighter build than his brother, and a year or more younger. He was not so shy as Tom, either; and his eyes sparkled with mischief. Nan found that she could not act “grown up” with her Cousin Rafe.

The principal dish for dinner was venison stew, served with vegetables and salt-rising bread. There was cake, too, very heavy and indigestible, and speckled with huckleberries that had been dried the fall previous. Aunt Kate was no fancy cook; but appetite is the best sauce, after all, and Nan had her share of that condiment.

During the meal there was not much conversation save about the wonderful fortune that had fallen to Nan’s mother and the voyage she and her husband were taking to Scotland to secure it. Nan learned, too, that Uncle Henry had telegraphed from Tillbury of Nan’s coming to Pine Camp, and consequently Aunt Kate was able to prepare for her.

And that the good woman had done her best to make a nest for her little niece in the ugly house, Nan was assured. After dinner she insisted upon the girl’s going to the east room to change her dress and lie down. The comparison between this great chamber and Nan’s pretty room at home was appalling.

The room had been plastered, but the plaster was of a gray color and unfinished. The woodwork was painted a dusty, brick red with mineral paint. The odd and ugly pieces of furniture horrified Nan. The drugget on the floor only served to hide a part of the still more atrociously patterned carpet. The rocking chair complained if one touched it. The top of the huge maple dresser was as bald as one’s palm.

Nan sat down on the unopened trunk when her aunt had left her. She dabbed her eyes with her handkerchief. Home certainly was never like this! She did not see how she was ever going to be able to stand it.

Chapter XIII
MARGARET LLEWELLEN

“If Momsey or Papa Sherwood knew about this they’d be awfully sorry for me,” thought Nan, still sitting on the trunk. “Such a looking place! Nothing to see but snow and trees,” for the village of Pine Camp was quite surrounded by the forest and all the visitor could see from the windows of her first-floor bedroom were stumps and trees, with deep snow everywhere.

There was a glowing wood stove in the room and a big, chintz- covered box beside it, full of “chunks.” It was warm in the room, the atmosphere being permeated with the sweet tang of wood smoke.

Nan dried her eyes. There really was not any use in crying. Momsey and Papa Sherwood could not know how bad she felt, and she really was not selfish enough to wish them to know.

“Now, Nanny Sherwood!” she scolded herself, “there’s not a particle of use of your sniveling. It won’t ‘get you anywhere,’ as Mrs. Joyce says. You’ll only make your eyes red, and the folks will see that you’re not happy here, and they will be hurt.

“Mustn’t make other folks feel bad just because I feel bad myself,” Nan decided. “Come on! Pluck up your courage!

“I know what I’ll do,” she added, literally shaking herself as she jumped off the trunk. “I’ll unpack. I’ll cover up everything ugly that I can with something pretty from Tillbury.”

Hurried as she had been her departure from the cottage on Amity Street, Nan had packed in her trunk many of those little possessions, dear to her childish heart, that had graced her bedroom. These appeared from the trunk even before she hung away her clothes in the unplastered closet where the cold wind searched through the cracks from out-of-doors. Into that closet, away back in the corner, went a long pasteboard box, tied carefully with strong cord. Nan patted it gently with her hand before she left the box, whispering:

“You dear! I wouldn’t have left you behind for anything! I won’t let them know you are here; but sometimes, when I’m sure nobody will interrupt, you shall come out.”

She spread a fringed towel over the barren top of the dresser. It would not cover it all, of course; but it made an island in a sea of emptiness.

And on the island she quickly set forth the plain little toilet- set her mother had given her on her last birthday, the manicure set that was a present from Papa Sherwood, and the several other knickknacks that would help to make the big dresser look as though “there was somebody at home,” as she whispered to herself.

She draped a scarf here, hung up a pretty silk bag there, placed Momsey’s and Papa Sherwood’s portraits in their little silver filigree easels on the mantelpiece, flanking the clock that would not run and which was held by the ugly china shepherdess with only one foot and a broken crook, the latter ornament evidently having been at one time prized by the babies of her aunt’s family, for the ring at the top was dented by little teeth.

Nothing, however, could take the curse of ugliness off the staring gray walls of the room, or from the horrible turkey-red and white canton-flannel quilt that bedecked the bed. Nan longed to spill the contents of her ink bottle over that hideous coverlet, but did not dare.

The effort to make the big east room look less like a barn made Nan feel better in her mind. It was still dreary, it must be confessed. There were a dozen things she wished she could do to improve it. There were nothing but paper shades at the windows. Even a simple scrim curtain—–

And, in thinking of this, Nan raised her eyes to one window to see a face pressed close against the glass, and two rolling, crablike eyes glaring in at her.

“Mercy!” ejaculated Nan Sherwood. “What is the matter with that child’s eyes? They’ll drop out of her head!”

She ran to the window, evidently startling the peeper quite as much as she had been startled herself. The girl, who was about Nan’s own age, fell back from the pane, stumbled in the big, men’s boots she wore, and ungracefully sprawled in the snow upon her back. She could not get away before Nan had the window open.

The sash was held up by a notched stick. Nan put her head and shoulders out into the frosty air and stared down at the prostrate girl, who stared up at her in return.

“What do you want?” Nan asked.

“Nothin’,” replied the stranger.

“What were you peeping in for?”

“To see you,” was the more frank reply.

“What for?” asked Nan.

“Ain’t you the new gal?”

“I’ve newly come here, yes,” admitted Nan.

“Well!”

“But I’m not such a sight, am I?” laughed the girl from Tillbury. “But you are, lying there in the snow. You’ll get your death of cold. Get up”

The other did so. Beside the men’s boots, which were patched and old, she wore a woollen skirt, a blouse, and a shawl over her head and shoulders. She shook the snow from her garments much as a dog frees himself from water after coming out of a pond.

“It’s too cold to talk with this window open. You’re a neighbor, aren’t you?”

The girl nodded.

“Then come in,” urged Nan. “I’m sure my aunt will let you.”

The girl shook her head in a decided negative to this proposal. “Don’t want Marm Sherwood to see me,” she said.

“Why not?”

“She told me not to come over after you come ‘ithout I put on my new dress and washed my hands and face.”

