<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XII" id="CHAPTER_XII">CHAPTER XII.</SPAN><br/> <small>INVADING THE UNKNOWN.</small></h2></div>
<p class="cap">Turning his head back to glance at Gerald,
already half hid by the bushes straggling
beside the path, Philip followed the
weather-worn fence on his left. The garden
into which he now looked seemed to be flourishing,
chiefly in the way of Indian corn and tomatoes
and string-beans. As he came closer
to the house, and its outward structure was
clearer, he noticed that it was more dignified
and solid looking than most of its sort. It
might almost be termed a mansion. It was
built of grayish stone and white-painted wood,
the second story covered by the high-pitched
roof with its at least dozen dormer-windows.
Both down-stairs and up-stairs many of these
windows were closed.</p>
<p>“Family must be small, and all busy somewhere
in the back, or perhaps in the garden,”
Philip concluded, advancing.</p>
<p>A harmless snake darted across the way as<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[164]</SPAN></span>
he at length raised the gate-latch. He called
out, “Holloa, here!” in as loud a tone as his
fatigue permitted. His only answer was the
dog’s leaping forward through the shrubbery
from a nook under one of the trees. But
this canine warder proved to be all bark and no
bite. At the sight of Philip unlatching the
gate his objections subsided to a growl, his
bound ended in a trot, and his tail suddenly
began wagging eagerly.</p>
<p>“Good fellow!” exclaimed Philip, walking up
the path and holding out his hand. “Changed
your mind, have you? You don’t think I look
like a thief, eh? I should think I did—very
much.”</p>
<p>The dog jumped on him, whining curiously.
He pursued the path toward the front porch,
which was shaded with roses, carefully trained.
The asters and geraniums on all sides showed
recent care, and on a strip of grass near the
porch lay a row of clean pans; and two white
aprons lay bleaching, and several fat hens
were scratching comfortably together under a
lilac-bush. The front window-shutters, with
the exception of the furthest one—faded gray-green
affairs, all of them, with half-moons cut<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[165]</SPAN></span>
in their broad, wooden expanses—were shut.
Touchtone rapped at the front door, letting
the iron knocker do its duty smartly. No footsteps
replied. The dog stared at him very intently.
Impatient of delay, he hurried around
the corner of the house.</p>
<p>A walk of cinders bordered with clam-shells
and china-pinks and zinnia led him toward it,
past what he presumed was the sitting-room or
dining-room, and two of the windows were open.
Nobody was to be seen or heard yet, outside or
in. He leaned over a window and peered inside.
A tall, white-covered bed, with four
posts and towering pillows, and various articles
of furniture that his eyes glanced at in his bold
inspection, loomed out in the cool dimness.</p>
<p>“The spare chamber, of course,” he at once
concluded. “Empty—in good order for unexpected
company—like Gerald and me.”</p>
<p>He slowly passed on, turning his head to
left and right. The dog preceded him, whining
and making sure that Touchtone followed.
A well, with its arbored trellis, was on the left.
He drank and was on the point of turning
back to relieve Gerald’s thirst, but thought it
better to go on. Upon a grass-plot more<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[166]</SPAN></span>
aprons and some towels were bleaching, and a
row of red crocks were sunned on an unpainted
bench by the back door. He reached the
kitchen. It was open.</p>
<p>“Holloa, here!” he called again before the
door, peering into the cool room then and
once more turning to survey the garden-beds, in
which more poultry strayed.</p>
<p>By this time the fatigues of the past few
hours were half-forgotten in a certain new excitement.</p>
<p>“Well, Towzer, if your people are all away
and are willing to leave their house and home
open and unprotected, in this free and easy
sort of fashion, pirates must be out of date
with a vengeance! I don’t know what strangers
coming to them for charity can do except
to do what Mrs. Wooden calls ‘act according
to their best lights’—eh?” The dog had
trotted into the kitchen behind him, and now
stood wagging his tail and barking a sharp note,
here and there, beside an empty platter that
rested on the hearth.</p>
<p>“Cold? Yes, and there hasn’t been a fire in
that stove for hours and hours,” exclaimed
Philip, examining; “nor have you been fed,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[167]</SPAN></span>
Towzer, I begin to suspect, within the same time,
have you? That’s what’s the matter with you.
