"Some sort of problem, is my guess," said Eb."I got kicked out of Chicago," Kyle replied. What the hell, what difference did it make whatthe old guy thought?"Good for a young feller to get out and see the world." replied Eb, "We're going to get these boards to a man who's building a boat for me." They went around a bend and headed to theJacobson Boat Company dock.Kyle got stuck unloading boards with one of the boat builders who had come from Chicago afew years ago. They talked about the city until the riverman and old man Jacobson finishedtalking about the new boat. They all had a plate of firecrackers --beans cooked with cayenne pepper--and cold biscuits. By the time they had pushed off from the boat company dock, the sunhad already set.They went a few miles more up the river until they came to a wide part and saw a saloon andsome other buildings and what looked like another saw mill. Kyle had a sinking feeling that Ebwas going to tell him that this was his destination. He looked at the old guy out of the corner of his eye, and Eb, who must have been reading his mind, nodded his head. Well, it figured.In a few minutes, Martin aimed the boat at the shore, grounded it on the bank, and turned off the little steam engine that had powered it. "You can jump off here," he said, "Take that paththrough the trees for about a quarter of a mile, and it's on your right. Just a cabin and a fewoutbuildings in a clearing.Don't dawdle along, it will be dark as a bat's ass in half an hour.""What about you" asked Kyle."Don't worry about me" said Martin, "I'm gonna camp out at the boatworks for a few days tosee how things are coming along Say hello to Emil for me. Better get going now." He pushed the boat from the bank with a long pole and went drifting downstream.Kyle waved goodbye and went off to his new life.
II.
Emil and Lena's parcel was adjacent to the Lorquist's on the river, and their back boundaryabutted the land of a family named Selby.It was not an uncommon sight to see Emil, or "old manGundel," as he was sometimes called, on the banks of the Bullhead with four or five long bamboo poles stuck into the bank, with their lines and bobbins well out into the stream. Despite the river'sname-- the bullhead might be described as a small brown catfish seldom fished for--there weresome excellent fish in the river, including northern pike and a few pickerel.The flowage by theThorvald mill where the river widened out was the size of a small lake.He would rather fish than farm, the neighbors said, and he usually did, so the land clearing of his forty acres proceeded at a less than leisurely pace. But as he was no longer youthful, and hisand Lena's children long grown, there was little stigma attached to this. One expected old folks totake it as easy as they could.Emil was not quite so old as his reputation would have it, though. He had inherited his parent'sfarm in the southern part of the State after their deaths from cholera that resulted from a visit torelatives in Milwaukee. The Gundel's son had left for California, and their daughter had married arailroad man, from Chicago, named Flanagan. The combination of a good offer for their farm plusthe lure of unlimited hunting and fishing inclined Emil to move, and Lena had acquiesced to himas she usually did in family matters.They had hired a crew of lumberjacks, who needed summer employment, who cleared aboutfive acres and erected a cabin of logs from the straighter hardwood they had cut down. TheGundels kept an ox for transportation and hauling, two goats for milk, chickens, and a series of housecats which lasted a year or two before they disappeared.They were not rich, but they had money put by from the sale of their farm. They settled downto a relatively inexpensive existence. They could send away for what they wanted when theywanted it, or the riverman would bring it to them for a good price.Their combined skills madethem more or less independent of the outside world. They got their flour and supplies from the
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