The day was one of the best days
in June, with warm sunshine and a cool breeze from
the east, for when Betty Leicester stepped from a hot
car to the station platform in Riverport the air had
a delicious sea-flavor. She wondered for a moment
what this flavor was like, and then thought of a salt
oyster. She was hungry and tired, the journey
had been longer than she expected, and, as she made
her way slowly through the crowded station and was
pushed about by people who were hurrying out of or
into the train, she felt unusually disturbed and lonely.
Betty had traveled far and wide for a girl of fifteen,
but she had seldom been alone, and was used to taking
care of other people. Papa himself was very apt
to forget important minor details, and she had learned
out of her loving young heart to remember them, and
was not without high ambitions to make their journeys
as comfortable as possible. Still, she and her
father had almost always been together, and Betty wondered
if it had not after all been foolish to make a certain
decision which involved not seeing him again until
a great many weeks had gone by.
The cars moved away and the young
traveler went to the ticket-office to ask about the
Tideshead train. The ticket-agent looked at her
with a smile.
“Train’s gone half an
hour ago!” he said, as if he were telling Betty
some good news. “There’ll be another
one at eight o’clock to-morrow morning, and
the express goes, same as to-day, at half past one.
I suppose you want to go to Tideshead town; this road
only goes to the junction and then there’s a
stage, you know.” He looked at Betty doubtfully
and as if he expected an instant decision on her part
as to what she meant to do next.
“I knew that there was a stage,”
she answered, feeling a little alarmed, but hoping
that she did not show it. “The time-table
said there was a train to meet this”
“Oh, that train is an express
now and doesn’t stop. Everything’s
got to be sacrificed to speed.”
The ticket-agent had turned his back
and was looking over some papers and grumbling to
himself, so that Betty could no longer hear what he
was pleased to say. As she left the window an
elderly man, whose face was very familiar, was standing
in the doorway.
“Well, ma’am, you an’
I ’pear to have got left. Tideshead, you
said, if I rightly understood?”
“Perhaps there is somebody who
would drive us there,” said Betty. She
never had been called ma’am before, and it was
most surprising. “It isn’t a great
many miles, is it?”
“No, no!” said the new
acquaintance. “I was in considerable of
a hurry to get home, but ’t isn’t so bad
as you think. We can go right up on the packet,
up river, you know; get there by supper-time; the wind’s
hauling round into the east a little. I understood
you to speak about getting to Tideshead?”
“Yes,” said Betty, gratefully.
“Got a trunk, I expect.
Well, I’ll go out and look round for Asa Chick
and his han’cart, and we’ll make for the
wharf as quick as we can. You may step this way.”
Betty “stepped” gladly,
and Asa Chick and the handcart soon led the way riverward
through the pleasant old-fashioned streets of Riverport.
Her new friend pointed out one or two landmarks as
they hurried along, for, strange to say, although
a sea-captain, he was not sure whether the tide turned
at half past two or at half past three. When they
came to the river-side, however, the packet-boat was
still made fast to the pier, and nothing showed signs
of her immediate departure.
“It is always a good thing to
be in time,” said the captain, who found himself
much too warm and nearly out of breath. “Now,
we’ve got a good hour to wait. Like to
go right aboard, my dear?”
Betty paid Asa Chick, and then turned
to see the packet. It was a queer, heavy-looking
craft, with a short, thick mast and high, pointed
lateen-sail, half unfurled and dropping in heavy pocket-like
loops. There was a dark low cabin and a long
deck; a very old man and a fat, yellow dog seemed
to be the whole ship’s company. The old
man was smoking a pipe and took no notice of anything,
but the dog rose slowly to his feet and came wagging
his tail and looking up at the new passenger.
“I do’ know but I’ll
coast round up into the town a little,” said
the captain. “’T ain’t no use asking
old Mr. Plunkett there any questions, he’s deef
as a ha’dick.”
“Will my trunk be safe?”
asked Betty; to which the captain answered that he
would put it right aboard for her. It was not
a very heavy trunk, but the captain managed it beautifully,
and put Betty’s hand-bag and wrap into the dark
cabin. Old Plunkett nodded as he saw this done,
and the captain said again that Betty might feel perfectly
safe about everything; but, for all that, she refused
to take a walk in order to see what was going on in
the town, as she was kindly invited to do. She
went a short distance by herself, however, and came
first to a bakery, where she bought some buns, not
so good as the English ones, but still very good buns
indeed, and two apples, which the baker’s wife
told her had grown in her own garden. You could
see the tree out of the back window, by which the
hospitable woman had left her sewing, and they were,
indeed, well-kept and delicious apples for that late
season of the year. Betty lingered for some minutes
in the pleasant shop. She was very hungry, and
the buns were all the better for that. She looked
through a door and saw the oven, but the baking was
all done for the day. The baker himself was out
in his cart; he had just gone up to Tideshead.