“Well!” exclaimed Nan, looking at her more closely. “You seem to have a clean face, at least.”

“Yes. But that dress she ‘gin me, my brother Bob took and put on Old Beagle for to dress him up funny. And Beagle heard a noise he thought was a fox barking and he started for the tamarack swamp, lickety-split. I expect there ain’t enough of that gingham left to tie around a sore thumb.”

Nan listened to this in both amusement and surprise. The girl was a new specimen to her.

“Come in, anyway,” she urged. “I can’t keep the window open.”

“I’ll climb in, then,” declared the other suddenly, and, suiting the action to the word, she swarmed over the sill; but she left one huge boot in the snow, and Nan, laughing delightedly, ran for the poker to fish for it, and drew it in and shut down the window.

The strange girl was warming her hands at the fire. Nan pushed a chair toward her and took one herself, but not the complaining spring rocking chair.

“Now tell me all about yourself,” the girl demanded.

“I’m Nan Sherwood, and I’ve come here to Pine Camp to stay while my father and mother have gone to Scotland.”

“I’ve heard about Scotland,” declared the girl with the very prominent eyes.

“Have you?”

“Yes. Gran’ther Llewellen sings that song. You know:

“‘Scotland’s burning! Scotland’s burning! Where, where? Where, where?
Fire! Fire! Fire! Fire!
Pour on water! Pour on water!
Fire’s out! Fire’s out!'”

Nan laughed. “I’ve heard that, too,” she said. “But it was another Scotland.” Then: “So your name is Llewellen?”

“Marg’ret Llewellen.”

“I’ve heard your grandfather is sick,” said Nan, remembering Tom’s report of the health of the community when he had met her and her uncle at Hobart Forks.

“Yes. He’s got the tic-del-rew,” declared Margaret, rather unfeelingly. “Aunt Matildy says he’s allus creakin’ round like a rusty gate-hinge.”

“Why! That doesn’t sound very nice,” objected Nan. Don’t you love your grandfather?”

“Not much,” said this perfectly frank young savage. “He’s so awfully wizzled.”

“‘Wizzled’?” repeated Nan, puzzled.

“Yes. His face is all wizzled up like a dried apple.”

“But you love your aunt Matilda?” gasped Nan.

“Well, she’s wizzled some,” confessed Margaret. Then she said: “I don’t like faces like hern and Marm Sherwood’s. I like your face. It’s smooth.”

Nan had noticed that this half-wild girl was of beautifully fair complexion herself, and aside from her pop eyes was quite petty. But she was a queer little thing.

“You’ve been to Chicago, ain’t you?” asked Margaret suddenly.

“We came through Chicago on our way up here from my home. We stayed one night there,” Nan replied.

“It’s bigger’n Pine Camp, ain’t it?”

“My goodness, yes!”

“Bigger’n the Forks?” queried Margaret doubtfully.

“Why, it is much, much bigger,” said Nan, hopeless of making one so densely ignorant understand anything of the proportions of the metropolis of the lakes.

That’s what I told Bob,” Margaret said. “He don’t believe it. Bob’s my brother, but there never was such a dunce since Adam.”

Nan had to laugh. The strange girl amused her. But Margaret said something, too, that deeply interested the visitor at Pine Camp before she ended her call, making her exit as she had her entrance, by the window.

“I reckon you never seen this house of your uncle’s before, did you?” queried Margaret at one point in the conversation.

“Oh, no. I never visited them before.”

“Didn’t you uster visit ’em when they lived at Pale Lick?”

“No. I don’t remember that they ever lived anywhere else beside here.”

“Yes, they did. I heard Gran’ther tell about it. But mebbe ’twas before you an’ me was born. It was Pale Lick., I’m sure. That’s where they lost their two other boys.”

“What two other boys?” asked Nan, amazed.

“Didn’t you ever hear tell you had two other cousins?”

“No,” said Nan.

“Well, you did,” said Margaret importantly. “And when Pale Lick burned up, them boys was burned up, too.”

“Oh!” gasped Nan, horrified.

“Lots of folks was burned. Injun Pete come near being burned up. He ain’t been right, I reckon, since. And I reckon that’s where Marm Sherwood got that scar on the side of her neck.”

Nan wondered.

Chapter XIV
AT THE LUMBER CAMP

Nan said nothing just then about her queer little visitor. Aunt Kate asked her when she came out of the east room and crossed the chill desert of the parlor to the general sitting room:

“Did you have a nice sleep, Nannie?”

“Goodness, Auntie!” laughed Nan. “I got over taking a nap in the daytime a good while ago, I guess. But you come and see what I have done. I haven’t been idle.”

Aunt Kate went and peeped into the east chamber. “Good mercy, child! It doesn’t look like the same room, with all the pretty didos,” she said. “And that’s your pretty mamma in the picture on the mantel? My! Your papa looks peaked, doesn’t he? Maybe that sea voyage they are taking will do ’em both good.”

Nan had to admit that beside her uncle and cousins her father did look “peaked.” Robust health and brawn seemed to be the two essentials in the opinion of the people of Pine Camp. Nan was plump and rosy herself and so escaped criticism.

Her uncle and aunt, and the two big boys as well, were as kind to her as they knew how to be. Nan could not escape some of the depression of homesickness during the first day or two of her visit to the woods settlement; but the family did everything possible to help her occupy her mind.

The long evenings were rather amusing, although the family knew little about any game save checkers, “fox and geese,” and “hickory, dickory, dock.” Nan played draughts with her uncle and fox and geese and the other kindergarten game with her big cousins. To see Tom, with his eyes screwed up tight and the pencil poised in his blunt, frost-cracked fingers over the slate, while he recited in a base sing-song:

“Hick’ry, dick’ry, dock
The mouse ran up the clock,
The clock struck one,
An’ down he come
Hick’ry, dick’ry, dock,”

was side-splitting. Nan laughed till she cried. Poor, simple Tom did know just what amused his little cousin so.

