“Well, my boy! To think
of you drifting down here. Have a cigar, and put
your feet on the railing. I tell you, you may
travel the world over, and there isn’t an easier
posture known, than the Yankee one of ’feet higher
than head.’”
John Devant and Richard Thornly sat
upon the wide veranda of Bluff Head; and Thornly,
being thus given the freedom of Yankee position, planted
his feet upon the high railing, tipped back his broad-armed
chair, and inhaled the smoke of his host’s good
cigar.
“You’ve caught the language
of the place already I see, Mr. Devant. Had we
met anywhere else, another word would have done; ‘drifting’
applies here. No one ‘runs down’
to Quinton, or ‘happens’ down; one just
naturally ‘drifts.’ It’s a great
place.”
“You like it, eh?” Mr.
Devant let his eyes rove over the wealth of color
and wildness, and puffed enjoyably.
“It’s immense! Strange,
isn’t it, how a place can lie slumbering for
generations, right at our doors, and no one has sense
enough to look at it? And after all, it is while
it is sleeping, or beginning to stir, that it charms.
Two years from now, when the rabble get onto the racket,
the glory will be gone. Think of picnics on the
Hills! Imagine a crowd rushing for the dunes,
and the bay thick with sails! No! Let’s
make the best of it while we may.”
Mr. Devant laughed. “I’ll
give it five or ten years,” he said. “My
grandfather had a vision of its future prosperity.
He bought acres here for a mere song. He built
this house, hoping the family would find it comfortable
for the summers. My father liked it so well that
he settled the library and general fixtures for a
home, living winters at a hotel in town. But
the old place was too lonely for me in the past.
I’m just beginning to have visions, like my
forebears. I’m sick of travel. Town
life ought never to charm a natural animal except during
the months of bad weather. My boy, I believe
I’ll settle down at fifty and take to land speculation!
I’ll buy up round here, keep the grip of the
rabble off, and preserve this spot for the-pure
in heart and them who have clean, hands!”
“’T would be a missionary
work,” Thornly rejoined lightly.
“Who turned your eyes hitherward, Dick?”
“Why, John Mason. He saw
Chatterton’s famous picture and came down and
discovered this garden spot. Poor old Mason!
With his money pots and his struggling love for beauty
and simplicity, he is sore distressed. He wanted
to build a cabin on the dunes and live here summers,
but Madam and the girls almost had hysterics.
They have just built a gingerbread affair at Magnolia,
and so Mason added a den to the structure. A huge
room overlooking the sea! It has space left on
the wall for a big picture, and Mason gave me an order.
’Go down to that heaven-preserved spot,’
he said, ’get the spirit of the place, and put
it in my den. I don’t mind the price.
Stay down all summer, but get it!’”
“Do you think you can?”
asked Devant. Thornly’s gaze contracted.
“I think I have,” he replied,
slowly flicking the ashes that had accumulated upon
his cigar.
“Good! That means more
glory. In this sordid age, and with an uncomprehending
public, you’ve had rare fortune in getting rid
of your work, Dick. Your pictures are sellers,
I hear. How proud your father would have been!
My old friend was one of the few men I have known who
set a price upon genius above money.”
“Yes: I wish father and
mother could have known. It’s often a bit
lonely.”
“But there is Katharine.
At least, I suppose, there is still Katharine?”
“Yes,” slowly, “there
is still Katharine; and our relations are the same.
She’s watching my stunts in art.”
“She’s proud of you?”
“She’s proud of my success.”
Thornly smiled. “There’s a difference,
you know.”
“Oh! yes. But Katharine
is young. I’d like to see the child again.
Is she as pretty as her childhood promised?”
“She is very handsome.”
“Full of life and dimples?”
“Oh! she’s giddy enough.
Superb health, and undiminished scent for pleasure!
Katharine is an undoubted success.”
“I must have her down.
My sister is coming at the month’s end.
I’ll write to Katharine to-night and plead my
friendship for her parents. Where is she?
And I’ll tell her you’re here.”
“She’s at South End, with the Prescotts.”
For some moments the older and the
younger man smoked in silence. The sun set in
due time and Captain David’s Light appeared.
“What a living thing a lighthouse
is!” said Thornly; “that and an open fire
have the same vital, human interest.”
“I believe you are right.
When I find myself bad company, I always have a fire
built if the temperature is below seventy. Since
I came here I’ve taken to this side of the veranda,
late afternoons, and I grow quite chummy with Cap’n
Davy’s Light.”
Mr. Devant got up, stretched himself
and took to pacing the piazza slowly.
“You know David of the Light?” asked Thornly.
