Part 21 (1/2)

”You are the same as of old, Mynheer Jacobus,” he said, ”and before Tayoga and I saw you, but while we heard you, we agreed that there had been no change, and that we did not want any.”

”And why should I change, you two young rascals? Am I not goot enough as I am? Haf I not in the past given the punishment to both uf you und am I not able to do it again, tall and strong as the two uf you haf grown? Ah, such foolish lads! Perhaps you haf been spared because pity wa.s.s taken on your foolishness. But iss it Mynheer Willet beyond you?

That iss a man of sense.”

”It's none other than Dave, Mynheer Jacobus,” said Robert.

”Then why doesn't he come in?” exclaimed Mynheer Jacobus Huysman. ”He iss welcome here, doubly, triply welcome, und he knows it.”

”Dave! Dave! Hurry!” called Robert, ”or Mynheer Jacobus will chastise you. He's so anxious to fall on your neck and welcome you that he can't wait!”

Willet came swiftly up the brick walk, and the hands of the two big men met in a warm clasp.

”You see I've brought the boys back to you again, Jacob,” said the hunter.

”But what reckless lads they've become,” grumbled Mynheer Huysman. ”I can see the mischief in their eyes now. They wa.s.s bad enough when they went to school here und lived with me, but since they've run wild in the forests this house iss not able to hold them.”

”Don't you worry, Jacob, old friend. These arms and shoulders of mine are still strong, and if they make you trouble I will deal with them. But we just stopped a minute to inquire into the state of your health. Can you tell us which is now the best inn in Albany?”

The face of Mynheer Jacobus Huysman flamed, and his eyes blazed in the center of it, two great red lights.

”Inn! Inn!” he roared in his queer mixture of English, Dutch and German accent ”Iss it that your head ha.s.s been struck by lightning und you haf gone crazy? If there wa.s.s a thousand inns at Albany you und Robert und Tayoga could not stop at one uf them. Iss not the house uf Jacobus Huysman good enough for you?”

Robert, Tayoga and the hunter laughed aloud.

”He did but make game of you, Mynheer Jacobus,” said Robert. ”We will alter your statement and say if there were a thousand inns in Albany you could not make us stay at any one of them. Despite your commands we would come directly to your house.”

Mynheer Jacobus Huysman permitted himself to smile. But his voice renewed its grumbling tone.

”Ever the same,” he said. ”You must stay here, although only the good Lord himself knows in what condition my house will be when you leave. You are two wild lads. It iss not so strange uf you, Robert Lennox, who are white, but I would expect better uf Tayoga, who is to be a great Onondaga chief some day.”

”You make a great mistake, Mynheer Jacobus,” said Robert. ”Tayoga is far worse than I am. All the mischief that I have ever done was due to his example and persuasion. It is my misfortune that I have a weak nature, and I am easily led into evil by my a.s.sociates.”

”It iss not so. You are equally bad. Bring in your baggage und I will see if Caterina, der cook, cannot find enough for you three, who always eat like raging lions.”

The soldiers, who were to return immediately to Colonel William Johnson, rode away with their horses, and Robert, Tayoga and Willet took their packs into the house of Mynheer Huysman, who grumbled incessantly while he and a manservant and a maidservant made them as comfortable as possible.

”Would you und Tayoga like to haf your old room on the second floor?”

he said to Robert.

”Nothing would please us better,” replied the lad.

”Then you shall haf it,” said Mynheer, as he led the way up the stair and into the room. ”Do you remember, Tayoga, how wild you wa.s.s when you came here to learn the good ways und bad ways uf the white people?”

”I do,” replied Tayoga, ”and the walls and the roof felt oppressive to me, although we have stout log houses of our own in our villages. But they were not our own walls and our own roof, and there was the great young warrior, Lennox, whom we now call Dagaeoga, who was to stay in the same room and even in the same bed with me. Do you wonder that I felt like climbing out of a window at night, and escaping into the woods?”

”You were eleven then,” said Robert, ”and I was just a shade younger. You were as strange to me as I was to you, and I thought, in truth, that you were going to run away into the wilderness. But you didn't, and you began to learn from books faster than I thought was possible for one whose mind before then had been turned in another direction.”

”But you helped me, Dagaeoga. After our first and only battle in the garden, which I think was a draw, we became allies.”