A sweeping curve of glistening beach.
A full palpitating sea lying under the languid heat
of a late June afternoon. The low, red Life Saving
Station, with two small cottages huddling close to
it in friendly fashion, as if conscious of the utter
loneliness of sea and sand dune. And in front
of one of these houses sat Cap’n Billy and his
Janet!
They two seemed alone in the silent
expanse of waste and water, but it in no wise disturbed
them. Billy was industriously mending a huge fish
net spread out upon the sands. Janet was planning
a mode of attack, in order to preserve unto herself
the very loneliness and isolation that surrounded
them.
In Janet’s hands Cap’n
Billy knew himself a craven coward. Only by keeping
his eyes away from the face near him could he hope
for success in argument. And Cap’n Billy,
with all the strength of his simple, honest nature,
meant to succeed in the present course-if
Janet would permit him!
It was yet to be discovered how beautiful
was the girl, crouching upon the sands. So unlike
was she to the young people of the Station that she
repelled, rather than attracted, the common eye.
Tall, slim, and sinewy was she, with the quick strength
of a boy. The smooth, brown skin had the fineness
and delicacy of exquisite bronze. Some attempt
had been made earlier in the day to confine the splendid
hair with strong strands of seaweed, but the breeze
of the later morning had treated the matter contemptuously,
and the shining waves were beautifully disordered.
Out of all keeping with this brown ruggedness were
Janet’s eyes. Like colorless pools they
lay protected by their dark fringes, until emotion
moved them to tint and expression. Did the sky
of Janet’s day prove kind, what eyes could be
as soft and blue as hers? Did storm threaten,
a grayness brooded, a grayness quite capable of changing
to ominous black.
Cap’n Billy, trained to watching
for storms and danger, knew the signals, and now,
for safety, lay low.
The eyes were mild and sun-filled,
the face bewitchingly friendly; but when Janet took
to wheedling, Billy hugged the shore.
“You don’t really mean it, Cap’n,
now, do you?”
“I do that!” muttered Billy, and he pulled
the twine energetically.
“What, send your own Janet off
to the mainland to stay-except when she
runs back?” This last in a tone that might have
moved a rock to pity.
“Yes, that, Janet; and ye mustn’t come
on too often, nuther.”
“Oh! Cap’n, and just
when we’ve got the blessed beach to ourselves!
Mrs. Jo G. and her kind gone; only the crew and us!
Why, Cap’n, this is life!”
“Now, Janet, ‘tain’t
no use fur ye t’ coax. Ye’re goin’
on seventeen, ain’t ye?”
“Seventeen, Cap’n, and eleven months!”
“It’s distractin’
the way ye’ve shot up. Clar distractin’;
an’ I ain’t been an’ done my duty
by ye, nuther.” Billy yanked a strand of
cord vigorously.
“Yes, you have, Cap’n,”
Janet’s tone was dangerously soft; “I’m
the very properest girl at the Station. Look
at me, Cap’n Daddy!”
But Billy steeled himself, and rigidly
attended to the net. “Well,” he admitted,
“ye’re proper enough ‘long some lines.
I’ve taught ye t’ conquer yer ’tarnal
bad temper-
“You’ve taught me to know
its power, Cap’n Daddy,” warned Janet with
a glint of darkness in the laughing serenity of her
gaze; “the temper is here just the same, and
powerful bad, upon provocation!”
A smile moved the corners of Billy’s humorous
lips.
“An’ the bedpost is here,
too, Janet. Lordy! I can see ye now as I
used t’ tie ye up till the storm was over.
What a ’tarnal little rascal ye war! The
waves of tantrums rolled over ye, one by one, yer yells
growin’ less an’ less; an’ bime
by ye called out ’tween squalls, ’Cap’n
Daddy, it’s most past!’” There was
a mist over Billy’s eyes. “Ye ’tarnal
little specimint!” he added.
“But, Cap’n, dear!”
Janet was growing more and more dangerous; “I’ve
been so good. Just think how I’ve gone across
the bay, to the Corners, to school. My! how educated
I am! Storm or ice, I leave it to you, Daddy,
did I ever complain?”
“Never, Janet. I’ve
stood on the dock and watched yer sail comin’
’fore the gale, till it seemed like I would
bust with fear. An’ the way ye handled
yer ice boat in the pursuit of knowledge-gettin’
was simple miraculous! No, I ain’t a-frettin’
over yer larnin’-gettin’; it’s the
us’n’ of the same as is stirrin’
me now. With such edication as ye’ve got
in spite of storm an’ danger, ye ought to be
shinin’ over on the mainland ’mong the
boarders!”
“Boarders!” sniffed Janet,
tossing her ruddy mane; “boarders! Folks
have gone crazy-mad over the city folks who have swooped
down upon us, like a-a-hawk!
