<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_III" id="CHAPTER_III">CHAPTER III.</SPAN><br/> <small>ALL ABOUT A ROW.</small></h2></div>
<p class="cap">The guests of the Ossokosee had the
pleasure of seeing a bright, still day for
the regatta. By nine o’clock the shady road
leading to the lake began to echo with carriages.
In the little wind that stirred flags
swayed down in the village and from the
staffs on the Ossokosee and the little boat-house.
As for the pretentious Victors’ head-quarters,
they were flaunting with streamers
and bunting to an extent that must have severely
taxed the treasury.</p>
<p>“I don’t see where so many more people than
usual have come from!” exclaimed Mr. Marcy
to Gerald and Mrs. and Miss Davidson as they
drove along toward the starting-point. And,
in truth, for a race between two crews of lads,
and of such local interest, the crowd was flattering.
Country wagons lined the bank, in
which sat the farmers of the district, with their
wives and daughters gorgeously arrayed in<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[42]</SPAN></span>
pink and blue and white calico gowns; and
bunches of roses and dahlias were every-where
about them.</p>
<p>“There are Mr. Wooden and Mrs. Wooden,
with Miss Beauchamp,” exclaimed Gerald,
nodding his head vigorously to the group.</p>
<p>Fashionable carriages were not few, filled
with ladies in gay colors, who chatted with
knickerbockered young men, or asked all sorts
of questions of their husbands and brothers
and cousins about the two crews.</p>
<p>“Those must be regular parties from the
other hotels about here,” said Miss Davidson,
“made up expressly to drive over here this
morning. Well, well!”</p>
<p>“Yes,” Mr. Marcy assented, “I never expected
to see such a general turning out at
one of the Ossokosee regattas. Do notice,
too, how the shores over there are covered
with people, walking and sitting! Bless my
heart! I hope that Phil and his friends are—h’m—not
going to be so badly beaten, when
there are so many hundreds of eyes to see it!
Never was such a fuss made over our race before,
especially a race so late in the season.”</p>
<p>Mr. Marcy jumped out. They were near<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[43]</SPAN></span>
the Ossokosee boat-house. After he had seen
how the oarsmen who bore the name and
credit of his hotel were feeling over their coming
struggle he was to get into a good-sized
barge with several other gentlemen, one of
them being the starter and umpire.</p>
<p>Gerald was looking at him with the full
power of his blue eyes as Mr. Marcy stood directing
the driver where to station the carriage
for Mrs. Davidson and her daughter. The
boy’s glance was so eloquent that the proprietor
of the Ossokosee House exclaimed:</p>
<p>“Why, Gerald, what was I thinking of?
You come along with me if you choose to.
That boat is apt to be crowded, but you’re a
little fellow and wont add much to the party.
I guess I can have you squeezed in.”</p>
<p>So the delighted boy followed his elderly
friend through the grass toward the boat-house
and the judge’s barge.</p>
<p>“Shall I see Philip?” he asked, as they advanced
to the inclosure. A long line of stragglers
hung about the gate leading down to the
Ossokosees’ quarters. The village constable
good-naturedly kept them from entrance.</p>
<p>“Yes; come right along,” Mr. Marcy said,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[44]</SPAN></span>
taking Gerald’s hand. They hurried down to
the rear door together.</p>
<p>“Hurrah! there’s Mr. Marcy,” was the exclamation,
as they were allowed to step in.
The six boys, Philip and Davidson foremost,
were already in full rig and busy over the
long shell just about to be easily deposited in
the water by the side of the float. Mr. Marcy
and a couple of his friends saw this feat accomplished
safely. Others of the barge-party
walked in. The excitement became general.