Whoever lives here has gone off on some errand
or other away from the island. What
sort of errand can it be that has made the family
stay so much longer than they must have expected
to stay?” Vague, disagreeable feelings
crossed Touchtone’s mind. It was strange.
“I must be certain of things in the place before
I go back to Gerald. What if there should
have been some plague, some awful accident on
the premises?”</p>
<p>He began to wonder, almost to dread,
what might come under his eyes any minute.
Suppose that this lonely house would not
prove the shelter for them at all. Various
reasons for the silence and desertion of the
dwelling, despite all signs of recent occupancy
and peaceful daily life, came thronging.</p>
<p>He paused a moment, leaning against a clean
kitchen-table whereon were set several pieces of
china ready to be laid upon the shelves around
the walls—another task mysteriously postponed.
The dog he had christened Towzer
now whined and fawned on him hungrily.
Philip whistled loudly, once, twice, half a<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[168]</SPAN></span>
dozen times. Then he opened the door in
front of him and proceeded deeper into the
dwelling.</p>
<p>Its central hall was before him, lighted
cheerfully by a good-sized fan-light over the
front entrance. The hall was of rather uncommon
width and height of ceiling, carpeted with
a faded but unworn green ingrain and with several
antiquated rugs. Philip looked quickly into
the front chamber on his right. It was the
large, well-furnished bedroom he had glanced
into from the garden-walk. The bed was
made. He noticed a hat-rack beside the hall
entrance on which depended a huge straw hat,
a woman’s sun-bonnet and a straw bonnet, and
two umbrellas; and a wide-open closet near by
contained various water-proofs, boots and shoes,
and two or three pairs of clean blue overalls.
He turned the knob of the parlor door and
withdrew it, murmuring,</p>
<p>“Locked, I declare! Regular New Englanders,
whatever else they are—believe in
saving the parlor for Sundays and their own
funerals.”</p>
<p>The sitting-room on the other side was full
of the usual simple furnishings of such living-rooms.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[169]</SPAN></span>
The pictures were old revolutionary
scenes, besides President Lincoln and his family
and an engrossed copy of the Lord’s Prayer
and the Ten Commandments, in photograph.
Up in one corner hung two highly elaborate
samplers, framed in an old-fashioned, heavy
style. On one of these “MARY ABIGAIL
JENNISON, August, 1827,” was stiffly worked
under the claws of a red and yellow bird of
paradise; on the other he read, “SARAH
AMANDA JENNISON, August, 1827,” who
boasted for her finer art the alphabet and the
numerals arranged in rows around a red book
and a green willow-tree.</p>
<p>“Old, those,” Philip thought. “I guess the
Jennison ladies must be pretty well tired out
with housekeeping if they are the heads of this
establishment at present.”</p>
<p>There were sundry photographs on the walls,
that he had not time to examine closely, of
elderly men and women with plain, hard-featured
New England faces.</p>
<p>The door into the room behind the sitting-room
stood open. It was quite light, each
shutter turned back. This appeared considerably
more of a living-room than its fellows,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[170]</SPAN></span>
with a sewing-machine, a big table with stockings,
hickory shirts, and coarse mending, a
cracked looking-glass with a comb and brush
in front of it, and a quantity of miscellaneous
articles distributed about. Suddenly Philip
perceived a pile of very modern-looking, paper-covered
books and a heap of newspapers.</p>
<p>“At last!” he ejaculated. He caught up
several numbers of a weekly religious magazine.
