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PAGE 2

Mackereling Out in the Gulf
by [?]

“Have you had pretty good luck this week, Benjamin? Father couldn’t go out much–he has been so busy with his hay, and Leon is such a poor fisherman.”

“We’ve had some of the best hauls of the summer this week. Some of the Rustler boats caught six hundred to a line yesterday. We had four hundred to the line in our boat.”

Mary Stella began absently to dabble her slender brown hand in the water. A silence fell between them, with which Benjamin was well content, since it gave him a chance to feast his eyes on the beautiful face before him.

He could not recall the time when he had not loved Mary Stella. It seemed to him that she had always been a part of his inmost life. He loved her with the whole strength and fidelity of a naturally intense nature. He hoped that she loved him, and he had no rival that he feared. In secret he exalted and deified her as something almost too holy for him to aspire to. She was his ideal of all that was beautiful and good; he was jealously careful over all his words and thoughts and actions that not one might make him more unworthy of her. In all the hardship and toil of his life his love was as his guardian angel, turning his feet from every dim and crooked byway; he trod in no path where he would not have the girl he loved to follow. The roughest labour was glorified if it lifted him a step nearer the altar of his worship.

But today he felt faintly disturbed. In some strange, indefinable way it seemed to him that Mary Stella was different from her usual self. The impression was vague and evanescent–gone before he could decide wherein the difference lay. He told himself that he was foolish, yet the vexing, transient feeling continued to come and go.

Presently Mary Stella said it was time to go back. Benjamin was in no hurry, but he never disputed her lightest inclination. He turned the dory about and rowed shoreward.

Back on the rocks, Mosey Louis and Xavier, the French Canadians, were looking through the spyglass by turns and making characteristic comments on the fleet. Mr. Murray and Braithwaite were standing by the skids, watching the dory.

“Who is that young fellow?” asked the latter. “What a splendid physique he has! It’s a pleasure to watch him rowing.”

“That,” said the older man, with a certain proprietary pride in his tone, “is Benjamin Selby–the best mackerel fisherman on the island. He’s been high line all along the gulf shore for years. I don’t know a finer man every way you take him. Maybe you’ll think I’m partial,” he continued with a smile. “You see, he and Mary Stella think a good deal of each other. I expect to have Benjamin for a son-in-law some day if all goes well.”

Braithwaite’s expression changed slightly. He walked over to the dory and helped Mary Stella out of it while Benjamin made the painter fast. When the latter turned, Mary Stella was walking across the rocks with her cousin. Benjamin’s blue eyes darkened, and he strode moodily over to the boats.

“You weren’t out this morning, Mr. Murray?”

“No, that hay had to be took in. Reckon I missed it–pretty good catch, they tell me. Are they getting any now?”

“No. It’s not likely the fish will begin to bite again for another hour.”

“I see someone standing up in that off boat, don’t I?” said Mr. Murray, reaching for the spyglass.

“No, that’s only Rob Leslie’s crew trying to fool us. They’ve tried it before this afternoon. They think it would be a joke to coax us out there to broil like themselves.”

“Frank,” shouted Mr. Murray, “come here, I want you.”

Aside to Benjamin he said, “He’s my nephew–a fine young chap. You’ll like him, I know.”

Braithwaite came over, and Mr. Murray put one hand on his shoulder and one on Benjamin’s.