<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XIV" id="CHAPTER_XIV">CHAPTER XIV.</SPAN><br/> <small>ALLIES.</small></h2></div>
<p class="cap">The question concluding the preceding
chapter of this history took more than a
moment or so to answer, as the reader may
suppose. Open-mouthed, as well as open-eared,
with their packages, one by one, dropped
heedlessly in the grassy path that led up from
the little dock, “Obed Probasco and Loreta
his wife” halted before Philip, still ejaculating,
questioning, and with their astonishment
of one kind giving place to that of another as
Philip proceeded with his story. He leaned
against the fence and, talking now with one,
now the other, related his strange experience.
The amazed New England couple turned and
looked into each other’s eyes at every few sentences,
with many a “My gracious me!” “Did
ever any body hear the like?” “You don’t
mean that you”—did so and so; and by Obed’s
frequent “Well, this beats all creation, fur as I
know it!” Even Touchtone’s anxiety and their<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[202]</SPAN></span>
curiosity as to Gerald could not retard their
eagerness to learn all the facts.</p>
<p>The couple bore every appearance of homely
thrift and simplicity of character; of being, in
short, precisely the kind of people Touchtone
had hoped. It is, perhaps, needless to say
that Philip’s narrative was only of the circumstances
since the hour of departure from the
<i>Old Province</i>. Mr. Belmont and his persecution
he left till a more convenient season.</p>
<p>“An’ you mean to tell me that that poor
boy an’ you have been shut up here two days?
No other soul about the place? An’ he sick on
your hands half the time?” gasped the distressed
Mrs. Obed.</p>
<p>“That’s just what I mean,” replied Touchtone.</p>
<p>“Never heard such an astonishin’ story in
my life,” repeated Probasco. “What would
you ’a’ done, though, if you hadn’t brought up
here? Well, it stumps me; that’s all.”</p>
<p>“The hand of the Lord’s in it, no mistake!”
declared Mrs. Obed. “I can’t say how welcome
you’ve been to any thing an’ to every thing of
ours that the old house there’s got inside it.
You couldn’t ’a’ better pleased me an’ my<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[203]</SPAN></span>
husband here, Mr. Tombstone—I mean Mr.
Touchtone—I b’lieve you said that was your
name, didn’t you?—than by just makin’ free
of every blessed corner of it. But dear, dear!
If I’d only been to home.”</p>
<p>“Yes, it’s queer luck! Wife an’ I’ve both
been over on shore. We had to go across
to Chantico to the funeral of a nephew of
ours, that died very sudden. We stuck fast
there by my bein’ sick. The very time that
such a thing as this came straight up to our
doors!”</p>
<p>“Queer luck?” repeated the farmer’s wife.
“You’d better just say queer Providence,
Obed! It’s been awful unhandy for you, Mr.
Touchtone—made things so much harder for
you an’ the little boy. But I guess if Providence
could save you both bein’ dashed overboard
with those poor souls in that boat, he
could help you to get along with a lot o’ my
stale stuff to eat, an’ not a hand to help you to
any thing better. Our house wide open, was
it? Well, I don’t know where you’d ’a’ got in
if’t been us left it last! But,” she continued,
turning in sudden vexation to her husband,
“that’s the very identical good-bye time old<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[204]</SPAN></span>
Murtagh’ll play us such a trick! After all his
straight up an’ down promises that he’d never
leave the place one minute! An’ the cow,
too!”</p>
<p>“Yes, I’ve had enough of Murtagh,” assented
the farmer, sharply, “an’ I guess we’ll find
the obligations on our side, sir. Murtagh’s a
man we’ve had on the place to help us, an’ he
don’t appear to have no more responsibleness
than a grasshopper, let alone his drinking.
Wife an’ I’ve been in a worry the hull time we
was obliged to stay across the strait. But we
didn’t look for his acting this way.”</p>
<p>It appeared that the derelict Murtagh had indeed
been left in charge by his master; and that
that neglectful hireling of the household must
have scarcely waited for his employers’ backs
to be turned than he had betaken himself to
his own little skiff and gone off shoreward, too.
“Most likely, on one of his regular high old
sprees!” surmised the exasperated farmer.
“This is the end of Pat Murtagh’s working for
me!”</p>
<p>“Well, come, come, don’t let’s stand another
minute here,” said Mrs. Probasco, realizing that
the necessary explanations on both sides were<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[205]</SPAN></span>
finished; “that boy you’ve got with you mustn’t
be left alone. Perhaps he’s not so sick as you
think. I hope he’s been asleep while we’ve
been puttin’ you through such a long catechism.
