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The Siren Of Scalawag Run
by
“Well, I’m bewildered,” said he, “an’ I’m not able t’ help you at all no more.”
“I’ll have nobody’s help,” Peggy Lacey retorted.
“Why not, Peggy?”
“I’ve my pride t’ serve.”
“My dear,” said Skipper John gravely, “you’ve also your happiness t’ gain.”
“I’ll gain it alone.”
“Aw, now, Peggy,” Skipper John coaxed, with a forefinger under Peggy’s little chin, “you’d take my help in this an’ in all things, wouldn’t ye? You is jus’ so used t’ my help, maid,” he added, “that you’d be wonderful lonesome without it.”
That was true.
“In most things, Father John,” Peggy replied, “I’d take your help an’ be glad. Whatever an’ all about that, I’ll have nobody’s help in the world t’ win the mastery o’ Dickie Blue. Mark that, now! I means it.”
“I’ve showed you the way t’ win it.”
“Tis dishonest.”
“Ay, but—-“
“‘Tis shameful.”
“Still an’ all—-“
“I’ll not do it.”
Again Skipper John scratched his head. “‘Tis an old sayin’,” he protested, “that all’s fair in love an’ war.”
“‘Tis a false sayin’,” Peggy declared. “Moreover,” she argued, “an I took your advice, an’ done the schemin’ wickedness that you said, ‘twould never win Dickie Blue.”
“Jus’ you try it, maid!”
“I scorn t’ try it! I’ll practice no wiles whatsoever t’ win the likes o’ Dickie Blue. An’ what would I say when he discovered the deception thereafter?”
“He’d never find out at all.”
“Sure, he’ve eyes t’ see with, haven’t he?”
“Ay, but he’s too stupid t’ notice. An’ once you’re wed—-“
“No, no! ‘Tis a thing too awful t’ plot.”
“An you cared enough for the lad,” said Skipper John, “you’d stop at nothin’ at all.”
Peggy’s great eyes clouded with tears.
“I cares more for he,” said she, “than he cares for me. My heart’s jus’ sore with grief.”
“Ah, no, now!”
“Ay, ’tis!” Peggy sobbed. She put her dark hair against Skipper John’s shoulder then. “I’m jus’ sick with the need of un!” she said.
* * * * *
Summer went her indifferent way, and Winter blustered into the past, too, without serving the emotions of Scalawag Run; and a new Spring was imminent–warm winds blowing out of the south, the ice breaking from the cliffs and drifting out to sea and back again. Still pretty Peggy Lacey was obdurately fixed in her attitude toward the sly suggestion of Skipper John Blue. Suffer she did–that deeply; but she sighed in secret and husbanded her patience with what stoicism she could command. There were times, twilight falling on the world of sea and rock beyond the kitchen window, with the last fire of the sun failing in the west like a bright hope–there were hours when her fear of the issue was so poignant that her decision trembled. The weather mellowed; the temptation gathered strength and renewed itself persistently–the temptation discreetly to accept the aid of artifice. After all, what matter? ‘Twas surely a thing o’ small consequence. An’ who would ever hear the least whisper about it? For a long time Peggy Lacey rejected the eager promptings of her love–clenched her little red fists and called her pride to the rescue; and then, all at once, of a yellow day, having chanced to glance out of the window and down the harbor in the direction of Cottage Point, and having clapped eyes on a sight that pinched and shook the very heart of her, she was changed in a twinkling into the Siren of Scalawag Run.
Peggy Lacey sped forthwith to Skipper John, whom she found alone in his kitchen, oiling his sealing-gun.
“Father John,” she demanded, “what’s all this I sees goin’ on on the tip o’ Cottage Point?”
Skipper John glanced out of the wide kitchen window.
“Ah,” said he, “that’s on’y young Dickie at labor. He’ve selected that pretty spot an’ is haulin’ his lumber afore the snow’s gone.”
“Haulin’ his lumber?” Peggy gasped.
“Mm-m.”
“Haulin’ l-l-lumber!”
“Mm-m. I sees he’ve ol’ Tog in harness with the rest o’ the dogs. Well, well! Tog’s too old for that labor.”