As for his evenings, his grandfather took
possession of them. Benjamin Wright's proposal that the young man
should go away for a while, had fallen flat; Sam replying, frankly,
that he did not care to leave Old Chester. As Mr. Wright was not
prepared to give any reasons for urging his plan, he dropped it; and
instead on Sunday nights detained his grandson to listen to this or
that drama or poem until the boy could hardly hide his impatience.
When he was free and could hurry down the hill road, as often as not
the lights were out in the Stuffed Animal House, and he could only
linger at the gate and wonder which was her window. But when he did
find her, he had an evening of passionate delight, even though
occasionally she snubbed him, lazily.
"Do you go out in your skiff much?" she asked once; and when he
answered, "No; I filled it with stones and sunk it, because you didn't
like rowing," she spoke to him with a sharpness that surprised
herself, though it produced no effect whatever on Sam.
"You are a very foolish boy! What difference does it make whether I
like rowing or not?"
Sam smiled placidly, and said he had had hard work to get stones
enough to fill the skiff. "I put them in," he explained, "and then I
sculled out in mid-stream, and scuttled her. I had to swim ashore. It
was night, and the water was like flowing ink, and there was a star in
every ripple," he ended dreamily.
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