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Read books online » Fiction » Laughing Last by Jane Abbott (fun to read .TXT) 📖

Book online «Laughing Last by Jane Abbott (fun to read .TXT) đŸ“–Â». Author Jane Abbott



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doesn’t matter what one’s like on the outside!” Now Sidney floundered for the second time in one day under the pressure of her own thoughts. “I mean—Lav can do anything he wants to do, anyway. And he’s working hard reading and studying and some day, after awhile, he’ll go away somewhere and study more—”

“Sidney Romley, you’re crazy!” cried Aunt Achsa, in a quavering voice. “Go away! How can he go away when we ain’t even the money to go ’sfar as Orleans. And he ain’t plannin’ to go on anyone’s charity!”

“Oh, I don’t mean he’s going away soon! I shouldn’t have told anyway for Lav told me as a secret. But I thought maybe it would make you happier knowing he had great ambitions. And he’ll tell you sometime himself.”

When Aunt Achsa spoke it was in a thin, grieved voice.

“It’s what I didn’t want him to ever take into his head. Goin’ off somewhere—alone. For I’m too old to go with him and he’ll need me!”

“Oh I wouldn’t have told you if I’d thought it would make you unhappy. He won’t go for a long time, Aunt Achsa. And when he does he’ll come back real often.”

Now Aunt Achsa sat so still that Sidney thought she had consoled her. But Aunt Achsa was facing in her own way this at which Sidney had hinted, drawing for it from that courage of hers that had not yet been exhausted. Well, if it was best for Lavender some day to go away she’d send him away with a smile even though the heart that had taken him, a wee baby, from the dying mother did burst with loneliness. Besides, even if Lavender went away she could go on praying to the Lord to keep him “happy”—no distance could keep her from doing that!

“It’s like as not his plans in his head that’s makin’ him act so quiet like and short-spoken. And last night he didn’t sleep in his bed at all!”

“Why, Aunt Achsa, where was he?” gasped Sidney, really startled.

“I don’t know, dearie. He used to take to spells like that when he was little. But lately he’s got over them. I followed him once and I found him out in the sand dunes lying flat on his face cryin’ awful—out loud and beatin’ his arms. I let him be. I stole home and I never let on I knew. When he came back all white lookin’ I had a nice cake ready—roll jell, his favorite.”

“Do—do you think he was out in the sand dunes—last night?”

“I don’t know. He come in about nine o’clock, awful quiet and I didn’t ask him anything, but I just set his breakfast before him as though the morning wa’n’t half over. And then he went off again and I ain’t seen him sense. I thought mebbe it was these folks of Mr. Dugald’s—”

“What do you mean, Aunt Achsa?” But Sidney knew what she meant.

“Like as not Lav’s plain jealous. Mr. Dugald hasn’t had any time for anything but toting this Pola round everywhere and Lav notices it. He hasn’t any right to be jealous as I can see for Miss Pola is Mr. Dugald’s own cousin, but Lav thinks the sun rises and sets in Mr. Dugald. And like as not he misses you—”

“I’ve missed Lav dreadfully. I didn’t know how much I missed him and Mart until today when it came over me suddenly that the things I was doing with Pola weren’t really much fun—just at first they were because they were different. I’m afraid, Aunt Achsa, that I love different things! But tomorrow I am going to play all day long with Lav and Mart, see if I don’t. I can’t wait for tomorrow to come!”

CHAPTER XVIII
 
“HOOK!”

Sidney found it a little difficult to take up the fun with her erstwhile chums where she had left off. When she stopped at the Calkins’ house directly after breakfast, Mart coolly declined to go anywhere with her, and smiled scornfully at her bare legs.

“I s’pose your million-dollar friend is otherwise engaged today!”

Sidney truthfully admitted that she was. “She’s gone to Chatham with her mother to see some people they know. And I’m glad. I’ve been just dying for a good swim. Let’s go out to the Arabella this morning.”

But Mart declared she was tired of all that. In fact she was tired of doing lots of the silly things they’d been doing. She’d promised Gert Bartow to go there right after lunch.

Sidney had no choice but to go on alone in search of Lav. She was discouraged to the point of tears. Yet she knew in her heart that she deserved Mart’s coldness. She remembered how she had felt once when Nancy had deserted her for a new girl at Miss Downs’. And it had seriously threatened their friendship.

As she wandered slowly toward the town Sidney wondered what Mart and Gert Bartow were going to do. Gert Bartow was a girl of nineteen at least, and much more grown up than even that. Mart had pointed her out to Sidney. Sidney wished Mart had asked her to go with her to Gert’s. She felt very lonely.

Perhaps she had spoiled everything. Pola would come back, of course, but, somehow, Pola’s glamour had faded. After all, what, besides tons of candy and quarts of sweet mixtures and much glitter, had there been to it? The sweets and the glitter and Pola’s endless confidences of “men” had left Sidney jaded and bored, though she did not know it; she did know that she was suddenly lonely for Mart and Lav and the stimulating pastimes they seemed to find always right at hand.

As she approached Rockman’s, wandering there from force of habit, she saw Lav pushing off in a dory. She ran down the wharf, hailing him.

“Oh, Lav, take me with you!” she pleaded, breathlessly.

