Part 56 (2/2)

He thought of course that it was Judah returning. He could not imagine why he should return, but it was more impossible to imagine any one else being out and coming to the Minot place on such a night. A figure, bent to the storm, pa.s.sed across the light from the window. Captain Kendrick dropped the shade and strode through the little entry to the back door. He threw it open.

”Come in, Judah,” he ordered. ”Come in quick, before we both drown.”

But the man who came in was not Judah Cahoon. He was George Kent.

CHAPTER XVI

The young man plunged across the threshold, the skirts of his dripping overcoat flapping about his knees and the water pouring from the brim of his hat. He carried the ruin of what had been an umbrella in his hand.

It had been blown inside out, and was now but a crumpled tangle of wet fabric and bent and bristling wire. He stumbled over the sill, halted, and turning, addressed the man who had opened the door.

”Cap'n,” he stammered, breathlessly, ”I--I--I've come to see you. I--I know you must think--I don't know what you can think--but--but----”

Kendrick interrupted. He was surprised, but he did not permit his astonishment to loosen his grip on realities.

”Go in the other room,” he ordered. ”In the kitchen there by the fire.

I'll be with you soon as I shut this door. Go on. Don't wait!”

Kent did not seem to hear him.

”Cap'n,” he began, again, ”I----”

”Do as I tell you. Go in there by the stove.”

He seized his visitor by the shoulder and pushed him out of the entry.

Then he closed and fastened the outer door. This was a matter of main strength, for the gale was fighting mad. When the latch clicked and the hook dropped into the staple he, too, entered the kitchen. Kent had obeyed orders to the extent of going over to the stove, but he had not removed his hat or coat and seemed to be quite oblivious of them or the fire or anything except the words he was trying to utter.

”Cap'n Kendrick,” he began again, ”I----”

”Sshh! Hus.h.!.+ Take off your things. Man alive, you're sheddin' water like a whistlin' buoy. Give me that coat. And that umbrella, what there is left of it. That's the ticket. Now sit down in that rocker and put your feet up on the hearth.... Whew! Are you wet through?”

”No. No, I guess not. I----”

”Haven't got a chill, have you? Can't I get you somethin' hot to drink?

Judah generally has a bottle of some sort of life-saver hid around in the locker somewhere. A hot toddy now?... Eh? Well, all right, all right. No, don't talk yet. Get warm first.”

Kent refused the hot toddy and would have persisted in talking at once if his host had permitted. The latter refused to listen, and so the young man sat silent in the rocking chair, his soaked trouser legs and boots steaming in the heat from the open door of the oven, while the captain bustled about, hanging the wet overcoat on a nail in the corner, tossing the wrecked umbrella behind the stove and pretending not to look at his caller.

He did look, however, and what he saw was interesting certainly and might have been alarming had he been a person easily frightened or unduly apprehensive. Kent's wet cheeks had dried and they were flushed now from the warmth, but they were haggard, his eyes were underscored with dark semicircles, and his hands as he held them over the red-hot stove lids were trembling. He looked almost as if he were sick, but a sick man would scarcely be out of doors in such a storm. He had, apparently, forgotten his desire to talk, and was now silent, his gaze fixed upon the wall behind the stove.

Kendrick quietly placed a chair beside him and sat down.

”Well, George?” he asked.

Kent started. ”Oh!” he exclaimed. And then, ”Oh, yes! Cap'n Kendrick, I--I know you must think my coming here is queer, after--after----”

He hesitated. The captain helped him on.

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