On the yellow label he read, “Obed Probasco,
Chantico,” and the name of the State. On
other copies of the <cite>Knoxport Weekly Anchor</cite>
he found scrawled by the newsdealer the same
name. Some new numbers of the <cite>Ladies’ Own
Monthly</cite> were directed, “Mrs. Obed Probasco,
Chantico.” The paper-covered novels, three
or four agricultural hand-books, and half a
dozen recipe-books were neatly marked in
similar fashion.</p>
<p>A last assurance that these were at least
the ruling spirits throughout this lonely island,
whose nearest post-office on the main-land was,
doubtless, the town of Chantico, lay between
the covers of a family Bible. On the fly-leaf
of this was written, in a faded ink, “To Obed
Probasco and Loreta, his Wife—a Wedding-Gift<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[171]</SPAN></span>
from their affectionate pastor, William
Day, May 17, 1850.”</p>
<p>“So then our hosts—that are to be—are
this Obed Probasco and Loreta, his wife,”
Touchtone decided. “Elderly people, of
course. No children living with them, as far
as I can guess. And they stay out here alone
on this island, and either own it or farm it.
Where on earth have they gone to just now?
When did they expect to come home, pray?”
His knees fairly were failing under him. He
saw what duty and necessity directed his doing
for himself and Gerald. For some hours at
least this lonely, inexplicable old house was
deserted, and they must make themselves at
home in it. He must get Gerald up at once
and provide food and drink and quarters for
the night, unpermitted and unasked.</p>
<p>But he would better finish his hasty survey.
He looked up the staircase. There might be
an invalid or helpless occupant still to be consulted
before he boldly took possession of the
premises in the license of Gerald’s and his own
plight; to use them until those absent should
suddenly appear. He mounted the stairs.</p>
<p>“Good, large, comfortable rooms, with more<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[172]</SPAN></span>
old-fashioned furniture, not used very much,”
he soliloquized, passing from one chamber to
another of the second story. Every thing was
clean, cheerful, and in stiff and even polished
order except Mr. and Mrs. Obed Probasco’s
own big room, evidently in too much use for
apple-pie order to be preserved. One or two
doors up-stairs were locked. It was plain
that to the Probascos a house was one thing,
living in it was another. A huge attic, that
startled Philip by the bewildering array of odds
and ends crowded in it, took up the space
immediately under the roof.</p>
<p>He descended quickly to the lower hall
again, on his way back to Gerald. His head
was giddy; he began to feel a great faintness,
but the main question of their finding shelter
and food was settled.</p>
<p>“I will fetch Gerald, ransack for what eatables
there must be, get him to bed, and then
we’ll await developments and the showing up
of these Probascos—how many or what sort
they be. We seem to be more than ever castaways,
but castaways under such a state of
things as never I have read about.”</p>
<p>The dog, with a hunger very evident to him,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[173]</SPAN></span>
tried to bar his way by leaping up on him
beseechingly as he hurried into the kitchen.
Ah! the first objects that might well have met
his eye he had not noticed before—three loaves
of tempting bread set on the high shelves, a
pound-cake, and a cooked ham, partly cut.
But he would not stretch his hand toward
them till Gerald was in that room to eat with
him. He left the house and hastened back to
the gate, giving loud whistle-calls for Gerald’s
encouragement.</p>
<p>He found the boy just entering the yard,
impatient, faint, and anxious.</p>
<p>“I was afraid something had happened,” he
exclaimed. “Well? Will they take us in?
What kind of people are they, Philip?”</p>
<p>“I don’t know, Gerald. The fact is, I can
find plenty of house and food and beds, but
not a single soul to hear us say, ‘By your
leave,’ if we help ourselves. So I’ve made up
my mind we must just do that—help ourselves.”</p>
<p>“What do you mean?” asked Gerald in distressed
surprise.</p>
<p>Touchtone made his explanation as brief
and cheering as he could. And really, after<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[174]</SPAN></span>
all, there was small wrong in this self-succoring,
without the license or help of these people
so unaccountably absent, who, in all probability,
were to be the kind of hosts likely to
rejoice that two such unfortunates should take
matters in their own hands.</p>
<p>“So, my dear fellow, you and I will just
take possession here at once, feed ourselves
and this unlucky Probasco dog, too, get rested
out and put our clothes in shape as well as we
can, and have every thing ready to leave the
place the moment any of the Probascos turn
up to help us or order us to do it.”</p>
<p>“How do you know that’s the name?”
asked Gerald.</p>
<p>Philip, explaining his warrant, to Gerald’s
amusement, in spite of the lad’s weariness
and exhaustion, got his charge and
himself safely into the kitchen. The cellar
revealed pan after pan of milk and cream.
