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"Well, for my part, I'd sooner buy a real wreck," Driggs announced.
"This may be an auctioneer's idea of honor. What was his name?"
"The auctioneer's name? Caswell," d.i.c.k answered.
"I'll make a note of that name," said Driggs, drawing out notebook and pencil, "and keep away from any auction that has a man named Caswell on the quarter-deck. Now, boys, what do you want to know about this canoe that your eyes don't tell you?"
"About how much would it cost us to fix her?" asked Prescott.
"Thirty dollars---maybe thirty-two," said Driggs, after another casual look at the canoe.
"Let's announce the bonfire for to-night," urged Greg.
"We haven't any such sum of money, Mr. Driggs," d.i.c.k went on.
"Too bad, boys, for you'd probably have a lot of fun in this craft.
If you want to sell it, maybe I could allow you four dollars for the craft as she stands."
"We'd hate to part with the canoe," d.i.c.k continued.
"I know, I know," remarked Driggs sympathetically. "It was wanting a boat badly when I was a boy that drove me into the boat business.
But I didn't have to handle birch bark then, or my first craft would have sunk me. Say, boys, great joke how young Ripley got stung so badly, wasn't it?"
"I know about how he feels," remarked d.i.c.k.
"Yes, of course," smiled Driggs. "But you boys are ent.i.tled to some honest sympathy. I don't imagine young Ripley will get much sympathy, will he?"
"Not a heap," Greg Holmes answered.
"Well," resumed Driggs, "I ain't a mite sorry for the boy and his make-believe pony. But I wish I could help you with your boat, for I know you haven't any loose money to throw around like young Rip."
Driggs dug his hands deep into his pockets and wrinkled his brow in thought.
At last he looked up hopefully.
"I'll tell you what I've been thinking about, boys. The town will be laughing at young Ripley to-morrow. But Rip, he'll be pa.s.sing the laugh around on you young fellers, too. Now, I don't mind Rip's troubles; but it's different with you boys, and I know how it stings to part with all the money you could sc.r.a.pe together.
Now, let's look this job over. I could say about thirty dollars for this job. It will cost twenty, and the other ten dollars would be profit, interest on my investment in my shop and so forth.
Now, I'll let this job go at just the cost---twenty dollars, and throw off the profit and tr.i.m.m.i.n.gs. Yes---to you young fellows---I'll call the job twenty dollars."
"That's kind of you," said d.i.c.k, with a grateful sigh. "But we want to be honest with you, Mr. Drigg---Twenty dollars, or five, or a hundred---it would be all the same to us. We haven't the money."
"Not so fast," returned Driggs, his eyes twinkling. "I'll give you credit, and treat the debt as a matter of honor between us."
"But I don't know how we'd pay you back," d.i.c.k went on. "As it is, we've borrowed a good bit of money that we've got to pay back."
"Exactly," agreed Driggs, "and you want to pay the other money back before you pay me. Yes; I'll take the job at cost---twenty dollars, and I'll throw in the use of one of my teams and trucks to come up here and get the canoe."
"But I'm afraid, sir, that we'd be a very long time paying you."
"No, you won't," Driggs disputed. "I don't allow long time bills, but I'll show you a way to pay me back fairly early, if you boys have the energy---and I believe you have. Now, you see, first off, boys, we'll need a lot of birch bark. I haven't any in stock, and the kind that is sound and good for canoe building is scarce these days. Now, first off, you'll have to range the woods for bark. Do you know where to find it?"
"Yes," d.i.c.k nodded. "Over on that place they call Katson's Hill."
"But that's about eleven miles from here," objected Driggs.
"I know it is," Prescott answered. "But the point is that Katson's Hill is wild land. No tax a.s.sessor knows who is the owner of that land, and it wouldn't bring enough money to make it worth while to sell it at a sheriff's sale. So a number of farmers turn their cattle in there and use it for free grazing ground.
As no owner can be found for the land we won't have to pay for the birch bark that we cut there."
"That's so," Driggs acknowledged. "But it's an awful distance, and over some mighty rough bits of road. You'll be about dead after you've packed a load of birch bark in from Katson's Hill."
"That wouldn't be anything, compared with having to do without our canoe," d.i.c.k returned.
"Maybe not," Driggs conceded. "Now, boys, is there much of that birch bark on Katson's Hill?"
"There must be several shiploads," Dave Darrin replied.
"Good enough. Then, see here. I'll take this job at twenty dollars, if you boys will get the birch bark. After you've brought in enough to patch the canoe then you can bring in enough more to amount to twenty dollars. Is that a go?"
"It's wonderfully kind of you," d.i.c.k answered gratefully.
"Not much it isn't," Driggs grinned, "and it will make that young Ripley cub feel mighty sore and cheap when he finds that he was the only one who got 'skinned' at this auction. But before you get through cutting and hauling birch bark you may think I'm a pretty hard taskmaster. I'll call it a go, if you boys will."
"We'll pay our full debt, Mr. Driggs, and pay you a load of thanks besides."
"All right," nodded Driggs, jumping down off the truck, in haste to get away from the embarra.s.sment of being thanked. "Some of you just hang around here until my man, Jim Snowden, gets up here with the truck. After Jim starts away with your war canoe then you can leave the rest to me, except cutting and hauling several loads of birch bark to square up matters."
Driggs beat a hasty retreat now. When he had gone the members of d.i.c.k & Co. exchanged glances. Then Holmes began to dance his best idea of a jig.
"We'll have that bonfire at eight o'clock tonight, Greg," d.i.c.k reminded him with a smile.
"Will you?" demanded Greg, scowling fiercely. "If any of you fellows have any matches, then just keep away from that canoe, or I'll fight. We can't afford to take any risks. Whoop!"
"Whoop!" answered Harry Hazelton, standing on his head.
"Whoop!" echoed Dave Darrin, giving Danny Grin a playful punch that sent Dalzell sprawling.
They were as happy a lot of boys as one could wish to see. They were to have their canoe and all the sport that that meant. It was to be a safe craft---as good as new! For Hiram Driggs was a dependable and skilful boat builder.
"Hey, too bad you fellows got stung so fearfully," cried a grammar school boy in pa.s.sing. "I'm mighty sorry."
"Thank you," d.i.c.k answered. "But we're going to have the canoe repaired. We'll be having lots of fun in the war canoe after a few days."
"How you going to get her fixed?" asked the other boy.
"Hiram Driggs has taken the job, and you know what he can do with boats."
"Whee! I'm glad on you're going to have the canoe fixed all right,"
nodded the other boy, and pa.s.sed on.
Forty-five minutes after Driggs' departure Jim Snowden came up with the truck. With the help of the boys he loaded the canoe from the other truck, then started away.