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<h2> CHAPTER VIII.—COURAGE DOES IT. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">R</span>eally, I believe
it's nicer than being on the boat.”</p>
<p>“Yes,” responded Sylvia, with a supreme faith in any assertion that
Courage might choose to make; “but why?”</p>
<p>“Because we have the fun of living out on the water, and Miss Julia
besides.”</p>
<p>“Oh, yes, to be sure!” half ashamed to have ventured so obvious a
question.</p>
<p>Miss Julia besides! No one could imagine what those three little words
meant to Courage. It was a delight in itself simply to waken in the
morning, and know that before night Miss Julia would probably come riding
over on her beautiful “Rex” or driving the gray ponies, or if not to-day,
then to-morrow. Whenever she came she would stop for a chat, and more
likely than not bring with her some little gift from the wonderful place
on the Rumson—a plant from the greenhouse, a golden roll of
delicious butter, or just a beautiful flower or two that her own hands had
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<p>And so the summer was crowned for Courage by the happy accident of
nearness to Miss Julia, and the only sad moments were when, now and then,
a great longing for her father surged over her, or when the realization of
Larry's ever-increasing blindness pressed heavily down upon even her
buoyant spirit.</p>
<p>As for life on the draw, the days slipped by as uneventfully as on the
lighter, though no doubt they were more monotonous. There were no morning
trips through the busy streets to market (David had all their supplies
sent over from Red Bank), and nothing, of course, of the ever-changing
life of the harbor; but the children were more than contented. Sylvia was
never so happy as when at work, and somehow or other there always seemed
to be plenty of work for the little black hands to do. But, it must be
confessed, there were times when Courage did find the days rather dull—times
when she did not feel quite like reading or studying, and when she could
think of nothing that needed to be done. There was one recreation,
however, that always served to add a zest to the quietest sort of a day.
Every clear afternoon, somewhere between four and six o'clock, she would
don the pretty blue hat, and when it was anywise cool enough the blue
coat, too—for she loved to wear it—and then go out and perch
herself safely somewhere on the top of the bridge rail and with her back
to the sun, should he happen to be shining. Then in a little while some of
her friends, out for their afternoon drive, would be pretty sure to come
crossing the bridge, and though possibly lacking the time to stop for a
chat, would at least exchange a few cheery words as they perforce walked
their horses over the draw. I say some of her friends, for already there
were many of them, for people could hardly escape noticing the pretty
little house and the kind-faced, halfblind old man sitting in the
door-way, or failing these, the little girl in the handsome blue coat and
hat. Some had either guessed or found out the meaning of the black bow on
the sleeve, and ever afterward seemed to regard her with an interest close
bordering on downright affection. Indeed, in one way and another, the
household on the draw became known far and wide, and strangers sometimes
driving that way for no other reason than to see the beautiful little girl
with the remarkable name, were disappointed enough if they did not chance
to come across her; but of this far-reaching notoriety Courage fortunately
never so much as dreamed.</p>
<p>And so the days fared on much as I have described until there came an
evening when something happened. It was an evening early in October, and
our little party sitting down to their six o'clock supper were every one
in a particularly happy frame of mind. The sun had gone down in a blaze of
gold and crimson, and the river, which is wide enough below the bridge to
be dignified as a bay, lay like a mirror reflecting the marvellous color.
Later, when the twilight was fusing all the varying shades into a fleecy,
wondrously tinted gray; a brisk little breeze strode up from the west, and
instantly the water rose in myriad tiny waves to meet it, and each wave
donned a “white-cap,” as in honor of its coming.</p>
<p>Low down on the horizon the veriest thread of a new moon was paying court
to the evening star, that was also near its setting, but both still shone
out with more than common brilliancy through the early evening air. Here,
then, was one cause for the generally happy feeling, and another, no
doubt, lay in the all-pervading cheeriness of the little home. Humble and
small it was, to be sure, but there was comfort, and plenty of it, on
every side—comfort in the mere sight of the daintily set table;
comfort of a very substantial kind in the contents of the shining teapot,
in the scrambled eggs sizzling away in a chafing-dish, which Sylvia had
cleverly concocted, and, above all, in the aroma, as well as in the taste,
of the deliciously browned toast. People who chanced to come driving over
glanced in at the cosey, lamp-lighted table, caught a whiff of the savory
odors, and then the moment they were off the draw urged on their horses in
elusive hope of finding something as inviting at home. During the progress
of the meal, and while Sylvia, who was an inimitable little mimic, was
giving a lisping impersonation of one of the teachers at the Asylum, a
carriage rolled rapidly by, and some one called, “Hello there, Courage!”
