A HOME IN RUINS.
As Joe rowed toward his home on the
mountain side, a good mile from Riverside, he could
not help but think of the two mysterious men and of
what they had said.
“They were certainly rascals,”
he mused. “And from their talk they must
have come from New York and are now going to try some
game in Philadelphia.”
The hermit’s boy was tired out
by the day’s outing, yet he pulled a fairly
quick stroke and it was not long before he reached
the dock at which he and Hiram Bodley were in the
habit of leaving their boat. He cleaned the craft
out, hid the oars in the usual place, and then, with
his fishing lines in one hand and a good sized fish
in the other, started up the trail leading to the
place that he called home.
“What a place to come to, alongside
of the one Ned lives in,” he said to himself.
“I suppose the Talmadges think this is a regular
hovel. I wish we could afford something better,—or
at least live in town. It’s lonesome here
with nobody but old Uncle Hiram around.”
As Joe neared the cabin something
seemed to come over him and, for some reason he could
not understand, he felt very much depressed in spirits.
He quickened his pace, until a turn of the trail brought
the homestead into view.
A cry of alarm broke from his lips
and with good reason. The little shelter had
stood close to a large hemlock tree. The lightning
had struck the tree, causing it to topple ever.
In falling, it had landed fairly and squarely upon
the cabin, smashing it completely. One corner
of the cabin was in ashes, but the heavy rain had probably
extinguished the conflagration.
“Uncle Hiram!” cried the
boy, as soon as he recovered from his amazement.
“Uncle Hiram, where are you?”
There was no answer to this call and
for the moment Joe’s heart seemed to stop beating.
Was the old hermit under that pile of ruins? If
so it was more than likely he was dead.
Dropping his fish and his lines, the
youth sprang to the front of the cabin. The door
had fallen to the ground and before him was a mass
of wreckage with a small hollow near the bottom.
He dropped on his knees and peered inside.
“Uncle Hiram!” he called again.
There was no answer, and he listened
with bated breath. Then he fancied he heard a
groan, coming from the rear of what was left of the
cabin. He ran around to that point and pulled
aside some boards and a broken window sash.
“Uncle Hiram, are you here?”
“Joe!” came in a low voice,
full of pain. The man tried to say more but could
not.
Hauling aside some more boards, Joe
now beheld the hermit, lying flat on his back, with
a heavy beam resting on his chest. He was also
suffering from a cut on the forehead and from a broken
ankle.
“This is too bad, Uncle Hiram!”
he said, in a trembling voice. “I’ll
get you out just as soon as I can.”
“Be—be careful, Joe—I—I—my
ribs must be broken,” gasped the hermit.
“I’ll be careful,”
answered the boy, and began to pull aside one board
after another. Then he tugged away at the beam
but could not budge it.
“Raise it up Joe—it—is—crushing
the life ou—out of me,” said the
hermit faintly.
“I’ll pry it up,”
answered the boy, and ran off to get a block of wood.
Then he procured a stout pole and with this raised
the heavy beam several inches.
“Can you crawl out, Uncle Hiram?”
There was no answer, and Joe saw that
the man had fainted from exhaustion. Fixing the
pole so it could not slip, he caught hold of the hermit
and dragged him to a place of safety.
Joe had never had to care for a hurt
person before and he scarcely knew how to proceed.
He laid the hermit on the grass and washed his face
with water. Soon Hiram Bodley opened his eyes
once more.
“My chest!” he groaned.
“All of my ribs must be broken! And my ankle
is broken, too!” And he groaned again.
“I had better get a doctor, Uncle Hiram.”
“A doctor can’t help me.”
“Perhaps he can.”
“I haven’t any faith in
doctors. A doctor operated on my mother and killed
her.”
“But Doctor Gardner is a nice
man. He will do all he can for you, I am sure,”
urged Joe.
“Well, Dr. Gardner is a good
fellow I admit. If you—can—can
get him—I’ll—I’ll—”
The sufferer tried to go on but could not.
“I think I can get him.
But I hate to leave you alone.” And Joe
stared around helplessly. He wished he had Ned
with him.
