My name’s Race. I’ve
traded these here Newfoundland north-coast outports
for salt-fish for half a lifetime. Boy and youth
afore that I served Pinch-a-Penny Peter in his shop
at Gingerbread Cove. I was born in the Cove.
I knowed all the tricks of Pinch-a-Penny’s trade.
And I tells you it was Pinch-a-Penny Peter’s
conscience that made Pinch-a-Penny rich. That’s
queer two ways: you wouldn’t expect a north-coast
trader to have a conscience; and you wouldn’t
expect a north-coast trader with a conscience to be
rich. But conscience is much like the wind:
it blows every which way; and if a man does but trim
his sails to suit, he can bowl along in any direction
without much wear and tear of the spirit. Pinch-a-Penny
bowled along, paddle-punt fisherman to Gingerbread
merchant. He went where he was bound for, wing-and-wing
to the breeze behind, and got there with his peace
of mind showing never a sign of the weather. In
my day the old codger had an easy conscience and twenty
thousand dollars.
Long Tom Lane, of Gingerbread Cove,
vowed in his prime that he’d sure have to even
scores with Pinch-a-Penny Peter afore he could pass
to his last harbor with any satisfaction.
“With me, Tom?” says Pinch-a-Penny.
“That’s a saucy notion for a hook-an’-line
man.”
“Ten more years o’ life,”
says Tom, “an’ I’ll square scores.”
“Afore you evens scores with
me, Tom,” says Peter, “you’ll have
t’ have what I wants an’ can’t get.”
“There’s times,”
says Tom, “when a man stands in sore need o’
what he never thought he’d want.”
“When you haves what I needs,”
says Peter, “I’ll pay what you asks.”
“If ’tis for sale,” says Tom.
“Money talks,” says Peter.
“Ah, well,” says Tom, “maybe it
don’t speak my language.”
Pinch-a-Penny Peter’s conscience
was just as busy as any other man’s conscience.
And it liked its job. It troubled Pinch-a-Penny.
It didn’t trouble un to be honest; it troubled
un to be rich. And it give un no rest. When
trade was dull-no fish coming into Pinch-a-Penny’s
storehouses and no goods going out of Pinch-a-Penny’s
shop-Pinch-a-Penny’s conscience made
un grumble and groan like the damned. I never
seed a man so tortured by conscience afore nor since.
And to ease his conscience Pinch-a-Penny would go over
his ledgers by night; and he’d jot down a gallon
of molasses here, and a pound of tea there, until
he had made a good day’s trade of a bad one.
’Twas simple enough, too; for Pinch-a-Penny
never gived out no accounts to amount to nothing,
but just struck his balances to please his greed at
the end of the season, and told his dealers how much
they owed him or how little he owed them.
In dull times Pinch-a-Penny’s
conscience irked him into overhauling his ledgers.
’Twas otherwise in seasons of plenty. But
Pinch-a-Penny’s conscience kept pricking away
just the same-aggravating him into getting
richer and richer. No rest for Pinch-a-Penny!
He had to have all the money he could take by hook
and crook or suffer the tortures of an evil conscience.
Just like any other man, Pinch-a-penny must ease that
conscience or lose sleep o’ nights. And
so in seasons of plenty up went the price of tea at
Pinch-a-Penny’s shop. And up went the price
of pork. And up went the price of flour.
All sky-high, ecod! Never was such harsh times,
says Peter; why, my dear man, up St. John’s
way, says he, you couldn’t touch tea nor pork
nor flour with a ten-foot sealing-gaff; and no telling
what the world was coming to, with prices soaring
like a gull in a gale and all the St. John’s
merchants chary of credit!
“Damme!” said Pinch-a-Penny;
“’tis awful times for us poor traders.
No tellin’ who’ll weather this here panic.
I’d not be surprised if we got a war out of
it.”
Well, now, on the Newfoundland north-coast
in them days ’twasn’t much like the big
world beyond. Folk didn’t cruise about.
They was too busy. And they wasn’t used
to it, anyhow. Gingerbread Cove folk wasn’t
born at Gingerbread Cove, raised at Rickity Tickle,
married at Seldom-Come-By, aged at Skeleton Harbor,
and buried at Run-by-Guess; they were born and buried
at Gingerbread Cove. So what the fathers thought
at Gingerbread Cove the sons thought; and what the
sons knowed had been knowed by the old men for a good
many years. Nobody was used to changes.
They was shy of changes. New ways was fearsome.
And so the price of flour was a mystery. It is,
anyhow-wherever you finds it. It always
has been. And why it should go up and down at
Gingerbread Cove was beyond any man of Gingerbread
Cove to fathom. When Pinch-a-Penny said the price
of flour was up-well, then, she was up;
and that’s all there was about it. Nobody
knowed no better. And Pinch-a-Penny had the flour.
Pinch-a-Penny had the pork, too.
And he had the sweetness and the tea. And he
had the shoes and the clothes and the patent medicines.
And he had the twine and the salt. And he had
all the cash there was at Gingerbread Cove. And
he had the schooner that fetched in the supplies and
carried away the fish to the St. John’s markets.
He was the only trader at Gingerbread Cove; his storehouses
and shop was fair jammed with the things the folk
of Gingerbread Cove couldn’t do without and
wasn’t able to get nowhere else. So, all
in all, Pinch-a-Penny Peter could make trouble for
the folk that made trouble for he. And the folk
grumbled. By times, ecod, they grumbled like the
devil of a fine Sunday morning! But ’twas
all they had the courage to do. And Pinch-a-Penny
let un grumble away. The best cure for grumbling,
says he, was to give it free course. If a man
could speak out in meeting, says he, he’d work
no mischief in secret.
“Sea-lawyers, eh?” says
Peter. “Huh! What you fellers want,
anyhow? Huh? You got everything now that
any man could expect. Isn’t you housed?
Isn’t you fed? Isn’t you clothed?
Isn’t you got a parson and a schoolmaster?
Damme, I believes you wants a doctor settled in the
harbor! A doctor! An’ ’tisn’t
two years since I got you your schoolmaster!
Queer times we’re havin’ in the outports
these days, with every harbor on the coast wantin’
a doctor within hail. You’re well enough
done by at Gingerbread Cove. None better nowhere.
An’ why? Does you ever think o’ that?
Why? Because I got my trade here. An’
think o’ me! Damme, if ar a one o’
you had my brain-labor t’ do, you’d soon
find out what harsh labor was like. What with
bad debts an’ roguery an’ failed seasons
an’ creditors t’ St. John’s I’m
hard put to it t’ keep my seven senses.
An’ small thanks I gets-me that keeps
this harbor alive, in famine an’ plenty.
’Tis the business I haves that keeps you.
You make trouble for my business, ecod, an’ you’ll
come t’ starvation! Now, you mark me!”
There would be a scattered time when
Pinch-a-Penny would yield an inch. Oh, ay!
I’ve knowed Pinch-a-Penny to drop the price of
stick-candy when he had put the price of flour too
high for anybody’s comfort.
Well, now, Long Tom Lane, of Gingerbread
Cove, had a conscience, too. But ’twas
a common conscience. Most men haves un. And
they’re irksome enough for some. ’Twas
not like Pinch-a-Penny Peter’s conscience.
Nothing useful ever come of it. ’Twas like
yours and mine. It troubled Tom Lane to be honest
and it kept him poor. All Tom Lane’s conscience
ever aggravated him to do was just to live along in
a religious sort of fashion and rear his family and
be decently stowed away in the graveyard when his
time was up if the sea didn’t cotch un first.
But ’twas a busy conscience for all that-and
as sharp as a fish-prong. No rest for Tom Lane
if he didn’t fatten his wife and crew of little
lads and maids! No peace of mind for Tom if he
didn’t labor! And so Tom labored and labored
and labored. Dawn to dusk his punt was on the
grounds off Lack-a-Day Head, taking fish from the sea
to be salted and dried and passed into Pinch-a-Penny’s
storehouses.
When Tom Lane was along about fourteen
years old his father died. ’Twas of a Sunday
afternoon that we stowed un away. I mind the time:
spring weather and a fair day, with the sun low, and
the birds twittering in the alders just afore turning
in.
Pinch-a-Penny Peter cotched up with
young Tom on the road home from the little graveyard
on Sunset Hill.
“Well, lad,” says he, “the old skipper’s
gone.”
“Ay, sir, he’s dead an’ buried.”
“A fine man,” says Pinch-a-Penny.
“None finer.”
With that young Tom broke out crying.
“He were a kind father t’ we,” says
he. “An’ now he’s dead!”
“You lacked nothin’ in your father’s
lifetime,” says Peter.
“An’ now he’s dead!”
“Well, well, you’ve no
call t’ be afeared o’ goin’ hungry
on that account,” says Peter, laying an arm
over the lad’s shoulder. “No, nor
none o’ the little crew over t’ your house.
Take up the fishin’ where your father left it
off, lad,” says he, “an’ you’ll
find small difference. I’ll cross out your
father’s name on the books an’ put down
your own in its stead.”
“I’m fair obliged,” says Tom.
“That’s kind, sir.”
“Nothin’ like kindness
t’ ease sorrow,” says Pinch-a-Penny.
“Your father died in debt, lad.”
“Ay, sir?”
“Deep.”
“How much, sir?”
“I’m not able t’
tell offhand,” says Peter. “’Twas
deep enough. But never you care. You’ll
be able t’ square it in course o’ time.
You’re young an’ hearty. An’
I’ll not be harsh. Damme, I’m no skinflint!”
“That’s kind, sir.”
“You-you-will square
it?”
“I don’t know, sir.”
“What?” cries Peter.
“What! You’re not knowin’, eh?
That’s saucy talk. You had them there supplies?”
“I ’low, sir.”
“An’ you guzzled your share, I’ll
be bound!”
“Yes, sir.”
“An’ your mother had her share?”
“Yes, sir.”
“An’ you’re not
knowin’ whether you’ll pay or not!
Ecod! What is you? A scoundrel? A dead
beat? A rascal? A thief? A jail-bird?”
“No, sir.”
“‘Tis for the likes o’ you that
jails was made.”
“Oh, no, sir!”
“Doesn’t you go t’
church? Is that what they learns you there?
I’m thinkin’ the parson doesn’t
earn what I pays un. Isn’t you got no conscience?”
’Twas too much for young Tom.
You sees, Tom Lane had a conscience-a
conscience as fresh and as young as his years.
And Tom had loved his father well. And Tom honored
his father’s name. And so when he had brooded
over Pinch-a-Penny’s words for a spell-and
when he had maybe laid awake in the night thinking
of his father’s goodness-he went
over to Pinch-a-Penny’s office and allowed he’d
pay his father’s debt. Pinch-a-Penny give
un a clap on the back, and says: “You is
an honest lad, Tom Lane! I knowed you was.
I’m proud t’ have your name on my books!”-and
that heartened Tom to continue. And after that
Tom kept hacking away on his father’s debt.
In good years Pinch-a-Penny would say: “She’s
comin’ down, Tom. I’ll just apply
the surplus.” And in bad he’d say:
“You isn’t quite cotched up with your own
self this season, b’y. A little less pork
this season, Tom, an’ you’ll square this
here little balance afore next. I wisht this
whole harbor was as honest as you. No trouble,
then,” says he, “t’ do business in
a business-like way.”
When Tom got over the hill-fifty
and more-his father’s debt, with
interest, according to Pinch-a-Penny’s figures,
which Tom had no learning to dispute, was more than
it ever had been; and his own was as much as he ever
could hope to pay. And by that time Pinch-a-Penny
Peter was rich, and Long Tom Lane was gone sour.
In the fall of the year when Tom Lane
was fifty-three he went up to St. John’s in
Pinch-a-Penny Peter’s supply-schooner. Nobody
knowed why. And Tom made a mystery of it.
But go he would. And when the schooner got back
’twas said that Tom Lane had vanished in the
city for a day. Why? Nobody knowed.
Where? Nobody could find out. Tom wouldn’t
tell, nor could the gossips gain a word from his wife.
And, after that, Tom was a changed man; he mooned
a deal, and he would talk no more of the future, but
dwelt upon the shortness of a man’s days and
the quantity of his sin, and labored like mad, and
read the Scriptures by candlelight, and sot more store
by going to church and prayer-meeting than ever afore.
Labor? Ecod, how that poor man labored through
the winter! While there was light! And until
he fair dropped in his tracks of sheer weariness!
’Twas back in the forest-hauling
fire-wood with the dogs and storing it away back of
his little cottage under Lend-a-Hand Hill.
“Dear man!” says Peter;
“you’ve firewood for half a dozen winters.”
“They’ll need it,” says Tom.
“Ay,” says Peter; “but will you
lie idle next winter?”
“Next winter?” says Tom.
And he laughed. “Oh, next winter,”
says he, “I’ll have another occupation.”
“Movin’ away, Tom?”
“Well,” says Tom, “I is an’
I isn’t.”
There come a day in March weather
of that year when seals was thick on the floe off
Gingerbread Cove. You could see un with the naked
eye from Lack-a-Day Head. A hundred thousand
black specks swarming over the ice three miles and
more to sea! “Swiles! Swiles!”
And Gingerbread Cove went mad for slaughter.
’Twas a fair time for off-shore sealing, too-a
blue, still day, with the look and feel of settled
weather. The ice had come in from the current
with a northeasterly gale, a wonderful mixture of
Arctic bergs and Labrador pans, all blinding white
in the spring sun; and ’twas a field so vast,
and jammed so tight against the coast, that there
wasn’t much more than a lane or two and a Dutchman’s
breeches of open water within sight from the heads.
Nobody looked for a gale of off-shore wind to blow
that ice afore dawn of the next day.
“A fine, soft time, lads!”
says Pinch-a-Penny. “I ’low I’ll
go out with the Gingerbread crew.”
“Skipper Peter,” says
Tom Lane, “you’re too old a man t’
be on the ice.”
“Ay,” says Peter, “but
I wants t’ bludgeon another swile afore I dies.”
“But you creaks, man!”
“Ah, well,” says Peter,
“I’ll show the lads I’m able t’
haul a swile ashore.”
“Small hope for such as you on a movin’
floe!”
“Last time, Tom,” says Peter.
“Last time, true enough,”
says Tom, “if that ice starts t’ sea with
a breeze o’ wind behind.”
“Oh, well, Tom,” says
Peter, “I’ll take my chances. If the
wind comes up I’ll be as spry as I’m able.”
It come on to blow in the afternoon.
But ’twas short warning of off-shore weather.
A puff of gray wind come down; a saucier gust went
by; and then a swirl of galish wind jumped over the
pans. At the first sign of wind, Pinch-a-Penny
Peter took for home, loping over the ice as fast as
his lungs and old legs would take un when pushed, and
nobody worried about he any more. He was in such
mad haste that the lads laughed behind un as he passed.
Most of the Gingerbread crew followed, dragging their
swiles; and them that started early come safe to harbor
with the fat. But there’s nothing will master
a man’s caution like the lust of slaughter:
give a Newfoundlander a club, and show un a swile-pack,
and he’ll venture far from safety. ’Twas
not until a flurry of snow come along of a sudden
that the last of the crew dropped what they was at
and begun to jump for shore like a pack of jack-rabbits.
With snow in the wind, ’twas
every man for himself. And that means no mercy
and less help.
By this time the ice had begun to
feel the wind. ’Twas restless. And
a bad promise: the pans crunched and creaked
as they settled more at ease. The ice was going
abroad. As the farther fields drifted off to
sea, the floe fell loose inshore. Lanes and pools
opened up. The cake-ice tipped and went awash
under the weight of a man. Rough going, ecod!
There was no telling when open water would cut a man
off where he stood. And the wind was whipping
off-shore, and the snow was like dust in a man’s
eyes and mouth, and the landmarks of Gingerbread Cove
was nothing but shadows in a mist of snow to windward.
Nobody knowed where Pinch-a-Penny Peter was.
Nobody thought about him. And wherever poor old
Pinch-a-Penny was-whether safe ashore or
creaking shoreward against the wind on his last legs-he
must do for himself. ’Twas no time to succor
rich or poor. Every man for himself and the devil
take the hindmost.
Bound out, in the morning, Long Tom
Lane had fetched his rodney through the lanes.
By luck and good conduct he had managed to get the
wee boat a fairish way out. He had beached her,
there on the floe-a big pan, close by a
hummock which he marked with care. And ’twas
for Tom Lane’s little rodney that the seven
last men of Gingerbread Cove was jumping. With
her afloat-and the pack loosening in-shore
under the wind-they could make harbor well
enough afore the gale worked up the water in the lee
of the Gingerbread hills. But she was a mean,
small boat. There was room for six, with safety-but
room for no more; no room for seven. ’Twas
a nasty mess, to be sure. You couldn’t expect
nothing else. But there wasn’t no panic.
Gingerbread men was accustomed to tight places.
And they took this one easy. Them that got there
first launched the boat and stepped in. No fight;
no fuss.
It just happened to be Eleazer Butt
that was left. ’Twas Eleazer’s ill-luck.
And Eleazer was up in years, and had fell behind coming
over the ice.
“No room for me?” says he.
’Twas sure death to be left
on the ice. The wind begun to taste of frost.
And ’twas jumping up. ’Twould carry
the floe far and scatter it broadcast.
“See for yourself, lad,” says Tom.
“Pshaw!” says Eleazer. “That’s
too bad!”
“You isn’t no sorrier than me, b’y.”
Eleazer tweaked his beard. “Dang
it!” says he. “I wisht there was
room. I’m hungry for my supper.”
“Let un in,” says one
of the lads. “’Tis even chances she’ll
float it out.”
“Well,” says Eleazer,
“I doesn’t want t’ make no trouble -”
“Come aboard,” says Tom. “An’
make haste.”
“If she makes bad weather,” says Eleazer,
“I’ll get out.”
They pushed off from the pan.
’Twas falling dusk, by this time. The wind
blowed black. The frost begun to bite. Snow
came thick-just as if, ecod, somebody up
aloft was shaking the clouds, like bags, in the gale!
And the rodney was deep and ticklish; had the ice not
kept the water flat in the lanes and pools, either
Eleazer would have had to get out, as he promised,
or she would have swamped like a cup. As it was,
handled like dynamite, she done well enough; and she
might have made harbor within the hour had she not
been hailed by Pinch-a-Penny Peter from a small pan
of ice midway between.
And there the old codger was squatting,
his old face pinched and woebegone, his bag o’
bones wrapped up in his coonskin coat, his pan near
flush with the sea, with little black waves already
beginning to wash over it.
A sad sight, believe me! Poor
old Pinch-a-Penny, bound out to sea without hope on
a wee pan of ice!
“Got any room for me?” says he.
They ranged alongside. “Mercy
o’ God!” says Tom; “she’s too
deep as it is.”
“Ay,” says Peter; “you
isn’t got room for no more. She’d
sink if I put foot in her.”
“Us’ll come back,” says Tom.
“No use, Tom,” says Peter.
“You knows that well enough. ’Tis
no place out here for a Gingerbread punt. Afore
you could get t’ shore an’ back night
will be down an’ this here gale will be a blizzard.
You’d never be able t’ find me.”
“I ’low not,” says Tom.
“Oh, no,” says Peter. “No use,
b’y.”
“Damme, Skipper Peter,” says Tom, “I’m
sorry!”
“Ay,” says Peter; “‘tis
a sad death for an ol’ man-squattin’
out here all alone on the ice an’ shiverin’
with the cold until he shakes his poor damned soul
out.”
“Not damned!” cries Tom. “Oh,
don’t say it!”
“Ah, well!” says Peter; “sittin’
here all alone, I been thinkin’.”
“’Tisn’t by any man’s wish
that you’re here, poor man!” says Tom.
“Oh, no,” says Peter.
“No blame t’ nobody. My time’s
come. That’s all. But I wisht I had
a seat in your rodney, Tom.”
And then Tom chuckled.
“What you laughin’ at?” says Peter.
“I got a comical idea,” says Tom.
“Laughin’ at me, Tom?”
“Oh, I’m jus’ laughin’.”
“‘Tis neither time nor
place, Tom,” says Peter, “t’ laugh
at an old man.”
Tom roared. Ay, he slapped his
knee, and he throwed back his head, and he roared.
’Twas enough almost to swamp the boat.
“For shame!” says Peter. And more
than Pinch-a-Penny thought so.
“Skipper Peter,” says Tom, “you’re
rich, isn’t you?”
“I got money,” says Peter.
“Sittin’ out here, all
alone,” says Tom, “you been thinkin’
a deal, you says?”
“Well,” says Peter, “I’ll
not deny that I been havin’ a little spurt o’
sober thought.”
“You been thinkin’ that money wasn’t
much, after all?”
“Ay.”
“An’ that all your money in a lump wouldn’t
buy you passage ashore?”
“Oh, some few small thoughts
on that order,” says Peter. “’Tis
perfectly natural.”
“Money talks,” says Tom.
“Tauntin’ me again, Tom?”
“No, I isn’t,” says
Tom. “I means it. Money talks.
What’ll you give for my seat in the boat?”
“’Tis not for sale, Tom.”
The lads begun to grumble. It
seemed just as if Long Tom Lane was making game of
an old man in trouble. ’Twas either that
or lunacy. And there was no time for nonsense
off the Gingerbread coast in a spring gale of wind.
“Hist!” Tom whispered to the lads.
“I knows what I’m doin’.”
“A mad thing, Tom!”
“Oh, no!” says Tom. “’Tis
the cleverest thing ever I thought of. Well,”
says he to Peter, “how much?”
“No man sells his life.”
“Life or no life, my place in
this boat is for sale,” says Tom. “Money
talks. Come, now. Speak up. Us can’t
linger here with night comin’ down.”
“What’s the price, Tom?”
“How much you got, Peter?”
“Ah, well, I can afford a stiffish
price, Tom. Anything you say in reason will suit
me. You name the price, Tom. I’ll pay.”
“Ay, ye crab!” says Tom.
“I’m namin’ prices now. Look
out, Peter! You’re seventy-three.
I’m fifty-three. Will you grant that I’d
live t’ be as old as you?”
“I’ll grant it, Tom.”
“I’m not sayin’ I would,”
says Tom. “You mark that.”
“Ah, well, I’ll grant it, anyhow.”
“I been an industrious man all
my life, Skipper Peter. None knows it better
than you. Will you grant that I’d earn a
hundred and fifty dollars a year if I lived?”
“Ay, Tom.”
Down come a gust of wind. “Have
done!” says one of the lads. “Here’s
the gale come down with the dark. Us’ll
all be cast away.”
“Rodney’s mine, isn’t she?”
says Tom.
Well, she was. Nobody could say nothing to that.
And nobody did.
“That’s three thousand dollars, Peter,”
says Tom.
“Three-thousand-dollars!”
“Ay,” says Peter, “she
calculates that way. But you’ve forgot t’
deduct your livin’ from the total. Not that
I minds,” says he. “’Tis just a
business detail.”
“Damme,” says Tom. “I’ll
not be harsh!”
“Another thing, Tom,”
says Peter. “You’re askin’ me
t’ pay for twenty years o’ life when I
can use but a few. God knows how many!”
“I got you where I wants you,”
says Tom, “but I isn’t got the heart t’
grind you. Will you pay two thousand dollars for
my seat in the boat?”
“If you is fool enough t’ take it, Tom.”
“There’s something t’ boot,”
says Tom. “I wants t’ die out o’
debt.”
“You does, Tom.”
“An’ my father’s bill is squared?”
“Ay.”
“’Tis a bargain!” says Tom.
“God witness!”
“Lads,” says Pinch-a-Penny
to the others in the rodney, “I calls you t’
witness that I didn’t ask Tom Lane for his seat
in the boat. I isn’t no coward. I’ve
asked no man t’ give up his life for me.
This here bargain is a straight business deal.
Business is business. ’Tis not my proposition.
An’ I calls you t’ witness that I’m
willin’ t’ pay what he asks. He’ve
something for sale. I wants it. I’ve
the money t’ buy it. The price is his.
I’ll pay it.” Then he turned to Tom.
“You wants this money paid t’ your wife,
Tom?”
“Ay,” says Tom, “t’ Mary.
She’ll know why.”
“Very good,” says Pinch-a-Penny.
“You’ve my word that I’ll do it....
Wind’s jumpin’ up, Tom.”
“I wants your oath. The
wind will bide for that. Hold up your right hand.”
Pinch-a-Penny shivered in a blast of the gale.
“I swears,” says he.
“Lads,” says Tom, “you’ll
shame this man to his grave if he fails t’ pay!”
“Gettin’ dark, Tom,” says Peter.
“Ay,” says Tom; “‘tis
growin’ wonderful cold an’ dark out here.
I knows it well. Put me ashore on the ice, lads.”
They landed Tom, then, on a near-by pan. He would
have it so.
“Leave me have my way!”
says he. “I’ve done a good stroke
o’ business.”
Presently they took old Pinch-a-Penny
aboard in Tom’s stead; and just for a minute
they hung off Tom’s pan to say good-by.
“I sends my love t’ Mary
an’ the children,” says he. “You’ll
not fail t’ remember. She’ll know
why I done this thing. Tell her ’twas a
grand chance an’ I took it.”
“Ay, Tom.”
“Fetch in here close,”
says Tom. “I want’s t’ talk
t’ the ol’ skinflint you got aboard there.
I’ll have my say, ecod, at last! Ye crab!”
says he, shaking his fist in Pinch-a-Penny’s
face, when the rodney got alongside. “Ye
robber! Ye pinch-a-penny! Ye liar! Ye
thief! I done ye! Hear me? I done ye!
I vowed I’d even scores with ye afore I died.
An’ I’ve done it-I’ve
done it! What did ye buy? Twenty years o’
my life! What will ye pay for? Twenty years
o’ my life!” And he laughed. And
then he cut a caper, and come close to the edge of
the pan, and shook his fist in Pinch-a-Penny’s
face again. “Know what I done in St. John’s
last fall?” says he. “I seen a doctor,
ye crab! Know what he told me? No, ye don’t!
Twenty years o’ my life this here ol’
skinflint will pay for!” he crowed. “Two
thousand dollars he’ll put in the hands o’
my poor wife!”
Well, well! The rodney was moving
away. And a swirl of snow shrouded poor Tom Lane.
But they heard un laugh once more.
“My heart is givin’ ’way,
anyhow!” he yelled. “I didn’t
have three months t’ live!”
Old Pinch-a-Penny Peter done what
he said he would do. He laid the money in poor
Mary Lane’s hands. But a queer thing happened
next day. Up went the price of pork at Pinch-a-Penny’s
shop! And up went the price of tea and molasses!
And up went the price of flour!