Quickly recognizing the voice, Courage rushed out-of-doors, almost
upsetting the table in her eagerness, but even then Miss Julia was a long
way past, having actually trotted her ponies right over the draw itself in
most unprecedented fashion. This was a grave offence in David's eyes, and
Courage, retaking her seat at the table, wondered what he would have to
say about it.</p>
<p>“Miss Julia must have been in a great hurry,” she ventured.</p>
<p>“Yes, a ten-dollar hurry,” growled David.</p>
<p>“Oh, you won't fine her!” Courage exclaimed, alarmed at the mere thought
of anything so ungracious; “she just couldn't have been thinking.”</p>
<p>“Well, then, we'll just teach her how to think;” but Sylvia, quite sure
that she detected a lack of determination in David's tone, said
complacently, “Neber you fear, Miss Courage. Mr. David don' sure nuff mean
what he sez, I reckon,” whereupon Mr. David shook his head, as much as to
say, “Well, he rather guessed he did,” but Courage saw with relief that
there really was nothing to fear. After supper Larry and David took a turn
on the bridge while the table was being cleared, and then coming back to
the little living-room, Courage read aloud for an hour from one of Sylvia
Sylvester's namesake books. It chanced to be the incomparable story of
“Alice in Wonderland,” and David and Larry were as charmed as the little
folk themselves. At nine o'clock the book was laid away and Larry went
directly to bed. Courage and Sylvia hurried into coats and hats for a run
in the bracing night air, and David, stopping first to light his pipe,
followed them out onto the bridge. All three found to their surprise that
the sky had grown suddenly lowering and overcast, while the breeze of the
twilight was fast stiffening to a vigorous west wind.</p>
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<p>“We're in for a blow, I'm thinkin',” said David, looking down-river, with
the children standing beside him, “and, bless me! there isn't a star to be
seen. Who'd a-thought it after that sunset.”</p>
<p>Courage, seeing something in the distance, paid no attention to this last
remark. “Mr. David, what's that?” she exclaimed, pointing in the direction
in which she had been gazing.</p>
<p>“Sure it looks like a sail, Courage. Can it be that they're wantin' to get
through, I wonder? What's a boat out for this time o' night, anyhow?” Then
for several minutes all was silent.</p>
<p>“Listen,” said Sylvia at last; “doesn't that sound like rowing?”</p>
<p>“Yes it do,” said David, after listening intently, his hand to his ear. “I
thought it didn't 'pear just like a sail-boat; howsomever, there's a white
thing dangling to it that looks—” but here David was interrupted by
a coarse voice calling out, “Hello there! Open the draw, will you?”</p>
<p>“Hello there!” David answered; “but what'll I open it for? Ye're rowin',
aren't ye?”</p>
<p>“Yes, we're rowing to gain time, but there's a sail to the boat as plain
as daylight, isn't there? Now hurry, man alive, and do as you're told;
we've sprung aleak.”</p>
<p>“Sprung aleak! Then ye're fools not to make straight for the shore,”
reasoned David.</p>
<p>“That's our lookout; but for land's sake! open the draw, instead of
standing there talking all night,” and David, realizing that there may be
danger for the men in longer parleying, puts his hand to the lever,
hurriedly dispatching the children to close the gates at either end; and
away they fly, eager to render a service often required of them when there
was need for special expedition. Indeed, one can but wonder how David
sometimes managed when alone, and a boat tacking against the wind had need
to make the draw at precisely the right moment.</p>
<p>But to-night it happens that he is in too great haste, and while yet
several yards from the gate, Courage, with horror, feels the draw
beginning to move under her. “Wait,” she calls back to David, but her
voice is weak with fear, and her feet seemed weighted. Oh, if she cannot
reach the end in time to make the main bridge and close the gate, and some
one should come driving on in the darkness, never seeing that the draw was
open! At last she is at the edge, but only the tenth of a second more and
it will be too late to jump. Shall she try it? It will be taking a
dreadful risk. She may land right against the rail, be thrown back into
the water, and no one know in time to hasten to her rescue. She hesitates.
