Harbor Tales Down North Part 11
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Skipper John grinned.
"Poor d.i.c.kie!" he sighed.
Peggy Lacey was in tears at last.
"Father John," she sobbed, "I'm jus' desperate with fear an' grief. I can't bear it no longer." She began to pace the floor in a tumult of emotion. "I can't breathe," said she. "I'm stifled. My heart's like t'
burst with pain." She paused--she turned to Skipper John, swaying where she stood, her hands pitifully reaching toward the old man, her face gray and dull with the agony she could no longer endure; and her eyes closed, and her head dropped, and her voice fell to a broken whisper. "Oh, hold me!" she entreated. "I'm sick. I'll fall."
Skipper John took her in his arms.
"Ah, hus.h.!.+" he crooned. "'Tis not so bad as all that. An' he's not worth it, the great dunderhead!"
Peggy Lacey pushed Skipper John away.
"I'll not yield t' n.o.body!" she stormed, her soft little face gone hard with a savage determination. Her red little lips curled and the nostrils of her saucy little nose contemptuously expanded. "I've neither eye-gla.s.ses nor grammar," said she, "but I'll ensnare d.i.c.kie Blue for all that."
"I would," said Skipper John.
"I will!"
"An' without scruple!"
"Not a twinge!"
"I'd have no mercy."
"Not I!"
"An' I'd encourage no delay."
"Skipper John, do you write that letter t' St. John's this very day,"
said Peggy, her soft, slender little body magnificently drawn up to the best of its alluring inches. She snapped, "We'll see what comes o'
that!"
"Hoos.h.!.+" Skipper John gloated.
"Waste no time, sir. 'Tis a ticklish matter."
"The answer will be s.h.i.+pped straight t' you, Peggy. 'Twill be here in less 'n a fortnight." Skipper John broke into a wild guffaw of laughter. "An' d.i.c.kie himself will fetch the trap for his own feet, ecod!"
Peggy remained grave.
"I'm determined," she declared. "There's nothin' will stop me now.
I'll do it, no matter what."
"Well, then," said Skipper John, "I 'low 'tis all over but the weddin'."
Skipper John privately thought, after all, that a good deal of fuss was being made over the likes o' d.i.c.kie Blue. And I think so too.
However, the affair was Peggy Lacey's. And doubtless she knew her own business well enough to manage it without ignorant criticism.
In the Winter weather, when the coast was locked in with ice, and continuing until the first cruise of the mail-boat in May, to be precise, d.i.c.kie Blue carried his Majesty's mail, once a fortnight, by government contract, from the railroad at Bottom Harbor to Scalawag Run and all the harbors of Whale Bay. It was inevitable, therefore, that he should be aware of the communication addressed to Miss Peggy Lacey of Scalawag Run; and acutely aware of it he was--the communication and the little box that seemed to accompany it. From Bottom Harbor to All-in-the-Way Island, he reflected occasionally upon the singular circ.u.mstance. Who had sent a gift to Peggy Lacey from St.
John's? Could it have been Charlie Rush? Charlie Rush was in St.
John's to s.h.i.+p for the ice with the sealing fleet. Pausing on the crest of Black Cliff to survey the crossing to Scalawag Run, he came to a conclusion in relation to Peggy Lacey's letter that was not at all flattering to his self-esteem.
The letter mystified d.i.c.kie Blue--the author of the communication; but he had no difficulty in surmising the contents of the box to his own satisfaction.
"'Tis a ring," he determined.
By that time the day was near spent. Dusk would fall within the hour.
Already the wide flare of light above the wilderness had failed to the dying ashes of its fire. Prudence urged a return to the cottage at Point-o'-Bay Cove for the night. True, it was not far from Black Cliff across the run to the first rocks of Scalawag. It was short of a mile, at any rate. d.i.c.kie could glimpse the lights of the Scalawag hills--the folk were lighting the lamps in the kitchens; and he fixed his eyes on Peggy Lacey's light, in the yellow glow of which, no doubt, pretty Peggy was daintily busied with making a supper of no dainty proportions; and he c.o.c.ked his head and scowled in deliberation, and he stood irresolute on the brink of the cliff, playing with the temptation to descend and cross, as though a whiff from Peggy Lacey's kitchen stove had invited and challenged him over.