Here was another way in which one might have gone to
Tideshead by land; it would have been good fun to go
on the baker’s cart and stop in the farm-house
yards and see everybody; but on the whole there was
more adventure in going by water. Papa had always
told Betty that the river was beautiful. She
did not remember much about it herself, but this would
be a fine way of getting a first look at so large
a part of the great stream.
It was slack water now, and the wharf
seemed high, and the landing-stage altogether too
steep and slippery. When Betty reached the packet’s
deck, old Mr. Plunkett was sound asleep; but while
she was eating her buns the dog came most good-naturedly
and stood before her, cocking his head sideways, and
putting on a most engaging expression, so that they
lunched together, and Betty left off nearly as hungry
as she began. The old dog knew an apple when
he saw it, and was disappointed after the last one
was brought out from Betty’s pocket, and lay
down at her feet and went to sleep again. Betty
got into the shade of the wharf and sat there looking
down at the flounders and sculpins in the clear water,
and at the dripping green sea-weeds on the piles of
the wharf. She was almost startled when a heavy
wagon was driven on the planks above, and a man shouted
suddenly to the horses. Presently some barrels
of flour were rolled down and put on deck twelve
of them in all by a man and boy who gave
her, the young stranger, a careful glance every time
they turned to go back. Then a mowing-machine
arrived, and was carefully put on board with a great
deal of bustle and loud talking. There was somebody
on deck, now, whom Betty believed to be the packet’s
skipper, and after a while the old captain returned.
He seated himself by Mr. Plunkett and shook hands
with him warmly, and asked him for the news; but there
did not seem to be any.
“I’ve been up to see my
wife’s cousin Jake Hallet’s folks,”
he explained, “and I thought sure I’d
get left,” and old Plunkett nodded soberly.
They did not sail for at least half an hour after this,
and Betty sat discreetly on the low cabin roof next
the wharf all the time. When they were out in
the stream at last she could get a pretty view of
the town. There was some shipping farther down
the shore, and some tall steeples and beautiful trees
and quaintly built warehouses; it was very pleasant,
looking back at it from the water.
A little past the middle of the afternoon
they moved steadily up the river. The men all
sat together in a group at the stern, and appeared
to find a great deal to talk about. Old Mr. Plunkett
may have thought that Betty looked lonely, for after
he waked for the second time he came over to where
she sat and nodded to her; so Betty nodded back, and
then the old man reached for her umbrella, which was
very pretty, with a round piece of agate in the handle,
and looked at it and rubbed it with his thumb, and
gave it back to her. “Present to ye?”
he asked, and Betty nodded assent. Then old Plunkett
went away again, but she felt a sense of his kind
companionship. She wondered whom she must pay
for her passage and how much it would be, but it was
no use to ask so deaf a fellow-passenger. He
had put on a great pair of spectacles and was walking
round her trunk, apparently much puzzled by the battered
labels of foreign hotels and railway stations.
Betty thought that she had seldom
seen half so pleasant a place as this New England
river. She kept longing that her father could
see it, too. As they went up from the town the
shores grew greener and greener, and there were some
belated apple-trees still in bloom, and the farm-houses
were so old and stood so pleasantly toward the southern
sunshine that they looked as if they might have grown
like the apple-trees and willows and elms. There
were great white clouds in the blue sky; the air was
delicious. Betty could make out at last that old
Mr. Plunkett was the skipper’s father, that
Captain Beck was an old shipmaster and a former acquaintance
of her own, and that the flour and some heavy boxes
belonged to one store-keeping passenger with a long
sandy beard, and the mowing-machine to the other,
who was called Jim Foss, and that he was a farmer.
He was a great joker and kept making everybody laugh.
Old Mr. Plunkett laughed too, now that he was wide
awake, but it was only through sympathy; he seemed
to be a very kind old man. One by one all the
men came and looked at the trunk labels, and they all
asked whether Betty hadn’t been considerable
of a traveler, or some question very much like it.
At last the captain came with Captain Beck to collect
the passage money, which proved to be thirty-seven
cents.
“Where did you say you was goin’
to stop in Tideshead?” asked Captain Beck.
“I’m going to Miss Leicester’s.
Don’t you remember me? Aren’t you
Mary Beck’s grandfather? I’m Betty
Leicester.”
“Toe be sure, toe be sure,”
said the old gentleman, much pleased. “I
wonder that I had not thought of you at first, but
you have grown as much as little Mary has. You’re
getting to be quite a young woman. Command me,”
said the shipmaster, making a handsome bow. “I
am glad that I fell in with you. I see your father’s
looks, now. The ladies had a hard fight some
years ago to keep him from running off to sea with
me. He’s been a great traveler since then,
hasn’t he?” to which Betty responded heartily,
again feeling as if she were among friends. The
storekeeper offered to take her trunk right up the
hill in his wagon, when they got to the Tideshead
landing, and on the whole it was delightful that the
trains had been changed just in time for her to take
this pleasant voyage.