All the oarsmen talked at once, gave opinions
of the state of the water, bewildered Mr. Lorraine
or Mr. Marcy with questions, and hurried
about the dim little boat-house to attend
to the usual last things and one.</p>
<p>“Well, Frank, what do you think?” inquired
Gerald of Davidson, with a face of almost
painful interest as he glanced first at
Touchtone, then at him.</p>
<p>“He thinks just what I think, Gerald,” interrupted
Philip, pulling the crimson silk handkerchief
lower across his forehead, “and that
is—”</p>
<p>“That the Victors are bigger men with a
lighter boat, and have beaten us for three years<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[45]</SPAN></span>
running,” Davidson said, quickly; “but that
the weather is perfect, that the water is as
smooth as if we’d taken a flat-iron to it, and
that the Victors don’t pull together after the
style the Ossokosees do. Look at them now
out yonder as they come around the point
again! See that second fellow! If he don’t
keep better stroke he can put the whole crew
out!”</p>
<p>Twenty minutes later Gerald was seated out
under the awning of the barge, sandwiched
between Mr. Lorraine and Captain Kent. He
waited in feverish impatience for the grand
moment. The umpire, a Mr. Voss, from the
next county, was arranging some matters between
Mr. Marcy and the supporters of the
Victors. There were to be three races; but,
the second one being between two members of
the Victors, and the last an informal affair between
four of the village lads in working-boats,
the special rivalry was not eclipsed. Gerald’s
heart beat faster and faster as the crowd along
the shores cheered six figures in crimson that
glided quietly to their post of departure on
the east; accompanied by the second shout
for the yellow-filleted Victors who pulled<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[46]</SPAN></span>
proudly across the open water and rested,
like pegs driven into its bed, opposite their
rivals.</p>
<p>“Looks as if it would be an uncommon good
race for both of ’em!” Gerald heard some one
near him say. But Mr. Voss was standing up
and waving his hand.</p>
<p>“Are you ready?”</p>
<p>“Ready!” from the right.</p>
<p>“Are you read-y?”</p>
<p>“Ready!” from the left.</p>
<p>“Go!”</p>
<p>Bang! And the echoes clanged over the
low hills and startled Farmer Wooden’s skittish
colt as Mr. Voss dropped his arm with the
smoking pistol. Neck and neck, with a quick,
snapping leap of the oars and a splendid start
with which neither crew could quarrel, the
slender, shining shells shot rod after rod up
the lake.</p>
<p>Babel began at once—cries, cheers, applause.
“Victors! Victors!” “Go it, Ossokosee!”
“That’s it; stick to the lead!” “Ossokosee
forever!”</p>
<p>“That aint no bad send-off for the Ossokosees!”
exclaimed Farmer Wooden to his<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[47]</SPAN></span>
wagon-load as the swift flight of the boats
made them diminish in size every few seconds.</p>
<p>“No,” said Miss Beauchamp, with her head
full of Philip and of his satisfaction if there
should be any bettering of the Ossokosees’
record; “but those strong-armed fellows in the
Victors’ boat are holding off, Mr. Wooden.
Don’t you see that? They’re going to give a
tremendous spurt after that stake-boat is
turned.”</p>
<p>By this time the road that ran parallel with
the course was in a whirl of wheels. Dozens
of carriages dashed up after the boats, to lose
no yard of the contest. The Ossokosees were,
in fact, a little in advance of the Victors. But,
as Miss Beauchamp had supposed, that was
evidently the policy of the older champions.
They darted along well to the left of their
rivals and kept carefully outside of a certain
long strip of eel-grass where a danger-signal
had been driven, and with their rapid pulling
they were already beginning to lessen the number
of boat-lengths between them and their opponents.
Every body having taken it for granted
that the excitement of this race was not who
should beat, but how honorably the hotel<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[48]</SPAN></span>
faction should be beaten, there arose all along
the mile of skirting land a buzz and then ragged
cheers as people began all at once to discover
the new possibility of the Victors being
dishonored for once in their proud career.</p>
<p>“Hi! Look at that, I tell you, Fisher!”
cried Mr. Marcy, as enthusiastic as Gerald himself,
when he made up his mind that up there
toward that stake-boat the Victors now began
to pull with might and main. “Our boys—why,
our boys are working like Trojans! And
those chaps have found it out!”</p>
<p>“Hurrah! They’re ’round the stake-boat
first, as true as I live!” said somebody else in
the barge.</p>
<p>Gerald was standing balanced on the outermost
edge of a seat, with Mr. Marcy’s arm
about him to keep him in any kind of equilibrium.
His eyes sparkled like stars as he held
up his field-glass, and his color came and went
with every cry he heard. It was for Philip’s
sake; all for Philip! It was wonderful, by the
bye, how many persons watched that race that
morning, giving one thought for the Ossokosees
in general and two to Philip Touchtone!</p>
<p>“Yes, they are!” exclaimed another. “Gracious!<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[49]</SPAN></span>
what ails the Victors? Pull, you sluggards,
pull, I say! Those boys are gaining on
you every second with that stroke. It must
be nearly forty.” Louder and louder rang the
clamor from all sides as the stake-boat was
left behind by the belated Victors, not after
all so much in arrear of the Ossokosees.
