"And why did she think so?" asked Mayo, in milder tones.

"She didn't say why," admitted Captain Candage. "Maybe women see into

things deeper than men do."

"It seems like coming home--coming home when a man is sick and tired of

everything in the world, sir."

"Reckon my Polly had something like that in mind. She dropped a few

hints that she hoped you'd come and get rested up from your troubles."

"And she has gone back to her work, I suppose?"

"No, she is still on her job at Maquoit, sir--calls it her real job. She

isn't a quitter, Polly isn't. She says they need her."

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"Like the song says, 'The flowers need the sunshine and the roses need

the dew,' that's how they need her," averred Oakum Otie. "Though them

Hue and Cry women and children can't be said to be much like roses and

geraniums! But they're more like it than they ever was before, since

Miss Polly has taken hold of 'em. It's wonderful what a good girl can do

when she tries, Captain Mayo!"

Resuming his life on the fishing-schooner was like slipping on a pair of

old shoes, and Mayo was grateful for that New England stoicism which had

greeted him in such matter-of-fact fashion.

"What you want to tell me is all right and what you don't want to tell

me is still better," stated Captain Candage. "Because when you ain't

talking about it you ain't stirring it!"

So, in that fashion, he came back into the humble life of Maquoit. There

had been no awkwardness in his meeting with Captain Candage; it had been

man to man, and they understood how to dispense with words. But Mayo

looked forward to his meeting with Polly Candage without feeling that

equanimity which the father had inspired.

He felt an almost overmastering desire to confide to her his troubles of

the heart. But he knew that he would not be able to do that. His little

temple had been so cruelly profaned. His humiliation was too great.

He was conscious that some other reason was operating to hold him back

from explaining to her; and because he did not understand just what it

was he was ill at ease when he did come face to face with her. He

was grateful for one circumstance--their first meeting was in the old

fish-house at Maquoit, under the hundred curious eyes of the colony. He

had rowed ashore in his dory and went to seek her in the midst of

her activities. She put out both her hands and greeted him with frank

pleasure and seemed to understand his constraint, to anticipate his own

thoughts, to respect his reticence.




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