Part 13 (1/2)

”Wish you good-morrow, Captain,” said the foremost, a st.u.r.dy young fellow with a pleasant English face.

”Good-morrow Peter Browne, and you, John Goodman,” replied the captain cordially. ”Whither away?”

”To cut thatch in the fields nigh yon little pond,” replied Browne pointing in a westerly direction. ”And I am taking Nero along to give account of any Indians that may be lurking there.”

”And John Goodman's spaniel to rouse the game for Nero to pull down,”

said Standish with a smile. ”Well, G.o.d speed you.”

And turning into the unfinished house he found Alden watching him with a look of silent friendliness and sympathy more eloquent than words; returning the greeting as mutely and as heartily, Standish would have pa.s.sed into his own bedroom, but the younger man interposed,--

”Thou 'lt break thy fast, Captain, wilt thou not? All is ready and waiting your coming; some of the bean soup you liked yester even, and some fish”--

”Presently, presently, good John! I would but bathe and refresh myself.

Nay, look not so doubtingly after me, friend. I am a man, and know a man's devoir.”

He spoke with a smile as brave as it was gentle, and pa.s.sing in closed the door.

”Doth he know she is dying!” muttered John throwing himself upon a bench; ”and Priscilla sickening and her mother dead!”

CHAPTER X.

A TERRIBLE NIGHT.

As Standish entered his own house the four men to whom he had spoken pa.s.sed on around the base of the hill, and reaching a tract of swampy land covered with reeds and rushes suitable for thatching, they set to work cutting them and binding in bundles ready for use. For some hours they wrought industriously, until Peter Browne, commander of the expedition, straightened his back, stretched his cramped arms, and gazing at the sun announced,--

”Noontime, men. We'll e'en rest and eat our snack.”

”Art thou o' mind to come and show me the pond where thou sawest wild fowl t' other day?” asked John Goodman, townsman and friend of Browne's.

”Ay, will I. Take thy meat in thy hand and come along,” replied Browne.

”And we may as well finish our day there, sith this spot is well nigh stripped. Margeson and Britteridge, when you have fed, you can bind the rushes that are cut, and then come after us as far as a little pond behind that hill, due west from here I should say. You'll find it easily enough.”

”Oh, ay, we'll find it,” replied Margeson, a rough companion, but a good worker. ”Go on mates, and take your dogs with you, for they're smelling at the victuals enough to turn a man's stomach. Get out you beast!” and raising his foot he offered to kick Nero, who growled menacingly and showed a formidable set of teeth.

”Have a care, man!” cried Browne angrily. ”Meddle with that dog and he'll make victual of thee before thou knowest what ails thee. 'T is ever a poor sign when a man cannot abear dogs or children.”

And the two friends, followed by the mastiff and spaniel, walked rapidly away. Two hours pa.s.sed while Margeson and Britteredge, not greatly in haste, finished their lunch and tied and stacked the reeds already cut.

Then shouldering their sickles they leisurely skirted the hill in front of them, and after a little search came upon the pretty sheet of water now called Murdoch's Pond.

”This will be the place,” said Margeson looking about him; ”but where is pepperpot Browne?”

”Or his dog?” suggested Britteridge slyly.

”Whistle and the beasts will hear us if the men do not,” said Margeson suiting the action to the word. No answer followed, and both men together raised a yet shriller note, followed by shouts, halloos, and various noises supposed to carry sound to the farthest limits of s.p.a.ce.

But each effort died away in dim and distant echoes among the hills, and after a while the men looked at each other in half angry discouragement.