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CHAPTER XXIX MITCHELLA JARS COLD
weather was again approaching.
October had been very wet; but bright, calm days of Indian summer
followed in
November. And about that time Catherine, Theodora and Ellen had an odd
adventure while out in the woods gathering partridge berries. At the old
farm we called the vivid
green creeping vine that bears those coral-red berries in November,
"partridge berry," because partridge feed on the berries and dig them
from under the snow. Botanists, however, call the vine Mitchella repens. In our tramps
through
the woods we boys never gave it more than a passing glance, for the
berries are
not good to eat. The girls, however, thought that the vine was very
pretty.
Every fall Theodora and Ellen, with Kate Edwards, and sometimes the
Wilbur
girls, went into the woods to gather lion's-paw and mitchella with
which to
decorate the old farmhouse at Thanksgiving and Christmas. But it was
one of
their girl friends, named Lucia Scribner, or rather Lucia's mother, at
Portland, who invented mitchella jars, and started a new industry in
our
neighborhood. Lucia, who
was attending the village
Academy, often came up to the old farm on a Friday night to visit our
girls
over Saturday and Sunday. On one visit they gathered a basketful of
mitchella,
and when Lucia went home to Portland for Thanksgiving, she carried a
small
boxful of the vines and berries to her mother. Mrs. Scribner was an
artist of
some ability, and she made several little sketches of the vine on
whitewood
paper cutters as gifts to her friends. In order to keep the vine moist
and
fresh while she was making the sketches, she put it in a little glass
jar with
a piece of glass over the top. The vine
was so pretty in the jar that
Mrs. Scribner was loath to throw it away; and after a while she saw
that the
berries were increasing in size. She had put nothing except a few
spoonfuls of
water into the jar with the vine; but the berries grew slowly all
winter, until
they were twice as big as in the fall. Mrs.
Scribner was delighted with the
success of her chance experiment. The jar with the vine in it made a
very
pretty ornament for her work table. Moreover, the plant needed little
care. To
keep it fresh she had only to moisten it with a spoonful of water every
two or
three weeks. And cold weather — even zero weather —
did not injure it at all. Friends who called on Mrs. Scribner
admired her jar, and said that they should like to get some of them.
Mrs.
Scribner wrote to Theodora and suggested that she and her girl friends
make up
some mitchella jars, and sell them in the city. That was
the way the little industry
began. The girls, however, did not really go into the business until
the next
fall. Then Theodora, Ellen, and Catherine prepared over a hundred
jarfuls of
the green vine and berries. Those they sent to Portland and Boston
during
Christmas week under the name of Mitchella Jars, and Christmas
Bouquets. The
jars, which were globular in shape and which ranged from a quart in
capacity up
to three and four quarts, cost from fifteen to thirty-five cents
apiece. When
filled with mitchella vines, they brought from a dollar and a quarter
to two
dollars. On the day
above referred to they
set out to gather more vines, and they told the people at home that
they were
going to "Dunham's open" — an old clearing beyond our farther
pasture, where once a settler named Dunham had begun to clear a farm.
The place
was nearly two miles from the old Squire's, and as the girls did not
expect to
get home until four o'clock, they took their luncheon with them. They hoped
to get enough mitchella
at the "open" to fill fifteen jars, and so took two bushel baskets.
Four or five inches of hard-frozen snow was on the ground; but in the
shelter
of the young pine and fir thickets that were now encroaching on the
borders of
the "open" the "cradle knolls" were partly bare. However,
they found less mitchella
at Dunham's open than they had hoped. After going completely round the
borders
of the clearing they had gathered only half a basketful. Kate then
proposed
that they should go on to another opening at Adger's lumber camp, on a
brook
near the foot of Stoss Pond. She had been there the winter before with
Theodora, and both of them remembered having seen mitchella growing
there. The old
lumber road was not hard to
follow, and they reached the camp in a little less than an hour. They
found
several plats of mitchella, and began industriously to gather the vine.
They had
such a good time at their
work that they almost forgot their luncheon. When at last they opened
the
pasteboard box in which it was packed, they found the sandwiches and
the mince
pie frozen hard. Kate suggested that they go down to the lumber camp
and
kindle a fire. "There's a
stove in it that the
loggers left three years ago," she said. "We'll make a fire and thaw
our lunch." "We have
no matches!"
Ellen exclaimed, when they reached the camp. Inside the
old cabin, however, they
found three or four matches in a little tin box that was nailed to a
log behind
the stovepipe. Hunters had occupied the camp not long before; but they
had left
scarcely a sliver of anything dry or combustible inside it; they had
even
whittled and shaved the old bunk beam and plank table in order to get
kindlings. After a glance round, Kate went out to gather dry brush
along the
brook. Running on
a little way, she picked
up dry twigs here and there. At last, by a clump of white birches, she
found a
fallen spruce. As she was breaking off some of the twigs a strange
noise caused
her to pause suddenly. It was, indeed, an odd sound — not a snarl or a
growl,
or yet a bark like that of a dog, but a querulous low "yapping." At
the same instant she heard the snow crust break, as if an animal were
approaching through the thicket of young firs. More
curious than frightened, Kate
listened intently. A moment later she saw a large gray fox emerge from
among
the firs and come toward her. Supposing that it had not seen or scented
her,
and thinking to frighten it, she cried out suddenly, "Hi, Mr. Fox!" To her
surprise the fox, instead of
bounding away, came directly toward her, and now she saw that its head
moved to
and fro as it ran, and that clots of froth were dropping from its jaws.
Kate
had heard that foxes, as well as dogs and wolves, sometimes run mad.
She
realized that if this beast were mad, it would attack her blindly and
bite her
if it could. Still clutching her armful of dry twigs, she turned and
sped back
toward the camp. As she drew near the cabin, she called to the other
girls to
open the door. They heard her cries, and Ellen flung the door open. As
Kate
darted into the room, she cried, "Shut it, quick!" Startled,
the other two girls
slammed the door shut, and hastily set the heavy old camp table against
it. "It's only
a fox!" Kate
cried. "But it has gone mad, I think. I was afraid it would bite me."
Peering
out of the one little window
and the cracks between the logs, they saw the animal run past the camp.
It was
still yapping weirdly, and it snapped at bushes and twigs as it passed.
Suddenly it turned back and
ran by the camp door again.
Afterward they heard its cries first up the slope behind the camp, and
then
down by the brook. "We
mustn't go out," Kate
whispered. "If it were to bite us, we, too, should go mad." There was
no danger of the beast's
breaking into the camp, and after a while the girls kindled a fire,
thawed out
their luncheon and ate it. The December sun was sinking low, and soon
set
behind the tree tops. It was a long way home, and they had their
baskets of mitchella
to carry. Hoping that the distressed creature had gone its way, they
listened
for a while at the door, and at last ventured forth; but when they drew
near
the place where Kate had gathered the dry spruce branches they heard
the
creature yapping in the thickets ahead. In a panic they ran back to the
camp. Their
situation was not pleasant.
They dared not venture out again. Darkness had already set in; the camp
was
cold and they had little fuel. The prospect that any one from home
would come
to their aid was small, for they were now a long way from Dunham's
open, where
they had said they were going, and where, of course, search parties
would look
for them. Kate, however, remained cheerful. "It's
nothing!" she
exclaimed. "I can soon get wood for a fire." Under the bunk she had
found an old axe, and with it she proceeded to chop up the camp table. "The only
thing I'm afraid
of," she said, "is that the boys will start out to look for us, and
that if they find our tracks in the snow, they'll come on up here and
run afoul
of that fox before they know it." "We can
shout to them,"
Ellen suggested. Not much
later, in fact, they began
to make the forest resound with loud, clear calls. For a long while the
only
answer to their cries came from two owls; but Kate was right in
thinking that
we boys would set out to find them. Addison,
Halstead and I had been up
in Lot 32 that day with the old Squire, making an estimate of timber,
and we
did not reach home until after dark. Grandmother met us with the news
that the
girls had gone to Dunham's open for partridge-berry vines, and had not
returned. She was very uneasy about them; but we were hungry and,
grumbling a
little that the girls could not come home at night as they were
expected to,
sat down to supper. "I am
afraid they've lost their
way," grandmother said, after a few minutes. "It's going to be very
cold. You must go to look for them!" And the old Squire agreed with
her. Just as we
finished supper Thomas
Edwards, Kate's brother, came in with a lantern, to ask whether Kate
was there;
and without much further delay we four boys set off. Addison took his
gun and
Halstead another lantern. We were not much worried about the girls;
indeed, we
expected to meet them on their way home. When we reached Dunham's open,
however,
and got no answer to our shouts, we became anxious. At last we
found their tracks
leading up the winter road to Adger's camp, and we hurried along the
old trail.
We had not
gone more than half a
mile when Tom, who was ahead, suddenly cried, "Hark! I heard some one
calling!" We stopped
to listen; and after a
moment or two we all heard a distant cry. "That's
Kate!" Tom
muttered. "Something's the matter with them, sure!" We started
to run, but soon heard
the same cry again, followed by indistinct words. "What's
the matter?" Tom
shouted. Again we
heard their calls, but
could not make out what they were trying to say. We were pretty sure
now that
the girls were at the old lumber camp; and hastening on to the top of
the ridge
that sloped down toward the
brook, we all shouted
loudly. Immediately a reply came back in hasty, anxious tones: "Take
care! There's a mad fox
down here!" "A what?"
Addison cried. "A fox
that has run mad!"
Kate repeated. "Where is
he?" Halstead
cried. "Running
round in the
thickets," Kate answered. "Look out, boys, or he'll bite you. That's
the reason we didn't come home. We didn't dare leave the camp." This was
such a new kind of danger
that for a few moments we were at a loss how to meet it. Tom looked
about for a
club. "It's only
a fox," he
said. "I guess we can knock him over before he can bite us." He and
Addison went ahead with the
club and the gun; Halstead and I, following close behind, held the
lanterns
high so that they could see what was in front of them. In this manner
we moved
down the brushy slope to the camp. The girls, who were peering out of
the door,
were certainly glad to see us. "But
where's your 'mad'
fox?" we asked. "He's
round here somewhere. He
really is," Kate protested earnestly. "We heard him only a little
while ago." Thereupon,
while the girls implored
us to be careful, we began to search about by lantern light. At last we
heard a
low wheezing noise near the old dam. On bringing the lantern nearer we
finally
caught sight of an animal behind the logs. It was a fox surely enough,
and it
acted as if it were disabled or dying. While Halstead and I held the
lanterns,
Addison took aim and shot the beast. Tom found a stick with a
projecting knot
that he could use as a hook, and with it he hauled the body out into
plain
view. It was a large cross-gray fox. "Boys,
that skin's worth thirty
dollars!" Tom exclaimed. "But I
shouldn't like to be the
one to skin it," Addison said. "Don't touch it with your hands,
Tom." While the
girls were telling us of
the fox's strange actions we warmed ourselves at the fire in the camp
stove,
and then all set off for home, for by this time it was getting late and
the
night was growing colder. Halstead
led the way with the two
lanterns; Addison and I, each shouldering a basket of mitchella,
followed; Tom,
dragging the body of the fox with his hooked stick, came behind the
girls. It
was nearly midnight when we reached home. Tom still
thought that the fox's
silvery pelt ought to be saved; but the old Squire persuaded him not to
run the
risk of skinning the creature. |