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PAGE 4

Mr. Bob
by [?]

Suddenly, at the door, which had been kept shut to prevent the natives from assembling and peering in–suddenly, at the door, there was heard a faint, faint knock. The concertina stopped. Fritz, the Dutchman, said “Hoosh!” and raised his pipe for silence. The knock was repeated. Quiet descended on the Land We Live In. Larry looked up from his bottles, and in a rough and belligerent voice called out, “Come in!”

The invitation was hesitatingly obeyed, and there stood Daisy Kirke on the threshold, a sweet, faltering figure, with her guard, boots and all, lined up in the roadway. Hardly a soul in the room knew there was a little white girl on the island; and the sight of Daisy, with the red ribbon in her hair, her dimity frock, her long stockings and pinafore, was as startling as it was unexpected.

“Howdy-do, evver’body?” said she.

There was an embarrassed silence.

“I know you better than you do me,” went on Daisy confidentially, proving it with her forefinger. “That’s Tommy, the cabin boy; and yonder’s Mr. Mathison, the beach-comber; and you”–indicating a giant of a man with an aquiline nose and a square-cut beard–“you are Mr. Bob Fletcher, the ringleader!”

A giggle of subdued merriment ran round the room. An instinctive respect kept it within bounds, or perhaps it was Bob Fletcher’s fierce and warning look that cowed any incipient rowdyism. The brawny mutineer set her on his knee, and, in a voice harshened by thirty years’ service before the mast, asked her deferentially if she fancied a glass of syrup?

“No, thank you,” said Daisy politely; and then, addressing everybody in general, “papa and mamma’s gone to Tarawa!”

“Now, if that ain’t too bad!” put in Bob sympathetically.

“And so it just occurred to me,” went on Daisy, “to do something nice to surprise them when they came back.”

A profound silence greeted this remark. The devil’s love of holy water is a craving compared to the amount of love lost between a South Sea missionary and the rough white element that mocks his labors at every turn. It was the custom of the Lord Dundonalds, moreover, to hoot the Rev. Walter Kirke whenever they met him. It was a recollection of this that made the present situation so piquant and humorous.

“Besides, it seems too bad,” continued Daisy, “that the natives should have such a fuss made over them, while all you white gentlemen are left out in the cold. It must look queer to Dod, and I don’t believe He likes it!”

“Everything for the niggers–that’s right,” muttered Tom Extrum bitterly, “and not even a six-months-old newspaper for the likes of us!”

“You don’t look so werry wicked,” said Daisy, taking in the room with a comprehensive glance, and putting an arm around Mr. Bob’s neck, as though confident of having at least one friend among the company. “I wonder if you wouldn’t all like to come along to my house, and play with my magic lantern, and–and–organize a Band of Hope?”

She was abashed by the roar of laughter that followed the proposal. Papa Benson flung himself on the floor and rolled over and over. Long Joe uttered whoops of delight. Even Mr. Bob shook with speechless mirth, till the veins on his forehead stood out like strings. Never in all its history was there such a hullabaloo in the Land We Live In. As the rumpus died down something very like remorse overwhelmed the roisterers as they saw Daisy’s flushing, quivering little face, hot with mortification.

It was Mr. Bob who sprang to the rescue before the brimming tears could fall.

“I’m on!” he shouted, rising to his feet with unexpected enthusiasm. “Now, then, boys, who says ‘Aye, aye’ for the Band of ‘Ope?”

A good part of the crowd would have preferred to stay by their spree; but so contagious is example and so sheeplike the sailor nature, that the whole room fell in with Bob, and answered his call like one man.