"Yes," nodded Ralph.
"A good name, and you"re a good sort. I jumped on you wrong the other night, and I want to say it right here. I thought Mort Bemis was my friend. This afternoon he took up with a fellow named Slump, broke open my trunk, stole two of my silver medals, and sloped. That"s what I got for being his friend. Now you come and do me a good turn. I"m not your kind, and we can"t ever mix probably, but if ever you want anyone hammered, I"ll be there. See? I"m--I"m obliged to you, Fairbanks.
You"ve taught me something. There"s something better in the world than muscle--and you"ve got it."
When Ralph left the old shed, he was pretty certain that he had made a new friend. He had, too, won the respect of the little coterie who had seen the terrible "champeen" eat humble pie before a fellow half his size.
Ralph went to a millinery store next. The Sat.u.r.day evening before he had accompanied his mother on her shopping tour. She had admired a hat in a show-window, but had said she could not spare the money for it just then.
Ralph proudly walked home with the self-same hat in a band-box.
"I have made quite a hole in that fifty dollars," he mused, as he left the band-box at the home cottage, and started for Mrs. Davis" house. "I wonder if I would be as extravagant on a bigger scale, if we should be fortunate enough to get back those twenty thousand dollars" worth of railroad bonds?"
CHAPTER XIV--A BUSY EVENING
The nearest cut to the house where Mrs. Davis lived was along a sort of a ravine, and Ralph pursued this route. It was the shortest, and it was here that the switch spur was to run up to Gasper Farrington"s old factory.
Ralph was interested in this as a railroader. The work of grading had already commenced. It was not to be a very particular job, as the service would be only occasional. The company was using old rails and second-hand ties.
There was a natural rock shelf on the north side of the ravine. This the roadbed would follow. There were several sharp grades, but there would be no heavy traffic. The entire factory output, which was in the furniture line, would not exceed a carload a day.
Mrs. Davis" home stood back from the ravine about a hundred feet. It was some three hundred yards from the factory building. Between it and the latter structure was a low two-story house, very old and dilapidated. Ralph wondered if this was the spot which Farrington had said he would appropriate, law or no law, as the connecting link in his right of way.
"Mr. Farrington may well look out for wrecks," soliloquized Ralph, as he pa.s.sed along the ravine. "The freight business from the factory is not worth enough for the company to put in a first-cla.s.s roadbed. A poor one means danger. They will have to go slow on some of those mean curves and crooked grades, if they want to avoid trouble."
Ralph turned from the ravine as he caught the gleam of a light in the house he knew to be occupied by the mysterious Mrs. Davis.
It was a desolate place, and he felt sorry for anyone compelled to live so remote from neighbors. He felt glad, however, that the lonely widow had been so fortunate as to find a friend in his mother.
Mrs. Davis had proven her honesty by wishing to repay him the ten-dollar loan. Ralph in a way counted that evening on some intimation concerning the twenty thousand dollars railroad bonds. He was naturally wrought up and anxious over this particular phase of the situation.
The house did not front on the ravine. In approaching it, Ralph came up to its side first. The light that had guided him was in a middle room.
Its window was open and the shade was lowered, but the breeze blew it back every little while.
It was a bright moonlight night. Ralph could make out the house and its surroundings as plain as day. As he walked beside a hedge of high alders, he paused with a start.
Someone stood directly beside the open window where the light was. The house shadowed him, but even at a distance Ralph could see that the lurker was a boy about his own height.
This person stood with his face to the window. Every time the breeze moved the curtain, he bobbed about actively. He craned his neck, and made all kinds of efforts to look into the room.
"Why," said Ralph indignantly, "it is someone spying!"
The breeze freshening, the curtain was just then blown on a forty-five degree slant. A perfectly plain view of the room and its inmates was momentarily shown.
Even at a distance Ralph could make out Mrs. Davis propped up in a chair with pillows, and his mother seated near by.
The lurker at the window was taking a good clear look. He suddenly whipped a card out of his pocket. He glanced at it quickly, then inside the room again. The breeze let down, and the curtain dropped plumb once more.
Ralph made an impetuous run for the window. He came up to the lurker, grabbed his arm, and still at full momentum ran him twenty feet along from the window. He did not wish to startle the inmates of the house.
The astonished boy he had seized Ralph landed against the side of a summerhouse. He never let go of him. His prisoner wriggled in his grasp.
"Hey, what"s this?" he began.
"Who are you and what are you up to?" challenged Ralph sharply. "What!"
he cried, loosening his hold in stupefaction. "Van--Van Sherwin!"
"h.e.l.lo!" muttered his companion, now faced squarely about, and staring in turn. "It is you, Fairbanks? Well, that"s natural, seeing your mother is here, but you took me off my feet so sudden. Shake. You don"t seem glad to see me one bit, although it"s an age since I met you last. How goes it?"
Ralph shook the hand affectionately extended. It was not the hearty greeting, however, he usually awarded to this his warmest boy friend.
Ralph looked grave, uncertain, and disappointed.
Of all the chums he had ever known, Van Sherwin had come into his life in a way that had appealed strongly to every friendly sentiment.
Deprived of reason temporarily through a blow from a baseball, and practically adopted by the Fairbanks family, Van"s gentle, lovable ways had charmed them. When he recovered his reason and was the means of introducing Ralph to Farwell Gibson, Van was cherished like a brother by Ralph.
Less than two weeks previous Van had gone back to the wilderness stretch beyond Springfield, where Gibson was keeping his railroad cut-off charter alive by grading the roadbed so much each day, as required by law.
Through Gibson Ralph had got the information that enabled them to prove Gasper Farrington"s mortgage on their home a fraud. Naturally he felt thankful to the queer old hermit who was working out an idea amid Crusoe-like solitude.
As to Van,--mother and son made him a daily topic of conversation. They had longed for a visit from the strange, wild lad who had unconsciously brought so much good into their lives.
Now Van had appeared, yet a vague distrust and disappointment chilled the warmth of Ralph"s reception. Van had always been frank, open-minded, aboveboard. Ralph had just discovered him apparently engaged in eavesdropping.
Thinking all this over, Ralph stood grim and silent as a statue for the s.p.a.ce of nearly two minutes.
"Hey!" challenged Van suddenly, giving his arm a vigorous shake. "Are you dreaming, Ralph?"
Ralph roused himself. He determined to clear the situation, if it could be cleared.
"Van," he said definitely, "what were you doing at that window?"
"Why, didn"t you see--looking in."
"I know you was. In other words, spying. Oh, Van--spying on my mother!"
Van Sherwin"s eyes flashed. In a trice he had whipped off his coat. His fists doubled up. He advanced on Ralph, his voice shaking with an angry sob.
"Take that back, Ralph Fairbanks!" he cried. "Do it quick, or you"ve got to lick me. Me spy on your mother? Why, she"s pretty near my mother, too--the only one I ever remember."
"But I saw you lurking at that window," said Ralph, a good deal taken aback by Van"s violent demonstration.
"Lurking, eh?" repeated Van sarcastically. "I"m a lurker, am I? And a spy? Why don"t you call me a bravo--and a brigand? Humph--you chump!"
The impulsive fellow shrugged his shoulders in such a pitying, indulgent way that Ralph was fairly nettled.
"I won"t fight you," declared Van, putting on his coat again. "You think so much of your mother that I"ll forgive you. But I think a lot of her, too, as you well know, and, knowing it, you ought to have thought twice before you--yes, imputed to me any action that could do her any harm."