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Captain
Joe and Jamie.
HOW the wind
roared in from the sea over the Tantramar dyke!
It was about sunset, and a fierce
orange-red gleam, thrusting itself through a rift in the
clouds that blackened the sky, cast a strange glow over
the wide, desolate marches. A mile back rose the dark
line of the uplands, with small, white farmhouses already
hidden in shadow.
Captain Joe Boultbee had just
left his wagon standing in the dyke road, with his four-year-old
boy on the seat. He was on the point of crossing the dyke,
to visit the little landing-place where he kept his boat,
when above the rush and whistle of [Page 204]
the gale he heard Jamie’s voice. He hurried
back a few paces before he could make out what the little
fellow was saying.
“Pap,” cried the child,
“I want to get out of the wagon. ’Fraid Bill
goin’ to run away!”
“Oh, nonsense!” answered
Captain Joe. “Bill won’t run away. He doesn’t
know how. You stay there, and don’t be frightened,
and I’ll be right back.”
“But, pap, the wind blows
me too hard,” piped the small voice, pleadingly.
“Oh, all right,” said
the father, and returning to the wagon he lifted the child
gently down and set him on his feet. “Now,”
he continued, “it’s too windy for you out
on the other side of the dyke. You run over and sit on
that big stick, where the wind can’t get at you;
and wait for me. And be sure you don’t let Bill
run away [Page 205].”
As he spoke the Captain noticed
that the horse, ordinarily one of the most stolid of creatures,
seemed tonight peculiarly uneasy; with his head up in
the air he was sniffing nervously, and glancing from side
to side. As Jamie was trudging through the long grass
to the seat which his father had shown him, the Captain
said, “Why, Bill does seem scary, after
all; who’d have thought this wind would scare him?”
“Bill don’t like it,”
replied Jamie; “it blows him too hard.” And,
glad to be out of the gale, which took his breath away,
the little fellow seated himself contentedly in the shelter
of the dyke. Just then there was a clatter of wheels and
a crash. Bill had whirled sharply about in the narrow
road, upsetting and smashing the light wagon.
Now, utterly heedless of his master’s
angry shouts, he was galloping in mad haste back toward
[Page 206] the uplands, with the fragments
of the wagon at his heels. The Captain and Jamie watched
him flying before the wind, a red spectre in the lurid
light. Then, turning away once more to see to his boat,
the Captain remarked, “Well, laddie, I guess we’ll
have to foot it back when we get through here. But Bill’s
going to have a licking for this!”
Left to himself, Jamie crouched
down behind the dyke, a strange, solitary little figure
in the wide waste of the marshes. Though the full force
of the gale could not reach him, his long fair curls were
blown across his face, and he clung determinedly to his
small, round hat. For a while he watched the beam of red
light, till the jagged fringe of clouds closed over it,
and it was gone. Then, in the dusk, he began to feel a
little frightened; but he knew his father would soon be
back, and he didn’t like to call him again [Page
207]. He listened to the waves washing, surging,
beating, roaring on the shoals beyond the dyke. Presently
he heard them, every now and then, thunder in against
the very dyke itself. Upon this he grew more frightened,
and called to his father several times. But of course
the small voice was drowned in the tumult of wind and
wave, and the father, working eagerly on the other side
of the dyke, heard no sound of it.
Close by the shelter in which
Jamie was crouching there were several great tubs, made
by sawing molasses-hogsheads into halves. These tubs,
in fishing season, were carried by the fishermen in their
boats, to hold the shad as they were taken from the net.
Now they stood empty and dry, but highly flavored with
memories of their office. Into the nearest tub Jamie crawled,
after having shouted in vain to his father [Page
208].
To the child’s loneliness
and fear the tub looked “cosey,” as he called
it. He curled up in the bottom, and felt a little comforted.
Jamie was the only child of Captain
Joe Boultbee. When Jamie was about two years old, the
Captain had taken the child and his mother on a voyage
to Brazil. While calling at Barbadoes the young mother
had caught the yellow fever. There she had died, and was
buried. After that voyage Captain Joe had given up his
ship, and retired to his father’s farm at Tantramar.