Let’s all hurry, to make up for it. Obed, don’t
you rattle that gate; an’ do you take off your
boots before you get to the kitchen door.
Thanky, Mr. Touchtone, let them things lay
just where they be; there’s nobody to steal ’em,
you know. Come along, quick, both of you.”</p>
<p>Leaving Obed to deprive his feet of their
squeaky new coverings, Philip and Mrs. Probasco
stepped lightly toward the kitchen and
on tiptoe drew near the bedroom door.</p>
<p>Sure enough, Gerald’s slumber was profound.
The kind-hearted woman followed Touchtone
to the bedside in curiosity and pity. She
beheld the face of this other of her two uninvited
guests with a great stir in her motherly
heart and a quick admiration of Gerald’s
strange and just now singularly pathetic beauty.
With a woman’s soft fingers she ventured to
touch his skin, and with intent ear she listened
to the sleeper’s breathing.</p>
<p>“He’s better than he was, I guess,” she
said in a hushed voice to Philip. “His skin’s<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[206]</SPAN></span>
damp, an’ he breathes in a good deal healthier
way than I expected. Fever’s gone down as
soon as it came up, I dare say. How han’some
he is!—a reg’lar picture. From New York,
did you say?”</p>
<p>Obed looked in at the door in anxious interest.
“You stay here with him while I fly
around and get things sort of settled and more
ready for whatever’s best for us to do.” She
glided out, closing the door after her. Smothered
sounds, that now and then came from
behind it, hinted to Philip as he sat that the
flying around had begun to some purpose.</p>
<p>Excellent Mrs. Probasco! Whatever may
have been the sentiments of your housekeeper’s
heart at such a delayed home-coming and such
a finding of your entire domestic establishment
taken possession of by boys, and not only an
asylum, but a hospital, all at once on your
hands—whatever the amusement or vexation
at the general upsetting of order on each side,
you kept it all to yourself! She darted softly
about. “Time enough for talk, by and by,”
she said, sharply, to Obed, who was accustomed
to act pretty much as she commanded. “Then
we’ll talk. We know plenty to start right at.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[207]</SPAN></span>
We must just take care of these boys as well
as we can, till they’re ready to leave us an’ go
ahead on their journey. An’, by the way, Mr.
Touchtone says they’d ought to get some sort
of word to their friends right away, just as soon
as we see how that boy is when he wakes. Of
course they’d ought! So I advise you, after
you been over the place, an’ done up all those
chores old Murtagh’s kindly left for you, to
get the boat ready for early to-morrow morning,
when you can hurry over to Chantico.”</p>
<p>Obed hastened off, his Sunday go-to-meeting
clothes exchanged for his every-day array,
and disappeared down the garden with the
chickens trooping after him in joyful expectancy;
Mrs. Probasco kept at work, now and
then slipping in to consult Touchtone or calling
him to her.</p>
<p>Daylight began to wane. Gerald slept on,
occasionally appearing to be just on the point
of awakening, but always drifting back into
sounder sleep again. Numerous, and with
many hurried and whispered paragraphs of
further explanation and questions and answers,
were the interviews between Philip and his
bustling hostess during the remnant of time<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[208]</SPAN></span>
before candle-light. With its windows and
doors wide open, and the smell of supper coming
appetizingly from the kitchen, and with a
general sense of human occupation about it,
the old dwelling was already like a different
place from its former mysterious self. The dog
(“You <em>will</em> call him Towzer, but his real
name’s Jock,” Mrs. Probasco protested)
trotted about. Upper rooms were unsealed,
and Touchtone stared about them, meeting
nothing to excite his curiosity except one or
two quaint and battered pieces of furniture
that seemed in keeping with the old house
rather than with any modern inmates.</p>
<p>And before long came history, bit by bit,
from Mrs. Probasco or Obed. As Philip had
expected, the farm and premises on Chantico
Island were not owned, but rented, by them—had
been so for many years, through an agent.</p>
<p>The dignified, isolated old dwelling, half farm-house,
half mansion, still belonged in a family
line once distinguished in the county for wealth
and social position—the Jennisons. Other
people might live in it, but it was always
haunted by the atmosphere of stately earlier
days and aristocratic occupants.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[209]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Who were, or had been, the Jennisons?
