<h2 id="c26">CHAPTER XXVI. <br/><span class="small">POLLY.</span></h2>
<p>It certainly did seem as though everything might
be trying to assist Thad. Why, even the elements
lent a helping hand; for the wind had only recently
risen to such a busy degree that it was now sighing
among the upper branches of all the trees, and rustling
the leaves of oaks and pines and cypresses until
there was raised such a commingling of various
sounds that possibly one might speak in an ordinary
tone without its being carried from the spring to
where the concealed shack lay.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_228">228</div>
<p>This was what Thad thought, for with a scout’s
education he noticed everything that promised to
have any connection with his affairs.</p>
<p>Providing, then, that the girl would not be so
startled at his sudden and unannounced appearance
that she would cry out, there was a chance of them
carrying on a little heart-to-heart talk, by means
of which he could impart certain facts which must
be of considerable interest to her.</p>
<p>“Watch out for the coming of the man, while I
try to speak with her,” he whispered in the ear of
Alligator Smith; who immediately stopped short,
as though he thought it would be as well to lie in
ambush right there, as go on any further.</p>
<p>Thad forgot all about his companion after that.</p>
<p>The girl was still by the spring. She had set her
pail down, and was on her knees. Thad could not
see exactly what she was doing, but imagined that
it might either be getting a drink, or else in girlish
fashion utilizing the clear water of the spring as a
mirror, to look at her reflection.</p>
<p>A dozen quick, noiseless paces served to bring him
close up to where she knelt. He managed to get
control of himself, and give a little cough, as though
in this fashion he hoped to alarm her less than by
suddenly speaking.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_229">229</div>
<p>The girl instantly turned her head. He saw that
she was astonished, and immediately Thad pressed
his finger on his lips to beg of her not to call out.
At the same time he tried to have a reassuring
smile on his face, though in his excitement he hardly
knew what he must look like.</p>
<p>“Please don’t call out to betray me to that man!”
he said, softly, “I don’t mean you the least harm.
In fact, I have come all the way down from the
North just to speak with you. Will you believe me
enough to listen, while I tell you something?”</p>
<p>She was on her feet now, and at first Thad feared
he had so alarmed her that her whole desire would
be to run as fast as she could to the shack, perhaps
screaming out loud, in her desire to have Jasper
hasten to her assistance. In that event he had made
up his mind to seize her, and then depend on the
guide to hold the angry man at bay when he came
rushing up.</p>
<p>But if this was indeed her first intention she
must have soon changed her mind. Possibly the
friendly reassuring smile on his eager face influenced
her; then again she may have been braver than
he had ever imagined could be the case; and last of
all perhaps she knew more about her past than it
had entered his mind to imagine.</p>
<p>“Yes, boy, if you promise not to come any nearer
to me than you are now, I will hear what you want
to say,” she replied, in a voice that quivered with
nervousness, fear, and perhaps anxiety. “But how
could you ever find your way over here, when he
told me no living person knew of that trail under
the mud.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_230">230</div>
<p>“There was one man who knew about it,” Thad
went on to say, softly, thinking it wise to approach
the wonderful subject that he wanted to speak
about by degrees, and first of all satisfy her girlish
curiosity. “But first of all, tell me if you believe
the man you are with is your own father?”</p>
<p>“He says he is, but somehow I do not believe
him,” she replied, drawing a long breath, while her
eyes opened wider than before, as though hopes
that had lain half dormant in her heart for some
time, once more flashed into life. “At the convent
school the sisters often talked about him, and they
could not believe he was my father. He gave his
name as Allan; but once when he came to see me
an empty envelope fell from his coat pocket, and I
saw that it was addressed to Felix Jasper; so ever
since I’ve believed that must mean him.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_231">231</div>
<p>“And you guessed what was true,” said Thad,
quickly, pleased beyond measure at what success
had already come to him in his suddenly arranged
plans; “his right name is Felix Jasper. Years ago
he used to be in charge of my mother’s property,
just after my father died; but he took advantage
of her inexperience to defraud her and was discharged,
but not prosecuted. Instead of being
grateful he seemed to lie awake nights trying to
think up something dreadful, through which he
might have revenge for what he considered his
wrongs. It is an old story, but happens now and
then, just as it used to do centuries ago. My little
baby sister disappeared most mysteriously, and was
never found, though they hunted everywhere. Jasper
was careful not to give the least clue; but my
mother believed until she died that he was to blame.
And now, many years afterwards, word reached my
uncle and guardian that this same Felix Jasper was
seen coming into this swamp, having a girl in his
company who seemed to be just about as old as my
little sister Pauline must have been if she were alive.
