<h3>CHAPTER III</h3>
<h4>WHAT HAS HAPPENED?</h4>
<p>The baggage-car door was wheeled wide open again and the lamps on the platform
shone in. There was the forward brakeman to "jump" her down from the high
doorway, and Reno, with the little red light still hung to his collar, bounded
after her.
</p>
<p>The conductor bustled away to tell the station master about the dog with
the red light, and of the word scrawled on the cloth which Ruth had found
wound around his collar. Indeed, Ruth herself was very anxious and very much
excited regarding this mystery; but she was anxious, too, about herself.
Was Uncle Jabez here to meet her? Or had he sent somebody to take her to
the Red Mill? He had been informed by Miss True Pettis the week before on
which train to expect his niece.
</p>
<p>Carrying her bag and followed dejectedly by the huge mastiff, Ruth started
down the long platform. The conductor ran out of the station, signalled the
train crew with his hand, and lanterns waved the length of the train. Panting,
with its huge springs squeaking, the locomotive started the string of cars.
Faster and faster the train moved, and before Ruth reached the pent-house
roof of the little brick station, the tail-lights of the last car had passed
her.
</p>
<p>A short, bullet-headed old man, with close-cropped, whitish-yellow hair,
atop of which was a boy's baseball cap, his face smoothly shaven and deeply
lined, and the stain of tobacco at either corner of his mouth, was standing
on the platform. He was not a nice looking old man at all, he was dressed
in shabby and patched garments, and his little eyes seemed so sly that they
were even trying to hide from each other on either side of a hawksbill nose.
</p>
<p>He began to eye Ruth curiously as the girl approached, and she, seeing that
he was the only person who gave her any attention, jumped to the conclusion
that <i>this</i> was Uncle Jabez. The thought shocked her. She instinctively
feared and disliked this queer looking old man. The lump in her throat that
would not be swallowed almost choked her again, and she winked her eyes fast
to keep from crying.
</p>
<p>She would, in her fear and disappointment, have passed the old man by without
speaking had he not stepped in front of her.
</p>
<p>"Where d'ye wanter go, Miss?" he whined, looking at her still more sharply
out of his narrow eyes. "Yeou be a stranger here, eh?"
</p>
<p>"Yes, sir," admitted Ruth.
</p>
<p>"Where are you goin'?" asked the man again, and Ruth had enough Yankee blood
in her to answer the query by asking:
</p>
<p>"Are you Mr. Jabez Potter?"
</p>
<p>"Me Jabez Potter? Why, ef I was Jabe Potter I'd be owing myself money, that's
what I'd be doin'. You warn't never lookin' for Jabe Potter?"
</p>
<p>Much relieved, Ruth admitted the fact frankly. "He is my uncle, sir," she
said. "I am going to live at the Red Mill."
</p>
<p>The strange old man puckered up his lips into a whistle, and shook his head,
eyeing her all the time so slily that Ruth was more and more thankful that
he had not proven to be Uncle Jabez.
</p>
<p>"Do you know Mr. Potter?" she asked, undecided what to do.
</p>
<p>"Do I know Jabe Potter?" repeated the man. "Well, I don't know much good
of him, I assure ye! I worked for him onct, I did. And I tell ye he owes
me money yet. You ax him if he don't owe Jasper Parloe money—you jest ax
him!"
</p>
<p>He began to get excited and did not seem at all inclined to step out of Ruth's
path. But just then somebody spoke to her and she turned to see the station
master and two or three other men with him.
</p>
<p>"This is the girl Mr. Mason spoke to me about, isn't it?" the railroad man
asked. "The conductor of the express, I mean. He said the dog would mind
you."
</p>
<p>"He seems to like me," she replied, turning to the mastiff that had stood
all this time close to her.
</p>
<p>"That is Tom Cameron's dog all right," said one of the other men. "And that
lantern is off his motorcycle, I bet anything! He went through town about
dark on that contraption, and I shouldn't wonder if he's got a tumble."
</p>
<p>Ruth showed the station master, whose name was Curtis, the bit of handkerchief
with the appeal for help traced upon it.