“Never mind—give
me a drink—then go,” answered Hiram
Bodley. He had often taken Doctor Gardner out
to hunt with him and liked the physician not a little.
Inside of five minutes Joe was on
the way to the doctor’s residence, which was
on the outskirts of Riverside. He had left the
hermit as comfortable as possible, on a mattress and
covered with a cloth to keep off the night air,—for
it was now growing late and the sun had set behind
the mountains.
Tired though he was the boy pulled
with might and main, and so reached the dock of the
physician’s home in a short space of time.
Running up the walk of the neatly-kept garden, he
mounted the piazza and rang the bell several times.
“What’s the matter?”
asked Doctor Gardner, who came himself to answer the
summons.
“Our cabin is in ruins, because
of the storm, and Mr. Bodley is badly hurt,”
answered Joe, and related some of the particulars.
“This is certainly too bad,
my boy,” said the physician. “I’ll
come at once and do what I can for him.”
He ran for a case of instruments and
also for some medicines, and then followed Joe back
to the boat.
“You act as if you were tired,”
said the doctor, after he had watched Joe at the oars
for several minutes.
“I am tired, sir—I’ve
been rowing a good deal to-day. But I guess I
can make it.”
“Let me row,” said the
physician, and took the oars. He was a fine oarsman,
and the trip was made in half the time it would have
taken Joe to cover the distance.
At the dock there was a lantern, used
by Joe and the hermit when they went fishing at night.
This was lit, and the two hurried up the trail to
the wreck of the cabin.
Hiram Bodley was resting where Joe
had left him. He was breathing with difficulty
and did not at first recognize the doctor.
“Take it off!” he murmured.
“Take it off! It is—is crushing
th—the life out of—of me!”
“Mr. Bodley—Hiram,
don’t you know me?” asked Doctor Gardner,
kindly.
“Oh! So it’s you?
I guess you can’t do much, doctor, can you?
I—I’m done for!” And a spasm
of pain crossed the sufferer’s face.
“While there is life there is
hope,” answered the physician, noncommittally.
He recognized at once that Hiram Bodley’s condition
was critical.
“He’ll get over it, won’t he?”
questioned Joe, quickly.
The doctor did not answer, but turned
to do what he could for the hurt man. He felt
of his chest and listened to his breathing, and then
administered some medicine.
“His ankle is hurt, too,” said Joe.
“Never mind the ankle just now, Joe,”
was the soft answer.
There was something in the tone that
alarmed the boy and he caught the physician by the
arm.
“Doctor, tell me the truth!” he cried.
“Is he is he going to die?”
“I am afraid so, my lad.
His ribs are crushed and one of them has stuck into
his right lung.”
At these words the tears sprang into
the boy’s eyes and it was all he could do to
keep from crying outright. Even though the old
hermit had been rough in his ways, Joe thought a good
deal of the man.
“Cannot you do something, doctor,” he
pleaded.
“Not here. We might do
something in a hospital, but he would not survive
the journey. He is growing weaker every moment.
Be brave, my lad. It is a terrible trial, I know,
but you must remember that all things are for the
best.”
Joe knelt beside the sufferer and
took hold of his hand. Hiram Bodley looked at
him and then at the doctor.
“I—I can’t
live—I know it,” he said hoarsely.
“Joe, stay by me till I die, won’t you?”
“Yes!” faltered the boy. “Oh,
this is awful!”
“I’m sorry to leave you
so soon, Joe—I—I thought I’d
be—be able to do something for you some
day.”
“You have done something for me, Uncle Hiram.”
“All I’ve got goes to you, Joe. Doctor,
do you hear that?”
“I do.”
“It—it ain’t
much, but it’s something. The blue box—I
put it in the blue box—” Here the
sufferer began to cough.
“The blue box?” came from Joe questioningly.
“Yes, Joe, all in the blue box—the
papers and the money—And the blue box is—is—”
Again the sufferer began to cough. “I—I
want water!” he gasped.
The water was brought and he took
a gulp. Then he tried to speak again, but the
effort was in vain. The doctor and Joe raised
him up.
“Uncle Hiram! Speak to me!” cried
the boy.
But Hiram Bodley was past speaking. He had passed
to the Great Beyond.