Great had they been once, in that part of
the State. Early Jennisons had bought the
island and named it “Jennison’s Island,” in
Revolutionary days. One famous grandfather
had built the mansion and fitted it with fine
old-fashioned furnishings, and loved it, and
lived and died in it. In his day this ancient
roof had sheltered many a guest of famous
name. Under it gay levees had come off, and
sumptuous dinners and country merry-makings,
and lively weddings and solemn funerals. Two
of the belles in the family line had been the
very “Mary Abigail” and “Sarah Amanda”
who had stitched those yellowed samplers on
the wall. They had died, grandmothers both,
long ago. And of all the Jennison estate was
left to-day only this single lonely corner of it,
the island, its very name changed on the government
maps by some State maneuver. Furthermore,
to bear the family name and own the scattered
remnants of this world’s goods left to its
credit, there was now only a single representative,
one Wentworth Jennison, according to Mrs.
Probasco’s reserved account, an erratic and
wandering man, who seldom set his foot near<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[210]</SPAN></span>
the home of his ancestors—once or twice a
year, perhaps; then not again for another two
or three seasons. He allowed an old lawyer at
Chantico to lease island, farm, and house to the
Probascos. They paid their modest rent and
kept the mansion from destruction. They
had long been its tenants.</p>
<p>Of course, the connection between these
details became clearer in his later talks with
the good farmer’s wife; but Philip gathered
enough in her scraps of explanation that afternoon
and evening to interest his boyish love
of romance and novelty and to fill his heart
with gratitude for this hospitable situation.</p>
<p>Just before supper-time Gerald awoke.</p>
<p>“Philip,” he called, “Philip! where have
you gone?”</p>
<p>Touchtone hastened in from the kitchen.
A few sentences with the sick boy gave him
a delightful sense of relief. It was quite confirmed
during the next half hour. Gerald’s
fever had almost departed. He was told the
good news of the Probascos’ return. On the
first sight of his sympathetic hostess he “took
to her” (so she expressed it), “as if we’d never
done nothing but spend our hull lives in this<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[211]</SPAN></span>
same old house.” Obed was permitted by his
vigilant spouse to come in and hold the boy’s
slender hand in his for a few moments and
speak his few kindly words of welcome and
help. The invalid’s appetite that had developed
was rewarded with a dainty supper, and
he was made comfortable in fresh sheets. “O,
I guess he’s all right, an’ doing splendidly, Mr.
Touchtone,” Mrs. Probasco declared. “We
wont give him a chance to get real sick,
between us.”</p>
<p>“What kind people they are!” Gerald said,
softly, to Touchtone, just as he was dropping
off into a fresh doze, with the clink of Mrs.
Probasco’s dishes and the murmur of her conference
with Obed making a homely lullaby
from the adjoining room.</p>
<p>“Yes, the kindest sort,” assented Touchtone.
“Go to sleep, old man, and dream about
them and every thing else that is pleasant.
I’ll add a postscript to these letters, to bring
them down to the latest minute.”</p>
<p>“O, yes, now you can. Did you write papa?”</p>
<p>“I have written papa and every body. Mr.
Probasco is going to get up early to-morrow
morning, and either take me over with these to<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[212]</SPAN></span>
Chantico or else carry them alone. So, you
see, we are fairly started toward getting back
to civilization and our friends again. The
suspense all around will soon be over.”</p>
<p>“We’ve been through a good deal together,
haven’t we? And in such a little while.”</p>
<p>“We certainly have,” said Touchtone, half
seriously, half smiling.</p>
<p>Gerald slept. Philip added a few lines to his
letters, and, now that their situation was so
happily determined, his anxiety for their being
dispatched came upon him with double force.
Not an hour longer must needlessly intervene.</p>
<p>It was impossible for him to guess what conclusion
Mr. Marcy and Gerald’s father could
have or could not have arrived at by this. According
to Probasco’s account there had been
plenty in all the newspapers about the steamer—“Folks
had done nothing else but read an’
talk about it”—although Obed’s “plaguey
turn o’ the wust sort o’ rheumatism” had kept
himself, his wife, and their Chantico relatives
in too much excitement for reading news, to
say nothing of the funeral at the house. In
his last writing Philip told Mr. Marcy and Mr.
Saxton that within as few hours as possible for<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[213]</SPAN></span>
Gerald and himself to leave the Probascos they
would go to Chantico, and thence down to
Knoxport. There they would wait for instructions
from one or the other gentleman. In
view of the absolute ignorance of affairs it
seemed to Philip unwise to hurry straight back
to New York by railroad, and much less advisable
to think of continuing their Halifax
journey, of course. There was a chance, too,
that at this very minute Mr. Saxton, Mr.
