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<h2> CHAPTER VII.—“THE QUEEREST LITTLE PLACE.” </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">I</span>t's mos' as nice
as de boat, an' eber so much like it,” said Sylvia.</p>
<p>“Yes, most as nice,” Courage conceded, “and the next best thing for a man
like Larry, who's lived all his life on the water. It looks a sight better
than when we came, doesn't it? But hush! Look, Sylvia; isn't that a bite?
Have the net ready.”</p>
<p>And Sylvia had the net ready, and in another second a great sprawling crab
was landed in the boat beside them, for you must know that mistress and
maid are out crabbing on the South Shrewsbury, and are meeting with much
better luck than is generally experienced in midsummer weather. Directly
over their heads is the queer little place that has recently become their
home. That chink there is in the floor of Sylvia's carpetless room, and
those wisps of straw are sticking through from Bruce's kennel. To be sure,
you have heard nothing of that young gentleman since the day when Courage
dried her tears on his coat, but that is only because there have been more
important things to tell about. He has, however, been behaving in the most
exemplary manner all the while, and has been, as always, Larry's constant
companion.</p>
<p>As for the queer little place, you have probably never seen anything at
all like it, unless, as is possible, you have chanced to see this very
little place itself. It is a house, of course, but wholly unlike other
houses. It has several rooms, but they are all strung along in a row, and
boasts neither attic nor cellar. There is water under it and water on
every side of it; in short, it is on the drawbridge that spans the river
between Port-au-Peck and Town Neck, and is what I presume may be called a
draw-house. Of the many bridges spanning the inlets threading all that
region of sea-board country, this South Shrewsbury Bridge is by far the
longest, and therefore the most pretentious.</p>
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<p>The draw, to accommodate the channel of the river, has been placed near
the southern end, while at either end of it on the main bridge are gates
that swing to for the protection of teams when the draw itself is open.
The house also stretches its length along the main bridge toward its
southern end.</p>
<p>From the day when the ice goes out of the river to the day when it locks
it in again it is David Starr's home, and David is Larry Starr's brother.
David's wife has been dead these many years; all his children are married
and settled; and David, not wishing, as he says, “to be beholden to ony of
'em,” minds the South Shrewsbury draw. For nine months or thereabouts he
stays on the bridge, and then, while the river is ice-bound, retreats to a
little house on the main-land, living quite by himself all the while.</p>
<p>And this is the place to which Larry has come with Courage and Sylvia, and
lonely old David is glad enough to see them, particularly as Larry
proposes to pay a snug little sum weekly, by way of board.</p>
<p>What they will do when cold weather sets in Larry has not yet decided; he
fully expects, however, to send Courage to school somewhere in the city,
if it take half his savings to do it; but for Larry himself, alas! the
darkness is settling down more and more surely. Meantime, Courage and
Sylvia do all in their power to cheer him, and everybody, Larry included,
tries hard not to think of the on-coming blindness. As for Larry's
cabin-boy, Dick, he could not, unfortunately, be included in this new
plan, but Courage, at Larry's dictation, wrote him a most promising sort
of a reference, and one which succeeded in obtaining him just as promising
a situation. And there was one other important matter attended to before
they all took final leave of Dick and the dear old lighter. Larry painted
out her name from the bow with the blackest of black paint. He would sell
his boat if he must, but the Courage Masterson, never!</p>
<p>But while I have been telling you all this, Courage and Sylvia, their
crabbing concluded, have tied their boat to the shore, and with a
well-filled basket swinging between them, are coming down the bridge. Over
against the house Larry sits in the sunshine, smoking his pipe, that is
now more of a comfort than ever, and with Bruce at his feet. He hears the
children and knows their tread almost the instant they set foot on the
roadway, his good old ears seeming kindly bent on doing double service.</p>
<p>“Any luck?” he calls out, as soon as he reckons them within speaking
distance.</p>
<p>“Yes, twelve big ones,” answers Sylvia; “but Lor'! Ise don' know nuffin
'bout how to cook things what's alive to start with.”</p>
<p>“David'll tell you how to manage,” laughs Larry, and just then a carriage,
crossing over the bridge, comes close upon them. Courage instinctively
glances over her shoulder, and straightway dropping her end of the basket,
cries out, with what little remaining breath surprise has left her, “Why,
Miss Julia!”</p>
<p>“Why, Courage, dear, <i>where</i> did you come from?” and instantly the
phaeton is brought to a standstill, and Courage bounds into it, and then
there is the report of a kiss loud enough to have started any save the
most discriminating of ponies on the wildest of gallops.</p>
<p>“But I thought you were to be on a boat all summer!” exclaims Miss Julia
the next minute.</p>
<p>“Yes, I was, but—” and then, feeling that there is something even
more important than an immediate explanation, Courage bounds out of the
carriage again, that she may lead Larry to Miss Julia, and they of course
shake hands very heartily, as two people should who have heard so much of
each other. Then Larry and Courage between them explain matters, and Miss
Julia in turn tells of her summer home, but a mile away on the Rumson
Road, and of how very often she drives over the Shrewsbury Draw.</p>
<p>Meanwhile poor Sylvia has been having an anxious time of it. When Courage
so unceremoniously dropped her end of the basket, several of the crabs
went scrawling out of it, and, as you know, there is nothing more lively
than a hard-shell crab, struggling with all its might to regain its native
element. But with the aid of Miss Julia's man, who has sprung down from
the rumble to help her, Sylvia does succeed in recapturing four of the
runaways, not, alas! however, before two beauties have succeeded in
gaining the edge of the bridge, and in plumping themselves back into the
water with a splash that must have consumed with envy the hearts of their
less fortunate fellows.</p>
<p>At last it is time for Sylvia to be introduced, and, as usual, her beaming
face expresses her satisfaction. Then there is a general chatting for a
little while longer, in which each bears a hand.</p>
<p>“And how pretty you have made it all!” says Miss Julia, taking up the
reins, preparatory to driving on. “I never should have known the place,
with the dainty dimity curtains at the windows and these starch boxes full
of plants along the rail here; such nice old-fashioned plants, too—geraniums
and lemon verbena and that little low plant with the funny name—oh,
yes, I remember—portulaca. How long has it taken you to work such a
transformation, Courage?”</p>
<p>“Only a week, Miss Julia. We came down last Monday; but then Sylvia and I
have worked pretty hard.”</p>
<p>“Of course you have. You're a pair of regular wonder-working fairies, you
and your faithful Sylvia. And now I must say good-bye, but not until Larry
promises that you shall come, both of you, and spend day after to-morrow
with me. I will send John down for you, with the ponies, bright and early,
and we'll have such a day of it.”</p>
<p>Larry promised, Miss Julia drove on, and the children looked a delight
which was, in very truth, unspeakable.</p>
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