They made a meal more ample than was altogether
prudent after such spare commons as
had been theirs at sea, but fortunately with no
harm to them; nor was the famishing Towzer
forgotten, nor the cat that suddenly came trotting
up the walk, miauling, with tail erect.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[175]</SPAN></span>
Infinitely refreshed, Philip went once more
over the sober, still dwelling to satisfy the
curiosity of Gerald. They made no new discoveries
of importance. In course of the afternoon,
after resting, they also somewhat examined
the garden and sheds and stables, and lo!
out in an inclosed lot the cow was patiently
grazing by a spring. On seeing them she
began complaining so sorely at being unmilked
that Philip brought back a foaming pail to
store away down-stairs.</p>
<p>“I should say, decidedly, that there was
hardly any body but Mr. and Mrs. Probasco
living here,” Gerald decided, in course of the
afternoon. “Every thing pointed, indeed, to a
solitary life led by a careful, thrifty couple in
this isolated spot; childless, and just now called
away from their home—probably to the main-land—by
some sudden and oddly detaining
necessity.”</p>
<p>“Yes; they live here alone. They have
gone away in a hurry for some special reason.
It’s plainly that, I think. And all you and I
can do is to wait for them to come back,” replied
Philip.</p>
<p>“But don’t you see how their not being here<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[176]</SPAN></span>
puts us back from letting papa or Mr. Marcy
or any body know what has happened to us?
They must all be terribly anxious.”</p>
<p>Touchtone quite realized that important
dilemma. There were, indeed, the others to
think of besides themselves. He had long
since remembered that their friends on shore
now might easily be believing the worst about
them. Other boats must have landed safely
from the abandoned steamer, and the list of
passengers have been carefully reckoned over.
What might not the newspapers be circulating
that very moment? But there was nothing to
be done now. One thing at a time.</p>
<p>“We cannot help that, Gerald, quite yet.
If they are anxious they must stay so, old fellow,
till we find some way of sending word.
If no boat lands here to-morrow with any of
the people that belong here in it, we will
mount a signal of distress, of some sort.”</p>
<p>“But it’s known that people live here! Signals
wont count for much unless we can manage
to hit on just the proper sort of one.”</p>
<p>“O, come, now! We’re not Robinson Crusoes,
remember! Before to-morrow noon, I
expect, we shall have the people who live here<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[177]</SPAN></span>
coming up that garden-walk and staring their
eyes out at you and me, when we go down
to meet them. We will not be left to ourselves
long, depend on it, and in a twinkling
after that we can get matters all straightened
out—explainings right and left, and going on
with our journey, and all.”</p>
<p>As twilight came on they remembered again
the boat, and would willingly have gone to make
more secure that single link at present connecting
them with the rest of the world. But they
had neither light nor strength for it. The
boat must fare as fate should decree.</p>
<p>Philip got Gerald to bed in the large chamber
on the first floor. He decided to occupy a
wide sofa he pushed in from an adjoining
room. A closet of linen supplied sheets and
a blanket. Gerald fell asleep at once. Apparently
he should be none the worse for his trying
adventures so far.</p>
<p>“I guess I am used up myself till to-morrow;
that’s certain,” he declared.</p>
<p>A big eight-day clock, composedly keeping
time from a sufficiently recent winding, struck
nine. Outside the frogs and tree-toads about
the lonely house croaked and chirped. The<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[178]</SPAN></span>
sound of the sea filled the night air. The stars
were bright and the moon shone gloriously.
Philip wondered once more if this novel situation
was reality or dream. Excitement could
keep him up and wakeful no longer. He did
not lock either a door or window and so break
what seemed the habit of the house. He partially
threw off his clothes and stretched himself
on his sofa to fall instantly into a deep slumber,
whether the problematical Probascos should
waken him out of it at midnight or any other
time.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[179]</SPAN></span></p>
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