“As a boy I knew the characters
roundabout here, somewhat. I’m trying to
reinstate myself in their good graces. This place
produces strange and unexpected types.”
“Yes, I found a pimpernel flower
on the Hills to-day,” said Thornly irrelevantly.
“Even the flora is startling.”
“You found what?”
“A pimpernel. It’s
a common wild flower in some sandy places, but a strange
enough little rascal to be seen just here. It’s
called the poor man’s weather glass. Where
it grows most common, it is not especially noticeable;
but it almost took my breath this morning. It’s
in keeping with the surprises of the surroundings.”
Devant laughed.
“Well,” he said presently,
“it must be a relation, same family, you know,
of a pimpernel of a girl I’ve discovered here.”
Thornly again contracted his brows.
“Solitary flower? Shutting
up at approach of storm, and all the rest?”
he asked.
“Solitary flower, all right,”
Devant rejoined. “I’m not up on plant-ology,
but I’ve studied humans, off and on, and I cannot
account for this one. I don’t know whether,
in my position as friend to you, I should bring this
odd specimen to your notice, but I’d like to
have you, as an artist, pass judgment upon her beauty.”
“I might have the storm’s
effect upon this pimpernel of yours,” Thornly
put in, “make her hide within herself.”
“I fancy storms would not daunt
her. I don’t know but that she would rather
enjoy them.”
Thornly yawned secretly.
“Handsome, is she?”
“Not only that,” said
Devant, “I suppose she is wonderfully handsome.
She has grace, too, and a figure, I should say, about
perfect. But it is her mental make-up that staggers
me. She talks in one way and thinks in another.
She clings to her g’s, too, in spite of local
tradition. She hasn’t a passing acquaintance
with ‘ain’t,’ or the more criminal
‘hain’t.’ Her English is good,
she reads like a starved soul, for the pure pleasure
of it; and she thinks like a child of ten. By
Jove! she was here in my library, the day I arrived.
She had a secret method of getting into the house
by a cellar window,-had done it for years.
She almost froze my blood when I saw her. I thought
I’d struck a ghost for certain. She was
reading Shakespeare! Said she hadn’t been
able to get beyond him for three months. She
began to read when she was little, at the bottom shelf,
and has worked her way up to the fifth. And yet
with all that, she’s a simple child, Dick.
Smollett and Fielding and heaven knows who else are
on the third shelf!”
“Lord!” cried Thornly, and laughed loudly;
“who is this pimpernel?”
“Janet of the Dunes. Cap’n
Billy’s girl! Been brought up like a wild
thing! Sails a boat like an old tar! Swims
like a fish! Motherless-old Billy,
a poor shote, according to the gossip! The women
have a sort of pitying contempt for him; the men keep
their mouths shut, but you can fancy the training
of this girl. I’m always interested in heredity
and I’d like to know the girl’s mother.
Something ought to account for my pimpernel.”
Thornly was rising.
“I’ll try to account for
my flower, Mr. Devant,” he said. “I
dare say some untoward wind bore it from its original
environment; it may be that the same reasons exist
in the case of this flower of yours. Good night!”
“Stay to late dinner, Dick!
You know you don’t want to go back to a dish
of prunes and soggy cake. Better stay.”
“No. Thank you, just the
same. I’m going to bunk out in my shanty
to-night. I’ve got a chafing dish there.
The prunes were undermining my constitution.
Good night!”
Devant watched him until the shrubbery hid him.
“I’ll get Katharine down
as soon as I can,” he mused; “and for his
father’s sake, as well as his own, I’ll
try to keep him and the pimpernel apart until then.
His engagement to Katharine is a safe anchor.”
But while Davy’s Light shone
friendly-wise upon Bluff Head, it also did its duty
by a lonely little mariner putting off from Davy’s
dock.
It had been a hard day for Janet.
Susan Jane, with almost occult power, had seemed to
divine the girl’s longing to get away.
“Boarder or no boarder!”
the helpless woman had snarled, “I reckon you’ve
got somethin’ human ‘bout you. If
you can’t stop an’ do fur me, I’ll
call David. I’ve had a bad night an’
I ain’t goin’ t’ be left t’
myself. There’s stirrin’ doin’s
goin’ on; but no one comes here t’ gossip.”
“I’ll stay,” Janet
had sighed, remembering David’s worn, patient
face when he staggered toward the bedroom an hour
before. “But I cannot gossip, Susan Jane,
I don’t know how; and all the other folks are
busy cooking, feeding, washing for, and waiting on
the boarders. City folks come high, Susan Jane.”
“Well, if you can’t gossip,
Janet, there is them as can. Thank God! when
He took the use of my legs an’ arms, He strengthened
my eyes an’ ears. I can see an’ hear
considerable, though there is them who would deny me
that comfort if they could. What ails you an’
Mark Tapkins?”
“Nothing, Susan Jane.”
“Yes, there be, too. He’s
more womble-cropped than ever. They say his Pa
is makin’ a mint of money sellin’ them
crullers of his’n. Who would have thought
of Mark’s bein’ smart enough to set his
Pa on that tack? The way these city folks eat
anythin’ that is give them is scandalous.
They must have crops like yaller ducks. Have you
heard ’bout Mrs. Jo G.’s Maud Grace?”
“No, Susan Jane.”
Janet stirred the cake she was making by Susan’s
recipe energetically.
“You’re deef as a bulkhead, Janet!
I bet you’re envious.”
“Envious, Susan Jane, envious of Maud Grace?”
“Oh! you have had yer eyes open, eh?”
“You just asked me about her, Susan Jane.”
“Did I? Well, it’s
simply amazin’ how Mrs. Jo G. is developin’
a business talent. Actually keepin’ her
girl dressed up t’ entertain the boarders, evenin’s!
She’s got some one t’ help wait in the
dinin’ room, an’ she cooks. Jo G.
sails the boarders, when they pay him enough, an’
that girl just sparks around an’ acts real entertainin’,
evenin’s. I shouldn’t wonder, with
such a smart ma, if she caught a beau. I do wish,
Janet, since you ain’t got no one but Billy,-an’
every one knows he’s got ’bout as much
gumption as a snipe,-I do wish you could
land one of these boarders. They must be real
easy from what I hear.”
“I don’t want them!”
“Course you don’t!
An’ you don’t want t’ work fur your
livin’, an’ Mark ain’t good enough
fur you. You’d better look out, Janet, I
tell you fur your good, it ain’t safe fur you
t’ trust yer leanin’s too far.”
So the day had passed. The afternoon
had brought Mark Tapkins with his gloomy face, too,
so Janet had been obliged to give the Hills a wide
berth and only darkness brought relief.
Susan Jane was bewailing her woes
in David’s patient ears,-it was Mark’s
night in the Light,-so, unseen and unsuspected,
Janet loosed the Comrade, unfurled the white
wing before the obliging land breeze, and made for
the Station.
It was a glorious summer night; full
moon, full tide, and a steady west wind heavy with
the odor of the Hills.
As the little boat darted ahead, Janet’s
spirits rose as poor David’s did, when once
he parted company with the burden of Susan Jane’s
peevish egotism. She looked back at the Light
and thought, with a little sigh of weariness, that
she was free from the watchfulness of the three within
its walls.
“Only the Light has an eye upon
me! Kind, good Light! Cap’n Daddy and
I do not need you to-night, but, come storm, then
God bless you!”
It was not the girl’s intention
to run up to the Station dock. She knew that
Cap’n Billy had the midnight patrol, going east;
so she planned to make for the little cove, midway
between the Station and the halfway house, and take
Billy by surprise and assault.
She chuckled delightedly as she constructed
her mode of attack. She was hungry to feel the
comfort of Billy’s understanding love and trust.
The more she had to conceal from Billy, the more she
yearned to be near him.
The Comrade, responding to
the steady hand upon the tiller, shot into the cove.
The girl secured the boat and ran lightly over the
dunes to the seaward side; then she lay down among
the sand grasses and waited.
She seemed alone in God’s world.
The moon-lighted ocean spread full and throbbing before
her. The sky, star-filled and blue-black, arched
in unbroken splendor. The waste and solitude
held no awe for this girl of the Station. They
had been her heritage and were natural and homelike
to her. Under summer skies and through winter’s
storms she knew the coast’s every phase of beauty
or danger. It was hers, and she belonged to it.
A common love held them together. She crouched
close to the sandy hillock. The night was growing
old, the tide had turned, and still she sat absorbed
in thought and tender memory. How beautiful the
world and life were! She took from her bosom
the tiny whistle, which had been for five long, delicious
weeks her power of summoning unlimited joy to herself.
What a new element had entered into her existence!
How powerful and self-sufficient she felt as she recalled
her part in those wonderful pictures that were growing
day by day in the shanty on the Hills!
Her blood rose hotly in her young
body, as she lived again, under the calm sky, those
weeks of perfect bliss.
Suddenly the girl sat upright, put
the whistle in its hiding place, and strained her
eyes toward the Station.
Yes: there came Billy! He
was striding along; head bowed, except when conscientiously
he gazed seaward, scanning with his far-sighted eyes
the bar where danger lay, come storm or fog.
But could there be danger on such a night as this?
