“I’m certain he would,” Seth replied promptly. “He hasn’t had anything except dry ginger cake since yesterday mornin’.”

A moment later Master Snip had before him a saucer filled with such milk as it is safe to say he had not seen since Seth took him in charge, and the eager way in which he lapped it showed that it was appreciated fully.

The fugitive did not make his toilet immediately, because of the irresistible temptation to gaze about him.

The walls of the kitchen were low; but in the newcomer’s eyes this was an added attraction, because it gave to the room such an hospitable appearance. The floor was more cleanly than any table he had ever seen; the bricks of the fireplace, at one side of which stood a small cook-stove, were as red as if newly painted; while on the dresser and the mantel across the broad chimney were tin dishes that shone like newly polished silver.

A large rocking-chair, a couch covered with chintz, and half a dozen straight-backed, spider-legged chairs were ranged methodically along the sides of the room, while in the centre of the floor, so placed that the fresh morning breeze which entered by the door would blow straight across it to the window shaded by lilac bushes, was a table covered with a snowy cloth.

“Well, if this is a farmer’s house I wouldn’t wonder if a good bit of Pip Smith’s yarn was true,” Seth muttered to himself, as he turned toward the sink, over which hung a towel so white that he could hardly believe he would be allowed to dry his face and hands with it.

He was alone in the kitchen. Snip, having had a most satisfactory breakfast of what he must have believed was real cream, had run out of doors to chase a leaf blown by the wind, and Gladys was close behind, alternately urging him in the pursuit, and showering praises upon “the sweetest dog that ever lived.”

“Folks that live like this must be mighty rich,” Seth thought, as he plunged his face into a basin of clear water. “It ain’t likely Snip an’ me will strike it so soft again, an’ I expect he’ll be terrible sorry to leave. I reckon it’ll be all right to hang ’round an hour or so, an’ then we must get out lively. I wonder if that little bit of a woman expects I’ll pay for breakfast?”