"But she's a bouncer," remarked the skipper. "What do you make her?"

"O--L," spelled Otie--"O--L--Olenia. Must be a local pilot aboard.

None of them New York spiffer captains could find Saturday Cove through

the feather-tide that's outside just now."

"Well, whether they can or whether they can't isn't of any interest to

me," stated the skipper, with fine indifference. "I'd hate to be in

a tight place and have to depend on one of them gilded dudes! I smell

supper. Come on!"

He was a little uncertain as to what demeanor he ought to assume

below, but he clumped down the companion-way with considerable show of

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confidence, and Otie followed.

The captain cast a sharp glance at his daughter. He had been afraid that

he would find her crying, and he did not know how to handle such cases

with any certainty.

But she had dried her eyes and she gave him no very amiable

look--rather, she hinted defiance. He felt more at ease. In his opinion,

any person who had spirit enough left for fight was in a mood to keep on

enjoying life.

"Perhaps I went a mite too far, Polly," he admitted. He was mild, but

he preserved a little touch of surliness in order that she might not

conclude that her victory was won. "But seeing that I brought you off to

sea to get you away from flirting--"

"Don't you dare to say that about me!" She beat her round little fist on

the table. "Don't you dare!"

"I don't mean that you ever done it! The dudes done it! I want to do

right by you, Polly. I've been to sea so long that I don't know much

about ways and manners, I reckon. I can't get a good line on things as

I ought to. I'm an old fool, I reckon." His voice trembled. "But it made

me mad to have you stram up there on deck and call me names before 'em."

She did not reply.

"I have always worked hard for you--sailing the seas and going without

things myself, so that you could have 'em--doing the best I could ever

after your poor mother passed on."

"I am grateful to you, father. But you don't understand a girl--oh, you

don't understand! But let's not talk about it any more--not now."

"I ain't saying to-night--I ain't making promises! But maybe--we'll

see how things shape up--maybe I'll send you back home. Maybe it 'll be

to-morrow. We'll see how the stage runs to the train, and so forth!"




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