<i>No</i>—and then <i>yes</i>, for an instantly deciding thought has
come to her.</p>
<p>The draw swings clear of the bridge. The men in the boat, grumbling at
everything, paddled clumsily through, while over the other gate, reached
barely in time, Sylvia hangs breathless and trembling. At the same moment
with Courage, she, too, felt the draw begin to move, but luckily chanced
to be nearer her goal. Meanwhile, where is Courage? Not in the water,
thank God, but prone upon the bridge above it, lying just where she fell
when, as she jumped, the rail of the draw struck her feet and threw her
roughly down upon it. She feels terribly jarred and bruised, and tries in
vain to lift herself up. But, hark! is that the sound of horses on the
road? Yes, surely, and they are coming nearer; and now they are on the
bridge, and the gate—the gate is open. With one superhuman effort
she struggles to her feet, reaches out for it, and swings it to. Then,
leaning heavily against the rail, she utters one shrill, inarticulate
scream. There is another scream almost as shrill in answer, and instantly
a pair of ponies, brought to an alarmingly sudden standstill, rear high in
the air beside her, and Courage, unable to stand another moment, drops in
a limp little heap to the flooring.</p>
<p>“My darling, darling Courage!” whispers some one close bending above her.</p>
<p>“<i>Dear</i> Miss Julia,” and a little hand all of a tremble gropes for
Miss Julia's face in the darkness.</p>
<p>The draw swings back into place, and Sylvia is on it in a flash.</p>
<p>“Oh, you didn't gib us 'nough time,” she cries accusingly to David as she
flies past. David instantly divines her meaning, for they both know
Courage well enough to fear she may have run some terrible danger, and
seizing the lantern, hanging midway in the draw, David follows Sylvia as
fast as tottering limbs will carry him. What a sickening sensation sweeps
over him as the horses loom up in the darkness and he sees a group of
people crowding about something hung on the bridge!</p>
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<p>“She isn't deaded! she isn't deaded!” Sylvia joyfully calls out, and that
moment the light from the lantern falls athwart a prostrate little figure
in the midst of the group.</p>
<p>“I think I can get up now” are the words that meet David's ear, and an
answering “God be praised!” escapes from his quivering lips. Then some one
turns the heads of the quieted horses, and two ladies, one on either side
of Courage, help her back to the house. Larry, who has heard the
commotion, succeeds in getting dressed and out to the door just as the
little party reach it. He starts alarmed and surprised at the sight of
Courage, but fortunately is too blind to see the alarming stains of blood
on her little white face, but the moment they enter the light the others
are quick to see them. Courage is lifted into David's big rocker, and
Larry, groping into his own room, brings a pillow for her back; Sylvia
disappears and returns in a trice with a towel and a basin of water; Miss
Julia, with shaking hands, measures something into a glass; the other
lady, with a little help from Courage, removes the dust-begrimed coat, and
then lays it very tenderly over a chair. And now the color begins to surge
back into the little pale face. The cut under the curls, which is not
severe enough to need a surgeon, is tightly bound, and then at last they
all sit down to get their breath for a moment. The horses, which of course
were none other than Miss Julia's gray ponies, are secured to a rail
outside, and David brings a strange gentleman into the room.</p>
<p>“This is my brother, Courage,” says Miss Julia—“he has often heard
me speak of you—and this lady is his wife.”</p>
<p>Courage smiles in acknowledgment of the introduction, for, indeed, she
does not feel equal to talking yet, and so keeps perfectly quiet,
listening to all the others—to David's reiterated self-accusations
for forgetting, in his haste, to make sure that the children were clear of
the draw; to Sylvia's excited account of the way she had “jes' ter
scrabble” to get over in time; to Miss Julia's explanation of how they had
set out at that late hour, and on a sudden impulse, to pay a call down at
Elberon, and of how, in her eagerness to spend as little time as possible
on the road, she had forgotten to walk the ponies over the draw; and then
to her description of her terror when the scream smote her ears, and she
reined in her ponies so suddenly as to almost throw them over backward;
until, at last, Courage herself feels inclined to put in a little word of
her own.</p>
<p>“And you didn't hear me call at all, Mr. David?” she asked in a low little
voice.</p>
<p>“Never a word, darling—never a word. Oh, it's dreadful to think what
might ha' happened, and I so careless!”</p>
<p>“It's all right now though, Mr. David,” Courage said comfortingly, “but it
was terrible to have to jump at the last moment like that. I thought I
couldn't at first, that no team would be likely to come over so late, and
then—oh, it's wonderful how many things you can think just in a
moment—I remembered that Miss Julia was over the draw, and I felt I
must try to do it,” and Courage looked toward Miss Julia with eyes that
said, “There is nothing in the world I would not try to do for you,” and
then what did Miss Julia herself do but break right down and cry.</p>
<p>“Oh, why are you crying?” asked Courage, greatly troubled.</p>
<p>“Because I cannot help it, Courage. It was so brave to risk so much, and
all for my sake, too.”</p>
<p>“But I was not really brave, Miss Julia. You see”—and as though
fully convinced of the logic of her position—“I think I was not
going to do it at all till I remembered about you. And if I hadn't, and
even if no one had happened to come on the bridge, I should have been
ashamed of it always every time any one called me Courage.”</p>
<p>“And so you are not going to take the least credit to yourself,” said Mr.
Everett, Miss Julia's brother. “Well, you certainly are a most unheard-of
little personage.”</p>
<p>Courage was not at all sure whether this was complimentary or otherwise,
but no matter. She had not much thought or heed for anything beyond the
fact that Miss Julia was crying, and she very much wished she wouldn't.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, Miss Julia's sister sat thinking her own thoughts with a sad,
far-away look in her eyes. She knew that little blue coat so well, and
this was not the first time she had come across it since, months before,
she had sent it away, expecting never to see it again.</p>
<p>“Courage,” she asked at last in what seemed an opportune moment, “were you
not on a lighter that was run into by the St. Johns a few weeks ago?”</p>
<p>“Why, yes,” answered Courage, surprised; “and were you the lady and the
gentleman?” (glancing toward Mr. Everett).</p>
<p>“Yes; we wanted to learn your name, but you and Sylvia here both answered
at once, so we could not make it out.”</p>
<p>“But why did you want to know?”</p>
<p>“Because I thought I recognized the little blue coat you had on, and now
that I have seen you again, I feel sure of it. I think it must have been
given to you by Miss Julia.”</p>
<p>“Why, yes,” said Courage; “and did you know the little girl it used to
belong to?”</p>
<p>“It belonged to my own little girl, Courage.”</p>
<p>“To your little girl? Oh, I would love to have seen her wear it, it's such
a beautiful coat! Did she mind having it given away?”</p>
<p>“Courage,” said Miss Julia sadly, “little Belle died last winter, and so
there was no longer any need for it.”</p>
<p>“Oh, dat's how it was,” said practical Sylvia, who had listened
attentively to every word. “We've spec'lated of 'en an' over—ain't
we, Miss Courage?—why a jes-as-good-as-new coat was eber gib away.”</p>
<p>“Hush, Sylvia!” whispered Courage, feeling instinctively that this
commonplace remark was untimely; and then by grace of the same beautiful
intuition she asked gently, “Did it make you feel very badly to see your
little Belle's coat on a strange little girl?”</p>
<p>“It almost frightened me. Courage, for Belle had auburn curls, too, and
you seemed so like her as you stood there. Then, after a moment, when I
