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"Yes, they're good to fry, but they're full of bones. Not enough of 'em."
"They won't bite in winter, will they?"
"Hope not. Tell you what, Port, we're in for the biggest kind of a time."
That was an exciting evening. n.o.body seemed to want to go to bed, and the semicircle around the fireplace talked of hardly any thing else but fis.h.i.+ng and hunting. Deacon Farnham himself came out with some stories aunt Judith said she hadn't heard him tell for more than a year. Porter and Susie had no stories to tell, but they could listen. The former went to bed at last, with a vague feeling that he would rather go to Mink Lake. It was a good while before he got to sleep, and even then he had a wonderful dream. He dreamed he was trying to pull a fish as large as a small whale through a sort of auger-hole in some ice. He pulled so hard, he woke himself up; but he could roll over and go to sleep soundly, now the fish was gone.
The house was early astir in the morning; and Deacon Farnham's long, low box-sleigh, drawn by his two big black horses, was at the door by the time they were through breakfast. Mrs. Farnham had decided not to go, because, as she said,--
"It's Judith's turn. Somebody's got to stay and keep house."
It had required some argument to persuade aunt Judith that it was her duty to go, but she had taken hold of the preparations with a will. It was wonderful what an amount of wrapping-up she deemed necessary for herself and all the rest.
"Why, Judith," said the deacon, "it's a good deal warmer in the woods than it is out here."
"I've heerd tell so, and mebbe it's true, but I don't put any trust in it. I've no notion of bein' frost-bit before I get back."
There was little to be feared from the frost, with all the buffalo-robes and blankets and shawls and cloaks that were piled into that sleigh.
When its pa.s.sengers were in, they made quite a party. There was the deacon (who insisted on driving), and aunt Judith, and Mrs. Stebbins and Vosh, and Corry, and Susie Hudson and Porter, and Penelope, in the sleigh, with Ponto all around outside of it; besides all the baskets of luncheon, the fis.h.i.+ng-tackle, axes, and guns.
"You can't shoot fish," said Susie.
"May shoot something else," said Vosh. "There's no such thing as telling. It's a wild place."
"Susie!" exclaimed Pen, "didn't you know there were deer up at Mink Lake,--real deer?"
"Corry," whispered Port, "let's get one before we come home."
"Father's got his gun by him, all ready, but he won't let us get ours out till we reach the lake. He may get a shot at something as he drives along."
There was a sharp lookout for all kinds of wild animals, after the way began to wind among the piny woods, and through the desolate-looking "clearings" left by the choppers. The road was found even better than Vosh's news had reported it, and the black team pulled their merry load along quite easily.
The young folk soon got over the solemn feeling which came upon them when they found themselves actually in the great forest.
It was delightful to shout, and listen for echoes; and to sing, and know there was not a living pair of ears to hear, except those in the sleigh, and Ponto's.
It was about two hours after they left the farmhouse, and Port had just remarked,--
"Seems to me we've been going up hill all the time," when Corry suddenly exclaimed,--
"There it is! That's Mink Lake. It'll be down hill all the way going home. See it!"
"Lake!" said Port. "I don't see any lake. Oh, yes, I do! It's all ice and snow,--frozen clean over."
"And we haven't seen a single deer yet," said Susie sorrowfully.
"You can see some now, then," replied Vosh as he eagerly pointed forward. "See 'em, Susie? See 'em? Way down yonder on the ice."
"I see them!" shouted Pen. "One, two, three, _four_ of 'em."
"Those black specks?" said Susie.
There they were indeed, and they were beginning to move rapidly across the ice; but they were too far away for any thing more than just to make out what they were.
Even Ponto continued to plod along soberly behind the sleigh. He was too old a dog to excite himself over any such distant and impossible game as that.
Deacon Farnham seemed to know exactly what he was about; for he drove right on where n.o.body else could see any road, until he stopped in front of a very small and very rudely made kind of house.
"Aunt Judith," asked Susie, "did anybody ever live here?"
"Live here, child? Why, that there's a choppers' shanty. It's for anybody that wants it, now they've done with it."
That was so, but it was not for the mere human beings of that picnic-party. The deacon took his horses from the sleigh, and led them in through the rickety door.
"They're a little warm," he said, "but they won't catch cold in there.
I'll give 'em a good feed, Vosh, while you're starting a fire.--Get the guns and tackle out, Corry."
Vosh had had a hard struggle with himself that morning to leave his own horse and cutter at home; but his mother had settled it for him. She remarked,--
"I'd ruther be in the big sleigh with the folks, so I can hear what's goin' on. So would Susie Hudson, or aunt Judith Farnham. You'd be kind o' lonely. Besides, that little thing of yourn 'd be upsettin' twenty times, over them mountain roads."
He was ready with his axe now; and Porter Hudson opened his eyes at the rapidity with which a great fire was blazing on the snow, a little distance from the shanty.
"What are we to get into?" asked Port.
"We won't need any shelter," said aunt Judith. "When it's time for dinner, we can eat it in the sleigh."
They were not yet thinking of eating. The first business on hand was a trip to the lake. Vosh Stebbins took his axe with him, and he and the deacon each carried a long, wide board. Port managed not to ask what these were for, and he had not a great while to wait before he knew.
"Vosh," said the deacon, "the ice must be pretty thick. Hope we sha'n't have to chop a hole."
"There's one air-hole, away yonder. It doesn't look too wide."
"Shouldn't wonder if it'd do."
"Susie," said Pen, "don't you know? That's where all the fish come up to the top to get a breath of fresh air."
There was some truth in Pen's explanation, in spite of the laugh she got from Mrs. Stebbins. Susie said nothing, for she was all eyes at that moment. She thought she had never seen any thing stranger or more beautiful than that little lake, all frozen, with the hills around it, and the mountains beyond them. The broken slopes of the hills and mountains were covered with white snow, green pines, spruces, hemlocks, and with the brownish gray of the other trees whose leaves had fallen from them. It was very wonderful and new to a young lady from the city.
"Most half the lake," said Vosh, "is smooth enough to skate on. If I'd ha' thought of that, I'd ha' brought along my skates."
It would have been worth while. Mink Lake was what some people call a "pond," and was hardly a mile wide by an irregular mile and a half long.
There was an immense skating-rink there now, in spite of the snow which covered a large part of it.
Susie was just about to ask some more questions, when her uncle shouted,--
"This'll do, Vos.h.!.+ Bring along your slide."