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"That's mighty good--"
"Why--"
"For _him_," finished the lightkeeper. "But it's your business, Heppy, not mine. Seein's we are only going to have 'bout eight thousand dollars in the bank, I presume you'd better take boarders to help out."
"Now, Tobias Ba.s.sett! it behooves us to make money while we may. We ain't gettin' any younger."
"I agree with you," said her brother. "And I don't believe we'll be wickedly overburdened with all the money you make out of this Degger feller."
For Tobias had judged fairly accurately that young man's idiosyncrasies.
There was nothing of the spendthrift about Mr. Conway Degger.
CHAPTER VIII
PHILOSOPHY AND OTHER THINGS
Tobias Ba.s.sett was a social soul and the "boarder," as he insisted upon calling the young man he had rescued from the motor-boat, was not tongue-tied. Get Degger set on a course, as Tobias termed it, relating to his own exploits, and the young fellow became more than voluble.
The lightkeeper and Miss Heppy certainly were surprised to learn that their visitor was acquainted with the Nicholets.
"You don't mean to tell me that that is the Nicholets' summer home up on that bluff? That first one yonder?" said the young man.
"That's it," replied Tobias, sitting on the bench beside the lighthouse door to smoke an after-supper pipe. "I see the storm shutters are down.
They'll be coming soon, I cal'late."
"And Miss Lorna comes here every summer? A charming girl."
Tobias looked at him fixedly.
"I don't suppose you'd be knowing Ralph Endicott? The Endicotts will occupy the house next to the Nicholets."
"The Endicotts of Amperly?"
"Them's the ones. Ralph is the one I mean. Feller 'bout your age, mebbe."
"If it is the Ralph Endicott I know," said Degger, the expression of his face changing, "he and I were at Harvard together."
"You don't say!" Tobias's eyes twinkled. The reason for the familiar sound of the boarder's name was suddenly explained. This was the "Conny Degger" Ralph had spoken of, for whose society Lorna had once shown a penchant. "I cal'late you know Ralph pretty well, then?" insinuated the lightkeeper.
"Oh, I was never chummy with Ralph Endicott," Degger observed. "He and I were scarcely in the same set." Which was strictly true. n.o.body could doubt it. Then he verged on rather thin ice: "You see, Ralph's kind are high-flyers." He dropped his voice a notch and glanced around to make sure that Miss Heppy was not within hearing. "Fellows like Ralph Endicott don't go to college altogether to study."
"I give it as my opinion," admitted Tobias, placidly smoking, "that some of 'em go mostly to learn about the breeds o' bulldogs-both pipes and canine. And they study how to play cards, and to dress as fancy as a n.i.g.g.e.r minstrel. I've seen some of that kind. But Ralph--"
"No. He did not run to those foibles, I believe. But there was a girl-well, you know how it is with some fellows, Skipper. Every pretty face attracts them, and there are plenty of girls of light ideas in every college town. Cambridge is no exception."
"Oh, sugar!" e.j.a.c.u.l.a.t.ed the lightkeeper. "I wouldn't think it of Ralph."
"Sly boy!" chuckled Conny Degger grinning. "Guess his folks never knew much about it. They are straight-laced, I fancy. But he was seen a good deal with Cora Devine-and she was not all she should be."
"Oh, sugar!" exclaimed Tobias again. "Maybe 'twas only a boy and girl flirtation."
"_She_ was no innocent kid. Believe me, Skipper, that Devine girl knew her way about. Why, I was told she'd been trooping with a burlesque show. Ralph Endicott made a perfect jack of himself over her. It was even rumored that they ran off and were married once when he was half-stewed."
Tobias jumped on the bench and uttered a startled exclamation.
"What is the matter, Skipper?"
"Must o' been one of them pesky sandfleas," muttered the lightkeeper.
"Wal, go on with your tale o' crime."
"Ha! Ha! No crime about it. Just Endicott's foolishness. If he did marry her, I'm sorry for him. She'll be bobbing up to confront him later. Such girls always do. They are expensive tr.i.m.m.i.n.gs to a fellow's college career."
"I cal'late," agreed Tobias, more calmly.
But later he sounded Heppy on a topic which he had not touched upon since back in the late winter when Lorna and Ralph had been stormbound at the light.
"Didn't Lorny say something to you about Ralph paying 'tentions to some gal at college? Wasn't she some worked up about it?"
"For love's sake, Tobias, she never spoke as though she'd feel jealous any if Ralph Endicott had forty girls! I should say not! She did mention that Ralph had some love affair when he was at school. But she called it puppy love," concluded Miss Heppy, with a sniff.
"Humph! Sort o' scorned it, did she? It didn't seem to worry her none?"
"Worry her? I should say not! But I guess 'twas only gossip at that.
I don't believe Ralph Endicott is the sort of a boy to play fast and loose with any girl."
"Does seem as though we feel about alike on that score, Heppy,"
reflected her brother. "Ralph, it strikes me, is purt' sound timber.
But I wonder, now, where Lorna Nicholet got her information about Ralph's chasing around after that chorus gal? Does seem as though such a story _might_ be one o' the things that makes Lorna so determined to cut Ralph adrift. Oh, sugar!"
But these final reflections of the lightkeeper were inaudible. He had by no means lost interest in his matchmaking intrigue regarding the two young people who he was convinced were "jest about made for each other."
His scheme-if scheme he had-had been in abeyance all these weeks. Now that the families of the young people were about to take up their residence on the Clay Head, he proposed to enter upon a more active campaign for what he believed to be the happiness of all concerned.
Not alone was Miss Heppy aware of the long-past bond of affection between Miss Ida Nicholet and Ralph's Uncle Henry. Tobias Ba.s.sett had been just as observant as his sister-or anybody else.
Like others, he had wondered twenty years before why the then young Professor Endicott had not pursued with more vigor the charming, if independent, Ida Nicholet, and made her his bride. _There_ was a romance nipped in the bud which Tobias always felt he might have mended-"if he'd put his mind to it."
In any case he determined not to see the s.h.i.+p of Ralph and Lorna's happiness cast on the rocks if he could help it. He felt that it might be within his power to avert such disaster. The strategic yeast of the true matchmaker began to stir within him.
"Miss Ida," as everybody called Lorna's a.s.sertive aunt, could not be long in any place without making her presence felt. Her original and independent character never failed to make its impress upon all domestic, as well as other, affairs. The Nicholet menage was run like clockwork. Miss Ida was the clock. Everything at the big house on Clay Head was soon working smoothly, and Miss Ida could look about.
She was a tall, free-striding, graceful woman without a gray thread in her abundant dark hair. She piled that hair low at the back of her head, and her neck and throat were like milk, and flawless.
When she came across the barrens under her rose-tinted parasol to see Miss Heppy at the Light, her plain morning dress was arranged as carefully as a ball gown would be on another woman. In addition, her pleasant eyes and round, firm chin, together with her Junoesque figure, made her appearance most attractive.