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As she spoke her "farewell" to England, Peg turned her little body toward the quickly nearing sh.o.r.es of America and thanked G.o.d that waiting to greet her would be her father, and entreated Him that he would be spared to her, and that when either should die that she might be called first; that life without him would be barren and terrible!
and above all, she pleaded that He would keep her little heart loyal always to her childhood hero, and that no other should ever supplant her father in her love and remembrance.
When she awoke nest day amid the bustle of the last morning on board, it seemed that her prayer had been answered.
Her farewell to England was indeed final.
She had only one thought uppermost--she was going to see her father.
BOOK V
PEG RETURNS TO HER FATHER
CHAPTER I
AFTER MANY DAYS
Frank O'Connell stood on the quay that morning in July, and watched the great s.h.i.+p slowly swing in through the heads, and his heart beat fast as he waited impatiently while they moored her.
His little one had come back to him.
His fears were at rest.
She was on board that floating ma.s.s of steel and iron, and the giant queen of the water had gallantly survived storm and wave and was nestling alongside the pier.
Would she be the same Peg? That was the thought beating through him as he strained his eyes to see the familiar and beloved little figure. Was she coming back to him--transformed by the magic wand of a.s.sociation--a great lady? He could scarcely believe that she WOULD, yet he had a half-defined fear in his soul that she might not be the same.
One thing he made up his mind to--never again would he think of separation. Never again would he argue her into agreeing to go away from him. He had learned his lesson and by bitter experience. Never again until SHE wished it.
Amid the throngs swarming down the gangways he suddenly saw his daughter, and he gave a little gasp of surprised pleasure, and a mist swam before his eyes and a great lump came into his throat and his heart beat as a trip-hammer. It was the same Peg that had gone away a month ago. The same little black suit and the hat with the berries and the same bag and "Michael" in her arms.
Their meeting was extraordinary. It was quite unlike what either had supposed it would be. There was a note of strangeness in each. There was--added to the fulness of the heart--an aloofness--a feeling that, in the pa.s.sage of time, life had not left either quite the same.
How often that happens to two people who have shared the intimacy of years and the affection of a lifetime! After a separation of even a little while, the break in their joint-lives, the influence of strangers, and the quick rush of circ.u.mstance during their parting, creates a feeling neither had ever known. The interregnum had created barriers that had to be broken down before the old relations.h.i.+p could be resumed.
O'Connell and Peg made the journey home almost in silence. They sat hand in hand in the conveyance whilst Peg's eyes looked at the tall buildings as they flashed past her, and saw the daring advertis.e.m.e.nts on the boardings and listened to the ceaseless roar of the traffic.
All was just as she had left it.
Only Peg had changed.
New York seemed a Babel after the quiet of that little north of England home. She s.h.i.+vered as thoughts surged in a jumbled ma.s.s through her brain.
They reached O'Connell's apartment.
It had been made brilliant for Peg's return.
There were additions to the meagre furnis.h.i.+ngs Peg had left behind.
Fresh pictures were on the walls. There were flowers everywhere.
O'Connell watched Peg anxiously as she looked around. How would she feel toward her home when she contrasted it with what she had just left?
His heart bounded as he saw Peg's face brighten as she ran from one object to another and commented on them.
"It's the grand furniture we have now, father!"
"Do ye like it, Peg?"
"That I do. And it's the beautiful picture of Edward Fitzgerald ye have on the wall there!"
"Ye mind how I used to rade ye his life?"
"I do indade. It's many's the tear I've shed over him and Robert Emmet."
"Then ye've not forgotten?"
"Forgotten what?"
"All ye learned as a child and we talked of since ye grew to a girl?"
"I have not. Did ye think I would?"
"No, Peg, I didn't. Still, I was wondherin'--"
"What would I be doin' forgettin' the things ye taught me?"
He looked at her and a whimsical note came in his voice and the old look twinkled in his eyes.
"It's English I thought ye'd be by now. Ye've lived so long among the Saxons."
"Englis.h.!.+ is it?" And her tone rang with disgust and her look was one of disdain. "English ye thought I'd be! Sure, ye ought to know me betther than that!"
"I do, Peg. I was just tasin' ye."
"An' what have ye been doin' all these long days without me?"
He raised the littered sheets of his ma.n.u.script and showed them to her.
"This."
She looked over her shoulder and read:
"From 'BUCK-SHOT' to 'AGRICULTURAL ORGANISATION.' "THE HISTORY OF A GENERATION OF ENGLISH MISRULE, by Frank Owen O'Connell."
She looked up proudly at her father.