“Well, this doesn’t look much like a place,” remarked Sam, as they got out of the heavy lumber wagon which had brought them and their outfit over.
“Phew! but aint it cold!” exclaimed Tom, dancing around and slapping his arms over his chest. “I wonder how Nellie and Grace Laning like this?”
“I’ll wager you’ve been thinking of Nellie all the way up,” said Dick slyly, remembering how his brother had tormented him about Dora Stanhope.
“Couldn’t think of anything but how cold it was,” growled Tom, but his face took on a sudden redness. “Where do you go next?” he demanded, to change the subject.
“Let’s go over to the store and ask for Mr. John Barrow,” suggested Dick.
The store was at a fork in the roads, and thither they hurried, to get inside, for the ride from Barton’s Corners had certainly been a chilling one. In the store they found a big pot stove throwing out a generous amount of heat, and around this stove were gathered half a dozen men, smoking and telling stories.
“So you are the young men who are looking for John Barrow,” said the storekeeper, after listening to what Dick had to say. “He was here waiting for you, and he’ll be back in a bit. Rather a cold ride, eh? Draw up to the fire and warm up.”
A place was made for the lads, and while they were “thawing out,” as Sam put it, John Barrow came in. He proved to be a tall, powerful built lumberman, with a well-tanned face and sharp, but kindly, eyes.
“How do you do,” he said, as he shook hands. “Real glad to know you. Yes, I got a letter from John Laning, my brother-in-law, tellin’ me all about you. He says as how you want a guide fer these parts. Well, I don’t want to brag, but I reckon I know the lay o’ the land ’round here about as good as any o’ ’em, and a heap sight better nor lots.”
“We’d like you first-rate for a guide,” said Tom, who was pleased with John Barrow’s looks, as were also his brothers. “But can you spare the time?”
“Reckon I can, just now. You see, the lumber company has got in some sort of a tangle with the owner of the timber on this tract, and consequently work is at a standstill. That’s why you see so many men hangin’ around here.”
“Then you work for the company?” asked Dick.
“I do in the winter time, but not in the summer. I’ve got a tidy farm down the river a bit, and I let out my hosses to the company to haul timber. It’s cash money, you see, when the haulin’ is goin’ on.”
“I believe the Laning girls are stopping with you,” put in Sam.
“Yes, Nellie and Grace came up some time ago. You see, our girl, Addie, gits tired being on the farm with only her mother, so we invited her cousins to come up for a spell. They’ve had some pretty good times together, so far, skatin’ and sleighin’, and the like. They are all anxious to see you.”
John Barrow had brought with him his wagon, and into this their outfit was dumped, and a minute later they were off, down the winding and rough road running along the bank of the river, which was now frozen to a thickness of a foot or more and covered with several inches of snow.