O Stormy was a good old man!
To my way you storm along!
Physog tough as an old tin pan,
Ay, ay, ay, Mister Storm-along!
--Storm-along Shanty.
Without paying much attention to the disturber, Captain Candage had been
a bit nettled during his meditation. A speed boat from one of the yachts
kept circling the Polly, carrying a creaming smother of water
under its upcocked bow. It was a noisy gnat of a boat and it kicked a
contemptuous wake against the rust-streaked old wagon.
When it swept under the counter, after Captain Candage was back on his
quarter-deck, he gave it a stare over the rail, and his expression was
distinctly unamiable.
"They probably wasted more money on that doostra-bulus than this
schooner would sell for in the market today," he informed Otie.
"They don't care how money goes so long as they didn't have to sweat
earning it. Slinging it like they'd sling beans!"
Back on its circling course swished the darting tender. This time the
purring motor whined into silence and the boat came drifting alongside.
"On board Polly!" hailed one of the yachtsmen, a man with owner's
insignia on his cap.
The master of the old schooner stuck his lowering visage farther over
the rail, but he did not reply.
"Isn't this Polly the real one?"
"No, it's only a chromo painting of it."
"Thank you! You're a gentleman!" snapped the yachtsman.
"Oh, hold on, Paul," urged one of the men in the tender. "There's a
right way to handle these old boys." He stood up. "We're much interested
in this packet, captain."
"That's why you have been making a holy show of her, playing ring around
a rosy, hey?"
"But tell me, isn't this the old shallop that was a privateer in the war
of eighteen twelve?"
"Nobody aboard here has ever said she wasn't."
"Well, sir, may we not come on board and look her over?"
"No sir, you can't."
"Now, look here, captain--"
"I'm looking!" declared the master of the Polly in ominous tones.
"We don't mean to annoy you, captain."
"Folks who don't know any better do a lot of things without meaning to."
Captain Candage regularly entertained a sea-toiler's resentment for men
who used the ocean as a mere playground. But more especially, during
those later days, his general temper was touchy in regard to dapper
young men, for he had faced a problem of the home which had tried his
soul. He felt an unreasoning choler rising in him in respect to these
chaps, who seemed to have no troubles of their own.