Billy, faithful soul, had not a nature
attuned to the glory of the night, but he had a soul
sensitive to a brother’s need. If he gave
heed at all to the summer beauty, it was merely in
thankfulness that all was well.
“Help! help!” Billy stopped
suddenly and raised his head. “Help! help!
Here’s a poor, little brig on the bar!”
A smile of joy overspread the man’s
face, a smile that drove all care and weariness before
it.
“Ye little specimint!”
he called, “what ye mean by burrowin’ in
the sand an’ scarin’ one of the government
officials clar out o’ common sense? Come
here, ye varmint!”
“My Cap’n!” The
strong young arms were about the rugged neck.
“You were just going to send up a Coston light,
now weren’t you, Daddy?”
“No. I war not! I
don’t waste nary a Coston on a wuthless little
hulk like ye. Come on, girl, I’ve been
takin’ it easy. I ain’t as young as
I once was. We must make the halfway in season.
’T ain’t the fust time we’ve took
the patrol together, is it, Janet?”
He held the girl’s hand in his,
and she accommodated her step as nearly as possible
to his long, swinging gait.
“Kinder homesick?” he asked presently.
“Kind of you-sick! I wanted
to be near you. I wanted-you,”
Janet whispered.
“Durned little cozzler!”
chuckled Billy. “I know what yer up t’.
Ain’t got nothin’ t’ do yet, over
on the mainland; just a lazy little tormint; an’
ye want t’ cozzen yer Cap’n Billy.
Why can’t ye jine the army that’s plain
fleecin’ the city folks? They be the easiest
biters, ‘cordin’ t’ what I hear,
that has ever run in t’ these shoals. Reg’lar
dogfish one an’ all.”
“Oh! I pick up a penny
now and then;” Janet pursed her pretty mouth
and set her head sideways. “I made enough
to pay Susan Jane for last week and this. Susan’s
an old leech, Cap’n Billy. It’s simply
awful to see her greed in money matters. Sitting
in her chair, she can manage to want more, strive
to get more, and make more fuss about it, than any
other woman on the mainland. You have to live
with Susan Jane to appreciate her. Oh! poor Davy.
We never really knew what a hero he is, Daddy.
He’s splendid!”
It had been necessary, unless Susan
Jane was to receive double pay for her boarder, that
Janet should inform Billy as to her money-getting;
but once the fact was stated, the girl hurried to
other thoughts, in order to divert Billy.
“How’d ye get yer money,
Janet?” A serious look came into the man’s
face. “It’s uncommon clever of ye
t’ help yerself on; if the money only comes
in a God-fearin’ way!”
“Cap’n Daddy!” Janet
drew herself up magnificently. “Do you take
me for Maud Grace?”
“No, I don’t, I’m
takin’ ye fur my gal, an’ it’s
my duty t’ see that ye don’t furgit yer
trainin’ over on the boarder-struck mainland!
But what’s wrong ‘long o’ Mrs. Jo
G.’s gal?”
“Nothing. Except she keeps
dressed up to entertain the boarders, and takes tips.
That’s what she calls them.”
“Tips?” Billy wrinkled his brows.
“Yes. Money for doing nothing. Cap’n
Daddy, I work for my money.”
“Doin’ what?” Billy’s insistence
was growing vexatious.
“Daddy, don’t you ever
tell!” Janet danced in front of him and walked
backward as she pointed a finger merrily.
The moonlight streaming upon the girl
showed her beauty in a witchlike brightness.
It stirred Billy in an uneasy, anxious fashion.
“There ain’t no call t’
tell any one,” he said, “you an’
me is enough t’ know. Us an’ them
what pays ye!”
“Cap’n Daddy; I’m-a-model!”
“A modil-what?”
Janet’s laugh rose above the lapping water’s
sound.
“Why, Daddy! Don’t you think I’m
a model everything?”
“No,” Billy shook his
head; “I ain’t blind, gal, ye ain’t
what most folks would call a modil, I’m thinkin’!”
“Well, the artists think I am!”
“The artists? Them womin in bonnets and
smutchy pinafores? Gosh!”
For a moment Janet’s truth-loving
soul shrank from deceiving Billy, but her promise
to Thornly held her. She stopped her merry dance
and came again beside him, clasping the hard hand
tenderly within her own.
“What do they think ye a modil
of?” asked the man, and his face had lightened
visibly.
“Oh! just what their silly fancy
tells them. Only don’t you see, Daddy,
dear, they don’t want any one to know until the
pictures are done. It would spoil the-the-well,
I cannot explain; but they want to spring the pictures
upon folks by and by.”
