It really began to look as if Jerry were seriously offended. For several days there had been no fresh fish at Dolittle Cottage. Peggy reproached herself for having gone too fast. “I ought to have told him about Audubon and David and let it soak in awhile. But when he started to talk about going to school, there didn’t seem any way out of saying what I thought.” Jerry’s prolonged absence was very annoying to Peggy. Five minutes face to face, she felt sure, would straighten out the tangle. Peggy had a not unreasonable confidence in the efficacy of kindly frankness. If Jerry once understood the friendliness of her criticism, it was impossible that he should cherish a grudge against her. As a matter of fact, the mood which accounted for Jerry’s aloofness was no more puzzling to Peggy than to Jerry himself. His first resentment of her criticism had burned itself out for lack of fuel, and had been succeeded by a restlessness unappeased Under the influence of the girls at Dolittle Cottage, and of Peggy in particular, Jerry’s attitude toward the world had been gradually changing. He found to his surprise that he liked to be liked. The courteous attitude of these strangers had raised him in his own estimation. The frequent appearance of the hand-painted necktie and the pointed shoes–both of which had belonged to Jerry’s father–was indicative of a change that went deep. The part he had taken in Lucy Haines’ benefit had also had its share in his development. Strange The effect of Peggy’s words on this new-born complacency was the havoc of a hailstorm on premature buds. Just as he was beginning to enjoy the flavor of approbation, his attention had been directed to his lacks and shortcomings. He stayed away from Dolittle Cottage because his last visit had been responsible for this present uneasy discomfort. He fished and hunted, rose early, and wandered late, without succeeding in the effort which older and wiser people have undertaken with equally poor success, the attempt to escape from one’s self. One of the Snooks children was waiting for him when he came home late one afternoon. Mrs. Snooks had hesitated when Peggy had asked to use one of the boys as a messenger, not being sure that the loaning of her offspring for such a purpose “They’s going to Snake River, them city girls. And She says–” Jerry did not find the pronoun ambiguous–“She says will you drive ’em?” “I’m going to be busy.” Little Andy stared unbelievingly. “They’s baking turnovers and things. She gave me a cooky with a crinkled edge. ’Twas good, too, you bet.” “You tell ’em I’ll be busy.” Jerry pushed past Andy and entered the house. He was astonished at the turmoil of his spirit. “Wish she’d let me alone,” he said fiercely. “I’m not bothering her none. I don’t see why she can’t leave me be.” Peggy received the concise report of her messenger with a little grimace which hid a real disappointment. “The silly boy!” she mused. “Next time I’ll go myself. I simply won’t stand his sulking. It’s too absurd.” Then she gave her attention to the more immediate problem. An indignant chorus negatived that suggestion. “I used to know something about driving,” said Elaine, who seemed to have developed a remarkable faculty for filling vacancies of almost any description. “But I shouldn’t like to try to manage spirited horses. Now what are you all laughing at?” “You could hardly call Nat and Bess spirited,” Peggy replied, when she could make herself heard. “Not if you keep them away from hornets’ nests, anyway.” She explained her qualification by telling the story of the other memorable picnic, and the description of the two old horses which Farmer Cole had placed at the disposal of the cottagers entirely relieved Elaine’s uncertainty. “I’ll do it, then. I seem to be a regular Jack-at-a-pinch,” she laughed. “You’re an emergency girl, and I’m proud of you,” Peggy declared. “The wonder of it is that we’ve been able to get along without you this summer. Accordingly it happened that Jerry Morton, from a point of concealment in the underbrush, watched a farm-wagon rattle past the following morning, the faces of the occupants indicating high spirits, their voices blending jubilantly, in spite of his rejection of the chance to share the day’s pleasure. “The new one’s driving,” Jerry said to himself. “But then, they could tie the lines to the whip stock and them two old plugs would take ’em there all right, just so they didn’t fall down on the way.” It was a relief to him to know that his refusal had not detracted from the pleasure of the company, and yet he was inconsistent enough to resent the gay chatter and the unclouded cheeriness of the smiling faces. He plunged back into the woods, well aware that his surreptitious glimpse had not helped to ease that inner disquiet. The drive scheduled for the morning was longer than that to Day’s Woods, but the charm of their destination was worth the extra effort. The spot to which they had been directed was a knoll on the river’s edge, crowned by tall pine-trees, whose needles formed a fragrant carpet. Snake River was an erratic stream, which, to judge from appearances, As on all well-conducted picnics, luncheon came early, and then followed the diversions which invariably contribute to the pleasure of such festive occasions. The girls strolled in the woods, picked the showy, scentless flowers, which had replaced the small, fragrant blossoms of springtime, and took little excursions on the river, two to a canoe. The strength of the current was something of a surprise. Ruth and Amy floating down the stream, and barely dipping their paddles into the water, had exclaimed over the ease of propelling the little bark. But the attempt to return to their starting-point “Another time I’d paddle up stream and float down,” exclaimed Amy, stepping ashore, and fanning herself with her hat. “I want my hard times at the start. But who would have supposed that there was such a current in this lazy old river?” Characteristically Peggy defended the reputation of the stream. “It’s not lazy a bit. Up here it winds around a good deal, but that’s only its playtime. Just a mile or two below are the falls, and I think the power is carried quite a long way to some town for electric lights and that sort of thing. So Snake River’s really a worker.” The drowsy hour of the afternoon had arrived. The breeze which had been so fresh in the early morning had died down. The pine-trees on the knoll rustled softly, and the sound was as soothing as a lullaby. “I believe I’ll feel better for a nap,” said Aunt Abigail, and forthwith settled herself on a steamer rug, spread out invitingly. The suggestion proved popular, and the younger members of Dorothy looked about on the somnolent gathering with dismay. “Aunt Peggy, I don’t like sleepy picnics. I want to play tag.” “Oh, it’s too hot for tag, and, besides, you always squeal so when you’re caught that it would wake everybody up. Don’t you want a tiny bit of a nap?” Either because of the force of example, or because the languor of the summer day was too much even for her energy, Peggy herself was frankly sleepy. “But I can have naps to my house.” Dorothy’s chin quivered in her disappointment, and Peggy surrendered with a laugh. “Naps are a kind of fun you can have almost anywhere, can’t you, dear? Well, we mustn’t play tag, but we’ll take one of the canoes and go on a nice little expedition all by ourselves.” Dorothy’s face was radiant over the prospect of stealing a march on the sleepers. She was on her feet in a moment, tiptoeing her way with exaggerated caution. Amy opening one eye, saw the buoyant little figure trip past, and wondered vaguely what was up, though in her state of comfortable “Now, you must sit as quiet as a mouse,” warned Peggy, lifting Dorothy into the canoe. “For these boats are the tippy kind. And this time we’ll go up stream instead of down.” The twisting, winding river was unexpectedly alluring. Every bend Peggy paddled past, the point just above beckoned her onward. Her temporary drowsiness had disappeared, and she enjoyed her sense of discovery and the exercise which was vigorous without being exhausting. Knowing that the return would be both swift and easy, she did not hesitate to yield to her new-born zeal for exploration, especially as Dorothy’s face was expressive of unalloyed satisfaction. “How pretty the river is here,” Peggy exclaimed at last, breaking a long, happy silence. “Prettier than below, if anything. Dorothy, aren’t you glad we’re not sleeping away our chance to see all this?” “My mamma puts me to bed when I’m naughty,” replied Dorothy, thereby explaining her inability to regard sleep as a diversion. “And I’ve been a good girl to-day.” “We’ve both been good girls,” boasted Peggy. “Too good to be sent to bed. And oh, Dorothy, Dorothy was ready to agree to anything which promised novelty and excitement. Accordingly, Peggy paddled into the welcoming arms of a miniature harbor, tied her craft to a convenient willow, and helped her small niece ashore. Islands had always possessed for Peggy a peculiar fascination. The smaller they were the better, from her standpoint, since with the larger it was always necessary to remind one’s self that they were not a part of the mainland. On this particular island it was quite impossible to forget for a moment that you were entirely surrounded by water. Peggy pursued her discoveries with zest. Considering its detached and lonely state, the little island had conformed surprisingly to the ways of the mainland. Peggy found flowers of the same varieties that she had picked in the woods back of the knoll a little earlier. A blackberry vine was heavily hung with fruit, though some of the berries were dry and withered. Peggy noticed a bird’s nest in a more exposed location than the little builder would have chosen elsewhere, she was sure, and she thought of the deductions Jerry would have drawn from this fact, and smiled while she sighed. “Aunt Peggy,” piped Dorothy, trotting at her heels, “let’s not ’splore any longer. I don’t like ’sploring.” “Oh, I don’t want to stop till I’ve seen everything, Dorothy. Be a good girl and don’t fret.” But Dorothy did not feel like being a good girl. One of her rare wilful moods had taken possession of her. She stood motionless, scowling at Peggy’s unconscious back, and then her little face overcast and rebellious, she turned and made her way down to the willow and the waiting canoe. The latter moved gently as the water rippled