answered Ben.
"How did it happen?"
"I haven"t anything to say about it; so you mustn"t ask me any questions."
"Don"t you know how it caught afire?" persisted Noddy.
"I"ve nothing to say on that subject."
Noddy was vexed and disheartened; but he felt that it would not be prudent to deny the charge of setting it on fire before he was accused, for that would certainly convict him. The old man was playing a deep game, and that annoyed him still more.
"So you won"t say anything about it, Ben?" added he, seating himself on the pier.
"Not a word, Noddy."
"Well, I wouldn"t if I were you," continued Noddy, lightly.
Ben took no notice of this sinister remark, thus exhibiting a presence of mind which completely balked his a.s.sailant.
"I understand it all, Ben; and I don"t blame you for not wanting to say anything about it. I suppose you will own up when Mr. Grant comes home to-night."
"Don"t be saucy, Noddy," said the old man, mildly.
"So you smoked your pipe among the shavings, and set the boat-house afire--did you, Ben? Well, I am sorry for you, you are generally so careful; but I don"t believe they will discharge you for it."
Ben was as calm and unruffled as a summer sea. Noddy knew that, under ordinary circ.u.mstances, the boatman would have come down upon him like a northeast gale, if he had dared to use such insulting language to him.
He tried him on every tack, but not a word could he obtain which betrayed the opinion of the veteran, in regard to the origin of the fire. It was useless to resort to any more arts, and he gave up the point in despair. All the afternoon he wandered about the estate, and could think of nothing but the unhappy event of the morning. f.a.n.n.y did not show herself, and he had no opportunity for further consultation.
About six o"clock Bertha returned with her father; and after tea they walked down to the river. f.a.n.n.y complained of a headache, and did not go with them. It is more than probable that she was really afflicted, as she said; for she had certainly suffered enough to make her head ache.
Of course the first thing that attracted the attention of Mr. Grant and his daughter was the pile of charred timbers that indicated the place where the boat-house had once stood.
"How did that happen?" asked Mr. Grant of Ben, who was on the pier.
"I don"t know how it happened," replied the boatman, who had found his tongue now, and proceeded to give his employer all the particulars of the destruction of the building, concluding with Noddy"s energetic exclamation that he wished the boat-house was burned up.
"But did Noddy set the building on fire?" asked Bertha, greatly pained to hear this charge against her pupil.
"I don"t know, Miss Bertha. I went up to the house to get my morning instructions, as I always do, and left Noddy at work washing up the boat-house. I found you had gone to the city, and I went right out of the house, and was coming down here. I got in sight of the pier, and saw Miss f.a.n.n.y come out of the boat-house."
"f.a.n.n.y?"
"Yes; I am sure it was her. I didn"t mind where she went, for I happened to think the mainsail of the Greyhound wanted a little mending, and I went over to my room after some needles. While I was in my chamber, one of the gardeners rushed up to tell me the boat-house was afire. I came down, but "twasn"t no use; the building was most gone when I got here."
"Did you leave anything in the building in the shape of matches, or anything else?" asked Mr. Grant.
"No, sir; I never do that," replied the old man, with a blush.
"I know you are very careful, Ben. Then I suppose it was set on fire."
"I suppose it was, sir."
"Who do you suppose set it afire, Ben?" said Bertha, anxiously.
"Bless you, miss, I don"t know."
"Do you think it was Noddy?"
"No, Miss Bertha, I don"t think it was."
"Who could it have been?"
"That"s more than I know. Here comes Noddy, and he can speak for himself."
Noddy had come forward for this purpose when he saw Mr. Grant and Bertha on the pier, and he had heard the last part of the conversation. He was not a little astonished to hear Ben declare his belief that he was not guilty, for he had been fully satisfied that he should have all the credit of the naughty transaction.
"Do you know how the fire caught, Noddy?" said Mr. Grant.
"I reckon it caught from a bucket of water I left there," replied Noddy, who did not know what to say till he had felt his way a little.
"No trifling, Noddy!" added Mr. Grant, though he could hardly keep from laughing at the ridiculous answer.
"How should I know, sir, when Ben don"t know? I tried to make him tell me how it caught, and he wouldn"t say a word about it."
"I thought it was best for me to keep still," said Ben.
"This is very strange," continued Mr. Grant. "Who was the last person you saw in the boat-house, Ben?"
"Miss f.a.n.n.y, sir. I saw her come out of it only a few moments before the fire broke out."
Noddy was appalled at this answer, for it indicated that f.a.n.n.y was already suspected of the deed.
"Of course f.a.n.n.y would not do such a thing as set the boat-house on fire," said Bertha.
"Of course she wouldn"t," added Noddy.
"What made you say you did not think Noddy set the fire, Ben?" asked Mr.
Grant.
"Because I think he had gone off somewhere before the fire, and that Miss f.a.n.n.y was in the building after he was. Noddy was sculling off before he had done his work, and I called him back. That"s when he wished the boat-house was burned down."
"It is pretty evident that the fire was set by Noddy or f.a.n.n.y," said Mr.
Grant; and he appeared to have no doubt as to which was the guilty one, for he looked very sternly at the wayward boy before him.
"I think so, sir," added Ben.
"And you say that it was not Noddy?" continued Mr. Grant, looking exceedingly troubled as he considered the alternative.
The boatman bowed his head in reply, as though his conclusion was so serious and solemn that he could not express it in words. Noddy looked from Ben to Mr. Grant, and from Mr. Grant to Ben again. It was plain enough what they meant, and he had not even been suspected of the crime.
The boatman had seen f.a.n.n.y come out of the building just before the flames appeared, and all hope of charging the deed upon some vagabond from the river was gone.