Rafe was by no means so slow, or so simple. Nan caught him cheating more than once at fox and geese. Rafe was a little sly, and he was continually making fun of his slow brother, and baiting him. Uncle Henry warned him:

“Now, Rafe, you’re too big for your Marm or me to shingle your pants; but Tom’s likely to lick you some day for your cutting up and I sha’n’t blame him. Just because he’s slow to wrath, don’t you get it in your head that he’s afraid, or that he can’t settle your hash in five minutes.”

Nan was greatly disturbed to hear so many references to fistic encounters and fighting of all sorts. These men of the woods seemed to be possessed of wild and unruly passions. What she heard the boys say caused her to believe that most of the spare time of the men in the lumber camps was spent in personal encounters.

“No, no, deary. They aren’t so bad as they sound,” Aunt Kate told her, comfortably. “Lots of nice men work in the camps all their lives and never fight. Look at your Uncle Henry.”

But Nan remembered the “mess of words” (as he called it) that Uncle Henry had had with Gedney Raffer on the railroad station platform at the Forks, and she was afraid that even her aunt did not look with the same horror on a quarrel that Nan herself did.

The girl from Tillbury had a chance to see just what a lumber camp was like, and what the crew were like, on the fourth day after her arrival at her Uncle Henry’s house. The weather was then pronounced settled, and word came for the two young men, Tom and Rafe, to report at Blackton’s camp the next morning, prepared to go to work. Tom drove a team which was then at the lumber camp, being cared for by the cook and foreman; Rafe was a chopper, for he had that sleight with an ax which, more than mere muscle, makes the mighty woodsman.

“Their dad’ll drive ’em over to Blackton’s early, and you can go, too,” said Aunt Kate. “That is, if you don’t mind getting up right promptly in the morning?”

“Oh, I don’t mind that,” Nan declared. “I’m used to getting up early.”

But she thought differently when Uncle Henry’s heavy hand rapped on the door of the east chamber so early the next morning that it seemed to Nan Sherwood that she had only been in bed long enough to close her eyes.

“Goodness, Uncle!” she muttered, when she found out what it meant. “What time is it?”

“Three o’clock. Time enough for you to dress and eat a snack before we start,” replied her uncle.

“Well!” said Nan to herself. “I thought the house was afire.”

Uncle Henry heard her through the door and whispered, shrilly: “Sh! Don’t let your aunt hear you say anything like that, child.”

“Like what?” queried Nan, in wonder.

“About fire. Remember!” added Uncle Henry, rather sternly, Nan thought, as he went back to the kitchen.

Then Nan remembered what the strange little girl, Margaret Llewellen, had said about the fire at Pale Lick that had burned her uncle’s former home. Nan had not felt like asking her uncle or aunt, or the boys, either, about it. The latter had probably been too young to remember much about the tragedy.

Although Nan had seen Margaret on several fleeting occasions since her first interview with the woods girl, there had been no opportunity of talking privately with her. And Margaret would only come to the window. She was afraid to tell “Marm Sherwood” how she had lost the new dress that had been given to her.

It was now as black outside Nan’s window as it could be. She lit her oil lamp and dressed swiftly, running at last through the cold parlor and sitting room into the kitchen, where the fire in the range was burning briskly and the coffee pot was on. Tom and Rafe were there comfortably getting into thick woolen socks and big lumbermen’s boots.

There was a heaping pan of Aunt Kate’s doughnuts on the table, flanked with the thick china coffee cups and deep saucers. Her uncle and the boys always poured their coffee into the saucers and blew on it to take the first heat off, then gulped it in great draughts.

Nan followed suit this morning, as far as cooling the coffee in the saucer went. There was haste. Uncle Henry had been up some time, and now he came stamping into the house, saying that the ponies were hitched in and were standing in readiness upon the barn floor, attached to the pung.

“We’ve twenty-five miles to ride, you see, Nannie,” he said. “The boys have to be at Blackton’s so’s to get to work at seven.”

They filled the thermos bottle that had so puzzled Tom, and then sallied forth. The ponies were just as eager as they had been the day Nan had come over from the Forks. She was really half afraid of them.

It was so dark that she could scarcely see the half-cleared road before them as the ponies dashed away from Pine Camp. The sky was completely overcast, but Uncle Henry declared it would break at sunrise.

Where the track had been well packed by former sleighs, the ponies’ hoofs rang as though on iron. The bits of snow that were flung off by their hoofs were like pieces of ice. The bells on the harness jingled a very pretty tune, Nan thought. She did not mind the biting cold, indeed, only her face was exposed. Uncle Henry had suggested a veil; but she wanted to see what she could.

For the first few miles it remained very dark, however. Had it not been for the snow they could not have seen objects beside the road at all. There was a lantern in the back of the pung and that flung a stream of yellow light behind them; but Uncle Henry would not have the radiance of it shot forward.

“A light just blinds you,” he said. “I’d rather trust to the roans’ sense.”

The ponies galloped for a long way, it seemed to Nan; then they came to a hill so steep that they were glad to drop to a walk. Their bodies steamed in a great cloud as they tugged the sleigh up the slope. Dark woods shut the road in on either hand. Nan’s eyes had got used to the faint light so that she could see this at least.

Suddenly she heard a mournful, long-drawn howl, seemingly at a great distance.

“Must be a farm somewhere near,” she said to Rafe, who sat beside her on the back seat.

“Nope. No farms around here, Nan,” he returned.

“But I hear a dog howl,” she told him.

Rafe listened, too. Then he turned to her with a grin on his sharp face that she did not see. “Oh, no, you don’t,” he chuckled. “That’s no dog.”

Again the howl was repeated, and it sounded much nearer. Nan realized, too, that it was a more savage sound than she had ever heard emitted by a dog.

“What is it?” she asked, speaking in a low voice to Rafe.

“Wolves!” responded her cousin maliciously. “But you mustn’t mind a little thing like that. You don’t have wolves down round where you live, I s’pose?”

Nan knew that he was attempting to plague her, so she said: “Not for pets, at least, Rafe. These sound awfully savage.”

“They are,” returned her cousin calmly.

The wolf cry came nearer and nearer. The ponies had started on a trot again at the top of the hill, and her uncle and Tom did not seem to notice the ugly cry. Nan looked back, and was sure that some great animal scrambled out of the woods and gave chase to them.

“Isn’t there some danger?” she asked Rafe again.

“Not for us,” he said. “Of course, if the whole pack gathers and catches us, then we have to do something.”

“What do you do?” demanded Nan quickly.

“Why, the last time we were chased by wolves, we happened to have a ham and a side of bacon along. So we chucked out first the one, and then the other, and so pacified the brutes till we got near town.”

“Oh!” cried Nan, half believing, half in doubt.

She looked back again. There, into the flickering light of the lantern, a gaunt, huge creature leaped. Nan could see his head and shoulders now and then as he plunged on after the sleigh, and a wickeder looking beast, she hoped never to see.

“Oh!” she gasped again, and grabbed at Rafe’s arm.

“Don’t you be afraid,” drawled that young rascal. “I reckon he hasn’t many of his jolly companions with him. If he had, of course, we’d have to throw you out to pacify him. That’s the rule
youngest and prettiest goes first—–“

“Like the ham, I s’pose?” sniffed Nan, in some anger, and just then Tom reached over the back of the front seat and seized his brother by the shoulder with a grip that made Rafe shriek with pain.

Nan was almost as startled as was Rafe. In the half-darkness Tom’s dull face blazed with anger, and he held his writhing brother as though he were a child.

“You ornery scamp!” he said, almost under his breath. “You try to scare that little girl, and I’ll break you in two!”

Nan was horrified. She begged Tom to let his brother alone. “I was only fooling her,” snarled Rafe, rubbing his injured shoulder, for Tom had the grip of a pipe wrench.

Uncle Henry never turned around at all; but he said: “If I had a gun I’d be tempted to shoot that old wolf hound of Toby Vanderwiller’s. He’s always running after sleds and yelling his head off.”

Nan was glad the creature following them was not really a wolf; but she knew she should be just as much afraid of him if she met him alone, as though he really were a wolf. However, mostly, she was troubled by the passionate nature of her two cousins. She had never seen Tom show any anger before; but it was evident that he had plenty of spirit if it were called up. And she was, secretly, proud that the slow-witted young giant should have displayed his interest in her welfare so plainly. Rafe sat and nursed his shoulder in silence for several miles.

The cold was intense. As the sky lightened along the eastern horizon it seemed to Nan as though the frost increased each moment. The bricks at their feet were getting cool; and they had already had recourse to the thermos bottle, which was now empty of the gratefully hot drink it had contained.

As the light gradually increased Nan saw Rafe watching her with sudden attention. After his recent trick she was a little afraid of Rafe. Still it did not seem possible that the reckless fellow would attempt any second piece of fooling so soon after his brother’s threat.

But suddenly Rafe yelled to his father to pull down the roans, and as the ponies stopped, he reached from the sled into a drift and secured a big handful of snow. Seizing Nan quickly around the shoulders he began to rub her cheek vigorously with the snow. Nan gasped and almost lost her breath; but she realized immediately what Rafe was about.

The frost had nipped her cheek, and her cousin had seen the white spot appear. “The rubbing stung awfully, and the girl could not keep back the tears; but she managed to repress the sobs.

“There!” exclaimed Rafe. “You are a plucky girl. I’m sorry I got some of that snow down your neck, Nan. Couldn’t help it. But it’s the only thing to do when the thermometer is thirty-two degrees below zero. Why! A fellow went outside with his ears uncovered at Droomacher’s camp one day last winter and after awhile he began to rub his ears and one of ’em dropped off just like a cake of ice.”

“Stop your lying, boy!” commanded his father. “It isn’t as bad as that, Nan. But you want to watch out for frost bite here in the woods, just the same as we had to watch out for the automobiles in crossing those main streets in Chicago.”

With a red sun rising over the low ridge of wooded ground to the east, the camp in the hollow was revealed, the smoke rising in a pillar of blue from the sheet-iron chimney of the cookhouse; smoke rising, too, from a dozen big horses being curried before the stables.

Most of the men had arrived the night before. They were tumbling out of the long, low bunkhouse now and making good use of the bright tin washbasins on the long bench on the covered porch. Ice had been broken to get the water that was poured into the basins, but the men laved their faces and their hairy arms and chests in it as though it were summer weather.

They quickly ran in for their outer shirts and coats, however, and then trooped in to the end of the cook shed where the meals were served. Tom turned away to look over his horses and see that they were all ready for the day’s work. Rafe put up the roan ponies in a couple of empty stalls and gave them a feed of oats.

Uncle Henry took Nan by the hand, and, really she felt as though she needed some support, she was so stiff from the cold, and led her into the warm room where the men were gathering for the hearty meal the cook and his helper had prepared.

The men were boisterous in their greeting of Uncle Henry, until they saw Nan. Than, some bashfully, some because of natural refinement, lowered their voices and were more careful how they spoke before the girl.

But she heard something that troubled her greatly. An old, grizzled man in a corner of the fireplace where the brisk flames leaped high among the logs, and who seemed to have already eaten his breakfast and was busily stoning an axe blade, looked up as Nan and her uncle approached, saying:

“Seen Ged Raffer lately, Hen?”

“I saw him at the Forks the other day, Toby,” Mr. Sherwood replied.

“Yaas. I heard about that,” said the old man drawlingly. “But since then?”

“No.”

“Wal, he was tellin’ me that he’d got you on the hip this time, Hen. If you as much as put your hoof over on that track he’s fighting you about, he’ll plop you in jail, that’s what he’ll do! He’s got a warrant all made out by Jedge Perkins. I seen it.”

Uncle Henry walked closer to the old man and looked down at him from his great height. “Tobe,” he said, “you know the rights of that business well enough. You know whether I’m right in the contention, or whether Ged’s right. You know where the old line runs. Why don’t you tell?”

“Oh, mercy me!” croaked the old man, and in much haste. “I ain’t goin’ to git into no land squabble, no, sir! You kin count me out right now!” And he picked up his axe, restored the whetstone to its sheath on the wall, and at once went out of the shack.

Chapter XV
A CAT AND HER KITTENS

That was a breakfast long to be remembered by Nan Sherwood, not particularly because of its quality, but for the quantity served. She had never seen men like these lumbermen eat before, save for the few days she had been at Uncle Henry’s house.

Great platters of baked beans were placed on the table, flanked by the lumps of pork that had seasoned them. Fried pork, too, was a “main-stay” on the bill-of-fare. The deal table was graced by no cloth or napery of any kind. There were heaps of potatoes and onions fried together, and golden cornbread with bowls of white gravy to ladle over it.

After riding twenty-five miles through such a frosty air, Nan would have had to possess a delicate appetite indeed not to enjoy these viands. She felt bashful because of the presence of so many rough men; but they left her alone for the most part, and she could listen and watch.

“Old Toby Vanderwiller tell you what Ged’s been blowin’ about, Henry?” asked one of the men at the table, busy ladling beans into his mouth with a knife, a feat that Nan thought must be rather precarious, to say the least.

“Says he’s going to jail me if I go on to the Perkins Tract,” growled Uncle Henry, with whom the matter was doubtless a sore subject.

“Yaas. But he says more’n that,” said this tale bearer.

“Oh, Ged says a whole lot besides his prayers,” responded Uncle Henry, good-naturedly. Perhaps he saw they were trying to bait him.

“Wal, ’tain’t nothin’ prayerful he’s sayin’,” drawled the first speaker, after a gulp of coffee from his thick china cup. “Some of the boys at Beckett’s, you know, they’re a tough crowd, was riggin’ him about what you said to him down to the Forks, and Ged spit out that he’d give a lump of money to see you on your back.”

“Huh!” grunted Uncle Henry.

“And some of ’em took him up, got the old man right down to cases.”

“That so?” asked Mr. Sherwood curiously. “What’s Ged going to do? Challenge me to a game of cat’s cradle? Or does he want to settle the business at draughts, three best out o’ five?”

“Now you know dern well, Hen,” said the other, as some of the listeners laughed loudly at Mr. Sherwood’s sally, “that old Ged Raffer will never lock horns with you ‘ceptin’ it’s in court, where he’ll have the full pertection of the law, and a grain the best of it into the bargain.”

“Well, I s’pose that’s so,” admitted Nan’s uncle, rather gloomily, she thought.

“So, if Beckett’s crowd are int’rested in bumping you a whole lot, you may be sure Ged’s promised ’em real money for it.”

“Pshaw!” exclaimed Uncle Henry. “You’re fooling now. He hasn’t hired any half-baked chip-eaters and Canucks to try and beat me up?”

“I ain’t foolin’.”

“Pshaw!”

“You kin ‘pshaw’ till the cows come home,” cried the other heatedly. “I got it straight.”

“Who from?”

“Sim Barkis, him what’s cookin’ for Beckett’s crew.”

“Good man, Sim. Never caught him in a lie yet. You are beginning to sound reasonable, Josh,” and Mr. Sherwood put down his knife and fork and looked shrewdly at his informant. “Now tell me,” he said, “how much is Sim going to get for helping to pay Ged Raffer’s debts?”

“Har!” ejaculated the other man. “You know Sim ain’t that kind.”

“All right, then. How much does he say the gang’s going to split between ’em after they’ve done me up brown according to contract?” scoffed Uncle Henry, and Nan realized that her giant relative had not the least fear of not being able to meet any number of enemies in the open.

“Sim come away before they got that far. Of course Ged didn’t say right out in open meetin’ that he’d give so many dollars for your scalp. But he got ’em all int’rested, and it wouldn’t surprise him, so Sim said, if on the quiet some of those plug- uglies had agreed to do the job.”

Nan shuddered, and had long since stopped eating. But nobody paid any attention to her at the moment.

Uncle Henry drawled: “They’re going to do the hardest day’s job for the smallest pay that they ever did on this Michigan Peninsula. I’m much obliged to you, Josh, for telling me. I never go after trouble, as you fellows all know; but I sha’n’t try to dodge it, either.”

He picked up his knife and fork and went quietly on with his breakfast. But Nan could not eat any more at all.

It seemed to the gently nurtured girl from Tillbury as though she had fallen in with people from another globe. Even the mill- hands, whom Bess Harley so scorned, were not like these great, rough fellows whose minds seemed continually to be fixed upon battle. At least, she had never seen or heard such talk as had just now come to her ears.

The men began, one by one, to push back the benches and go out. There was a great bustle of getting under way as the teams started for the woods, and the choppers, too, went away. Tom hurried to start his big pair of dapple grays, and Nan was glad to bundle up again and run out to watch the exodus.

They were a mighty crew. As Uncle Henry had said, the Big Woods did not breed runts.

Remembering the stunted, quick-moving, chattering French Canadians, and the scattering of American-born employees among them, who worked in the Tillbury mills, Nan was the more amazed by the average size of these workmen. The woodsmen were a race of giants beside the narrow-shouldered, flat-chested pygmies who toiled in the mills.

Tom strode by with his timber sled. Rafe leaped on to ride and Tom playfully snapped his whiplash at him. Nan was glad to see that the two brothers smiled again at each other. Their recent tiff seemed to be forgotten.

Some of the choppers had already gone on ahead to the part of the tract where the marked trees were being felled. Now the pluck, pluck, pluck of the axe blows laid against the forest monarchs, reached the girl’s ears. She thought the flat stuttering sound of the axes said “pluck” very plainly, and that that was just the word they should say.

“For it does take lots of pluck to do work of this kind,” Nan confided to her uncle, who walked up and down on the porch smoking an after-breakfast pipe.

“Yes. No softies allowed on the job,” said he, cheerfully. “Some of the boys may be rough and hard nuts to crack; but it is necessary to have just such boys or we couldn’t get out the timber.”

“But they want to fight so much!” gasped Nan.

“Sho!” said her uncle, slowly. “It’s mostly talk. They feel the itch for hard work and hard play, that’s all. You take lively, full-muscled animals, and they are always bucking and quarreling trying to see which one is the best. Take two young, fat steers they’ll lock horns at the drop of a hat. It’s animal spirits, Nan. They feel that they’ve got to let off steam. Where muscle and pluck count for what they do in the lumber camps, there’s bound to be more or less ructions.”