Every body knew that the most remarkable
“finish” ever to be dreamed of for Ossokosee
Lake was begun. The carriages rolled quicker
and quicker back to the goal, and began to pack
together in the open meadow, abreast of the
judge’s barge. Shouting boys and men ran
frantically along the road and side-paths, waving
hats. From the knots of on-lookers, the
crowded Victors’ club-house, the private boats
moored by the ledges, fluttered handkerchiefs,
veils, and shawls in the hands of standing spectators;
and every thing increased in intensity,
of course, as the two glittering objects flashed
forward nearer, nearer, until the bending backs
of the six rowers in each could be seen, crimson
and yellow—and the panic-struck yellow
sweeping onward last!</p>
<p>“O-h-h-h! Victors! Victors!” rang the
echoes on the left, where most of the village<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[50]</SPAN></span>
partisans lined the wagon. “Ossokosees!”
“Now, then, Ossokosees! Give ’em your
best!” “Good for you! That’s right, don’t
let ’em make it!” “Touchtone! O, Touchtone!”
“Go it, Dater, that’s the way to give
it to ’em!” “One good spurt now, Victors,
and you can have it your own way!” “Bravo,
Ossokosee!” “Oss-o-ko-see!” And then mingled
with all this voicing of favorites, began
the patter, at first gentle, but strengthening, of
thousands of hands clapping together in the
open air, and whips and sticks pounded on
wagon-bottoms, and parasols clattered with
them. O, it was a great finish; and—sweep—sweep—as
the now desperate Victors flew down
it was clear that Philip and his friends were
not yet nearly overtaken, and that with a hope
that gave each arm the power of steel the
Ossokosees were bound to win that race if
they could hold two minutes longer their
advantage.</p>
<p>Gerald let fall his hand. Mr. Marcy, Mr.
Lorraine, Mr. Voss, and the others were leaning
forward in strong hope; and, as to the
friends of the Victors, in courage till the last.
The stroke of the Ossokosees was weakening a<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[51]</SPAN></span>
trifle now, just at the unluckiest climax. In
fact, the six had never pulled so fast in their
lives as something had enabled them to do to-day.
Their flesh and blood and wind were
likely to fail at any instant now, in revenge.
If Davidson should faint, or McKay come within
a tenth of catching the smallest crab, why,
then the charm must break and all end in
defeat.</p>
<p>Many times since that day Gerald Saxton
has said, smiling, “Well, I shall never forget
the first time I knew that praying for a thing
meant that you wanted it with all your heart
and being! I prayed over a boat-race once,
when I was a little boy.”</p>
<p>“Now, then, steady with that match!”
called Mr. Voss to the men in charge of the
salute to greet either winners and signal the
race’s end. “They’ve got it! They’ve got it,
sure!” cried Mr. Marcy, squeezing Gerald till
the little boy wondered if his ribs would stand it.</p>
<p>Ah, now desperate Victors, that was a splendid
spurt, but it’s of no use! Two and one
half lengths behind instead of three; that is
all you get by it, and there are six rowers in
that boat ahead of you who will fall over, and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[52]</SPAN></span>
overboard, before you shall pass them now.
Again? Another spurt? Yes; well done, and
you deserve the cheer for it that you scarcely
hear in your frantic efforts. But there is a roar
drowning it out already, which signals your
defeat. At them! At them one last time,
Dater, the Consequential! But you know how
to pull. It must be the last. For, look! you can
see the very scarf-pins in the bosoms of Mr. Voss
and Mr. Marcy in the barge; and on it with
them, in an agony of delight at your vain
prowess, stands Gerald Saxton, the friend of
Philip Touchtone—Philip Touchtone, whose
strong stroke has helped mightily to tell against
you all the way up and back. Ah, you falter
a little now; nor can you save yourselves by
any more spurting. The green amphitheater
rings again and again with cheers and applause,
but not for you. You dart two boat-lengths
behind those crimson shirts, that even
your warmest friends yonder must hurrah over
as they shoot by the goal! The cannon booms
out their welcome far and wide! You who are
the Victors must call yourselves the Defeats,
for the race is over and the Ossokosees have
won it gloriously!</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[53]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>How the next half hour passed for Philip,
Davidson, McKay, Rice, and all that enraptured
crew, as they received in the boat-house
the friends who could press their way inside to
congratulate them—this the reader may imagine.
