“Oh, don't mention it. Now who'll I send it to?”
“You needn't send it. I couldn't think of putting you to further trouble.”
“Trouble! 'Tain't no trouble to telephone. Land sakes, I do it four or five times a day. Now who'll I send it to?”
“You needn't send it.”
“Oh, well, of course, if you'd ruther send it yourself—”
“I sha'n't send it. It really isn't worth while 'phoning or telegraphing either. I didn't drown, and I'm very comfortable, thank you—or should be if it weren't for these mosquitoes.”
“Comf'table! Yes, you're comf'table, but how about your folks? Won't they learn, soon's that steamer gets into—into Portland—or—or—New York or Boston—or . . . Hey?”
“I didn't speak.”
Seth swallowed hard and continued. “Well, wherever she was bound,” he snapped. “Won't they learn that you sot sail in her and never got there? Then they'll know that you MUST have fell overboard.”
John Brown drew a mouthful of smoke through the stem of the pipe and blew it spitefully among the mosquitoes.