Perhaps this might be; but Nan was dreadfully sorry, nevertheless, that Uncle Henry had this trouble with Mr. Gedney Raffer. The girl feared that there had been something besides “letting off steam” in the challenge her uncle had thrown down to his enemy, or to the men that enemy could hire to attack him.

The timber sledges soon began to drift back, for some of the logs had been cut before the big storm, and had only to be broken out of the drifts and rolled upon the sleds with the aid of the men’s canthooks. It was a mystery at first to Nan how they could get three huge logs, some of them three feet in diameter at the butt, on to the sled; two at the bottom and one rolled upon them, all being fastened securely with the timber-chain and hook.

How the horses strained in their collars to start the mighty load! But once started, the runners slipped along easily enough, even through the deep snow, packing the compressible stuff in one passage as hard as ice. Nan followed in this narrow track to the very bank of the river where the logs were heaped in long windrows, ready to be launched into the stream when the waters should rise at the time of the spring freshet.

Tom managed his team alone, and unloaded alone, too. It was marvelous (so Nan thought) that her cousin could start the top log with the great canthook, and guide it as it rolled off the sled so that it should lie true with timbers that had been piled before. The strain of his work made him perspire as though it were midsummer. He thrust the calks on his bootsoles into the log and the shreds of bark and small chips flew as he stamped to get a secure footing for his work. Then he heaved like a giant, his shoulders humping under the blue jersey he wore, and finally the log turned. Once started, it was soon rolled into place.

Nan ran into the cook shed often to get warm. Her uncle was busy with the boss of the camp, so she had nobody but the cook and his helper to speak to for a time. Therefore it was loneliness that made her start over the half-beaten trail for the spot where the men were at work, without saying a word to anybody.

None of the teams had come by for some time; but she could hear faintly the sound of the axes and the calling of the workmen to each other and their sharp commands to the horses.

She went away from the camp a few hundred yards and then found that the trail forked. One path went down a little hill, and as that seemed easy to descend, Nan followed it into a little hollow. It seemed only one sled had come this way and none of the men were here. The voices and axes sounded from higher up the ridge.

Suddenly she heard something entirely different from the noise of the woodsmen. It was the snarling voice of a huge cat and almost instantly Nan sighted the creature which stood upon a snow-covered rock beside the path. It had tasseled ears, a wide, wicked “smile,” bristling whiskers, and fangs that really made Nan tremble, although she was some yards from the bobcat.

As she believed, from what her cousins had told her, bobcats are not usually dangerous. They never seek trouble with man, save under certain conditions; and that is when a mother cat has kittens to defend.

This was a big female cat, and, although the season was early, she had littered and her kittens, three of them, were bedded in a heap of leaves blown by the wind into a hollow tree trunk.

The timberman driving through the hollow had not seen the bobcat and her three blind babies; but he had roused the mother cat and she was now all ready to spring at intruders.

That Nan was not the person guilty of disturbing her repose made no difference to the big cat. She saw the girl standing, affrighted and trembling, in the path and with a ferocious yowl and leap she crossed the intervening space and landed in the snow within almost arm’s reach of the fear-paralyzed girl.

Chapter XVI
“INJUN PETE”

Nan Sherwood could not cry out, though she tried. She opened her lips only to find her throat so constricted by fear that she could not utter a sound. Perhaps her sudden and utter paralysis was of benefit at the moment, after all; for she could not possibly have escaped the infuriated lynx by running.

The creature’s own movements were hampered by the deep drift in which she had landed. The soft snow impeded the cat and, snarling still, she whirled around and around like a pinwheel to beat a firmer foundation from which to make her final spring at her victim.

Nan, crouching, put her mittened hands before her face. She saw no chance for escape and could not bear to see the vicious beast leap at her again. “Momsey! Papa Sherwood!” she thought, rather than breathed aloud.

Then, down the hill toward her, plunged a swift body. She rather felt the new presence than saw it. The cat yowled again, and spit. There was the impact of a clubbed gun upon the creature’s head.

“Sacre bleu! Take zat! And zat!” cried a sharp voice, between the blows that fell so swiftly. The animal’s cries changed instantly from rage to pain. Nan opened her eyes in time to see the maddened cat flee swiftly. She bounded to the big tree and scrambled up the trunk and out upon the first limb. There she crouched, over the place where her kittens were hidden, yowling and licking her wounds. There was blood upon her head and she licked again and again a broken forefoot between her yowls of rage and pain.

But Nan was more interested just then in the person who had flown to her rescue so opportunely. He was not one of the men from the camp, or anybody whom she had ever seen before.

He was not a big man, but was evidently very strong and active. His dress was of the most nondescript character, consisting mainly of a tattered fur cap, with a woolen muffler tied over his ears; a patched and parti-colored coat belted at the waist with a frayed rope. His legs disappeared into the wide tops of a pair of boots evidently too big for him, with the feet bundled in bagging so that he could walk on top of the snow, this in lieu of regular snowshoes.

His back was toward Nan and he did not turn to face her as he said:

“Be not afeared, leetle Man’zelle. Le bad chat is gone. We shall now do famous-lee, eh? No be afeared more.”

“No, no, sir,” gasped Nan, trying to be brave. “Won’t, won’t it come back?”

“Nev-air!” cried the man, with a flourish of the gun which was a rusty-barreled old weapon, perhaps more dangerous at the butt end than at its muzzle. “Ze chat only fear for her babies. She have zem in dat tree. We will go past leeving zem streectly alone, eh?”

“No!” cried Nan hastily. “I’m going back to the camp. I didn’t know there were such dangerous things as that in these woods.”

“Ah! You are de strange leetle Mam’zelle den?” responded the man. “You do not know ze Beeg Woods?”

“I guess I don’t know anything about this wilderness,” confessed Nan. “My uncle brought me to the camp up yonder this morning, and I hope he’ll go right home again. It’s awful!”

“Eet seem terrifying to ze leetle Mam’zelle because she is unused eh? Me! I be terrified at ze beeg city where she come from, p’r’aps. Zey tell Pete ’bout waggings run wizout horses, like stea’mill. Ugh! No wanter see dem. Debbil in ’em,” and he laughed, not unpleasantly, making a small joke of the suggestion.

Indeed his voice, now that the sharpness of excitement had gone out of it, was a very pleasant voice. The broken words he used assured Nan that his mother tongue must be French. He was probably one of the “Canucks” she had heard her cousins speak of. French Canadians were not at all strange to Nan Sherwood, for in Tillbury many of the mill hands were of that race.

But she thought it odd that this man kept his face studiously turned from her. Was he watching the bobcat all the time? Was the danger much more serious than he would own?

“Why don’t you look at me?” cried the girl, at length. “I’m awfully much obliged to you for coming to help me as you did. And my uncle will want to thank you I am sure. Won’t you tell me your name?”

The man was silent for a moment. Then, when he spoke, his voice was lower and there was an indescribably sad note in it.

“Call me ‘Injun Pete’, zat me. Everybody in de beeg Woods know Injun Pete. No odder name now. Once ze good Brodders at Aramac goin’ make scholar of Pete, make heem priest, too, p’r’aps. He go teach among he’s mudder’s people. Mudder Micmac, fadder wild Frinchman come to dees lakeshore. But nev-air can Pete be Teacher, be priest. Non, non! Jes’ Injun Pete.”

Nan suddenly remembered what little Margaret Llewellen had said about the fire at Pale Lick, and “Injun Pete.” The fact that this man kept his face turned from her all this time aroused her suspicion. She was deeply, deeply grateful to him for what he had just done for her, and, naturally, she enlarged in her mind the peril in which she had been placed.

Margaret had suggested this unfortunate half-breed was “not right in his head” because of the fire which had disfigured him. But he spoke very sensibly now, it seemed to Nan; very pitifully, too, about his blasted hopes of a clerical career. She said, quietly:

“I expect you know my uncle and his family, Pete. He is Mr. Sherwood of Pine Camp.”

“Ah! Mis-tair Hen Sherwood! I know heem well,” admitted the man. “He nice-a man ver’ kind to Injun Pete.”

“I’d like to have you look at me, please,” said Nan, still softly. “You see, I want to know you again if we meet. I am very grateful.”

Pete waved her thanks aside with a royal gesture. “Me! I be glad to be of use, oh, oui! Leetle Man’zelle mus’ not make mooch of nottin’, eh?”

He laughed again, but he did not turn to look at her. Nan reached out a tentative hand and touched his sleeve. “Please, Mr. Pete,” she said. “I, I want to see you. I, I have heard something about your having been hurt in a fire. I am sure you must think yourself a more hateful sight than you really are.”

A sob seemed to rise in the man’s throat, and his shoulders shook. He turned slowly and looked at her for a moment over his shoulder. Then he went swiftly away across the snow (for the bobcat had disappeared into her lair) and Nan stumbled back up the trail toward the camp, the tears blinding her own eyes.

The disfigured face of the half-breed HAD been a shock to her. She could never speak of it afterward. Indeed, she could not tell Uncle Henry about her meeting with the lynx, and her rescue she shrank so from recalling Injun Pete’s disfigured face.

Chapter XVII
SPRING IN THE BIG WOODS

That visit to the lumber camp was memorable for Nan Sherwood in more ways than one. Her adventure with the lynx she kept secret from her relatives, because of the reason given in the previous chapter. But there was another incident that marked the occasion to the girl’s mind, and that was the threat of Gedney Raffer, reported to her Uncle Henry.

Nan thought that such a bad man as Raffer appeared to be would undoubtedly carry out his threat. He had offered money to have Mr. Sherwood beaten up, and the ruffians he had bribed would doubtless be only too eager to earn the reward.

To tell the truth, for weeks thereafter, Nan never saw a rough- looking man approach the house on the outskirts of Pine Camp, without fearing that here was coming a ruffian bent on her uncle’s injury.

That Uncle Henry seemed quite to have forgotten the threat only made Nan more keenly alive to his danger. She dared not discuss the matter with Aunt Kate, for Nan feared to worry that good woman unnecessarily. Besides, having been used to hiding from her own mother all unpleasant things, the girl naturally displayed the same thoughtfulness for Aunt Kate.

For, despite Mrs. Henry Sherwood’s bruskness and masculine appearance, Nan learned that there were certain matters over which her aunt showed extreme nervousness.

For instance, she was very careful of the lamps used in the house she insisted upon cleaning and caring for them herself; she would not allow a candle to be used, because it might be overturned; and she saw to it herself that every fire, even the one in Nan’s bedroom, was properly banked before the family retired at night.

Nan had always in mind what Uncle Henry said about mentioning fire to Aunt Kate; so the curious young girl kept her lips closed upon the subject. But she certainly was desirous of knowing about that fire, so long ago, at Pale Lick, how it came about; if Aunt Kate had really got her great scar there; and if it was really true that two members of her uncle’s family had met their death in the conflagration.

She tried not to think at all of Injun Pete. That was too terrible!

With all her heart, Nan wished she might do something that would really help Uncle Henry solve his problem regarding the timber rights on the Perkins Tract. The very judge who had granted the injunction forbidding Mr. Sherwood to cut timber on the tract was related to the present owners of the piece of timberland; and the tract had been the basis of a feud in the Perkins family for two generations.

Many people were more or less interested in the case and they came to the Sherwood home and talked excitedly about it in the big kitchen. Some advised an utter disregard of the law. Others were evidently minded to increase the trouble between Raffer and Uncle Henry by malicious tale-bearing.

Often Nan thought of what Uncle Henry had said to old Toby Vanderwiller. She learned that Toby was one of the oldest settlers in this part of the Michigan Peninsula, and in his youth had been a timber runner, that is, a man who by following the surveyors’ lines on a piece of timber, and weaving back and forth across it, can judge its market value so nearly right that his employer, the prospective timber merchant, is able to bid intelligently for the so-called “stumpage” on the tract.

Toby was still a vigorous man save when that bane of the woodsman, rheumatism, laid him by the heels. He had a bit of a farm in the tamarack swamp. Once, being laid up by his arch enemy, with his joints stiffened and muscles throbbing with pain, Toby had seen the gaunt wolf of starvation, more terrible than any timber wolf, waiting at his doorstone. His old wife and a crippled grandson were dependent on Toby, too.

