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"Throost the punt along as far as I can, and when I've gotten to the end o' the watter tie her oop to the pole, and walk over to see the plaace."
"I'll come with you, Dave."
"Hey, do, lad, and you can tell me all about it as we go. Jump in."
d.i.c.k wanted no second invitation, and the decoy-man sent the punt along rapidly, and by following one of the lanes of water pursued a devious course toward Grimsey, whose blackened ruins now began to come into sight.
d.i.c.k talked away about the events of the night, but Dave became more and more silent as they landed and approached the farm where people were moving about busily.
"Nay," he said at last, "it weer some one smoking. n.o.body would hev set fire to the plaace. Why, they might hev been all bont in their beds."
Tom Tallington saw them coming and ran out.
"Why, Dave," he cried, "I'd forgotten all about the fis.h.i.+ng, but we can't go now."
"Nay, we couldn't go now," said the man severely. "'Twouldn't be neighbourly."
Tom played the part of showman, and took them round the place, which looked very muddy and desolate by day.
"I say, d.i.c.k, do you know how your father made the horses come out?" he said, as they approached the barn, which had been turned into a stable.
"Hit 'em, I suppose, the stupid, cowardly brutes!"
"No; hitting them wouldn't have made them move. He p.r.i.c.ked them with the point of his knife."
"Did he, though?" said Dave, who manifested all the interest of one who had not been present.
At last he took his departure.
"Soon as you like, lads," he said; "soon as it's a fine day. I'll save the baits, and get some frogs too. Big pike like frogs. Theer's another girt one lies off a reed patch I know on. I shall be ash.o.r.e every day till you're ready."
He nodded to them, and pushed off.
"You won't go without us, Dave?" said d.i.c.k, as the boat glided away.
"Nay, not I," was the reply; and the boys watched him till he poled in among the thin dry winter reeds, through which he seemed to pa.s.s in a shadowy way, and then disappear.
CHAPTER TEN.
A TRIMMERING EXPEDITION.
A stormy time ensued, lasting about a fortnight, during which the draining business was hindered; but, upon the whole, the progress made was steady, for a number of men were now employed, and the fen people, who visited the outfall now and then, began to realise what kind of d.y.k.e it was that would run across the great swamp.
At last one evening, as the lads had wandered down to Hickathrift's, and were talking to the great bluff wheelwright as he worked away with his axe at roughly shaping the shaft of a sledge, Dave came silently up, followed by the little decoy-dog; and the first knowledge of his presence was given by an attack made upon Hickathrift's big lurcher, which, after showing its teeth angrily, settled down, and seemed to look scornfully at the little animal, before closing its eyes as if to go to sleep.
"Hallo, Dave!" cried the lads together; "want us?"
"Nay, I don't want you, my lads."
"Well, then, we want you," cried Tom.
"Eh?"
"To take us out after the pike, as you promised."
"Nay, it would be too cold, and you wouldn't like it."
"How do you know, Dave?" cried d.i.c.k. "Come, when shall we start?"
"Well," said Dave, looking about him as if in search of a good piece of wood which might prove useful, "I dunno. You lads do as you likes; but if I wanted to go, I sud say as the weather was nicely sattled, and start to-morrow morning."
The hour was settled, as well as the weather, and after obtaining the requisite permission the lads were punctual to their time, and found Dave waiting in his punt, upon whose thwart he was seated gravely tying a hook on to a stout piece of twisted horse-hair.
"Got everything ready, Dave?" cried d.i.c.k.
"Ay, lad; all ready."
"So are we. Look, Dave," cried d.i.c.k, swinging up the big basket he carried, "pork-pie, bread and cheese, and a lump of bacon, and--"
Dave's face twitched as he listened, but he did not speak, only waited; till, after waiting awhile to whet the man's anxiety, d.i.c.k added:
"And a big bottle of beer."
"Oh, I don't want no beer!" grumbled Dave. "Watter's good enough for me."
"Let's leave it behind, Tom," said d.i.c.k archly. "It will only be heavy in the boat."
"Nay, put it in," said the man with a dry look. "Mebbe the fish would like a drop. Mak' 'em bite."
The boys laughed, and stepped into the punt, which was soon gliding over the dark waters that lay in pools and winding lane-like ca.n.a.ls, Dave, in his fox-skin cap, standing up in front and handling the pole, the boys carefully examining the contents of the boat.
"What's in that bucket, Dave?"
"Never mind; you let it alone," said Dave gruffly; and d.i.c.k dropped the net he was raising from the pail.
"Well, let's look at the basket, Dave."
"Nay; I wean't hev my hooks and lines tangled up just after I've laid 'em ready. Yow two wait and see when we get acrost to wheer the pike lays."
"Oh, very well!" said d.i.c.k in a disappointed tone. "I would have shown you what we've got in our basket."
"I know what you've got yow telled me," retorted Dave. "I don't want to look at vittles; I want to taste 'em."
There was a pause, while Dave worked steadily away with his pole.
"I shall be glad when the summer comes again," said Tom.