There he devoted himself to Jamie and the farm, but to
Jamie especially; and in the summer, partly for amusement,
partly for profit, he was accustomed to spend a few weeks
in drifting for shad on the wild tides of Chignecto Bay.
Wherever he went, Jamie went. If the weather was too rough
for Jamie, Captain Joe stayed at home. As for the [Page
209] child, petted without being spoiled, he
was growing a tough and manly little soul, and daily more
and more the delight of his father’s heart.
Why should he leave him curled
up in his tub on the edge of the marshes, on a night so
wild? In truth, though the wind was tremendous, and now
growing to a veritable hurricane, there was no apparent
danger or great hardship on the marshes. It was not cold,
and there was no rain.
Captain Joe, foreseeing a heavy
gale, together with a tide higher than usual, had driven
over to the dyke to make his little craft more secure.
He found the boat already in confusion;
and the wind, when once he had crossed out of the dyke’s
shelter, was so much more violent than he had expected,
that it took him some time to get things “snugged
up.” He felt that Jamie was all right, as long as
he was out of the wind. He [Page 210] was
only a stone’s throw distant, though hidden by the
great rampart of the dyke. But the Captain began to wish
that he had left the little fellow at home, as he knew
the long walk over the rough road, in the dark and the
furious gale, would sorely tire the sturdy little legs.
Every now and then, as vigorously and cheerfully he worked
in the pitching smack, the Captain sent a shout of greeting
over the dyke to keep the little lad from getting lonely.
But the storm blew his voice far up into the clouds, and
Jamie, in his tub, never heard it.
By the time Captain Joe had put
everything shipshape, he noticed that his plunging boat
had drifted close to the dyke. He had never before seen
the tide reach such a height. The waves that were rocking
the little craft so violently, were a mere back-wash from
the great seas which, as he now observed with a pang [Page
211], were thundering in a little further up
the coast. Just at this spot the dyke was protected from
the full force of the storm by Snowdons’ Point.
“What if the dyke should break up yonder, and this
fearful tide get in on the marshes?” thought the
Captain, in a sudden anguish of apprehension. Leaving
the boat to dash itself to pieces if it liked, he clambered
in breathless haste out on to the top of the dyke, shouting
to Jamie as he did so. There was no answer. Where he had
left the little one but a half-hour back, the tide was
seething three or four feet deep over the grasses.
Dark as the night had grown, it
grew blacker before the father’s eyes. For an instant
his heart stood still with horror, then he sprang down
into the flood. The water boiled up nearly to his arm-pits.
With his feet he felt the great timber, fastened in the
dyke, on which his boy [Page 212] had
been sitting. He peered through the dark, with straining
eyes grown preternaturally keen. He could see nothing
on the wide, swirling surface save two or three dark objects,
far out in the marsh. These he recognized at once as his
fish-tubs gone afloat. Then he ran up the dyke toward
the Point. “Surely,” he groaned in his heart,
“Jamie has climbed up the dyke when he saw the water
coming, and I’ll find him along the top here, somewhere,
looking and crying for me!”
Then, running like a madman along
the narrow summit, with a band of iron tightening about
his heart, the Captain reached the Point, where the dyke
took its beginning.
No sign of the little one; but
he saw the marshes everywhere laid waste. Then he turned
round and sped back, thinking perhaps Jamie had wandered
in the other direction. Passing the now buried landing-place
[Page 213], he saw with a curious distinctness,
as if in a picture, that the boat was turned bottom up,
and glued to the side of the dyke.
Suddenly he checked his speed
with a violent effort, and threw himself upon his face,
clutching the short grasses of the dyke. He had just saved
himself from falling into the sea. Had he had time to
think, he might not have tried to save himself, believing
as he did that the child who was his very life had perished.
But the instinct of self-preservation had asserted itself
blindly, and just in time. Before his feet the dyke was
washed away, and through the chasm the waves were breaking
furiously.