Thus in desperate straits Toby Vanderwiller had accepted help from Gedney Raffer. It was a pitifully small sum Raffer would advance upon the little farm; but it was sufficient to put Toby in the usurer’s power. This was the story Nan learned regarding Toby. And Uncle Henry believed that Toby, with his old-time knowledge of land-boundaries, could tell, if he would, which was right in the present contention between Mr. Sherwood and Gedney Raffer.

These, and many other subjects of thought, kept the mind of Nan Sherwood occupied during the first few weeks of her sojourn at Pine Camp. She had, too, to keep up her diary that she had begun for Bess Harley’s particular benefit. Every week she sent off to Tillbury a bulky section of this report of her life in the Big woods. It was quite wonderful how much there proved to be to write about. Bess wrote back, enviously, that never did anything interesting, by any possibility, happen, now that Nan was away from Tillbury. The town was “as dull as ditch water.” She, Bess, lived only in hopes of meeting her chum at Lakeview Hall the next September.

This hope Nan shared. But it all lay with the result of Momsey’s and Papa Sherwood’s visit to Scotland and Emberon Castle. And, Nan thought, it seemed as though her parents never would even reach that far distant goal.

They had taken a slow ship for Momsey’s benefit and the expected re-telegraphed cablegram was looked for at the Forks for a week before it possibly could come.

It was a gala day marked on Nan’s calendar when Uncle Henry, coming home from the railroad station behind the roan ponies, called to her to come out and get the message. Momsey and Papa Sherwood had sent it from Glasgow, and were on their way to Edinburgh before Nan received the word. Momsey had been very ill a part of the way across the ocean, but went ashore in improved health.

Nan was indeed happy at this juncture. Her parents were safely over their voyage on the wintry ocean, so a part of her worry of mind was lifted.

Meanwhile spring was stealing upon Pine Camp without Nan’s being really aware of the fact. Uncle Henry had said, back in Chicago, that “the back of winter was broken”; but the extreme cold weather and the deep snow she had found in the Big Woods made Nan forget that March was passing and timid April was treading on his heels.

A rain lasting two days and a night washed the roads of snow and turned the fast disappearing drifts to a dirty yellow hue. In sheltered fence corners and nooks in the wood, the grass lifted new, green blades, and queer little Margaret Llewellen showed Nan where the first anemones and violets hid under last year’s drifted leaves.

The river ice went out with a rush after it had rained a few hours; after that the “drives” of logs were soon started. Nan went down to the long, high bridge which spanned the river and watched the flood carry the logs through.

At first they came scatteringly, riding the foaming waves end-on, and sometimes colliding with the stone piers of the bridge with sufficient force to split the unhewn timbers from end to end, some being laid open as neatly as though done with axe and wedge.

When the main body of the drive arrived, however, the logs were like herded cattle, milling in the eddies, stampeded by a cross- current, bunching under the bridge arches like frightened steers in a chute. And the drivers herded the logs with all the skill of cowboys on the range.

Each drive was attended by its own crew, who guarded the logs on either bank, launching those that shoaled on the numerous sandbars or in the shallows, keeping them from piling up in coves and in the mouths of estuaries, or creeks, some going ahead at the bends to fend off and break up any formation of the drifting timbers that promised to become a jam.

Behind the drive floated the square bowed and square sterned chuck-boat, which carried cook and provisions for the men. A “boom”, logs chained together, end to end, was thrown out from one shore of the wide stream at night, and anchored at its outer end. Behind this the logs were gathered in an orderly, compact mass and the men could generally get their sleep, save for the watchman; unless there came a sudden rise of water in the night.

It was a sight long to be remembered, Nan thought, when the boom was broken in the morning. Sometimes an increasing current piled the logs up a good bit. It was a fear-compelling view the girl had of the river on one day when she went with Uncle Henry to see the first drive from Blackton’s camp. Tom was coming home with his team and was not engaged in the drive. But reckless Rafe was considered, for his age, a very smart hand on a log drive.

The river had risen two feet at the Pine Camp bridge overnight. It was a boiling brown flood, covered with drifting foam and debris. The roar of the freshet awoke Nan in her bed before daybreak. So she was not surprised to see the river in such a turmoil when, afer a hasty breakfast, she and Uncle Henry walked beside the flood.

“They started their drive last night,” Uncle Henry said, “and boomed her just below the campsite. We’ll go up to Dead Man’s Bend and watch her come down. There is no other drive betwixt us and Blackton’s.”

“Why is it called by such a horrid name, Uncle?” asked Nan.

“What, honey?” he responded.

“That bend in the river.”

“Why, I don’t know rightly, honey-bird. She’s just called that. Many a man’s lost his life there since I came into this part of the country, that’s a fact. It’s a dangerous place,” and Nan knew by the look on her uncle’s face that he was worried.

Chapter XVIII
AT DEAD MAN’S BEND

Nan and her uncle came out on the bluff that overlooked the sharp bend which hid the upper reaches of the river from Pine Camp. Across the stream, almost from bank to bank, a string of gravel flats made a barrier that all the rivermen feared.

Blackton was no careless manager, and he had a good foreman in Tim Turner. The big boss had ridden down to the bend in a mud- splashed buggy, and was even prepared to take a personal hand in the work, if need be. The foreman was coming down the river bank on the Pine Camp side of the stream, watching the leading logs of the drive, and directing the foreguard. Among the latter Nan spied Rafe.

“There he is, Uncle!” she cried. “Oh! He’s jumped out on that log, see?”

“He’s all right, girl, he’s all right,” said Uncle Henry comfortingly. “Rafe’s got good calks on his boots.”

The boy sprang from log to log, the calks making the chips fly, and with a canthook pushed off a log that had caught and swung upon a small bank. He did it very cleverly, and was back again, across the bucking logs, in half a minute.

Below, the foreman himself was making for a grounded log, one of the first of the drive. It had caught upon some snag, and was swinging broadside out, into the stream. Let two or three more timbers catch with it and there would be the nucleus of a jam that might result in much trouble for everybody.

Tim Turner leaped spaces of eight and ten feet between the logs, landing secure and safe upon the stranded log at last. With the heavy canthook he tried to start it.