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laughed as he said it, but there was a taint of bitterness in the laugh. She did not laugh. Instead she took a step toward him and involuntarily put out her hand.

      "Oh, I'm so sorry!" she said.

      "Eh? Oh, you needn't be. I'm gettin' along tip-top. Able to walk and ride and—er—chase hens. That's doin' pretty well for one day."

      "I know. But they were my—our—hens and they must have tired you so. Please forgive us. I won't," with a smile, "ask you to forgive them."

      "Oh, that's all right, that's all right, Miss—er——"

      "Berry. I am Elizabeth Berry. My mother is in charge here at the Harbor."

      "Harbor? Oh, yes, over yonder. Berry? Berry? The only Berry I remember around here was Cap'n Isaac Berry. Cap'n Ike, we young fellows used to call him. I went to sea with him once, my first voyage second mate."

      "Did you? He was my father. But there, I must go. Good-by, Cap'n Kendrick. I hope you will get well very fast now."

      "Thanks. Good-bye. Oh, by the way, Miss Berry, what made you think I might be Sears Kendrick? There are half a dozen Kendricks around Bayport."

      "Yes, but—excuse me—there is only one Cap'n Sears Kendrick. You are one of Bayport's celebrities, Cap'n."

      "Humph! Notorieties, you mean. So all hands have been talkin' about me, eh? Humph! Well, I guessed as much."

      "Why, of course. You are one of our shining lights—sea lights, I mean. You must expect to be talked about."

      "I do—in Bayport, and I'll be talked about more in a day or two, I guess."

      "Why?"

      "Eh? Oh, nothin', nothin'. I was thinkin' out loud, didn't realize I spoke. Good-by."

      "Good-by."

      The gate closed behind her. Kendrick sat down once more upon the bench beneath the locust tree.

      When Judah returned with the bucket of clams he found his guest and prospective boarder just where he had left him.

      "Well, by Henry, Cap'n Sears!" he exclaimed. "Still at the same old moorin's, eh? Been anchored right there ever since I sot sail?"

      "Not exactly, Judah. Pretty nearly, though."

      "Sho! Kind of dull music for you, I'm afraid. Whoa, you lop-sided hay-barge! Stand still till I give you orders to move, will ye! That's what I warned you, Cap'n Sears; not much goin' on around here. You'll be pretty lonesome, I guess likely."

      "Oh, I guess I can stand it, Judah. I haven't been lonesome so far."

      "Ain't, eh? That's good. Well, I got my clams; now I'll steer this horse into port and come back and get to work on that chowder. Oh, say, Cap'n Sears; I see Sary and told her you was cal'latin' to stay here for dinner."

      "Did you? Much obliged. What did she say?"

      "Say? She said a whole lot. Wanted to know how in time you got up here. 'You didn't let him walk all that great long ways, Judah Cahoon?' she says. 'I ain't altogether a fool, be I?' says I."

      Mr. Cahoon paused to search his pockets for a match.

      "What answer did she make to that?" asked the captain. Judah grinned.

      "Wa—ll," he drawled, "she said, 'Perhaps not—altogether.' 'Twan't much, but it was enough of the kind, as the feller said about the tobacco in the coffee pot. Oh, say, that reminds me, Cap'n Sears; there was somebody else talkin' about you. I—whoa, you camel, you! Creepin', crawlin', jumpin'—— Well, go ahead, then! I'll tell you the rest in half a shake, Cap'n. Git dap!"

      Horse, cart and driver jogged and jolted into the barn. After a brief interval Mr. Cahoon reappeared, carrying the clam bucket. They entered the kitchen together. Then the captain said:

      "Judah, you said some one beside Sarah was talkin' about me. Who was it?"

      "Hey? Oh, 'twas Emeline Tidditt, her that's keepin' house for Judge Knowles. She says the old judge is gettin' pretty feeble. Don't cal'late he'll last out much longer, Emeline don't. Says it's nothin' but just grit and hang-on that keeps him alive. He's a spunky old critter, Judge Knowles is, 'cordin' to folks's tell. Course I don't know him same as some, but I cal'late he's a good deal on the general build and lines of a man name of George Dingo that I run afoul of one time to a place called Semurny—over acrost. You know Semurny, don't ye, Cap'n? One of them Med'terranean port 'tis."

      "Smyrna, do you mean?"

      "Um-hm. That's it, Semurny. I was there aboard the William Holcomb, out of Philadelphy. We was loadin' with figs and truck like that. You remember the old Holcomb, don't you, Cap'n Sears? Sartin sure you do. Horncastle and Grant of Philadelphy they owned her. Old Horncastle was a queer man as ever I see. Had a cork leg. Got the real one shot off in the Mexican war or run over by a horse car, some said one and some said t'other. Anyhow he had a cork one spliced on in place of it, and—ho, ho! 'twas as funny a sight as ever I see—one time he fell off the wharf there in Philadelphy. Yes, sir, fell right into the dock, he did. And when they scrabbled down the ladder to haul him in there wasn't nothin' in sight but that cork leg, stickin' up out of water. The rest of him had gone under, but that cork leg hadn't—no, sire-ee! Haw, haw! Well … er … er. … What did I start to talk about, Cap'n Sears?"

      "I don't know, Judah. It was a good while ago. You began by sayin' that you met Judge Knowles's housekeeper."

      "Hey? Why, sure and sartin!" Mr. Cahoon slapped his leg. "Sartin sure, Cap'n Sears, that was it. And I said she and me got to talkin' about you. Well, well, well! I started right there and I fetched up way over in Semurny, along of George Dingo. Well, by Henry! Ain't that queer, now?"

      He rubbed his legs and shook his head, apparently overcome by the queerness of it. Kendrick, judging that another Mediterranean cruise was imminent, made a remark calculated to keep him at home.

      "What did this—what's-her-name—this Tidditt woman say about me?" he asked.

      "Hey? Oh, she said that Judge Knowles wanted to see you. Said that he asked about you 'most every day, wanted to know how you was gittin' along, because just as soon as you was well enough to cruise on your own hook he wanted you to come in and see him."

      "Judge Knowles wanted me to come in and see him? Why, that's funny! I don't know the judge well. Haven't seen him for years, and then only two or three times. What on earth can Judge Knowles have to say to me? … Humph! I can't think."

      He tried to think, nevertheless. Judah busied himself with the sloppy process of clam opening. A little later he observed:

      "So you wan't lonesome all alone here by yourself while I was gone, Cap'n? That's good. Glad to hear it."

      "Thanks, Judah. I wasn't alone, though."

      "You wan't? Sho! Do tell! Have company, did ye? Somebody run in?"

      "Yes. And they wouldn't run out again, not for a good while. They came on business."

      "Business? What kind of business?"

      "Well, I suppose you might call it gardening. They were interested in raisin' vegetables, I know that."

      Judah laid down the clam knife and regarded his former skipper. "Raisin' vegetables?" he repeated slowly. "What—? Look here Cap'n Sears, who was they? Where'd they come from?"

      "I believe they came from next door?"

      "Next door? From the Harbor?" He rose to his feet, suspicion dawning upon his face above the whiskers.

      "Yes, Judah."

      "Cap'n Sears, answer me right straight out. Have those dummed everlastin' Fair Harbor hens been in my garden again?"

      "Yes, Judah."

      "Have they—have they?——" Words failed him. He strode up the path to the garden. Then, after a moment's comprehensive gaze upon the scene of ruin, the words returned.

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