It was not so much the visionary whiff of Peggy Lacey's supper, however, that challenged his courage: it was Peggy Lacey's letter in the pack on his back, and Peggy Lacey's suggestive packet, that tantalized him to reckless behavior. Ah-ha, he'd show Peggy Lacey what it was to carry the mail in a way that a man should carry it! He'd put the love-letter an' the ring in her hand forthwith. His Majesty's mail would go through that night.
"Ha!" he gloated. "I'll further her courts.h.i.+p. An' that'll settle her, ecod! I'll show her once an' for all that 'tis no matter t' me whom she weds."
There were stout reasons, however, against attempting to cross the run that night. The lane was filled from sh.o.r.e to sh.o.r.e with fragments of ice. Moreover, fog was blowing in from the east in the wake of the departing day, and rain threatened--a cold drizzle. All this being patent, the rain and peril of the pa.s.sage in contrast with the dry, lighted kitchens of Point-o'-Bay Cove, d.i.c.kie Blue crossed Scalawag Run that night notwithstanding; and the mere circ.u.mstance of the crossing, where was no haste that he knew of, indicated at least the perturbation of his emotions. Well, Peggy Lacey might wed whom she pleased, an' he'd further her schemes, too, at the risk of his life.
She should have her letter at once--her ring without delay; an' as for d.i.c.kie Blue, 'twas a closed book of romance--there were other maids at Scalawag Run, fairer maids, more intellectual maids, an' he'd love one o' them soon enough.
When d.i.c.kie Blue entered, Skipper John looked up, amazed.
"Did ye cross the run this night?" said he.
"I'll leave you, sir," d.i.c.kie answered curtly, "t' solve that deep riddle for yourself. You'll not be needing my help."
Skipper John reflected.
"Was there a letter for Peggy Lacey?" said he. "She've been eager for a message from St. John's."
"There was."
"Nothin' else, I 'low?"
"There was. There was a packet."
"Whew!" Skipper John e.j.a.c.u.l.a.t.ed. "That's a pity. I been fearin' an outcome o' that sort. An I was you, d.i.c.k," he advised, "I'd lose no time in that direction."
"'Tis not my purpose to."
"Ye'll wed the maid?"
"I will not."
"Ye obstinate dunderhead!" Skipper John scolded. "I believes ye! Dang if I don't! Go to! s.h.i.+ft them wet clothes, sir, an' come t' supper. I hopes a shrew hooks ye. Dang if I don't!"
In gloomy perturbation, in ill humor with the daft dealings of the world he lived in, d.i.c.kie Blue left the soggy road and sad drizzle of the night for the warm, yellow light of Peggy Lacey's kitchen, where pretty Peggy, alone in the housewifely operation, was stowing the clean dishes away. Yet his course was shaped--his reflections were determined; and whatever Peggy Lacey might think to the contrary, as he was no better, after all, than a great, blundering, obstinate young male creature, swayed by vanity and pique, and captive of both in that crisis, Peggy Lacey's happiness was in a desperate situation. It was farther away at the moment of d.i.c.kie Blue's sullen entrance than ever it had been since first she flushed and shone with the vision of its glorious approach.
Ay--thought the perverse d.i.c.kie Blue when he clapped eyes on the fresh gingham in which Peggy Lacey was fluttering over the kitchen floor (he would not deign to look in her gray eyes), the maid might have her letter an' her ring an' wed whom she pleased; an' as for tears at the weddin', they'd not fall from the eyes o' d.i.c.kie Blue, who would by that time, ecod, perhaps have consummated an affair with a maid of consequence from Grace Harbor! Ha! There were indeed others! The charms of the intellect were not negligible. They were to be taken into account in the estimate. And d.i.c.kie Blue would consider the maid from Grace Harbor.
Harbor Tales Down North Part 11
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Harbor Tales Down North Part 11 summary
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