"I mean to."
"Haven"t you done it already?"
"I didn"t say I had," answered Ben, who was evidently debating with himself whether he should admit Harry to his confidence.
"But didn"t you set the barn afire?"
"What if I did?"
"Why, I should say you run a great risk."
"I don"t care for that."
"I see the reason now, why you wouldn"t tell me what you was going to do before."
"We are in for it now, Harry. I meant to pay off the squire, and--"
"Then you did set the barn afire?"
"I didn"t say so; and, more than that, I don"t mean to say so. If you can see through a millstone, why, just open your eyes--that"s all."
"I am sorry you did it, Ben."
"No whining, Harry; be a man."
"I mean to be a man; but I don"t think there was any need of burning the barn."
"I do; I couldn"t leave Redfield without squaring accounts with Squire Walker."
"Where are you going, Ben?"
"To Boston, of course."
"How shall we get there?"
"We will go by the river, as far as we can; then take to the road."
"But this is George Leman"s boat--isn"t it?"
"Yes."
"You hooked it?"
"Of course I did; you don"t suppose I should mind trifles at such a time as this! But he can have it again, when I have done with it."
"What was the use of taking the boat?"
"In the first place, don"t you think it is easier to sail in a boat than to walk? And in the second place, the river runs through the woods for five or six miles below Pine Pleasant; so that no one will be likely to see us. We shall get off without being found out."
"But the river is not deep enough. It is full of rocks about three miles down."
"We won"t mind them. We can keep her clear of the rocks well enough.
When I was down the river last spring, you couldn"t see a single rock above water, and we don"t draw more than six inches."
"But that was in the spring, when the water was high. I don"t believe we can get the boat through."
"Yes, we can; at any rate, we can jump ash.o.r.e and tow her down,"
replied Ben, confidently, though his calculations were somewhat disturbed by Harry"s reasoning.
"There is another difficulty, Ben," suggested Harry.
"O, there are a hundred difficulties; but we mustn"t mind them."
"They will miss the boat, and suspect at once who has got it."
"We shall be out of their reach when they miss it."
"I heard George Leman say he was going a fishing in her to-morrow."
"Did you? Then why didn"t you say so before?" retorted Ben, angrily.
"Because you didn"t tell me what you were going to do. How could I?"
"Never mind; it is no use to cry for spilt milk. We will make the best of it."
"We are in for it now."
"That we are; and if you only stick by me, it will all come out right.
If we get caught, you must keep a stiff upper lip."
"Never fear me."
"And, above all, don"t blow on me."
"Of course I won"t."
"Whatever happens, promise that you will stick by me."
"I will, Ben."
"That"s a good fellow, Harry. On that, we will take a bit of luncheon, and have a good time of it."
As he spoke, Ben drew out from under the seat in the bow a box filled with bread and cheese.
"You see we are provisioned for a cruise, Harry," added Ben, as he offered the contents of the box to his companion. "Here is enough to last us two or three days."
"But you don"t mean to keep on the river so long as that?"
"I mean to stick to the boat as long as the navigation will permit,"