Every house full of those raving lunatics going on
about the views, and the-the artistic desolation!
That’s what those dirty, spotty looking things
on the Hills call it. Cap’n, you just ought
to see them going about in checked kitchen aprons,
with daubs all over them-sunbonnets adangling
on their heads, little wagons full of truck for painting
pictures-and such pictures! Lorzy!
if I lived in a place that looked like those-sketches,
they call them-I’d-I’d
go to sea, Cap’n Daddy-to sea!”
“But they be folks, Janet, an’
it’s a new life an’ a chance, an’
it ain’t decint fur ye, with all yer good pints,
t’ be on the beach along with the crew, all
alone!”
“Cap’n, I do believe you
want to marry me off! get rid of me! oh, Daddy!”
Janet plunged her head in her lap and was the picture
of outraged maidenhood.
“‘T ain’t so!
An’ ye know it!” cried Billy. “But
Mrs. Jo G., ’fore they sailed off, opened my
eyes.”
“Mrs. Jo G.!” snapped
Janet, raising her head and flashing a look of resentment,
“I thought so! What did she suggest-that
I might come to her house and wait-wait,
just think of it, Cap’n, wait upon those boarders?”
She had suggested that, and something even worse, so
Billy held his peace.
“It’s simply outrageous
the way our people are going on,” the girl continued;
“they are bent upon beggaring the city folks!
Beggaring them, really! they have no consciences about
the methods they take to-to rob them!”
“Janet, hold yer tiller close!”
“Oh! I know, Cap’n,
but I do not want to take part in it all. I want
to stay alone with you. Think of the patrols,
Cap’n Daddy! I’ll take them all with
you. Sunset, midnight, and morning! You and
I, Daddy, dear, under the stars, or through storm!
Ah, I’ve ached for just this!”
Billy felt his determination growing weak.
“I’ve made ‘rangements,
Janet; Cap’n David he’s goin’ to
board ye, an’ ye can look about, an’ if
ye see an openin’ t’ get a chance t’
better yerself-not in the marryin’
way, but turnin’ a penny-why it will
all help, my girl, an’ ye ought t’ be
havin’ the chance with the city folks, what
all the others is havin’.”
“Oh! you sly old Cap’n
Daddy! And do you realize that Cap’n Davy’s
Susan Jane isn’t any joke to live with?
You don’t hear Davy tattling, but other folks
are not so particular. Daddy, dear, I just cannot!”
And with this the girl sprang into the net, rolled
over and over and then lay ensnarled in the meshes
at Billy’s feet, her laughing eyes shining through
the strands.
“Ye ’tarnal rascal!” cried Billy.
“You think you’ve caught
me!” whined Janet, “you think you’ve
got me! Oh! Cap’n, I’m afraid
of the city folks!”
“Fraid!” sneered Billy. “My
Janet ‘fraid o’ anythin’!”
“Yes, honest true! I do
not want to be near them. I scent danger; not
to them, but to me!”
Billy, bereft of his hands’
occupation, looked out seaward. He was well-nigh
distracted. Always his duty to this girl was uppermost
in his simple mind; but his love and anxiety mingled
with it. He no more understood her than he understood
the elements that made havoc along the coast and necessitated
his brave calling. He waged war with the sea
to save his kind; and he struggled against the opposing
forces in Janet that he in no wise understood, in
order that she, as a girl among others, should have
her rights.
Wild little creature as she had always
been, Billy had used all the opportunities at hand
to tame her into a similarity to the other children
of the Station; and when he had failed, he gloried
in the failure, and grew more distracted. Braving
opposition in the girl and the dangers of Nature,
Billy had forced the child across the bay to the school
at the Corners. What there was to learn in that
primitive institution, Janet had learned, and much
more besides in ways of which Billy knew nothing.
For years the quaint seaside village
had lain unnoticed in its droning course. Ships,
now and again, had been driven upon the bar outside
the dunes, and at such times the bravery of the quiet
crew at the Government Station was sung in the distant
city papers.
Now and again the superiority of the
Point Quinton Light would be mentioned. But Captain
David never knew of it. He tended and loved the
Light with a fatherly interest. It was his life’s
trust, and David was a poet, an inarticulate poet,
who spoke only through his shining Light. The
government was his master. David thought upon
the government in a personal way and served it reverently.
Then an artist had discovered Quinton-by-the-Sea.
He took a painting of it back to the restless town,
a painting full of color of dune, sea, bay, and hundred-toned
Hills, with never a tree to stay the progress of the
unending breezes. That was sufficient! The
artist was great enough to touch the heart and Quinton
was doomed to be famous! But it was only the
beginning now. Every house in the village had
opened its doors to the strangers; and every pocket
yawned for possible dollars. Tents were pitched
in artistic arrangement on the Hills, but the hotel
was not yet. Managers waited to see if the fever
would last. While they waited, the village folk
reaped a breathtaking harvest. Mrs. Jo G., the
only woman who had lived at the Life Saving Station
in her own home, packed up and went “off,”
with baggage and children, to open the old farmhouse
on the mainland and take boarders. Before going
she left food for Billy to digest.