past. It seemed to Dorothy to be tugging at its fastenings with an impatience that matched her own. “You don’t like ’sploring either, do you?” she said, addressing the canoe in a confidential undertone. “And–and it’s very naughty of Aunt Peggy to want her own way all the time. I guess she’d be s’prised if we went off and left her.” The canoe repeated its wordless invitation. Dorothy drew closer, cast a defiant glance behind her, and then set one small foot firmly on the bottom of the uncertain craft. The responsive lurch was so unexpected that she went over in a heap, luckily “There, I didn’t disobey Aunt Peggy, ’cept with one foot. I guess that old canoe pulled me in its own self.” Her complacency vanished with a startling discovery. The canoe had been carelessly tied and the jar of her tumble had loosened it altogether. Yielding to the current it began to move down the stream, and Dorothy’s alarm found vent in an ear-splitting shriek. “Aunt Peggy! Aunt Peggy!” Peggy came crashing through the bushes, startled by the summons, and yet scarcely prepared for the sight which met her eyes. And then so rapidly did things happen, that there seemed to be no time to be frightened. For, at the first glimpse of her rescuer, foolish little Dorothy sprang to her feet. As a matter of course the canoe overturned, throwing her into the water. Peggy’s instinctive leap took no account of the depth of the stream. She could have drowned with Dorothy. It was quite impossible for her to stand by and look on while Dorothy drowned. Luckily the water, though deep at this point, was not over “Dorothy, don’t hold so tight. I can’t breathe.” The appeal was useless. Dorothy was beyond heeding any admonition but that of the blind instinct of self-preservation. Peggy would not have believed that there was such strength in the slender little arms. Gasping, and with reeling senses, she edged step by step nearer the shore, groping with her disengaged hand for the sloping bit of beach where she could deposit her burden. When at length her fingers came in contact with the pebbly edge the bright summer world was a black mist before her unseeing eyes. Luckily the contact with mother earth suggested to Dorothy that here was something more stable than the swaying support to which she had been clinging so desperately. Her hold relaxed, and a minute later she was scrambling up the slope into the grass and bushes, caring for nothing except to get as far as possible from the terrible water. Peggy caught her breath, waited an instant for brain and vision to clear, and then, with the aid of Dorothy was sitting back in the bushes, crying with a lustiness which suggested that no serious consequences were to be apprehended from her plunge bath, beyond the possibility of taking cold. “I don’t like ’sploring islands,” she sobbed. “Let’s go back, Aunt Peggy.” Peggy turned sharply. Down the stream floated the overturned canoe, already at a distance which made its recapture hopeless. A little in advance was a white straw hat, a pert bow acting as a sail. Not till that moment had it occurred to Peggy that her troubles were not yet over. Her gratitude for her escape from death was tempered by irritated dismay. “Why, Dorothy, we can’t go back! We’ve got to wait till they come for us. How provoking!” “Oh, dear! We’re going to be so late getting home,” scolded Peggy. “It’ll be dark, and none of us know the roads very well.” She looked longingly at the point around which at any moment a canoe might appear. “It’s going to take some time to land us,” she reflected, “as long as these canoes can’t carry any more than two. Oh, dear, Dorothy! How much trouble you’ve made.” And the pensive mermaid wept again, with the submissive penitence which disarms censure. Over in the west above the treetops, the sky grew pink, deepened to crimson, paled to ashes-of-roses. The sparkling lights on the water were snuffed out one by one. The air was full of sounds, shrill-voiced insects cheeping, the pipe of frogs, the twittering of birds seeking their nests. The downward droop of the corners of Dorothy’s mouth became more pronounced. Peggy hugged the little penitent close. She did not like the sound herself. “You’re pretty near dry, aren’t you?” she said, trying to speak lightly. Dorothy’s answer was a grieved whimper, “Aunt Peggy, when are they coming for us?” “I don’t know, dear.” The resolute cheerfulness of Peggy’s tone gave no hint of her inward perturbation. What did it mean, she asked herself. What were the girls thinking of? It was growing dark. She tightened her clasp about Dorothy and the disconsolate little maid snuggled her damp head against Peggy’s shoulder, and forgot her troubles in sleep. Little flickering lights began to play about the island, as the fire-flies lit their fairy lamps. Overhead the stars came out. The warm wind of the summer night sighed through the treetops, and the sad chorus of humble earthly pipers answered from below. It seemed to Peggy as if the dear familiar world with its cheery homes and friendly faces, had been blotted out, and Dorothy and herself were alone on an unfamiliar earth. Yet with all the strange, terrifying loneliness, the stars had never seemed so bright nor the heavenly Father so near. |