Philip and his friends forgot how exhausted
they were in the delight of such praises
and hand-shakings. As for Gerald and Mr.
Marcy, they were among the first to greet
them when they were cool enough to quit their
shell for a few moments. Gerald was quite
unnerved with rapture.</p>
<p>“O, Philip,” he exclaimed, “I never was so
glad over any thing in my life!” And the boy
spoke the exact truth.</p>
<p>“You deserve to be carried home on a
church-steeple—a blunt one—every one of
you!” declared Mr. Marcy, adding to the patron
of the Victors, who stood near him, “Mr.
York, your young men have lost their laurels
forever. Our boys don’t intend to be beaten
again.” And, as a matter of fact, they never
were; for the Ossokosee Club rowed them another
year and utterly routed them, and before
the third season the Victors were disbanded and
a new organization had grown out of their ruins.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[54]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>The two other races were duly pulled. Dater
came out first in that which concerned his
own club. The Ossokosees were presented at
the side of the barge with their prize. Mr.
Voss made a little speech. The crowd gave
their final cheers as Philip received it for his
associates. That two hundred dollars was to
be spent in improving the boat-house. Somebody
had talked of buying a new shell with it;
but that was not heard of again after the day’s
deeds with the old one. Then the crowds
broke up. The carriages rolled in different directions.
The excitements of the morning
were over. In the evening there was to be a
special reception at the Ossokosee House,
given by Mr. Marcy.</p>
<p>“But I never went to a regular grown-up
party, even,” protested Gerald, in visible concern
when Miss Davidson declared he must go
with her and see how Philip and the rest would
be lionized. “I—I’m not old enough.”</p>
<p>“Neither am I, for that matter, Gerald,”
laughed Philip, with a droll glance at the
amused Miss Davidson; “so you ought to go
along to keep me company. I am not a ladies’
man, like Davidson or McKay.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[55]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“Well, you will have to walk about the hotel
dining-room with some girl; you see if you
don’t,” declared Gerald. But Philip did not.
Nearly all the evening Gerald found his friend
near him, where the boy could listen to the
fine speeches lavished on Touchtone and every
member of that crew of Ossokosee—quite numerous
enough to turn older heads than Philip’s.
Miss Beauchamp, who was quite old enough to
be Philip’s aunt, declared that she, for her part,
“felt jealous of Gerald” when Philip said that
he would leave the scene for a while to see
the boy quickly to his bed, Gerald having become
fagged out with his enjoyment.</p>
<p>“You had better adopt him, Touchtone,”
Mr. Marcy suggested as the two turned away.</p>
<p>“O, I will, if his father will let me,” retorted
Philip, laughingly.</p>
<p>“Humph!” said Mr. Marcy, half aloud, “I
doubt if he’d mind it half as much as he ought.”</p>
<p>The party broke up half an hour later. Early
hours were the custom at the Ossokosee.
Philip was to sleep in Gerald’s room that the
accommodation he thus vacated might be
given to some particular guests. The races had
filled the house.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[56]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>The hotel grew quiet. Mr. Marcy had not
read the evening mail through, so busy had he
been kept during the regatta. He sat in the
office with his night-clerk, concluding the letters
hastily.</p>
<p>“Holloa!” he exclaimed, breaking a seal,
“Nova Scotia post-mark? Saxton’s hand?
I guess I’d better look at it before I go to
bed.” He glanced at the first lines. His face
grew attentive. He read on and turned the
page. It wasn’t a long letter, but it was plainly
about an important matter.</p>
<p>He laid it down. Then, folding his arms,
he stared in consideration at the uninteresting
picture of a North German Lloyds steamship
over his desk. Then he said, half aloud, “Certainly
he’ll do! He’s just the person.” He
rose quickly. “I’ll go up and read it to them
at once. No! On second thoughts, they would
neither of them sleep a wink if I did. To-morrow
will do.”</p>
<p>Mr. Marcy put the letter in the desk, turned
out the gas, bade Mr. Keller good-night, and
walked away to his room.</p>
<p>In that letter were involved the fortunes of
the two lads, the big and the little one, who<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[57]</SPAN></span>
were asleep in Number 45, Gerald with one
hand under his yellow head and the other just
touching Philip’s arm; as if he would have him
mindful, even in dreams, that their existences
now had ceased to be divorced, and that a new
responsibility had come to Touchtone in that
fact.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[58]</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />