The Squirrel Inn. Stockton Frank Richard

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it. I shall be on the boat until we reach Romney."

      "That is where I get off," she said.

      "Indeed," said he; "then perhaps you will engage the country girl whom I intended to hire."

      "Do you know any one living there," she asked, "who would come to me as nurse-maid?"

      "I don't know a soul in Romney," said Lodloe; "I never was in the place in my life. I merely supposed that in a little town like that there were girls to be hired. I don't intend to remain in Romney, to be sure, but I thought it would be much safer to engage a girl there than to trust to getting one in the country place to which I am going."

      "And you thought out all that, and about my baby?" said Mrs. Cristie.

      "Yes, I did," said Lodloe, laughing.

      "Very well," said she; "I shall avail myself of your forethought, and shall try to get a girl in Romney. Where do you go when you leave there?"

      "Oh, I am going some five or six miles from the town, to a place called the 'Squirrel Inn.'"

      "The Squirrel Inn!" exclaimed Mrs. Cristie, dropping her hands into her lap and leaning forward.

      "Yes," said Lodloe; "are you going there?"

      "I am," she answered.

      Now in his heart Walter Lodloe blessed his guardian angel that she had prompted him to make the announcement of his destination before he knew where this lady was going.

      "I am very glad to hear that," he said. "It seems odd that we should happen to be going to the same place, and yet it is not so very odd, after all, for people going to the Squirrel Inn must take this boat and land at Romney, which is not on the railroad."

      "The odd part of it is that so few people go to the Squirrel Inn," said the lady.

      "I did not know that," remarked Lodloe; "in fact I know very little about the place. I have heard it spoken of, and it seems to be just the quiet, restful place in which I can work. I am a literary man, and like to work in the country."

      "Do you know the Rockmores of Germantown?" asked Mrs. Cristie.

      "I never heard of them," he answered.

      "Well, then, you may as well stay on board this steamboat and go back home in her," said Mrs. Cristie; "if you do not know the Rockmores of Germantown Stephen Petter will not take you into his inn. I know all about the place. I was there with my husband three years ago. Mr. Petter is very particular about the guests he entertains. Several years ago, when he opened the inn, the Rockmores of Germantown spent the summer with him, and he was so impressed with them that he will not take anybody unless they know the Rockmores of Germantown."

      "He must be a ridiculous old crank," said Lodloe, drawing a camp-chair near to the lady, and seating himself thereon.

      "In one way he is not a crank," said Mrs. Cristie; "you can't turn him. When he has made up his mind about anything, that matter is settled and fixed just as if it were screwed down to the floor."

      "From what I had been told," said the young man, "I supposed the Squirrel Inn to be a free and easy place."

      "It is, after you get there," said Mrs. Cristie, "and the situation and the surroundings are beautiful, and the air is very healthful. My husband was Captain Cristie of the navy. He was in bad health when he went to the Squirrel Inn, but the air did him good, and if we had staid all winter, as Stephen Petter wanted us to, it would have been a great advantage to him. But when the weather grew cool we went to New York, where my husband died early in the following December."

      "I will take my chances with Stephen Petter," said Lodloe, after a suitable pause. "I am going to the Squirrel Inn, and I am bound to stay there. There must be some road not through Germantown by which a fellow can get into the favor of Mr. Petter. Perhaps you will say a good word for me, madam?"

      "I don't know any good word to say," she answered, "except that you take excellent care of babies, and I am not at all sure that that would have any weight with Stephen Petter. Since you are going to the inn, and since we have already talked together so much, I wish I did properly know you. Did you ever have a sister at Vassar?"

      "I am sorry to say," said Lodloe, "that I never had a sister at that college, though I have one who wanted very much to go there; but instead of that she went with an aunt to Europe, where she married."

      "An American?" asked Mrs. Cristie.

      "Yes," said Lodloe.

      "What was his name?"

      "Tredwell."

      "I never heard of him," said the lady. "There don't seem to be any threads to take hold of."

      "Perhaps you had a brother at Princeton," remarked Lodloe.

      "I have no brother," said she.

      There was now a pause in the dialogue. The young man was well pleased that this very interesting young woman wished to know him properly, as she put it, and if there could be found the least bit of foundation on which might be built a conventional acquaintance he was determined to find it.

      "Were you a Vassar girl?" he asked.

      "Oh, yes," said Mrs. Cristie; "I was there four years."

      "Perhaps you know something of old Matthew Vassar, the founder?"

      Mrs. Cristie laughed. "I've heard enough about him, you may be sure; but what has he to do with anything?"

      "I once slept in his room," said Lodloe; "in the Founder's Room, with all his stiff old furniture, and his books, and his portrait."

      "You!" cried Mrs. Cristie. "When did you do that?"

      "It was two years ago this spring," said Lodloe. "I was up there getting material for an article on the college which I wrote for the 'Bayside Magazine.'"

      "Did you write that?" said Mrs. Cristie. "I read it, and it was just as full of mistakes as it could be."

      "That may be, and I don't wonder at it," said the young man. "I kept on taking in material until I had a good deal more than I could properly stow away in my mind, and it got to be too late for me to go back to the town, and they had to put me into the Founder's Room, because the house was a good deal crowded. Before I went to bed I examined all the things in the room. I didn't sleep well at all, for during the night the old gentleman got down out of his frame, and sat on the side of my bed, and told me a lot of things about that college which nobody else ever knew, I am sure."

      "And I suppose you mixed up all that information with what the college people gave you," she said.

      "That may be the case," answered Lodloe, laughing, "for some of the old gentleman's points were very interesting and made a deep impression upon me."

      "Well," said Mrs. Cristie, speaking very emphatically, "when I had finished reading that article I very much wished to meet the person who had written it, so that I might tell him what I thought of it; but of course I had no idea that the founder had anything to do with its inaccuracies."

      "Madam," said Lodloe, "if it had not been for the mistakes in it you never would have thought of the man who wrote the paper, but you did think of him, and wanted to meet him. Now it seems to me that we have been quite properly introduced to each other, and it was old Matthew Vassar

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