Part 37 (1/2)
”I wouldn't say that. There's naught revealed on them matters. But I'm cruel certain that up aloft there'll be a rumpus if Peter wakes up and don't find his s.h.i.+p.”
”You may take it away; I'll have none of it,” said Jane.
So the old woman departed, but was not disposed to accept discomfiture.
She went to the undertaker.
”Mr. Matthews, I want you to put this here boat in wi' my gran'child Peter. It will go in fitty at his feet.”
”Very sorry, ma'am, but not unless I break off the bowsprit. You see the coffin is too narrow.”
”Then put'n in sideways and longways.”
”Very sorry, ma'am, but the mast is in the way. I'd be forced to break that so as to get the lid down.”
Disconcerted, the old woman retired; she would not suffer Peter's boat to be maltreated.
On the occasion of the funeral, the grandmother appeared as one of the princ.i.p.al mourners. For certain reasons, Mrs. Jane did not attend at the church and grave.
As the procession left the house, Old Betty took her place beside her son, and carried the boat in her hand. At the close of the service at the grave, she said to the s.e.xton: ”I'll trouble you, John Hext, to put this here little s.h.i.+p right o' top o' his coffin. I made'n for Peter, and Peter'll expect to have'n.” This was done, and not a step from the grave would the grandmother take till the first shovelfuls had fallen on the coffin and had partially buried the white s.h.i.+p.
When Granny Rea returned to her cottage, the fire was out. She seated herself beside the dead hearth, with hands folded and the tears coursing down her withered cheeks. Her heart was as dead and dreary as that hearth. She had now no object in life, and she murmured a prayer that the Lord might please to take her, that she might see her Peter sailing his boat in paradise.
Her prayer was interrupted by the entry of Jonas, who shouted: ”Mother, we want your help again. There's Jane took bad; wi' the worrit and the sorrow it's come on a bit earlier than she reckoned, and you're to come along as quick as you can. 'Tisn't the Lord gave and the Lord hath taken away, but topsy-turvy, the Lord hath taken away and is givin' again.”
Betty rose at once, and went to the house with her son, and again--as nine years previously--for a while she a.s.sumed the management of the house; and when a baby arrived, another boy, she managed that as well.
The reign of Betty in the house of Jonas and Jane was not for long. The mother was soon downstairs, and with her reappearance came the departure of the grandmother.
And now began once more the same old life as had been initiated nine years previously. The child carried to its grandmother, who dandled it, crooned and talked to it. Then, as it grew, it was supplied with socks and garments knitted and cut out and put together by Betty; there ensued the visits of the toddling child, and the remonstrances of the mother.
School time arrived, and with it a break in the journey to or from school at granny's house, to partake of bread and jam, hear stories, and, finally, to a.s.sist at the making of a new s.h.i.+p.
If, with increase of years, Betty's powers had begun to fail, there had been no corresponding decrease in energy of will. Her eyes were not so clear as of old, nor her hearing so acute, but her hand was not unsteady. She would this time make and rig a schooner and not a cutter.
Experience had made her more able, and she aspired to accomplish a greater task than she had previously undertaken. It was really remarkable how the old course was resumed almost in every particular.
But the new grandson was called Jonas, like his father, and Old Betty loved him, if possible, with a more intense love than had been given to the first child. He closely resembled his father, and to her it was a renewal of her life long ago, when she nursed and cared for the first Jonas. And, if possible, Jane became more jealous of the aged woman, who was drawing to her so large a portion of her child's affection. The schooner was nearly complete. It was somewhat rude, having been worked with no better tool than a penknife, and its masts being made of knitting-pins.
On the day before little Jonas's ninth birthday, Betty carried the s.h.i.+p to the painter.
”Mr. Elway,” said she, ”there be one thing I do want your help in. I cannot put the name on the vessel. I can't fas.h.i.+on the letters, and I want you to do it for me.”
”All right, ma'am. What name?”
”Well, now,” said she, ”my husband, the father of Jonas, and the grandfather of the little Jonas, he always sailed in a schooner, and the s.h.i.+p was the _Bold Venture_.”
”The _Bonaventura_, I think. I remember her.”
”I'm sure she was the _Bold Venture_.”