Meanwhile, what had become of
Jamie?
The wind had made him drowsy,
and before he had been many minutes curled up in the tub,
he was sound asleep.
When the dyke gave way, some [Page
214] distance from Jamie’s queer retreat,
there came suddenly a great rush of water among the tubs,
and some were straightway floated off. Then others a little
heavier followed, one by one; and, last of all, the heaviest,
that containing Jamie and his fortunes. The water rose
rapidly, but back here there came no waves, and the child
slept as peacefully as if at home in his crib. Little
the Captain thought, when his eyes wandered over the floating
tubs, that the one nearest to him was freighted with his
heart’s treasure! And well it was that Jamie did
not hear his shouts and wake! Had he done so, he would
have at once sprung to his feet and been tipped out into
the flood.
By this time the great tide had
reached its height. Soon it began to recede, but slowly,
for the storm kept the waters gathered, as it were, into
a heap at the head of the bay [Page 215].
All night the wind raged on, wrecking the smacks and schooners
along the coast, breaking down the dykes in a hundred
places, flooding all the marshes, and drowning many cattle
in the salt pastures. All night the Captain, hopeless
and mute in his agony of grief, lay clutching the grasses
on the dyke-top, not noticing when at length the waves
ceased to drench him with their spray. All night, too,
slept Jamie in his tub.
Right across the marsh the strange
craft drifted before the wind, never getting into the
region where the waves were violent. Such motion as there
was—and at times it was somewhat lively—seemed
only to lull the child to a sounder slumber. Toward daybreak
the tub grounded at the foot of the uplands, not far from
the edge of the road. The waters gradually slunk away,
as if ashamed of their wild vagaries. And still the child
slept on [Page 216].
As the light broke over the bay,
coldly pink and desolately gleaming, Captain Joe got up
and looked about him. His eyes were tearless, but his
face was gray and hard, and deep lines had stamped themselves
across it during the night.
Seeing that the marshes were again
uncovered, save for great shallow pools left here and
there, he set out to find the body of his boy. After wandering
aimlessly for perhaps an hour, the Captain began to study
the direction in which the wind had been blowing. This
was almost exactly with the road which led to his home
on the uplands. As he noticed this, a wave of pity crossed
his heart, at thought of the terrible anxiety his father
and mother had all that night been enduring. Then in an
instant there seemed to unroll before him the long, slow
years of the desolation of that home without Jamie.
All this time he was moving along
[Page 217] the soaked road, scanning
the marsh in every direction. When he had covered about
half the distance, he was aware of his father, hastening
with feeble eagerness to meet him.
The night of watching had made
the old man haggard, but his face lit up at sight of his
son. As he drew near, however, and saw no sign of Jamie,
and marked the look upon the Captain’s face, the
gladness died out as quickly as it had come. When the
two men met, the elder put out his hand in silence, and
the younger clasped it. There was no room for words. Side
by side the two walked slowly homeward. With restless
eyes, ever dreading lest they should find that which they
sought, the father and son looked everywhere,—except
in a certain old fish-tub which they passed. The tub stood
a little to one side of the road. Just at this time a
sparrow lit on the tub’s edge, and uttered a loud
and startled chirp [Page 218] at sight
of the sleeping child. As the bird flew off precipitately,
Jamie opened his eyes, and gazed up in astonishment at
the blue sky over his head. He stretched out his hand
and felt the rough sides of the tub. Then, in complete
bewilderment, he clambered to his feet. Why, there was
his father, walking away somewhere without him! And grand-papa,
too! Jamie felt aggrieved.
“Pap!” he cried, in
a loud but tearful voice, “where you goin’
to?”
A great wave of light seemed to
break across the landscape, as the two men turned and
saw the little golden head shining, dishevelled, over
the edge of the tub. The Captain caught his breath with
a sort of sob, and rushed to snatch the little one in
his arms; while the grandfather fell on his knees in the
road, and his trembling lips moved silently [Page
219].
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