hunter, scout, explorer an' Injun-fighter, has to fish
fur a while fur a livin'. When I wuz runnin' away from the warriors,
with my side an' my feelin's hurtin' me, I come to this lake. I knowed
that jest ez soon ez you got the chance, providin' you wuz still livin',
you'd foller to find me, an' so I blazed the trail. But when I got here
it set me to thinkin'. I saw the high bank on this side, all rocks an'
bushes. I reckoned I could come over here an' hide among 'em an' still
see anybody who followed my trail down to the other side. I wuz strong
enough by that time to swim across, an' I done it. Then when I wuz
lookin' among the rocks an' bushes fur a restin' place, I jest stumbled
upon this bee-yu-ti-ful mansion. It ain't furnished much yet, ez I told
you, but I've sent an order to Philadelphy, an' I'm expectin' a lot o'
gor-gee-yus things in a couple o' years."
"And you live by fishing, you say?"
"Mainly. You remember we all agreed a long time ago always to carry
fishin' lines an' hooks, ez we might need 'em, an' need 'em pow'ful bad
any time. It looked purty dang'rous to shoot off a gun with warriors so
near, although I did bring down wild turkeys twice in the night. But
mostly I've set here on the ledge with my bee-yu-ti-ful figger hid by
the bushes, but with my line an' hook in the water."
"Is the fishing good?"
"Too good. I don't s'pose the fish in Hyde Lake--that's what I've named
it--ever saw a hook before, an' they've been so full o' curiosity they
jest make my arm ache. It's purty hard on a lazy man like me to hev to
pull in a six or seven pound bass when you ain't rested more'n half a
minute from pullin' in another o' the same kind. I tell you, they kep'
me busy, Henry, when what I wuz needin' wuz rest."
Henry smiled.
"Were you fishin' when you saw me?" he asked.
"I shorely wuz. I'm mostly fishin', an' when I'm fishin' I mostly keep
my eyes turned that way. I've been sayin' to myself right along for the
last two or three days: 'Henry will be along purty soon now. He shorely
will. When he comes, he'll follow that chipped trail o' mine right down
to the edge o' the water. Then he'll stan' thar wondering an' while he's
standin' and wondering I'll give him an invite to come over to my
bee-yu-ti-ful mansion,' and, shore enough, that's jest what happened."
Henry sat down on a heap of leaves and leaned luxuriously against the
wall.
"You cook at night?" he said.
"O' course, and I always pick a
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