“‘Cordin’ t’
what Andrew Farley tells,” grinned Billy, all
amiability now, “no one will be likely t’
know ye from a scrub oak stump when the picters is
done. Andrew says when he thinks of all it costs
t’ paint a boat an’ then sees the waste
of good, honest paint up on the Hills, it turns his
stummick sick. Well, long as it is innercent potterin’
like that, Janet, I don’t know but as yer considerable
sharp t’ trade yer looks fur their money.
It rather goes agin the grain with me t’ have
ye git the best of them. But Lord! as the good
book says, a fool an’ his money is soon parted,
an’ so long as they’re sufferin’
t’ part with theirs, I don’t know but
what ye have a right t’ barter what cargo yer
little craft carries, as well as others what have less
agreeable stores on board.” Janet laughed
merrily.
“Mark Tapkins was on yisterday,”
Billy continued; “he says Bluff Head’s
open an’ Mr. Devant an’ a party is there.
Must be quite gay an’ altered on the mainland.”
Janet’s face clouded.
“Cap’n Daddy,” she
faltered, “I’m going to tell you something
else.”
“Yer considerable talky, it
seems t’ me.” Billy eyed the girl.
“Cap’n Billy, have you
ever wondered why I talk better than most of the others
at the Station?”
“I don’t know as I would
allow that ye do,” Billy replied; “ye
talk differenter, somewhat, but I don’t
know as it’s better.”
“Well, it is. And it isn’t
all the teachers’ doings either, Daddy, for
Maud Grace and the rest never changed much; but for
years, Daddy, I’ve been crawling in the cellar
window of Bluff Head, when no one on earth knew, and
I’ve read five shelves of books! I’ve
thought like those books, and talked like them, until
I seem to be like them; and, Daddy, the day Mr. Devant
came home, he found me in his library-room, reading
his books!”
“Gawd!” ejaculated Billy,
and stood stock still. “Did he fling ye
out, neck and crop?” he gasped at last.
“Daddy! he’s a nice old gentleman!”
“Old? He ain’t dodderin’
yet. An’ he use t’ have a bit of pepper
in his nater. What did he do?”
“Do? Why, he gave me the
key to his front door. He reads with me and tells
me what to read. We’re great friends!”
“Yer ’tarnal specimint!”
Billy was shaking. “I see ye’ve caught
the mainland fever, eh, gal? Ye don’t want
t’ bide on the dunes ‘long o’ old
Billy, now, eh?”
“You blessed old Cap’n!”
Janet struggled to hold her prize. “I’m
perfectly happy! And I had to come over here to-night
and tell you.”
“Janet,”-Billy’s
eyes were dim,-“I keep wishin’
more an’ more that ye had a ma. I ain’t
never thought openly on it fur years, not since ye
was fust borned. But as ye grow int’
womanhood, ye seem as helpless as ye did then.
I wish ye had a ma!”
The little halfway house was in front
of them. Andrew Farley, who served on the crew
at the Station beyond, was in the doorway.
“What ye got in tow, Billy?” he called
jovially.
“Jest a tarnal little bit of
driftwood, Andy.” Billy rallied his low
spirits.
“Hello, Janet!” Andrew
recognized her. “How comes ye kin leave
the mainland? I thought every one who could,
stuck there t’ see the show. By gracious!
Billy, ye jest oughter see how things is altered.”
The two men exchanged the brass checks, then, before
returning to their stations, they stood chatting easily.
“Been up to the Hills lately, Janet?”
The girl flushed.
“Not very,” she replied.
“Come on, Cap’n Daddy, I’m going
to stay on and sleep in the cottage to-night.”
“Them artists,” Andrew
continued, turning slowly in his own direction, “them
artists is smudgin’ up the landscape jest scandalous.
One of them wanted t’ paint me, the other day,
an’ I held off an’ let her. Lord!
ye should jest have seen wot she done t’ my
likeness! I nearly bu’st when she showed
me. I ain’t handsome, none never accused
me of that crime, but I ain’t lopsided an’
lantern-jawed t’ the extent she went. She
said I had a loose artistic pose; them was her words,
but I ain’t so loose that I hang crooked.”
Janet slept in the cottage on the
dunes that night; and when the men rose to go through
the sunrise drill, she ran down the beach, across the
sand hills, and set her sail toward the mainland.
She had had her breakfast in the Station with the
men and, recalling her difficulty in escaping Susan
Jane the day before, she headed the Comrade
away from the Light and glided toward the Hills.
Mark Tapkins, turning down the wick
as the sun came up, saw the white sail set away from
home; and something heavier than sleep struck chilly
upon his heart. He knew from past spying where
Janet was going!