</p>
<p>"That is blood," she said. "You see it's blood, don't you? Can't somebody
take Reno and hunt for him? He must be very badly hurt."
</p>
<p>"Mason said he expected it was nothing but some fool joke of the boys. But
it doesn't look like a joke to me," Mr. Curtis said, gravely. "Come, Parloe,
you know that patch of woods well enough, over beyond the swamp and Hiram
Jennings' big field. Isn't there a steep and rocky road down there, that
shoots off the Osago Lake pike?"
</p>
<p>"The Wilkins Corners road—yep," said the old man, snappishly.
</p>
<p>"Then, can't you take the dog and see if you can find young Tom?"
</p>
<p>"Who's going to pay me for it?" snarled Jasper Parloe. "I ain't got no love
for them Camerons. This here Tom is as sassy a boy as there is in this county."
</p>
<p>"But he may be seriously hurt," said Ruth, looking angrily at Jasper Parloe.
</p>
<p>"'Tain't nothin' to me—no more than your goin' out ter live with Jabe Potter
ain't nothin' to me," responded the old man, with an ugly grin.
</p>
<p>"You're a pretty fellow, you are, Jasper!" exclaimed Mr. Curtis, and turned
his back upon the fellow. "I can't leave the station now—Ah! here's Doctor
Davison. <i>He'll</i> know what to do."
</p>
<p>Doctor Davison came forward and put his hand upon Ruth's shoulder most kindly.
"What is all this?" he asked. "And there is the mastiff. They tell me you
are a dog tamer, Miss Fielding."
</p>
<p>He listened very closely to what Mr. Curtis had to say, and looked, too,
at the smeared handkerchief.
</p>
<p>"The dog can find him—no doubt of that. Come, boys, get some lanterns and
we'll go right along to the Wilkins Corners road and search it." Then to
Ruth he said: "You <i>are</i> a brave girl, sure enough."
</p>
<p>But when the party was ready to start, half a dozen strong, with Parloe trailing
on behind, and with lanterns and a stretcher, Reno would not budge. The man
called him, but he looked up at Ruth and did not move from her side.
</p>
<p>"I declare for't," exclaimed one man. "That girl will have to go with us,
Doctor Davison. You see what the dog means to do."
</p>
<p>Ruth spoke to the mastiff, commanded him to leave her and find "Tom." But
although the dog looked at her intelligently enough, and barked his response—a
deep, sudden, explosive bark—he refused to start without her.
</p>
<p>"It's a long way for the girl," objected Doctor Davison. "Besides, she is
waiting to meet her uncle."
</p>
<p>"I am not tired," she told him, quickly. "Remember I've been sitting all
the afternoon. And perhaps every minute is precious. We don't know how badly
the dog's master may be hurt. I'll go. I'm sure I can keep up with you."
</p>
<p>Reno seemed to understand her words perfectly, and uttered another short,
sharp bark.
</p>
<p>"Let us go, then," said Doctor Davison, hurriedly.
</p>
<p>So the men picked up their lanterns and the stretcher again. They crossed
the tracks and came to a street that soon became a country road. Cheslow
did not spread itself very far in this direction. Doctor Davison explained
to Ruth that the settlement had begun to grow in the parts beyond the railroad
and that all this side of the tracks was considered the old part of the town.
</p>
<p>The street lights were soon behind them and they depended entirely upon the
lanterns the men carried. Ruth could see very little of the houses they passed;
but at one spot—although it was on the other side of the road—there were
two green lanterns, one on either side of an arched gate, and there seemed
to be a rather large, but gloomy, house behind the hedge before which these
lanterns burned.
</p>
<p>"You will always know my house," Doctor Davison said, softly, and still retaining
her hand, "by its green eyes."
</p>
<p>So Ruth knew she had passed his home, to which he had so kindly invited her.
And that made her think for a moment about Uncle Jabez and Aunt Alvirah.
Would she find somebody waiting to take her to the Red Mill when she got
back to the station?</p>
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