Page:Cornelia Meigs-The Pirate of Jasper Peak.djvu/145

 he found, however, any number of things to be done, pans to be cleaned, water to be carried, some  last weeds and dried stalks to be cleared from  Oscar’s vegetable garden and in the small field  that he had cultivated. Oscar had managed to raise quite a store of wheat, had ground it by  hand in the rude little mill that he had constructed  himself and had put it aside for use during the  winter. He had potatoes, too, and beans, turnips and other vegetables that could be dried or stored,  so that the supplies that must be carried so laboriously from Rudolm need be the fewest possible.

After he had finished his work in the cabin and had cooked his dinner, trying to imitate  Oscar’s skill in tossing flapjacks and not succeeding very well, Hugh took an ax and went out  to the edge of the forest to cut wood. Gathering the winter’s fuel was an endless task, one upon  which he and Oscar spent all of their extra time. He looked across at Jasper Peak again as he came out, but a curtain of rain was falling beeen him and the mountain and the cabin