As Ruby entered, the stranger broke off an
earnest conversation he was holding with the farmer, and stood up to
greet her. The rose lay on her plate.
"Who has robbed my rose-bush?" she asked.
"I am guilty," he answered: "I stole it to give it back; and, not being
mine, 'twas the harder to part with."
"To my mind," broke in Farmer Tresidder, with his mouth full of ham,
"the best part o' the feast be the over-plush. Squab pie, muggetty pie,
conger pie, sweet giblet pie--such a whack of pies do try a man, to be
sure. Likewise junkets an' heavy cake be a responsibility, for if not
eaten quick, they perish. But let it be mine to pass my days with a
cheek o' pork like the present instance. Ruby, my dear, the young man
here wants to lave us."
"Leave us?" echoed Ruby, pricking her finger deep in the act of pinning
the stranger's rose in her bosom.
"You hear, young man. That's the tone o' speech signifyin' 'damn it
all!' among women. And so say I, wi' all these vittles cryin' out to be
ate."
"These brisk days," began the stranger quietly, "are not to be let slip.
I have no wife, no kin, no friends, no fortune--or only the pound or two
sewn in my belt. The rest has been lost to me these three days and lies
with the _Sentinel_, five fathoms deep in your cove below.
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