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"A steamer letter," explained Uncle Jim. "Are you such a landlubber as not to know that in these days letters follow you regularly on your voyage?"
A moment later she discerned in a corner, "Care the Purser," and then she broke the seal.
"What news?" asked Uncle Jim, as she finished.
"All you'd expect from a letter written before I left home. I wonder how far we are now," she concluded with a sigh.
"Too far for you to swim back," answered Aunt Caroline, reading her thoughts.
Among the letters that Irma received daily after this, Mahala's was especially entertaining.
"To dream of a horse," she began, "is a sign of a letter, so I'm writing because I dreamt of a horse last night, though that isn't the way it's generally meant to work. Tessie's beginning to live up to many of the signs I've taught her, and when I told her I hoped your voyage wouldn't be unlucky because you were leaving Cranston Friday--just after you started she ran out of the room, and when I went on the steps to see if she'd gone over to the Flynns', well, just at that very minute something struck me on the head, and such a mess, all down my face and over my ap.r.o.n. When I got hold of Tessie she explained that she'd heard me say that if any one wished on an egg dropped from a second story window, the wish would come true--if the egg didn't break--but this egg certainly broke, and I hope it won't cause you ill luck. This wouldn't require mentioning, only I thought it might make you laugh if you happen to feel peaked the day you read this letter. We didn't punish Tessie, because she's feeling kind of bad about you, and she got scared enough when the egg broke on my head."
CHAPTER II
THE WESTERN ISLANDS
The first day or so of the voyage seemed long to Irma. She could not lie in a steamer chair, and pretend to read, as Aunt Caroline did. She had more than a suspicion that her aunt seldom turned the leaves of her book, and that left to herself she was apt to doze, although each morning Uncle Jim placed beside her chair a large basket containing books and magazines.
"Lean back, Irma," Uncle Jim would say, "you are not a real bird that you need perch on the arm of your chair. Lean back; I will fix your cushions--as Marion is not here to do this for you," he concluded mischievously.
"I wonder what Marion does with himself," interposed Aunt Caroline. "We see him only at meals, and I thought he would be such company for Irma."
"Irma doesn't need him," responded Uncle Jim. "Come, my dear, let us look at the steerage."
"Don't go below," protested Aunt Caroline. "You don't know what frightful disease you might catch."
"We'll only look over the railing," and Uncle Jim led Irma to a spot where she could look down at the steerage pa.s.sengers, sitting in the sun on the deck below.
"It's not very crowded," explained Uncle Jim, "on the pa.s.sage to Europe at this season. Most of those you see have a free pa.s.sage because the authorities fear they may become public charges."
"How hard!"
"No, my dear. Many of them have better food and quarters here than they ever have on sh.o.r.e."
"Are there many sick among them?"
"The doctor told me of one poor woman who may not live until she reaches the Azores. She has been working in New Bedford, but when the doctors told her she could not live long, she was sure the air of the Western Islands would cure her. So her friends had a raffle, and raised enough for her pa.s.sage, and a little more for her to live on after her arrival here, at least, that's what Marion told me."
"Marion!"
"Yes, he takes a great interest in the steerage. I dare say he knows those three ferocious-looking desperadoes in the corner."
"Desperadoes!"
"Well, they might be brigands, might they not? at least judging from their appearance. Most men returning at this season--and not a few of the women, too--are sent back by our Government because undesirable for citizenship."
"Oh!" exclaimed Irma. "That explains why so many wear strange clothes.
They are really foreigners."
"Yes. The majority of them have probably never even landed."
As Irma turned away, her interest in the steerage increased rather than lessened. But when she asked Uncle Jim questions, she found he knew little about individuals. She wished that Marion would talk to her. She believed that he could tell her what she wished to know. But as the days pa.s.sed Marion did not thaw out. It is true he usually reported the day's run to Irma, a little ahead of the time when it was marked on the ship's chart, and if she was not near Aunt Caroline when the steward pa.s.sed around with his tea and cakes, he would usually hunt her up. But if she began to talk to him, he answered in the briefest words, and did not encourage further conversation.
One day, when he came to the table rather more animated than usual, she could not help overhearing him describe a visit he had made to the lower regions of the ship, where he had seen the inner workings of things. She listened eagerly to his description of the stoking hole with the flames weirdly lighting up the figures of the busy stokers. This interested her more than what he told of the machinery and the huge refrigerating plant.
"The doctor might have asked me, too. It's different from the steerage.
Marion is very selfish, never to think of me. If there were more girls of my age, I wouldn't care. There isn't a boy in Cranston who would be so mean."
Soon after this, the day before they reached the Azores, Irma made the acquaintance of the one girl on board, near her own age. Hitherto Muriel had looked at her wistfully, not venturing to leave her governess, who talked French endlessly, as they paced the deck. But now, as Irma was watching a game of shuffleboard, played by older persons, Muriel approached and began a conversation, and soon the two were comparing their present impressions and their future plans.
"I'm awfully tired of Europe," said Muriel. "We go every year, but this time it may not be so bad, as we are to motor through Italy."
The most of this day the two new friends were together, separating only to finish the letters that they wished to mail at St. Michael's.
After dinner, when Irma went back to the dining saloon, the mail steward sat at a table with a scale before him, receiving money for the stamps he was to put on letters at Ponta Delgada.
"Why, here's my little lady of the stamps," cried a voice in Irma's ear, and turning, she recognized the little old gentleman, whom she had not seen since the first day.
Irma returned his greeting, and he went up with her toward the deck.
"It's so mild," she explained, "that my aunt said I might sit outside.
I am so anxious to see land."
"Even if we were nearer sh.o.r.e, there's not moon enough to show an outline. Why are you so anxious to see land?"
"Because it will be my first foreign country. Except when we sailed from New York, I had never been out of New England."
"There are worse places to spend one's life in than New England," and the old gentleman sighed, as he added, "yet in the fifty years since I left it, I have been back only half a dozen times."
"I suppose you know the Azores," ventured Irma.
"Oh, yes, the country was very primitive in the old days. The interior, they tell me, has changed little, but the cities are more up to date."
"Cities?"
"Not large cities like ours in America, though Ponta Delgada is the third largest in Portugal. But there, young ladies of your age dislike guidebook information, at least out of school."
"Oh, please go on," begged Irma, and for half an hour her new friend talked delightfully about the Azores and other places.
"Ah, there's Uncle Jim," she exclaimed, as she saw her uncle approaching under one of the electric lights.
"I never thought of finding you out here alone," cried her uncle.