“Oh, what will we do when she is gone, daddy?” mourned Freddy. “Of course you are getting well now, and Dan and I can wait on you and get you broth and jelly; but it won’t be like having dear Miss Stella. Oh, I just love her! Don’t you, daddy? She is almost as good as a real mother.”
And daddy’s pale cheek had flushed as he answered:
“Almost, little Boy Blue!”
“Well, we’re all going home in a week,” said Dan, as he stood out under the stars that night. “But I’ll miss you sure, Miss Stella; for you don’t mind being friends with a rough sort of a boy like me, and you know Aunt Winnie; and if I give up and—and go down you’ll—you’ll understand.”
“Give up and go down!” repeated Miss Stella. “You give up and go down, Danny? Never,—never! You’re the sort of boy to climb, however steep and rough and sharp the way,—to climb to the stars.”
“That’s what Aunt Winnie dreams,” was the answer. “That’s what I dream, too, sometimes. Miss Stella. But it isn’t for me to dream: I have to wake up and hustle. I can’t stay dreaming and let Aunt Winnie die. So if I have to give up and go down, Miss Stella, you’ll—you’ll understand.”
And Miss Stella steadied her voice to answer:
“Yes, Danny, I’ll understand.”
But, in spite of this, Miss Stella’s parting from Killykinick was not altogether a sad one; for “The Polly” came down next morning, with flying colors, to bear her away. Dad was aboard; also Polly, jubilant at recovering her dear Marraine after three weeks of desertion; and Captain Carleton, and Miss Stella’s girl friends who had been picked up from the camp at Shelter Cove. It was such a picnic party altogether that sighs and tears seemed quite out of place; for, after all, things had turned out most cheerfully, as everybody agreed.
So, with “The Polly” glittering in new paint and gilding necessitated by the storm, with all her pennants flying in the wind, with the victrola singing its merriest boat song, and snowy handkerchiefs fluttering gay farewells, Miss Stella was borne triumphantly away. It was to be an all-day cruise. Great hampers, packed with everything good to eat and drink, were stored below; and “The Polly” spread her wings and took a wide flight to sea, turning back only when the shadows began to deepen over the water, and the stars to peep from the violet sky. The young people were a trifle tired; Polly had fallen asleep on a pile of cushions, while the girls from Shelter Cove sang college songs.