A southwest wind howled around the
little hut upon the Hills. The season was in
one of its humorous moods, for the day was almost summer-like
in spite of the wind’s noisy insistence.
Between the tops of the highest dunes the white crested
heads of the waves could be seen at times; and the
deep, solemn tones announced that there was “a
heavy sea on.”
The nearer water of the bay, in imitation
of its mighty neighbor, echoed in mildest tones its
restlessness, and tossed its feathery foam high upon
the pebbly beach.
Thornly had found the first May pinks
by the roadside that morning, and Mark Tapkins had
mentioned, in passing, that Cap’n Billy was soon
coming off. By these signs, and the singing in
his heart, he knew the spring had come.
He was sitting before the easel upon
which rested “The Pimpernel,” finished
at last!
The work had been his salvation through
the long weeks of waiting since that night upon the
beach. Alternately exulting and despairing, he
had painted in a frenzy born of starved desire and
memory-haunted love.
Only once had he seen Janet alone
since that eventful night, for Billy’s dangerous
illness claimed her every thought and hour. But
that once, while Davy sat beside his friend, she had
walked with Thornly upon the sands and had told him
her life story. Very simply she had spoken, watching,
meanwhile, the effect upon her listener. He had
been startled and shaken by the recital, and for a
time Janet had misunderstood him.
“You must go away and think
it over,” she had said; “I am not the same
girl, you see!”
“Great heavens, Janet!”
Thornly had exclaimed when once he recovered from
his surprise. “Do you think anything can
make a difference now? Why, you are dearer a
thousand times in ways you cannot realize, for I know
Mr. Devant better than you do, and I am glad for him.”
Janet shook her head. “Cap’n
Billy must never know,” she whispered.
“There may never be a chance, but in any case
he shall never have that hurt.”
“It would be an added joy, little
girl,” Thornly insisted, but Janet would not
consider it.
“So please go now,” she
had pleaded finally. “Go and think and think.
Perhaps by and by-who can tell? Just
now it must be only my Cap’n Daddy.”
Thus with the courage and patience
of her nature the girl had set aside her own love
and yearning; and Thornly took to the Hills and the
unfinished picture of “The Pimpernel.”
The glorious face upon the canvas
changed and assumed character according as the master’s
mood swayed him.
One day it would shine forth with
the sweet questioning of joyous girlhood. Then
Thornly, remembering how the question had been answered
on a certain summer day when ignorance died and knowledge
was born, wiped away the expression while his heart
grew heavy within him.
Then he would paint her as he recalled
her on that black night upon the beach when, her uplifted
face touched by the fleeting rays of the white moon,
she had asked him if he needed her to help him finish
his picture.
No! no! He could not paint her
so. That was no face for a flower wreath-and
the flowers he must have!
Again he painted her as he had last
seen her. The love light shining in her eyes
while courageously she put her joy from her until her
duty to Billy was ended, and her lover had had time
to think.
Thornly had thought! Never in
his life had he thought so deeply and intensely, and
from out the thought and love the soul of Janet had
evolved and become fixed upon the canvas. “It
is a masterpiece!” cried the artist in the man,
as he gazed upon the glorious face.
“It is my woman!” responded
the man in the artist. “My Spirit of the
dunes with the strength of the Hills and the mystery
of the sea.”
A sudden knock shattered the ecstasy.
“Come!” called Thornly and turned to meet
his guest. Mark Tapkins awkwardly entered.
Mark had been a great resource to Thornly lately.
Unconsciously he had been a link between Janet and
the Hills. In his slow, dull fashion he repeated
all he saw and heard at the Station, and Thornly,
trusting to Tapkins’s uncomprehending manner,
sent messages to the dunes that he knew Janet’s
keener wit would interpret and understand. But
Thornly had still something to learn about Tapkins.
“Any news this morning?”
he said cheerily, pushing a stool toward Mark.
“She’s come off,”
said Tapkins with his eyes fixed upon “The Pimpernel.”
“Is already off?” Thornly’s
color rose. “You know you said they were
coming soon.”
“They’ve come! Her an’ Billy
is down t’ Davy’s.”
“And Billy, how is he?” asked Thornly.
“Middlin’. But he
ain’t complainin’ none. Say, Mr. Thornly,
I don’t know as you understand why I’ve
been runnin’ here so much lately? You see
I wanted, so t’ speak, t’ git the lay
o’ the land ’twixt you an’-her!”
Tapkins kept his eyes upon the vivid
face, only by its inspiration could he hold to his
purpose.
“Have you got it, Tapkins?”
Thornly bent closer and gazed at his visitor keenly.
“I seem t’ sense it,”
was the low reply. “Travel an’ city
ways, Mr. Thornly, make men understand each other.”
The old foolish conceit added dignity to the evident
purpose with which Mark was struggling. “Now,
over t’ the Station the crew think you’re
a ’vestigator!”
So they had been talking him over,
those quiet, apparently unobservant men!
“What do they think I’m
investigating, Tapkins?” Thornly’s gaze
contracted, and he clasped his hands rigidly around
his knees. He felt as if he were before a bar
of justice and he must weigh the evidence against
himself.
“The sand bar,” Mark replied.
“Every once so often some fellers come down
here with a fool notion o’ cuttin’ down
the sand bar, an’ dredge deep enough to make
a inlet int’ the bay.”
“Perhaps they may, some day,
Tapkins.” Thornly felt that along this line
he might sooner reach his friend’s purpose in
calling for the second time that day. “It’s
not a bad idea, you know. It would sweeten the
waters of the bay, carry off the stagnant growth and
let in a lot of new life. But you do not think
I’m an investigator, eh, Mark?”
Tapkins turned suddenly and faced his host.
“Not that kind, Mr. Thornly,”
he said, in a tone that brought, again, the color
to Thornly’s face. “An’ what’s
more,” Tapkins continued, “I don’t
think same as you do ’bout the inlet, nuther,
Mr. Thornly. Nater is pretty much alike in sand
bars, an’ folks, an’ what not! God
Almighty knows what He’s about when He piles
up them dunes what divides ocean an’ bay; an’
folks an’ folks!”
“Go on, Tapkins!” This
was worthy of Cap’n Davy. The sojourn at
the Light had had its influence upon the assistant
keeper. Mark gulped and turned his gaze upon
the picture.
“‘T ain’t no good
tryin’ t’ mix things, Mr. Thornly.
That’s what the crew tells them fellers ’bout
the bar. They don’t listen none. They
work like beavers, an’ we hold off an’
have our laugh. Then they go away real pleased
after they’ve cut through, but nation! ’t
ain’t any time ’t all ‘fore the
sand’s piled up agin. It’s awful foolish
workin’ agin Nater.”
“Just what kind of an investigator
do you take me for, Tapkins?” Thornly felt he
must know the worst, and at once. The look Mark
cast upon him was full of trouble. He did not
want to wrong this man he had grown to like, but a
sense of duty lashed him on.
“The Lord knows, Mr. Thornly,”
he faltered, “I don’t want t’ make
any mistakes. It’s turrible confusin’
when you try t’ label folks. The same acts
mean different ‘cordin’ t’ the handlin’,
an’ a good man an’ a bad man bear a powerful
likeness t’ each other on the outside, sometimes.
Once I didn’t speak out t’ a friend when
I ought t’, an’-an’, well,
there was, what you might say, a wreck! I ain’t
goin’ t’ hold back another time.
Mr. Thornly, you’re stayin’ on down here,
’cause you have some sort o’ idée
o’ openin’ up a inlet ‘twixt sich
folks as you an’ Mr. Devant an’-her!”
Mark waved his cap toward the easel. “’T
ain’t no use, Mr. Thornly, s’pose you
did cut through an’ clean an’ honest, too,
don’t you see a little craft like that one couldn’t
sail out int’ deep waters? an’ the
Lord knows, big craft like you an’ him would
get stranded in no time down here. Folks is separated
fur a good reason. ’T ain’t a question
o’ one bein’ better nor the other,”
Tapkins raised his head proudly, “it’s
jest a case o’ difference. Cuttin’
down barriers ain’t goin’ t’ do
nothin’ but cause waste o’ time in buildin’
’em up agin.”
Never before in his life had Mark
spoken so eloquently nor so lengthily.
A dimness rose in Thornly’s
eyes, and a respect for the awkward fellow grew in
his heart. He arose and stood before Tapkins,
his hand resting protectingly upon “The Pimpernel.”
“You’re one of the best
fellows I’ve ever met, old man!” he said,
“and you’ve lived pretty deep; but there
is another point of view about those sand bars of
yours. There is going to be an inlet all right,
some day, over on the dunes! When that time comes,
beside sweetening the waters of the bay and doing
all the rest, something else is going to happen and
don’t you forget it! Craft from outside
will come in and not get stranded, either; and what’s
more, some craft of yours that is stronger and better
fitted than you know of is going to sail out into the
open, test its strength and not get wrecked!
Sand bars are for nothing in the world, Tapkins, but
for conquering. Take my word for that. It
all depends upon who tackles the job of the inlet,
see?”
Mark got upon his feet and took the
hand that was suddenly stretched out to meet his.
Thornly held the poor fellow’s tear-filled eyes
by the radiance of his own.
“We understand each other, old
man,” he continued. “I am going, please
God, to cut through a barrier that has no right to
exist. I’m going to let as brave and trusty
a little craft as ever sailed go out into the broad
waters where she belongs. Do you catch on, Tapkins?”
“I do that!” murmured
Mark, and he dropped Thornly’s hand. “I’ll
watch out, Mr. Thornly. It’s my way t’
watch, an’ I’m learnin’ one thing
over an’ over. In this life there’s
plenty t’ learn if you’ve got-power!”
Mark had done his duty and departed.
Thornly watched him from the open door until he shambled
from sight. Then a new doubt arose. While
he had waited alone upon the Hills, working and loving
without distrust of the future, they, these patient
conservatives of Quinton, had discussed him from every
point of view and were ready when he pressed his claim
to judge him.
How different from his old world was
this one of the dunes! What different standards
existed from those which swayed Katharine Ogden and
her kind! Unless he met their demands, he could
mean nothing to them. How far had time and discussion
influenced Janet? Might she not fear to try the
larger life with him; she who had, without a quiver,
discarded Devant with his claims and yearnings?
For a moment the day seemed chilly
and the sky darker. But Thornly was not one to
hold back when even the slightest hope beckoned.
He would not wait for her to call him, he would go
to her!
He closed the door and strode down
the sandy road. He passed the new inn at the
foot of the Hills, and returned the salute that Pa
Tapkins waved to him with a kettle from the kitchen
window. As he neared the bay the salt smell of
the water seemed to give him strength. There was
James B.’s little boat at his wharf and Eliza
Jane in the doorway of the low, vine-covered house.
“You jest better be goin’
on!” she called to James B., who was loitering
on the village side of the garden.
“I ain’t more’n
jest come off!” James B. answered. “I
ain’t any more’n had time t’ swaller
my dinner.”
“Well, what more do you want?”
snapped his wife. “You go on now, an’
do what I tell you. An’ there ain’t
no use t’ turn the P’int t’ the
village, nuther. I kin see your sail till you
reach the Station, an’ if you don’t go
straight on, I kin reach the village store ’fore
you kin. So ’t ain’t no use, James
B.”
James B. evidently agreed with her,
for he turned and went disconsolately toward the wharf.
Thornly smiled and his old cheerfulness
returned. He was seeing these people, slowly,
through Janet’s eyes. They were so brave,
patient, and humorous. They were so human and
faulty and lovable. Among them she, poor little
wayfarer, had got her life lesson-how would
she apply it now?
Before him rose Davy’s Light,
its glistening head ready for duty when the night
should come. Some one was waving from the balcony
up aloft! Some one had been watching the road
from the Hills! Thornly’s heart beat quicker.
Was it Davy?
Just then the playful wind caught
the loosened, ruddy hair of the watcher above, and
Thornly hastened his steps.
The rooms of the lighthouse were empty,
and silence brooded over all. Thornly mounted
the winding stairs and, as if Davy’s personality
pervaded the way, his heart lightened perceptibly at
each landing. In the little room below the lamp,
Janet met him.
“We’re freshening up,”
she said with the old half-shy laugh, “Davy,
Cap’n Daddy, and I. Come!”
Thornly stretched out his hands toward her.
“Janet!” he whispered.
“One moment, little girl!” She turned a
full look upon him. A look of love, of question,
of joy!
“Not yet. Come!”
she repeated, and paused at the foot of the steps for
him to join her.
On the sheltered side of the tower,
in an easy-chair, sat Cap’n Billy. Davy
was hovering over him, good-naturedly scolding him
for the exertion he had made in getting to the balcony.
“The next time, Billy, that
ye take it in t’ yer head t’ come up here,
by gum! I’m goin’ t’ hist ye
up from the outside, same as if ye war île!
How are ye, Mr. Thornly?” he cried, turning quickly.
“Take a seat on the railin’. ‘T
ain’t what ye might call soft an’ yieldin’,
but there’s plenty of it, there bein’
no beginnin’ or endin’.” He
laughed and sighed in quite the old way. Billy’s
sickness had brought back the sigh.
Thornly bent over Billy in greeting,
and then seated himself where he could look into all
three faces. Janet sank upon a stool at Cap’n
Billy’s feet.
“You know why I have waited,
Cap’n Billy, for this day?” he said.
He could not resort to lesser means,
when simple directness would be better understood.
Davy plunged his hands into his pockets and clutched
the courage that was supposed to lie there along with
the pipe and tobacco.
Cap’n Billy with quaint dignity
put his thin, brown hand upon Janet’s bowed
head, and answered in kind.
“I do that, Mr. Thornly.
Out there on the beach arter I come in t’ consciousness,
I done a heap o’ thinkin’, an’ t’-day
I told Davy I knowed ye would come, an’ I wanted
t’ freshen up on the balcony ’fore we
talked over the present and-the past!”
“Can’t we let the past
go, Cap’n?” Thornly asked gently.
“You know it can never matter to me. The
future is all that I want.” Billy shook
his head.
“Them’s good heartsome
words!” Davy broke in, tugging energetically
at his pockets. “An’ spoke like a
man, by gum! Let well enough alone, Billy.
You an’ Janet is goin’ t’ stay right
on at the Light, an’ we’ll start in fresh
from now!” When had Davy been a coward before?
But Billy’s “works” might take to
running down again, and that fear quelled Davy’s
daring. But again Billy shook his head.
“‘Course the government
ain’t goin’ t’ take on an old feller
like me,” he said, “‘specially when
he has t’ be towed in himself when he’s
most needed t’ lend a hand; an’ I ain’t
above takin’ a place in the Light, Davy, when
I pull myself up sufficient, but I want once an’
fur all t’ clar the air ’bout Janet.”
His troubled eyes looked pleadingly across the sunny
bay toward the Station that had been his resting place
and home for so long.
“The old see mighty clar, Mr.
Thornly,” he said, turning his gaze to the present.
“An’ as ye git near port it’s amazin’
how the big things, the real things, hold yer thoughts
an’ longin’s. I ain’t done my
whole duty by my little gal, an’ the fact shadders
my days.”
“Don’t say that, Cap’n
Daddy!” Janet pressed closer to him. “You
have done your own duty and the duty of the whole
world by me!”
“That’s like ye, Janet,
t’ say them words; but ye don’t know all!
That’s whar I’ve wronged ye.”
Davy saw that he must take a hand
in what was going on. It would ease Billy and
spare Janet.
“We’ve got, so t’
speak,” he commenced with grim determination,
“t’ open up the grave of the Past.”
He was always poetical when emotion swayed him.
“Ye see, Mr. Thornly, t’ put it plain an’
square, me an’ Billy knows that ye have some
idée o’ Janet, an’ Billy ain’t
goin’ t’ let ye take her under no false
pretences. As t’ givin’ our consent
t’ ye payin’ yer respects, so t’
speak, t’ Janet, me an’ Billy don’t
know, ‘cordin t’ law, as we have any right
fur givin’ or holdin’ our consent.
An’ now ye have it straight an’ fair!”
“Thank you, Cap’n Davy,”
Thornly replied, “but, I repeat, the past can
never mean anything to me.”
“But ye see, Mr. Thornly,”
Billy clung to his purpose, “this girl, properly
speakin’, don’t b’long t’ me.
She drifted in t’ port early, an’ from,
as ye may say, a wreck; I kept her, an’ loved
her, God knows, as if she war my own. But she
ain’t!”
This confession brought the beads
of perspiration to Billy’s brow, but Thornly’s
unmoved expression calmed him.
“My Cap’n Daddy!”
Janet turned her face to the agitated one above her.
“I’ve told Mr. Thornly this already, and
he does not care!”
Billy drew a long, relieved sigh.
“I only want Janet,” Thornly
hastened to say. “Whether she belongs rightfully
to you or not, Cap’n Billy, you have trained
her into exactly the kind of woman I would have her!”
“That’s the kind o’
talk!” ejaculated Davy, and he drew out his pipe,
lighted it and inwardly gave thanks that they had all
passed the bar so successfully.
“But that ain’t enough!”
Billy insisted, shattering Davy’s calm.
“I knowed who Janet’s mother was, but
I never knowed her father. I never tried t’
find out. I allus war afraid I would somehow,
an’ that’s what’s clutchin’
me now. I ain’t acted wise or square.
It comes t’ me lately when I look at Janet,
an’ see how much she favors some one what I don’t
know, that I ain’t only cheated her, but I’ve
cheated some man out o’ his own, no matter how
ye look at it. She might ‘a’ been
the means, so t’ speak, o’ bringin’
him t’ grace; an’ times is when I’ve
wondered if Janet won’t blame me some day.”
“Never! never! my own Cap’n
Daddy!” Janet reassured him, but her eyes were
troubled. An old doubt rose to take sides with
Billy against her own determination.
“That’s what ye say, not
knowin’, my girl.” Poor Billy’s
wrinkled face twitched. “If yer true father
be among the livin’, an’ sufferin’
has eaten int’ his soul, then don’t
ye see, I’ve stood ‘twixt him an’
his chance of somewhat undoin’ a bitter wrong?
It ain’t no light matter t’ take the settlin’
o’ things out o’ God Almighty’s hand.
I wish I’d hunted him up! ‘T was
my plain duty t’ have done that, I see it now.
I wish I’d given my gal the choice ‘tween
him an’ me! It’s a growin’
trouble as time passes.” The slow tears
were rolling down Billy’s suffering face.
Janet had no comfort for him now. In her ignorance
she had pushed aside her chance to give him what his
honest soul had longed for. Recalling Mr. Devant’s
words, she bowed her head upon Billy’s knee
in contrition, and pressed her lips against his work-worn
hand.
Thornly stepped beside the crouching
girl and laid a firm hand upon Billy’s shoulder.
He must give no shock, but his time had come to take
another duty of Janet’s upon himself.
“Cap’n Billy,” he
said slowly, and Davy eyed him closely, “I know
Janet’s-other father!”
The sun crept around the tall tower.
The wind fell into a lull after its day of play.
A silence held the little group for a moment, and then
Thornly went on:
“He has suffered a lifetime
of remorse. He is a lonely, sad man.”
“Ye hear that, Janet?”
whispered Billy hoarsely, but his yearning eyes were
fixed upon the little house across the bay.
“Yes, my Cap’n, I hear,” came in
muffled tones.
How much the dear voice sounded like
that one which years ago had so named him!
“An’, God willin’,
ye kin have a choice, my girl, even now! I ain’t
goin’ t’ stand ‘twixt ye an’
a open course. Ye’ve got his blood as well
as hers! Ye must choose yerself, Janet, an’
do it just an’ honest like I’ve tried
t’ show ye how!”
“Cap’n Billy,”-Thornly
pressed the thin shoulder firmer, the real test was
coming now,-“our little girl has had
her chance. She knows her father; he came and
offered her a life of luxury and pleasure-and
she chose you!”
“Gawd!” burst from Davy,
and his pipe lay shattered upon the floor.
Billy breathed quicker, but the habit
of a lifetime helped him bear this crowning bliss.
To such as he it sometimes happens that an inner sense
prepares the soul for its mounts of vision. In
the silence that followed, Billy struggled in memory
from that long-ago time when his love was young, to
this hour when he was to know!
“An’ he-is?”
He spoke waveringly like a child feeling out into the
darkness for an object he knows is there. Thornly
waited for what his love trusted.
“Mr. Devant, my Cap’n
Daddy!” The answer was in Janet’s voice.
“I-I sort o’
sensed it!” whispered Billy. “An’
ye chose me when ye had sich a chance?”
Wonder thrilled through the question. Was he to
know more joy?
“Yes, my own Daddy. I chose
you because I loved you! I never even wanted
you to know. But Mr. Thornly knew you better than
I. You are nobler than I thought.”
“An’ ye loved me like
that?” A shining joy broke over Billy’s
face, a joy that drove pain and remorse before it.
“Do ye hear that, Davy? An’ ye once
said God couldn’t pay me fur what I done!
Why, man, God paid me all along the way, an’
now He’s added more’n I ever earned!”
The weak voice rose rapturously. “Mr. Thornly,
I want that ye should send fur Mr. Devant. I
ain’t goin’ t’ prove unworthy o’
the Lord’s trust in me!”
“Daddy! Daddy!” broke
from Janet. Billy stayed her with a look.
“No, my gal. This ain’t
no matter fur ye! This be man’s work!”
“Right you are, Cap’n!”
Thornly grasped the old hand. Davy drew near and
looked upon his friend as if he were seeing him for
the first time in years.
“By gum!” he said.
“An’ that’s what has been draggin’
on ye all these years! Why, Billy, you an’
me is goin’ t’ take a new lease o’
life!”
“We are that!” nodded Billy. Then
he turned to Thornly.
“I ain’t never goin’
t’ doubt a man like you, Mr. Thornly,”
he said, “but ye see I could only train Janet
one way, havin’, as ye know, no other ‘sperience.
I ain’t use t’ sich waters as ye sail,
an’ Janet ain’t much wiser. I’m
thinkin’,” he paused and tried to see his
way, “I’m thinkin’, Mr. Devant might
help ye on this tack. Sort o’ steer this
little craft, so t’ speak, till it’s able
to keep upright.”
Quietly the girl by Billy’s
knee arose. She stood just where the westering
sun touched her with a golden glow. Thornly drew
his lips in sharply as he looked at her, and even
Billy and Davy were awed by what they in no wise comprehended.
“Daddy dear,” said the
sweet voice, “I am going to be very fond of Mr.
De-of my father, by and by. We are
going to be great friends, I know, and that will make
you glad. But I must always be your girl!
I am not afraid to sail out upon the broad middle
ocean. I used to tell Davy that I longed to go;
but I want no other help than your chart, my Cap’n,
and my Davy’s Light!” Her lifted eyes
were tear-filled as they rested in turn upon the two
rugged faces. Then she looked at Thornly and her
tears were dried as desire grew to trust and perfect
understanding; he opened his arms to her and she came
to him gladly.
“And my love, my Pimpernel!”
he whispered as his lips pressed the soft, ruddy hair.
The birds twittered among the nooks
and corners of Davy’s Light. The bay sparkled,
and across the dunes the ocean’s voice spoke
in the deep cadences of a mighty organ’s tone.
“An’ there was glory
over all the land,” Davy chanted as he turned
to his evening duty. “A flood o’ glory.”