He hesitated a moment before he swung the dory back to the wharf. Something of the look Mart had given her flashed into his eyes.

Then: “Come on if y’want to,” he answered ungraciously.

As she sat down in the bow of the boat Sidney wanted to cry more than anything else, but Lav’s dark face suddenly reminded her of what Aunt Achsa had told her. Perhaps he had been out in the sand dunes last night, lying on his face, sobbing aloud! She began chattering with resolute cheerfulness.

“Isn’t it hot this morning, Lav? Where are you going?” Lav answered shortly that he was going out to the Arabella. Sidney noticed a book in his pocket, but said nothing. She ventured other remarks concerning the activities in the bay to which Lavender answered in monosyllables, if at all.

“Oh, look, the Puritan’s in, Lav!” And even to this Lavender only grunted: “It’s been in two days!”

By the time they reached the Arabella Sidney’s remorse was yielding to a spark of indignation. Lav needn’t be quite so mad for, after all, it had been his own precious Mr. Dugald who had thrown her and Pola so constantly together! And if Lav had not hidden himself away he most certainly would have been included in all the plans. It was not fair in Lav to act so cross.

“I know you came out to read, Lav, and I’ve some thinking to do, so I’m going up in the bow and leave you quite to yourself,” Sidney said as they boarded the Arabella, and if in her tone there was something of Mart’s tartness, it may be forgiven for Sidney had been punished enough.

“I don’t care if you hang ’round,” Lav conceded. “It’s too hot to read, anyways. I thought maybe there’d be a breeze out here. What’s that?” For he had suddenly spied an object lying on the deck close to the rail as though it had dropped there from someone’s pocket.

At almost the same moment Sidney spied it, too. Both darted for it. Lavender reached it first and picked it up and examined it with frowning eyes.

“It’s a knife!” cried Sidney, at his elbow.

“Sure it’s a knife. Anybody can see that. What I want to know—”

“Let me look at it. Isn’t it Mr. Dugald’s?”

“No, it isn’t Mr. Dugald’s. He hasn’t been out here for a week. And that knife wasn’t here yesterday for I’d a’ seen it.”

“Let me look at it, Lav,” pleaded Sidney, for Lav, a curious expression on his face, had covered the knife with his hand.

“It’s funny, that’s all I got to say. I mean—how it come here.”

“Lavender Green, show me that knife this minute! You act so mysterious and I have a right to know why.”

Slowly Lavender placed the knife in Sidney’s eager hands. It was an ordinary case knife such as the fishermen carried, but Lavender pointed to two initials that had been carved on the case.

“J.S.”

“J.S.” repeated Sidney; then she cried: “Why—J.S.! That’s Jed Starrow!”

“Sure it’s Jed Starrow!”

“But how did it get on the Arabella?”

“That’s what I’d like to know.”

“He’s been on the Arabella, Lav!”

“Or someone of his gang.”

“Isn’t that funny? What would he come here for?”

Lavender was silent. And Sidney, staring at him as though to read from his face some explanation, suddenly fell silent, too. The secret that Cap’n Davies had laid upon her weighed heavily. She wished she could tell.

“Sid, I haven’t played square,” Lavender suddenly blurted out, flushing. “We promised to tell one another if any one of us found out anything and I did—and I didn’t tell!”

Lavender’s admission faded beside the fact that he knew something.

“Oh, what?” Sidney cried.

“I wasn’t going to tell you. I thought you didn’t care anything about the pirates any more. And the laugh’s sort o’ on me, anyway, because I thought we were all crazy to suspect Jed Starrow.”

“Tell me quick, Lav,” commanded Sidney, quivering with excitement.

Lav leaned against the rail. To tell his story meant confessing his state of mind.

“I guess I’ve been sore because you and Mr. Dugald fooled ’round with those new folks. Jealous. I get that way lots of times—all hot inside because I’m different. And I go off somewhere alone and stay there until I fight it down.”

“I know, Lav. Aunt Achsa told me. Did you go to the dunes?”

“One night I did. Stayed there all night. But one evening I went out on the breakwall. There’s a place out there where the rocks are piled so’s to make a cave. I used to play there a lot when I was a little kid. I crawled into it. And I hadn’t been there very long when I heard somebody talking—two men. They were up close so’s I heard everything they said.”

“And what did they say, Lav? Oh, tell me quick!”

“I could only get scraps of it. I didn’t dare look, I didn’t dare move. But one fellow called the other Jed. I heard ’em say something about ‘risk’ and a ‘stranger from Boston asking too many questions ’round Rockman’s to be healthy,’ and Jed Starrow—I’m dead sure it was his voice—said, sort of blustering like, ‘Let them search the Puritan! They won’t find anything on her now!’ And the other fellow answered him: ‘There’s too much in this, Jed, to take any chances.’ That’s what they said, Sid, and then they went on.”

“Oh, Lav, they’re pirates!”

“Well, not exactly pirates, but they’re up to something that’s sure. Maybe they’re rum-runners. There’s a lot of that going on. I thought you were crazy, but I guess you weren’t.”

Sidney’s lips trembled with eagerness. As long as Lavender knew what he knew she felt that she would be justified in telling him what Cap’n Davies had told her.

“It isn’t rum—Lav,” she whispered, “It’s diamonds!”

“Diamonds! Oh,

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