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He pa.s.sed a wide stretch of cultivated fields, mostly planted in tobacco, but he could not recollect what farmer had tobacco down by the creek this year. There were some men at work on a piece of rising ground, but they were a long way off. Still, Harry shouted to them, but they did not appear to hear him.
Then he pa.s.sed on among the trees again, b.u.mping against stumps, turning and twisting, but always keeping out in the middle of the current. He began to be very uneasy, especially as he now saw, what he had not noticed before, that the boat was leaking badly.
He made up his mind that he must do something soon, even if he had to take off his clothes and jump in and try to swim to sh.o.r.e. But this, he was well aware, would be hard work in such a current.
Looking hurriedly around, he saw, a short distance before him, a tree that appeared to stand almost in the middle of the creek, with its lower branches not very high above the water. The main current swirled around this tree, and the boat was floating directly toward it.
Harry's mind was made up in an instant. He stood up on the seat, and as the boat pa.s.sed under the tree he seized the lowest branch.
In a moment the boat was jerked from under his feet, and he hung suspended over the rus.h.i.+ng water.
He gripped the branch with all his strength, and giving his legs a swing, got his feet over it. Then, after two or three attempts, he managed to draw himself up and get first one leg and then his whole body over the branch. Then he sat up and shuffled along to the trunk, against which he leaned with one arm around it, all in a perspiration, and trembling with the exertion and excitement.
When he had rested awhile, he stood up on the limb and looked toward the land. There, to his joy, he saw, at a little distance, a small log-house, and there was some one living in it, for he saw smoke coming from the log and mud chimney that was built up against one end of the cabin.
Harry gave a great shout, and then another, and another, and presently a negro woman came out of the cabin and looked out over the creek. Then three colored children came tumbling out, and they looked out over the creek.
Then Harry shouted again, and the woman saw him.
"h.e.l.lo, dar!" she cried. "Who's dat?"
"It's me! Harry Loudon."
"Harry Loudon?" shouted the woman, running down to the edge of the water. "Mah'sr John Loudon's son Harry? What you doin' dar? Is you fis.h.i.+n'?"
"Fis.h.i.+ng!" cried Harry. "No! I want to get ash.o.r.e. Have you a boat?"
"A boat! Lors a ma.s.sy! I got no boat, Mah'sr Harry. How did ye git dar?"
"Oh, I got adrift, and my boat's gone! Isn't there any man about?"
"No man about here," said the woman. "My ole man's gone off to de railroad. But he'll be back dis evenin'."
"I can't wait here till he comes," cried Harry. "Haven't you a rope and some boards to make a raft?"
"Lor', no! Mah'sr Harry. I got no boards."
"Tell ye what ye do, dar," shouted the biggest boy, a woolly-heady urchin, with nothing on but a big pair of trousers that came up under his arms and were fastened over his shoulders by two bits of string, "jist you come on dis side and jump down, an' slosh ash.o.r.e."
"It's too deep," cried Harry.
"No, 'tain't," said the boy. "I sloshed out to dat tree dis mornin'."
"You did, you Pomp!" cried his mother. "Oh! I'll lick ye fur dat, when I git a-hold of ye!"
"Did you, really?" cried Harry.
"Yes, I did," shouted the undaunted Pomp. "I sloshed out dar an' back agin."
"But the water's higher now," said Harry.
"No, 'tain't," said the woman. "Tain't riz much dis mornin'. Done all de risin' las' night. Dat tree's jist on de edge of de creek bank. If Pomp could git along dar, you kin, Mah'sr Harry! Did ye go out dar, sure 'nuff, you Pomp? Mind, if ye didn't, I'll lick ye!"
"Yes, I did," said Pomp; "clar out dar an' back agin."
"Then I'll try it," cried Harry; and clambering around the trunk of the tree, he jumped off as far as he could toward sh.o.r.e.
CHAPTER XXIV.
THE FIRST BUSINESS TELEGRAMS.
When Harry jumped from the tree, he came down on his feet, in water not quite up to his waist, and then he pushed in toward land as fast as he could go. In a few minutes, he stood in the midst of the colored family, his trousers and coat-tails dripping, and his shoes feeling like a pair of wet sponges.
"Ye ought to have rolled up yer pants and tooked off yer shoes and stockin's afore ye jumped, Mah'sr Harry," said the woman.
"I wish I had taken off my shoes," said Harry.
The woman at whose cabin Harry found himself was Charity Allen, and a good, sensible woman she was. She made Harry hurry into the house, and she got him her husband's Sunday trousers, which she had just washed and ironed, and insisted on his putting them on, while she dried his own.
She hung his stockings and his coat before the fire, and made one of the boys rub his shoes with a cloth so as to dry them as much as possible before putting them near the fire.
Harry was very impatient to be off, but Charity was so certain that he would catch his death of cold if he started before his clothes were dry that he allowed himself to be persuaded to wait.
And then she fried some salt pork, on which, with a great piece of corn-bread, he made a hearty meal, for he was very hungry.
"Have you had your dinner, Charity?" he asked.
"Oh, yes, Mah'sr Harry; long time ago," she said.
"Then it must be pretty late," said Harry, anxiously.
"Oh, no!" said she; "'tain't late. I reckon it can't be much mor' 'n four o'clock."
"Four o'clock!" shouted Harry, jumping up in such a hurry that he nearly tripped himself in Uncle Oscar's trousers, which were much too long for him. "Why, that's dreadfully late. Where can the day have gone? I must be off, instantly!"
So much had happened since morning, that it was no wonder that Harry had not noticed how the hours had flown.
The ride to the creek, the discussions there, the delay in getting the boat, the pa.s.sage down the stream, which was much longer than Harry had imagined, and the time he had spent in the tree and in the cabin, had, indeed, occupied the greater part of the day.
And even now he was not able to start. Though he urged her as much as he could, he could not make Charity understand that it was absolutely necessary that he must have his clothes, wet or dry; and he did not get them until they were fit to put on. And then his shoes were not dry, but, as he intended to run all the way to Aunt Judy's cabin, that did not matter so much.
"How far is it to Aunt Judy's?" he asked, when at last he was ready to start.
"Well, I reckons it's 'bout six or seben miles, Mah'sr Harry," said Charity.