And I have come down here to find out if it might
be true. Now you know why I asked you not to
call out! You do not love that man, I hope?”</p>
<p>“I have hardly seen him more than four or five
times in as many years, until he came two weeks
ago, and told me I would have to leave the convent
school, and go with him, because he had to live
abroad. And then we came here to this queer spot,
and he has acted so strangely all the while, as
though he feared some one might be meaning to do
him an injury. Ever so many times a day I have
seen him examining a terrible pistol he carries in
his pocket. Is it you he is afraid of, boy?”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_232">232</div>
<p>“No, I don’t think it is,” replied Thad; “you
see he is a thief, and has robbed a wealthy planter
who employed him; so that he is afraid the sheriff
and his posse will find him. And they are here close
by, meaning to arrest him; so that you must not go
back there to that shack, for it would be too dangerous.
But if you believe that he could not be your
real father, have you not sometimes tried to picture
who was, and what your right name might be?”</p>
<p>“Yes, oh! yes, I have, many, many times,” she
went on to say, breathlessly, so that Thad was emboldened
to take a step toward her, and follow it
up with another. “And then there was that day
when the sisters showed me the clothes that were
on me when he brought me there as a baby, saying
that my mother had died, and he had to go abroad
on a very important mission. I shall never forget
that there were three letters embroidered on one of
the garments; and oh! how often I used to dream
that the day <i>might</i> come when I could know whether
my name were really Mary Allen, or something else
that those initials stood for.”</p>
<p>“Listen,” said Thad, his very heart seeming to
stop beating, because everything might depend on
what answer she would make to the question he
meant to ask her now; “tell me, were those three
letters P. C. B?”</p>
<p>“Oh! you have said them just as I saw them!”
she exclaimed, in sudden awe, not unmixed with
ecstacy; and Thad breathed freely again, while his
face lighted up with a joy that could no longer be
denied.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_233">233</div>
<p>“They stand for Pauline Chester Brewster!” he
said, “and I do not for a minute doubt but that
you are my own dear little sister; but all that can
be settled when we see those sisters you speak of, in
New Orleans, and the garments they have kept all
these years are shown. You will not be afraid of
me any longer, will you?”</p>
<p>He was drawing very close to her when he said
this. The little girl’s bright eyes were fastened
upon his face. What she saw there must have given
her complete confidence in the boy, for she suddenly
extended both hands toward him.</p>
<p>“No, I am not afraid of you. Why should I be
when you have brought me such splendid news?
And you look just like what I have always thought
a brother must be. Oh! I do hope I won’t wake
up and find that it’s all only a dream; because that
has happened so many times. It always made me
cry, because I was so very much disappointed. But
then this time it seems different, because I’ve heard
you speak, and you have told me the things I’ve
always wanted to know. And so my name is
Pauline?”</p>
<p>“Yes, or Polly for short,” the delighted boy went
on, as he took both her extended hands in his; “do
you think you will like it better than Mary? It was
my mother’s name too, and she was a Chester before
she married my father. I am Thad Brewster,
your own brother Thad.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_234">234</div>
<p>“How queer it seems to me—to have a real
brother,” she went on to say; “but oh! we forget
about <i>him</i>. He will be very, very angry if he finds
me talking to you in this way; because he has always
told me I must never say a single word to a
stranger.”</p>
<p>“Well, it’s different when you’re talking with
your brother, you see,” Thad replied; but her words
had awakened him to the fact that it was most unwise
to continue to linger so close to the shack
where Jasper was staying; and that the safest
policy would be for them to reach the spot where
Sheriff Badgely and his posse lay concealed, and
leave the rest to that astute peace official.</p>
<p>He wondered at such a young girl talking so well,
but then she had been all of her life in the charge
of the sisters at the convent school, and consequently
was somewhat old-fashioned in her ways.</p>
<p>“But what will you do about it?” she asked
him; “because I am sure he will never let me go
away with you, even if you are my brother.”</p>
<p>“I don’t mean to ask him,” Thad told her. “All
you have to do is to walk off now with me, and we
can laugh at him.”</p>
<p>“Oh! but you don’t know what a terrible man he
can be!” she said, laying a little hand earnestly on
his sleeve; “once I saw him furiously angry, and
he frightened me very much, even if he did tell me
I mustn’t think he was meaning me when he said
such awful things. He will follow after us, and do
something wicked, I know he will.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_235">235</div>
<p>“I hope he will follow us,” said Thad, with perfect
confidence; “because then he may step into a
trap, and have his teeth drawn without being able
to do anybody harm. But come, let us hurry off.”</p>
<p>She seemed to have the utmost faith in this boy
who had so suddenly dawned upon her horizon with
the astonishing claim that he was her own real
brother; for without hesitation she was about to
take his hand, when suddenly she gave utterance to
a piteous little cry:</p>
<p>“Oh! dear, I just knew it would turn out like it
always does!” she exclaimed; and Thad, seeing that
she was looking past him in a sort of daze, instantly
turned his own head to ascertain what had
caused this new alarm.</p>
<p>What he saw was not reassuring. There not
twenty feet away stood the man of the shack, Felix
Jasper. He was holding something that glistened
in his right hand; and seemed both angry and astounded
to see a stranger here on his private island
that was guarded by that supposed to be impassable
bog.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_236">236</div>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />