2016년 5월 2일 월요일

The Merry Anne 1

The Merry Anne 1


The Merry Anne
 
Author: Samuel Merwin
 
THE MERRY ANNE
 
[Illustration: 9013]
 
Dear H. K. TV.:
 
This tale dedicates itself to you as a matter of right. For we grew up
together on the bank of Lake Michigan; and you have not forgotten, over
there in Paris, the real house on stilts, nor the miles we have tramped
along the beach, nor, I am sure, the grim old life-saver on the near
Ludington, and his sturdy scorn for our student life-savers at Evanston.
And the endless night on Black Lake, with Klondike Andrews at the tiller
and never a breath of wind, we shall not forget that. Once we differed:
I failed to tempt you into a paddle in the Oki, one fresh spring day
three years ago; but then, your instinct of self-preservation always
worked better than mine, as the adventure in the Swampscott dory will
recall to you.
 
But, after all, these doings do not make up the reason why the story
is partly yours; nor do the changes in the text that sprang from your
friendly comment. I will tell you the real reason.
 
[Illustration: 8014]
 
Early, very early, one summer morning, you and I stood on the
wheel-house of the P'ere Marquette Steamer No. 4--or was it the No. 3--a
few hours from Milwaukee. The Lake was still, the thick mist was faintly
illuminated by the hidden sun. Of a sudden, while the steamer was
throbbing through the silence, a motionless schooner, painted blue, with
a man in a red shirt at the wheel, loomed through the mist, stood out
for one vivid moment, then faded away.
 
That schooner was the Merry Anne; and the man at the wheel was Dick
Smiley. What if he should some day chance upon this tale and declare it
untrue? know better, for we saw it there.
 
S. M.
 
 
 
 
CHAPTER I--DICK AND HIS MERRY ANNE
 
THE _Merry Anne_ was the one lumber schooner on Lake Michigan
that always appeared freshly painted; it was Dick Smiley's wildest
extravagance to keep her so. Sky blue she was (Annie's favorite color),
with a broad white line below the rail; and to see her running down on
the north wind, her sails white in the sun, her bow laying the waves
aside in gentle rolls to port and starboard, her captain balancing
easily at the wheel, in red shirt, red and blue neckerchief, and slouch
hat, was to feel stirring in one the old spirit of the Lakes.
 
It was a lowering day off Manistee. Out on the horizon, now and then
dipping below it, a tug was struggling to hold two barges up into the
wind. Within the harbor, at the wharf of the lumber company, lay the
_Merry Anne_. Two of her crew were below, sleeping off an overdose
of Manistee whiskey. The third, a boy of seventeen, got up in slavish
imitation of his captain,--red shirt, slouch hat, and all,--was at work
lashing down the deck load. Roche, the mate, stood on the wharf, the
centre of a little group of stevedores and rivermen. "Hi there, Pink,"
he shouted at the red shirt, "what you doin' there?"
 
The boy threw a sweeping glance lake-ward before replying, "Makin'
fast."
 
"That 'll do for you. There won't be no start _this_ afternoon."
 
"But Cap' Smiley said--"
 
"None o' your lip, or I 'll Cap' Smiley you.
 
"Pretty ugly, out there, all right enough," observed a riverman.
"Cornin' up worse, too. Give you a stiff time with all that stuff
aboard."
 
"I ain't so sure about that," said Roche, with a swagger. "If _I_ was
cap'n o' this schooner, she'd start on the minute, but Smiley's one o'
your fair-weather sort."
 
"Sure he is. He done a heap o' talkin' about that time he brung the
_William Jones_ into Black Lake before the wind, the day the _John T.
Eversley_ was lost; but Billy Underdown was sailin' with him then, and
he told me hisself that he had the wheel all the way--Smiley never done
a thing but hang on to the companionway and holler at him to look out
for the north set o' the surf outside the piers; and there's my little
Andy that ain't nine year old till the sixth o' September, could ha'
told him the surf sets south off Black Lake, with a northwest wind. If
it hadn't been for Billy, the Lord only knows where Dick Smiley'd be
to-day."
 
A tug hand had joined the group, and now he addressed himself to Roche.
 
"Cap'n Peters wants to know if you're a-goin' to try to make it, Mr.
Roche."
 
"Not by a dam' sight."
 
"Well--I guess he won't be sorry to wait till mornin'. What time do you
think you 'll want us?"
 
"Six o'clock sharp."
 
"Them's Cap'n Smiley's orders, is they?"
 
"Them's _my_ orders, and they're good enough for you."
 
"Oh, that's all right, of course, only Cap'n Peters, he said if 'twas
anybody else, he'd just tie up and wait, but there ain't never any
tellin', he says, what Dick Smiley 'll take it into his head to do."
 
"You tell your cap'n that Mr. Roche said to come at six in the mornin'."
 
"All right. I 'll tell him. Say--Cap'n Smiley ain't anywhere around, is
he?"
 
"_No, Cap'n Smiley ain t anywheres around!_" mimicked Roche, angrily.
"If you want to know whereabouts Cap'n Smiley is, he's uptown
skylarkin', that's where _he_ is."
 
The river hands laughed at this.
 
"I reckon he's somethin' of a hand for the ladies, Dick Smiley is, with
them blue eyes o' his'n," said one. "I ain't a-tellin', you understand,
but there's boys in town here that could let you know a thing or two if
they was minded."
 
As a matter of fact, Dick was at that moment in an up-town jewellery
shop, fingering a necklace of coral.
 
"I want a longer one," he was saying, "with something pretty hanging on
the end of it--there, that's the boy--the one with big rough beads and
the red rose carved on the end."
 
"Must be somebody's birthday, Captain," observed the jeweller, with a
wink.
 
And Dick, who could never resist a wink, replied: "That's what. Day
after to-morrow, too, and I haven't any too much time to make it in."
 
"Here's a nice piece--if she likes the real red."
 
Dick took it in his hands and nodded over it. "I think that would please
her. She likes bright colors." He drew a wallet from a hip pocket and
disclosed a thick bundle of bills.
 
"I shouldn't think you'd like to carry so much money on you, Captain, in
your line of work."
 
"It isn't so much. They are most all ones." But the jeweller, seeing a
double X on the top, only smiled and remarked that it was a dark day.
 
"Yes, too dark. I don't like it. Makes me think of the cyclone three
years ago April, when the _Kate Howard_ went down off Lakeville. I spent
three hours roosting on the topmast that day. It was black then, like
this. If it keeps up, you 'll have to turn on your lights in here."
 
"Guess I will. It wouldn't hurt now. Well, good-by, Captain. Drop in
again next time you run in here."
 
"All right. But there's no telling when that will be. I have to go where
Captain Stenzenberger sends me, you know."
 
"You don't own your schooner yet, then?"
 
"No; only a quarter of it. Well, good-by." And he left the shop with the
corals, securely wrapped, stowed in an inside pocket.
 
The first big drops of rain were falling when he reached the schooner.
The deck was deserted, but he found Roche and his wharf acquaintances
settled comfortably in the cabin. Their talk stopped abruptly at the
sight of his boots coming down the companionway.
 
"Why isn't the load lashed down, Pete?" he asked, addressing Roche.
 
"Why--oh, it was lookin' so bad, I thought we'd better wait till you
come."
 
"Where's the tug? Don't Peters know we want him?"
 
The loungers were silent. All looked at Roche.
 
"Why, yes--sure. He ain't showed up yet, though."
 
"You ain't goin' to try to make it, are you, Cap'n?" asked a riverman.
 
"Going to try? We _are_ going to make it, if that's what you mean."
 
One of the men rose. "I'm going up the wharf, Cap'n. If you like, I 'll speak to Peters."

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