“This be Janet’s chance,”
she said, standing with her hands on her hips, and
her sunbonnet shading her fair, pinched face-nothing
ever tanned Mrs. Jo G. “She can turn in
an’ help wait on table, or she kin take in washin’.
It won’t hurt her a mite. Washin’
will have t’ be done, an’ the city folks
will pay. Janet can make them fetch and carry
their own duds. She can stand on her dignity;
an’ wash money is as good as any other.”
Billy experienced a distinct chill
at this last proposition. Why, he could hardly
have told. During Janet’s babyhood and early
childhood he had assumed all household duties himself.
Later he and Janet had shared them together over tub
and table, but that Janet should wash for the boarders
was harrowing!
“You think she’s too good,
Cap’n,” sneered Mrs. Jo G., “but
she ain’t. She’s wild, an’
she ought t’ get her bearin’s. She
ain’t any different from my girls nor the others,
though you act as if you thought so. You ain’t
as strong as you once was, Cap’n, an’ come
the time when you pass in your last check, who’s
goin’ t’ do for Janet? An’ how’s
she goin’ t’ know how t’ do fur
herself? You ain’t actin’ fair by
the girl. It’s clear Providence, the way
the city folks has fallen, as you might say, right
in our open mouths. There’ll be plenty of
chances on the mainland fur Janet t’ turn a
penny, an’ get an idea of self-support.
But she ought t’ be there, and not stuck here!”
Mrs. Jo G. had hardly turned the Point,
after this epoch-making speech, before Billy was starting
for the Light and the one friend of his heart.
“David,” he explained,
viewing his friend through a fog of thick, blue smoke,
“I want that ye should take my girl! Once
Janet is here, she’ll be mighty spry ‘bout
gettin’ in t’ somethin’. I don’t
want her t’ take t’ washin’ or servin’
strangers, ‘less she wants t’, but when
’sperience an’ money is floatin’
loose, my girl ought t’ be out with her net.”
“Course!” nodded David;
“an’ Janet’s a rare fisher fur these
new waters.”
“Ye’ll keep yer eye on her, David-knowin’
all ye do?”
The furrows deepened on Billy’s
brow. David took his pipe from his mouth.
“God’s my witness! I will that!”
he said.
Thus things stood while Janet, coiled
in the meshes, lay laughing up at Billy.
“What do you think of your haul,
Cap’n Billy Daddy?” The man sighed.
“You wouldn’t let those dreadful old sharks-they
are sharks, Cap’n-you wouldn’t
let them hurt your poor little fish, now would you?”
The rippling, girlish laugh jarred Billy’s nerves.
He must take a new tack.
“See here, Janet, do ye mind
this? Ye ain’t jes’ my child-Lord
knows ye ain’t-yer hers!”
“Hers?”
“Yes.”
“Ah! you mean my mother.”
The net lay quite still. Having no memory of
the mother, Janet was not deeply impressed. “I
know, Cap’n; when you are in a difficulty you
always bring-’her’-in,-what
she would like, and what she wouldn’t.
It’s my belief, Cap’n, she’d have
done and thought exactly as we told her to.”
“‘T ain’t so, nuther!
She had heaps of common sense, an’ as she got
near port, she saw turrible clear, an’ she talked
considerable ‘bout larnin’, an’
how it could steer yer craft better than anythin’
else; an’ she ‘lowed if ye was gal or
lad, after ye got larnin’, she wanted ye should
go out int’ the world an’ test it.
She wasn’t over sot ’bout the Station.
She’d visited other places.”
Janet sat up, and idly draped the net about her.
“I suppose if my mother had
lived,” she said, “I would have listened
to her-some. But, Cap’n Daddy,
I reckon she would have gone off with me.
Like as not we would have taken boarders, but, don’t
you see, Cap’n, I would have had her?”
“True; an’ it’s
that what’s held my hand many’s the time.
Yer not havin’ her has crippled us both.
But a summer on the mainland ain’t a-goin’
t’ swamp us, Janet. With the Comrade
tied to David’s wharf, an’ me here, what’s
goin’ t’ happen to a-a girl
like you?”
Janet looked across the summer sea.
“What? Sure enough, Cap’n
Daddy, just what? And I ought to be earning my
keep.”
“I’m goin’ t’
set ye up with some gal fixin’s what I’ve
saved fur ye. Yer mother’s things!
Ye ain’t never seen them. S’pose we
take a look now. A summer, with runnin’s
over t’ the Station, will be real interestin’,
Janet. An’ ye must tell me everythin’.
