Mrs. Twig placed the big earthen bowl
with the appetizing odour in the center of the table,
together with a plate heaped high with slices of white
bread and a bowl of molasses. Then she poured
tea.
“Dinner’s ready this minute,”
boomed Skipper Zeb. “Set in, and we’ll
eat.”
There was no cover upon the home-made
table, but its top had been scoured clean and white
with sand and water. The cabin boasted no chairs,
and chests were drawn up by Skipper Zeb and Toby to
the ends of the table, and a bench on each side, to
serve as seats.
Accepting the invitation, Charley
took a place beside Toby on one of the benches, Violet
sat on the bench opposite them, while the Skipper and
Mrs. Twig each took an end. When all were seated,
Skipper Zeb, in so big a voice Charley was sure the
Lord could not fail to hear, asked a devout blessing
upon the family, the stranger within their home, and
upon the food.
“Turn to, now, and eat hearty,”
Skipper Zeb invited, indicating the earthen bowl.
“’Tisn’t much we has, but ’tis
good. Mrs. Twig makes the finest dumplin’
on The Labrador. I knows for I eats un. I
shoots the bear last week, and ’twere as fine
and fat a bear as ever I sees. He were just prime
to curl up for his winter sleep.”
“It looks good, and I’m
hungry,” said Charley, transferring, with a big
serving spoon, a portion of the stewed bear’s
meat and dumpling to his plate. “I never
ate bear’s meat, and I’ve always wished
I could.”
“Never ate bear’s meat!”
exclaimed Skipper Zeb. “Well, now!
And we gets a bear most every year. What kind
of meat does you eat where you comes from? ’Tis
likely you gets plenty of deer’s meat?”
“Beef, and lamb, and veal, and
pork, but I don’t care much for pork, except
bacon,” said Charley.
“Well, now! In all my days
I never tastes beef or lamb or veal! We gets
pickled pork at the post, and ’tis wonderful
fine meat I thinks. If beef and lamb and
veal be better than pork, I’d like to try un
once. They must be a rare treat.”
Skipper Zeb smacked his lips. “Yes, sir,
I’d like to try un once! And does you hunt
un?”
“No,” Charley smiled,
“the animals are raised on farms and the meat
is sold at stores.”
“Well, now! What wonderful
things goes on in the world, and we never knows about
un down here on The Labrador.” Skipper Zeb
shook his head in astonishment. “Does you
mark that, Sophia? They raises the animals and
then kills un, and sells the meat at the tradin’
stores!”
“’Tis a queer way,” admitted Mrs.
Twig.
“’Tis a fine way!”
enthused Skipper Twig. “Twould be fine if
we could raise deer and kill un when we wants un.”
“Here’s sweetenin’
for your tea,” and Toby, observing that Charley
had not helped himself, passed the molasses.
“Thank you,” Charley accepted,
putting a spoonful of the molasses into his tea, and
wondering why it was used instead of sugar, but venturing
no question. Had he asked, Skipper Zeb would have
told him that it was much less expensive than sugar,
and that sugar was a luxury they could not afford.
There were no vegetables, for on the
Labrador coast the summers are too short and too cold
to grow them, and not one of the Twig family had ever
so much as tasted a potato or an onion or a tomato,
or, indeed, any of the wholesome vegetables that we,
in our kindlier land, have so plentifully, and accept
as a matter of course. But Charley and the Twigs,
old and young, found the stewed bear’s meat,
with Mrs. Twig’s light, fluffy dumplings and
the good bread and molasses, both satisfying and appetizing;
and when Charley declined a third helping, urged upon
him by Skipper Zeb, he declared that he was as full
as though he had eaten a Christmas dinner.
When all were finished, Skipper Zeb
bowed his head and gave thanks for the bountiful meal;
and then, with Toby’s assistance, drew the benches
and chests back to the wall.
“Set down, now, and when I lights
my pipe we’ll talk over this fix you’re
gettin’ in,” said Skipper Zeb. Drawing
a pipe and a plug of black tobacco and a jack-knife
from his pocket, he shaved some of the plug into the
palm of his left hand, rolled it between his palms,
and filled the pipe. Then, with some deliberation,
he selected a long, slender sliver from the wood box,
ignited it at the stove, lighted his pipe and carefully
extinguished the burning sliver.
“This is a fix, now!
Well, now, ’tis a fix!” Skipper
Zeb sat down upon a bench by Charley’s side,
and for a minute or two puffed his pipe in silence,
sending up a cloud of smoke. Then, turning to
Charley, he boomed: “But ’tis not
such a bad fix we can’t get out of un! No,
sir! We’ll see about this fix!
We’ll see!”
“Thank you,” said Charley
gratefully, and with hope that there might be a way
out of his trouble after all.