had had time to think, I felt pretty sure it must be Belle's own coat that
I saw.”</p>
<p>“I am sorry that I happened to have it on,” said Courage; “I would not
like to have seen anything of my papa's on anybody else.”</p>
<p>“And so I thought,” said Mrs. Everett, wondering that a child should so
apparently understand every phase of a great sorrow, “but I find I was
mistaken,” and Mrs. Everett, moving her chair close beside Courage, took
her little brown hand in hers, as she added: “More than once since that
evening it has been on my lips to ask Miss Julia if she knew who was the
owner of Belle's coat.”</p>
<p>“And more than once,” said Miss Julia, “it has been on my lips to tell
without your asking, and then I feared only to start for you some train of
sad thoughts.” Miss Julia by this time had gotten the best of her tears,
and stood behind Courage affectionately stroking the beautiful wavy hair,
for both she and Mrs. Everett were longing to give expression to the
overpowering sense of gratitude welling up within them.</p>
<p>“Do you know what the black bow is for?” Courage asked of Mrs. Everett.</p>
<p>“I thought it was mourning for some one, perhaps.”</p>
<p>“Yes; it is mourning for my papa. A little girl told me I ought to wear
all black clothes, but Miss Julia thought not; only she just tied this bow
on for me the last day of sewing-school, because I wanted to have
something that would tell that I was very lonely without him. Soldiers
wear mourning like that, you know.”</p>
<p>All this while Larry had sat quietly on one side, his dimmed eyes resting
proudly on Courage; but now he had something to say on his own account.</p>
<p>“It was all my fault, sir,” he began abruptly, addressing Mr. Everett—“that
accident on the bay a few weeks back. I was losing my sight, and was just
going to give up my life on the water when I found that Hugh Masterson had
died, and that Courage there had set her heart on spending the summer with
me on the boat. And so I tried for her sake to hold on a while longer, but
it wa'nt no use, and I'd like to made an end to us all that evening. I
wish sometime when ye're aboard the St. Johns ye'd have a word with the
captain, and tell him how it all happened, and that Larry Starr has not
touched a drop of liquor these twenty years; he thought I was drunk, you
know, and no wonder.”</p>
<p>“Indeed I will, Larry, and only too gladly,” Mr. Everett promised, drawing
closer to Larry's side, that they might talk further about it.</p>
<p>Not long after this Miss Julia made a move to go, not, however, you may be
sure, until she had seen Courage tucked away in her own bed, and dropping
off into the soundest sort of a sleep the moment her tired little head
touched the pillow. But before Miss Julia actually gave the reins to her
ponies for the homeward drive there was a vigorous hand-shaking on all
sides, for the exciting experiences of the last hour had made them all
feel very near to each other.</p>
<p>“Well, Julia, we must do something for that precious child,” said Mrs.
Everett as soon as the ponies struck the dirt road, and it was less of an
effort to speak than when their hoofs were clattering noisily on the
bridge.</p>
<p>“And what had it best be?” asked Miss Julia, and yet with her own mind
quite made up on the subject.</p>
<p>“Nothing less than to have her make her home with us always.”</p>
<p>“Nothing less,” said Miss Julia earnestly.</p>
<p>“Bless her brave heart! nothing less,” chimed in Mr. Everett; “but what
will become of poor Larry?”</p>
<p>True enough! what would become of poor Larry? and would it be right to ask
him to make such a sacrifice? It was not necessary, however, to discuss
all the details of the beautiful plan just then, and even Mr. Everett, who
had raised the question, had faith to believe that somehow or other
everything could be satisfactorily arranged. For the remainder of the
drive home not a word was spoken. People who have just been face to face
with a great peril, and realize it, are likely to find thoughts in their
hearts quite too deep for utterance and too solemn.</p>
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