Marcy, or both, were lingering in Knoxport,
hoping for news from some quarter, unwilling
to quit the point nearest to the late accident.</p>
<p>Fortunately, he did not know that a body declared
to be his own, drowned and disfigured,
had been duly “identified” days before by a
coroner’s jury, and that the fate of the boat
had been decided by every opinion brought to
bear on it, and that, while he sat there writing,
Mr. Marcy, with as heavy a heart as a man can
ever bear in his breast, was packing his own
and Mr. Saxton’s valises and preparing to fairly
drag away the distracted father from the Knoxport
House on the journey that he hoped might
quiet his friend’s nerves, and for which Marcy
had generously suspended all his own affairs.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[214]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>The letters sealed, Philip felt more at rest.
As the evening wore on, more excited than
tired, he and Mrs. Probasco and Obed sat
within ear-shot of the sick-room. In low voices
they went into new particulars on both sides,
discussed his plans for himself and Gerald together,
and weighed this and that. Hospitable,
shrewd, warm-hearted folk! Could you and
your charge, Philip, have fallen into more tender
or more willing hands? How interested they
became in the life at the Ossokosee that had
made this friendship begin, and in the thousand
little or greater incidents which had perfected
it and so suddenly laid such responsibilities on
Touchtone’s shoulders! How carefully both,
the man by silence, the good woman by tactful
turns of the conversation, avoided intruding
on matters that they surely would have
relished understanding better, but into which
they would not pry!</p>
<p>It seemed beautiful to Mrs. Probasco’s inmost
heart, which one already will have divined
was nothing like as unromantic as her
features, this friendship between these two
lads, this devotion of the elder lad to the
younger.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[215]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“There never was any thing prettier than
the way you an’ him have been keeping together,”
she ventured once to remark, ungrammatically
but earnestly. “It’s like a book.”</p>
<p>“But there never was any body else like
Gerald—in or out of a book,” Touchtone answered,
simply, blushing. For if facts were on
his lips his inner sentiments, as a general thing,
were not.</p>
<p>“Well, I only hope that you’ll have a long
life together without no kind of quarrels between
you, nor troubles after these, my lad,”
said Obed, stroking the dog’s head as Towzer
lay beside his chair. “You’ve begun to
make friendship the way it’d ought to be
made, an’ as it’s grown older it’d ought to be
of a kind that aint common in this part o’ the
world, so far as I’ve had opportunity to jedge.”</p>
<p>“I hope so, too,” responded Touchtone,
soberly. Yes, and he believed it. His “old
head on young shoulders” for one moment
pictured in flashing succession years to come
at Gerald’s side, himself his best friend ever,
to companion and care for him. Or, would
the future bring differences, quarrels, a breaking
apart for them, and only thorns from this<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[216]</SPAN></span>
now newly planted vineyard, as happened to
so many other pairs of friends in this strange
world? Only fate knew, and only time could
decide.</p>
<p>Bed-hour came. Philip proposed to hold to
his lounge; so it was more comfortably made
up for rest, under Mrs. Probasco’s care, than before.
Obed was to start for Chantico after the
early breakfast. At first Philip decided that it
was best he should go with him; but he concluded
to curb his impatience and not be absent
all day from Gerald. The letters and telegrams
lay ready to be forwarded; Obed understood
precisely what he was to do.</p>
<p>They said good-night. Philip lay awake a
half hour or so. He was restless. Uncertainty
after uncertainty and step by step of the unsolved
equation of Gerald’s and his situation
filled his brain. He thought and planned, and
heard the wind that had all at once risen blow
furiously about the house. His final thought
was that it had begun to rain pretty hard.</p>
<p>But his dismay and that of the Probascos
when they met the next morning cannot briefly
be described. A great gale was raging. The
sea was a wild, mad, terrible creature, heaving<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[217]</SPAN></span>
itself in black tumult in the drenching and cold
storm. The channel between the island and
vanished coast was a raging body of water that
no ordinary boat could safely hope to traverse.
It was not a storm, but an equinoctial tempest.</p>
<p>Obed, with as much regret as honesty, declared
he could not think of attempting a passage
to Chantico. Letters, telegrams, every
sort of communication, must wait until the elements
were lulled.</p>
<p>“Another day lost!” cried Philip to himself,
impatiently. He walked up and down
Gerald’s room in chafing, impotent anxiety.
Gerald was so much better that Mrs. Probasco
declared danger of further illness ended. He
roved languidly about the house with the
farmer’s wife, in more contentment than Philip
had hoped the boy could be kept in. But it
made his own concern come home to him
heavily. Obed and he counseled and watched
the sea and storm. There was nothing else to
do. The gale’s fury increased in the afternoon,
and, worse still, the coming of the early
and deep darkness of the evening found it undiminished
in violence.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[218]</SPAN></span></p>
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