There ain’t no reason why ye shouldn’t
sail over every little while, but I do hope ye’ll
make yerself useful somehow. It will help bime
by. An’ I’m gettin’ stiff.”
He arose awkwardly and strode toward the tiny house.
Janet followed, trailing her fish net robe and humming
lightly.
The house was composed of three small
rooms with a lean-to, where of late years Billy had
slept. From the middle room, which was the living
room, a ladder, set against the wall, led to the loft
overhead. The man slowly climbed upward, and
Janet went after.
The space above was hardly high enough
for an upright position, so man and girl sat down
upon the floor, and it happened that a locked chest
stood between them.
“Janet, ye ain’t never seen these things,
have ye?”
“No, Cap’n Billy.” The mocking
laugh was gone from the face.
“Ye ain’t got no sense
of curiosity ‘bout anythin’, Janet-not
even yer mother. Most girls would have asked
questions.”
This seemed like a rebuke, and Janet kept silent.
“Ain’t ye got no curious feelin’
’bout yer mother?”
“Cap’n Billy, you haven’t
ever let me miss anything in all my life. I s’pose
that’s why I haven’t asked. I never
knew her, did I, Cap’n Billy? You made
up for everything.”
This unnerved Billy.
“That’s logic,”
he nodded, “an’ it’s good-heartedness,
as well; but, Janet, I’m goin’ to tell
ye somewhat of yer mother.” He took a key
from his pocket, unlocked the chest and raised the
lid.
“Them things is hers!”
he said reverently. “Little frocks-”
Three he laid out upon the floor. Cheap, rather
gaudy they were, but of cut and fashion unknown to
the beach-bred girl. “And little under-thin’s,
an’ a hat, an’ sacque; shoes-just
look at them, Janet! Little feet they covered,
but such willin’ little feet, always a-trottin’
’bout till the very last, so turrible afraid
they wouldn’t be grateful enough. Lord!
but that was what she said.” The pitiful
store of woman’s clothing lay near Janet, but
she made no motion to touch it.
“And this is her!” Captain
Billy took a photograph from the bottom of the chest,
unwrapped it from its covering of tissue paper, and
handed it to the quiet girl opposite. “This
is her, an’ as like as life! The same little
hat on, what she set such store by! I ain’t
had the heart t’ show ye this before.”
Janet seized the card eagerly. The light from
a small window in the roof fell full upon it.
“Oh!” she breathed, “she
was-why, Cap’n Billy, she was more
than pretty! I think I should have felt her more
if I had seen this.”
“Maybe, Janet.”
“Am-am I like her?”
“Like as not, if ye was whiter
an’ spindlin’er, there’d be a likeness.”
An uneasiness struggled in Billy’s inner consciousness
as he viewed the girl. “Ye’re more
wild-like,” he added.
“I wish I had asked a lot about
her,” Janet whispered, and there was a mist
in her eyes; “I have been careless just because
I’ve been happy. It seems as if we had
sort of pushed her away, and kept her still.”
“Well, it’s her turn t’
speak now, girl, an’ that’s what I’ve
been steerin’ round t’. Ye’re
hers an’-
“And yours, Cap’n Billy,
even if you have taught me to say Captain, instead
of Father.”
“It was her word for me, child,
an’ ye added Daddy of yer own will. ’My
Cap’n,’ she use t’ say. It sounded
awful soothin’; an’ her so grateful ‘bout
nothin’! Sho! An’ she wanted
ye to be a help long o’ me. Them was her
words. An’ Lordy! child, I’m willin’
t’ work an’ share with ye-but
savin’ is pretty hard when there ain’t
nothin’ much t’ save from, an’ if
this summer-boardin’ business is goin’
t’ open up a chance fur ye, it ain’t cause
I want help, but she’d like ye t’ have
more things. Don’t ye see? An’
I jest know ye’ll get yer innin’s on the
mainland.”
“I have been a selfish girl!”
Janet murmured, holding the photograph closer, “a
human crab; just clinging and gripping you. Then
running wild and fighting against you when you wanted
me to learn to be useful! I think, Cap’n
Billy, if you had shown me-my mother, and
talked more of her-maybe it would have
been different. Maybe not,”-with
a soft sigh,-“I reckon every one
has to be ready for seeing. I don’t just
know how to-how to get my share
from those-those boarders. But I’ll
find a way! I mean to be helpful, Cap’n.
I can’t bring myself to wait on them. Mrs.
Jo G. doesn’t seem to mind that, but I do.
And I hate to see them eat-in crowds.
But I’ll find something to do. Put the clothes
in the carpet-bag, Cap’n Billy Daddy; I may
not wear them over there, but I’d like to have
them. May I take the picture?”
“Yes, only be powerful careful
o’ it. An’ don’t show it round.
Somehow she seems to belong to nobody but jest us
two.”