OUT IN A STORM.
“What do you think of this storm, Joe?”
“I think it is going to be a
heavy one, Ned. I wish we were back home,”
replied Joe Bodley, as he looked at the heavy clouds
which overhung Lake Tandy.
“Do you think we’ll catch
much rain before we get back?” And Ned, who
was the son of a rich man and well dressed, looked
at the new suit of clothes that he wore.
“I’m afraid we shall,
Ned. Those black clouds back of Mount Sam mean
something.” “If this new suit gets
soaked it will be ruined,” grumbled Ned, and
gave a sigh.
“I am sorry for the suit, Ned;
but I didn’t think it was going to rain when
we started.”
“Oh, I am not blaming you, Joe.
It looked clear enough this morning. Can’t
we get to some sort of shelter before the rain reaches
us?”
“We can try.”
“Which is the nearest shelter?”
Joe Bodley mused for a moment.
“The nearest that I know of
is over at yonder point, Ned. It’s an old
hunting lodge that used to belong to the Cameron family.
It has been deserted for several years.”
“Then let us row for that place,
and be quick about it,” said Ned Talmadge.
“I am not going to get wet if I can help it.”
As he spoke he took up a pair of oars
lying in the big rowboat he and Joe Bodley occupied.
Joe was already rowing and the rich boy joined in,
and the craft was headed for the spot Joe had pointed
out.
The lake was one located in the central
part of the State of Pennsylvania. It was perhaps
a mile wide and more than that long, and surrounded
by mountains and long ranges of hills. At the
lower end of the lake was a small settlement of scant
importance and at the upper end, where there was a
stream of no mean size, was the town of Riverside.
At Riverside were situated several summer hotels and
boarding houses, and also the elegant mansion in which
Ned Talmadge resided, with his parents and his four
sisters.
Joe Bodley was as poor as Ned Talmadge
was rich, yet the two lads were quite friendly.
Joe knew a good deal about hunting and fishing, and
also knew all about handling boats. They frequently
went out together, and Ned insisted upon paying the
poorer boy for all extra services.
Joe’s home was located on the
side of the mountain which was just now wrapped in
such dark and ominous looking clouds. He lived
with Hiram Bodley, an old man who was a hermit.
The home consisted of a cabin of two rooms, scantily
furnished. Hiram Bodley had been a hunter and
guide, but of late years rheumatism had kept him from
doing work and Joe was largely the support of the
pair,—taking out pleasure parties for pay
whenever he could, and fishing and hunting in the between
times, and using or selling what was gained thereby.
There was a good deal of a mystery
surrounding Joe’s parentage. It was claimed
that he was a nephew of Hiram Bodley, and that, after
the death of his mother and sisters, his father had
drifted out to California and then to Australia.
What the real truth concerning him was we shall learn
later.
Joe was a boy of twelve, but constant
life in the open air had made him tall and strong
and he looked to be several years older.
He had dark eyes and hair, and was
much tanned by the sun. The rowboat had been
out a good distance on the lake and a minute before
the shore was gained the large drops of rain began
to fall.
“We are going to get wet after
all!” cried Ned, chagrined.
“Pull for all you are worth
and we’ll soon be under the trees,” answered
Joe.
They bent to the oars, and a dozen
more strokes sent the rowboat under a clump of pines
growing close to the edge of the lake. Just as
the boat struck the bank and Ned leaped out there
came a great downpour which made the surface of Lake
Tandy fairly sizzle.
“Run to the lodge, Ned; I’ll
look after the boat!” shouted Joe.
“But you’ll get wet.”
“Never mind; run, I tell you!”
Thus admonished, Ned ran for the old
hunting lodge, which was situated about two hundred
feet away. Joe remained behind long enough to
secure the rowboat and the oars and then he followed
his friend.
Just as one porch of the old lodge
was reached there came a flash of lightning, followed
by a clap of thunder that made Ned jump. Then
followed more thunder and lightning, and the rain came
down steadily.
“Ugh! I must say I don’t
like this at all,” remarked Ned, as he crouched
in a corner of the shelter. “I hope the
lightning doesn’t strike this place.”
“We can be thankful that we
were not caught out in the middle of the lake, Ned.”
“I agree on that, Joe,—but
it doesn’t help matters much. Oh, dear me!”
And Ned shrank down, as another blinding flash of lightning
lit up the scene.
It was not a comfortable situation
and Joe did not like it any more than did his friend.
But the hermit’s boy was accustomed to being
out in the elements, and therefore was not so impressed
by what was taking place.
“The rain will fill the boat,” said Ned,
presently.
“Never mind, we can easily bail her out or turn
her over.”
“When do you think this storm will stop?”
“In an hour or two, most likely.
Such storms never last very long. What time is
it, Ned?”
“Half-past two,” answered
Ned, after consulting the handsome watch he carried.
“Then, if it clears in two hours,
we’ll have plenty of time to get home before
dark.”
“I don’t care to stay
here two hours,” grumbled Ned. “It’s
not a very inviting place.”
“It’s better than being
out under the trees,” answered Joe, cheerfully.
The hermit’s boy was always ready to look on
the brighter side of things.
“Oh, of course.”
“And we have a fine string of
fish, don’t forget that, Ned. We were lucky
to get so many before the storm came up.”
“Do you want the fish, or are
you going to let me take them?”
“I’d like to have one fish. You may
take the others.”
“Not unless you let me pay for them, Joe.”
“Oh, you needn’t mind about paying me.”
“But I insist,” came from Ned. “I
won’t touch them otherwise.”
“All right, you can pay me for what I caught.”
“No, I want to pay for all of
them. Your time is worth something, and I know
you have to support your—the old hermit
now.”
“All right, Ned, have your own
way. Yes, I admit, I need all the money I get.”
“Is the old hermit very sick?”
“Not so sick, but his rheumatism
keeps him from going out hunting or fishing, so all
that work falls to me.”
“It’s a good deal on your shoulders, Joe.”
“I make the best of it, for there is nothing
else to do.”
“By the way, Joe, you once spoke
to me about—well, about yourself,”
went on Ned, after some hesitation. “Did
you ever learn anything more? You need not tell
me if you don’t care to.”
At these words Joe’s face clouded for an instant.
“No, I haven’t learned a thing more, Ned.”
“Then you don’t really know if you are
the hermit’s nephew or not?”
“Oh, I think I am, but I don’t know whatever
became of my father.”
“Does the hermit think he is alive?”
“He doesn’t know, and he hasn’t
any means of finding out.”
“Well, if I were you, I’d find out, some
way or other.”
“I’m going to find out—some
day,” replied Joe. “But, to tell the
truth, I don’t know how to go at it. Uncle
Hiram doesn’t like to talk about it. He
thinks my father did wrong to go away. I imagine
they had a quarrel over it.”
“Has he ever heard from your father since?”
“Not a word.”
“Did he write?”
“He didn’t know where to write to.”
“Humph! It is certainly a mystery, Joe.”
“You are right, Ned; and as
I said before, I am going to solve it some time, even
if it takes years of work to do it,” replied
the hermit’s boy.