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    Chapter IX. The Unwelcome Guest - Page 2

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    the door and out into the yard. Then, after a little maneuvering, he caught a chicken, and going to the block, seized the ax, and soon decapitated it.

    "What have you done?" said Paul, ruefully, for the old man had followed his nephew, and was looking on in a very uncomfortable frame of mind.

    "Taken the first step toward a good dinner," said the other, coolly. "I am not sure but we shall want two."

    "No, no!" said Paul, hastily. "I haven't got much appetite."

    "Then perhaps we can make it do. I'll just get it ready, and cook it myself. I've knocked about in all sorts of places, and it won't be the first time I've served as cook. I've traveled some since I saw you last."

    "Have you?" said the old man, who seemed more interested in the untimely death of the pullet than in his nephew's adventures.

    "Yes, I've been everywhere. I spent a year in Australia at the gold diggings."

    "Did you find any?" asked his uncle, for the first time betraying interest.

    "Some, but I didn't bring away any."

    Ben Haley meanwhile was rapidly stripping the chicken of its feathers. When he finished, he said, "Now tell me where you keep your vegetables, Uncle Paul?"

    "They're in the corn barn. You can't get in. It's locked."

    "Where's the key?"

    "Lost."

    "I'll get in, never fear," said the intruder, and he led the way to the corn barn, his uncle unwillingly following and protesting that it would be quite impossible to enter.

    Reaching the building, he stepped back and was about to kick open the door, when old Paul hurriedly interposed, saying, "No, no, I've found the key."

    His nephew took it from his hand, and unlocking the door, brought out a liberal supply of potatoes, beets and squashes.

    "We'll have a good dinner, after all," he said. "You don't half know how to live, Uncle Paul. You need me here. You've got plenty around you, but you don't know how to use it."

    The free and easy manner in which his nephew conducted himself was peculiarly annoying and exasperating to the old man, but as often as he was impelled to speak, the sight of his nephew's resolute face and vigorous frame, which he found it difficult to connect with his recollections of young Ben, terrified him into silence, and he contented himself with following his nephew around uneasily with looks of suspicion.

    When the dinner was prepared both sat down to partake of it, but Ben quietly, and, as a matter of course, assumed the place of host and carved the fowl. Notwithstanding the shock which his economical notions had received, the farmer ate with appetite the best meal of which he had partaken for a long time. Ben had not vaunted too highly his
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