“Now, to start in the beginning,
and that’s where most things have to start,”
said Skipper Zeb, “we won’t worry about
un. Worry is bad for the insides of a man’s
head, and what’s bad for the insides of a man’s
head is bad for all of his insides, and if he worries,
and keeps un up, he gets sick. To-day is to-day
and to-morrow is to-morrow. ’Tis but sense
for a man to provide for to-morrow, and do his best
to do un, but if he can’t there’s no use
his worryin’ about un. That’s how
I figgers. You’re feelin’ well and
hearty to-day?”
“Yes,” admitted Charley.
“You just had a good snack of vittles?”
“Yes.”
“You’re warm and snug?”
“Yes.”
“There you be! The worst
of un’s took care of to start with! Feelin’
well, a belly full of good vittles, warm and snug!
Now keep feelin’ contented, and right as if
this was your own home. Nothin’ to worry
over. No, sir, not a thing! Now we’ve
headed off the worst of un.
“You’re in a fix, but
’twon’t trouble us any. Not us!
Life is full of fixes, first and last. ‘Twouldn’t
be much fun livin’ if we didn’t get in
fixes now and again! ‘Tis a fine bit of
sport figgerin’ the way out of fixes. Fixes
gives us a change and somethin’ to think about.
There’s a way out of most fixes I finds,
even the worst of un.”
“Do you think the ship will come back for me?”
asked Charley anxiously.
“Well, now,” Skipper Zeb
wrinkled his forehead as though he were pondering
the question deeply, “if she comes back she’ll
come in through the tickle and come to in the offing
and blow her whistle, and we’ll hear un, and
be ready for she. If she don’t come back,
she’ll not blow her whistle, and we’ll
not hear un. We’ll be stayin’ here
as snug as a bear in his den and listen for that whistle.”
“But do you think she’ll
come back?” insisted Charley, with a suspicion
that Skipper Zeb’s answer had been evasive.
“That’s a question!
That’s a fair and square question, now,”
admitted Skipper Zeb. “You asks un fair
and I’ll answer un fair. The folk on the
mail boat misses you. They looks up and down and
don’t find you. You’re not on the
boat, and how can they find you? Captain Barcus
of the mail boat says, ’Well, he’s gone,
that’s sure. If he leaves the mail boat
at Pinch-In Tickle, he’s with Skipper Zeb Twig
by now, and safe enough and well took care of.
If he falls overboard, that’s the last of he.’
And sayin’ this, and knowin’ Captain Barcus
the way I knows he, he keeps right on to St. John’s,
and don’t come back till next June or July month.”
“If the ship don’t come,”
broke in Charley, suddenly startled into his old fear,
“what can I do? What will
become of me?”
“Well, now!” and Skipper
Zeb broke into a hearty laugh. “’Tis just
what I says in the beginnin’ about no worry,
and about to-day bein’ to-day and to-morrow
bein’ to-morrow. You’re cast away
with shelter and grub. That’s not
so bad, considerin’. Not the best of shelter
and not the best of grub, but not so bad either.
You does your best to get out of this fix, and the
best way you finds is to bide right where you finds
the shelter and grub. If the mail boat don’t
come to-day, and I says fair and square, I’m
not expectin’ she, you goes to Double Up Cove
in the marnin’ with us. Whilst you’re
on The Labrador our home is your home, and I hopes
you’ll like un.”
“But Daddy! Poor Daddy!
He’ll be broken-hearted when he thinks I’ve
been lost at sea, and so will Mother!” Charley
gulped hard to keep back the tears.
“’Twill be a bit hard
for un, but you can’t help un,” Skipper
Zeb consoled. “What’s past is past,
and there’s no use worryin’ about un.
You’re busy tryin’ to get out of a fix.
They’ll be so glad to see you when you gets
home, ‘twill more than make up to un for the
mournin’ they does now. Your feelin’
bad and worryin’ about un won’t help your
father and mother any, and it’ll get your insides
upset, as I were sayin’. You’re gettin’
out of a fix. You stick by the grub and shelter,
such as ’tis, and make the best of un, and be
happy.”
“Oh, thank you!” and tears
came into Charley’s eyes in spite of his effort
to keep them back. “Daddy will make it right
with you. He’ll pay you for being good
to me. He’ll pay you all you ask.”
“I asks nothing,” said
Skipper Zeb. “’Tis the right thing to do.
Here on The Labrador we stands shoulder to shoulder,
and when a man’s cast away we takes him to our
home till he can get to his own home. We all be
wonderful glad to have you. Ask Mrs. Twig, now.”
“’Twill be wonderful fine
to have you bide with us,” and Mrs. Twig’s
smile left no doubt of her sincerity. “You
and Toby will be havin’ rare good times together.”
“That we will, now!” broke
in Toby quite excited at the prospect.