The captain had watched the boys with great interest. He was proud of the speedy and skilful manner in which they had performed the work. He knew that if he had assisted there would now be many more logs in the cove. But he could not afford to lose his dignity, oh, no, and he chuckled as he sat there for a few minutes after the scouts had gone home.
That evening when supper was over, the captain started out alone in the tender. He told his wife that it might be late before he got home, and for her not to worry. He knew where many logs were lying in coves and creeks unknown to the scouts. Hour after hour he patiently toiled, collecting these, and lashing them together with timber-dogs and ropes he had brought with him. It was long after dark when he at last took his raft in tow, and began to row for his own shore. The tide was favourable, so after a pull of over an hour he had the satisfaction of making them fast to a tree in front of the Anchorage.
Next morning the captain was in great spirits, and he chuckled so often over his breakfast that his wife’s curiosity was aroused.
“What is it, Joshua?” she asked. “You seem to be greatly amused over something.”
“Oh, it’s only a little surprise fer the scouts,” was the reply. “Don’t say a word, and I’ll tell ye.”
“But what about your dignity, Joshua?” Mrs. Britt laughingly enquired, when she had heard the story. “May I tell Whyn? She would be so pleased, poor girl.”
“Sure, Betsey. But how is she this mornin’?”
“No better, I’m afraid. She is failing fast. She hasn’t been able to see the scouts for some time, and you know what that means. She just lies there all day without saying hardly anything. She is so different from what she was when she first came here.”
“But she still takes an interest in what the scouts are doin’, does she not?”
“Oh, yes, in a way. But she cannot get up her old enthusiasm. The least excitement tires her. She is an angel, if ever there was one. Mrs. Sinclair is coming this morning, so she wrote. She will be terribly disappointed in Whyn.”
Often during the day the captain went to see if the logs he had gathered during the night were safe. Then before school was out, he took off all the tacklings, and scattered the logs along the shore, so that they had the appearance of having drifted there in the night. He kept a strict watch over them now lest they should get too far from the shore, and very glad was he when at last the scouts arrived.
They were surprised and delighted to find so many logs near at hand, and never for a moment did they suspect what the captain had done. It took them the rest of the afternoon getting the logs into the cove, and when this was accomplished, they stood upon the shore and gazed proudly upon their haul, as the captain termed it.
“Ye’ve done well, lads,” he remarked, “fer ye must have nigh onto three hundred now. But yez should have a boom around them. If a gale springs up, there’ll be trouble.”