Under the influence of the new arrival
it was not at all strange that many changes were wrought
in the domestic life at Cobden Manor.
My lady was a sensuous creature, loving
color and flowers and the dainty appointments of life
as much in the surroundings of her home as in the
adornment of her person, and it was not many weeks
before the old-fashioned sitting-room had been transformed
into a French boudoir. In this metamorphosis
she had used but few pieces of new furniture one
or two, perhaps, that she had picked up in the village,
as well as some bits of mahogany and brass that she
loved but had depended almost entirely
upon the rearrangement of the heirlooms of the family.
With the boudoir idea in view, she had pulled the
old tables out from the walls, drawn the big sofa
up to the fire, spread a rug one of her
own before the mantel, hung new curtains
at the windows and ruffled their edges with lace,
banked the sills with geraniums and bégonias,
tilted a print or two beside the clock, scattered a
few books and magazines over the centre-table, on
which she had placed a big, generous lamp, under whose
umbrella shade she could see to read as she sat in
her grandmother’s rocking-chair in
fact, had, with that taste inherent in some women touched
with a knowing hand the dead things about her and
made them live and mean something; her talisman
being an unerring sense of what contributed to personal
comfort. Heretofore Doctor John had been compelled
to drag a chair halfway across the room in order to
sit and chat with Jane, or had been obliged to share
her seat on the sofa, too far from the hearth on cold
days to be comfortable. Now he could either stand
on the hearth-rug and talk to her, seated in one corner
of the pulled-up sofa, her work-basket on a small
table beside her, or he could drop into a big chair
within reach of her hand and still feel the glow of
the fire. Jane smiled at the changes and gave
Lucy free rein to do as she pleased. Her own nature
had never required these nicer luxuries; she had been
too busy, and in these last years of her life too
anxious, to think of them, and so the room had been
left as in the days of her father.
The effect of the rearrangement was
not lost on the neighbors. They at once noticed
the sense of cosiness everywhere apparent, and in
consequence called twice as often, and it was not long
before the old-fashioned sitting-room became a stopping-place
for everybody who had half an hour to spare.
These attractions, with the aid of
a generous hospitality, Lucy did her best to maintain,
partly because she loved excitement and partly because
she intended to win the good-will of her neighbors those
who might be useful to her. The women succumbed
at once. Not only were her manners most gracious,
but her jewels of various kinds, her gowns of lace
and frou-frou, her marvellous hats, her assortment
of parasols, her little personal belongings and niceties gold
scissors, thimbles, even the violet ribbons that rippled
through her transparent underlaces so different
from those of any other woman they knew were
a constant source of wonder and delight. To them
she was a beautiful Lady Bountiful who had fluttered
down among them from heights above, and whose departure,
should it ever take place, would leave a gloom behind
that nothing could illumine.
To the men she was more reserved.
Few of them ever got beyond a handshake and a smile,
and none of them ever reached the borders of intimacy.
Popularity in a country village could never, she knew,
be gained by a pretty woman without great discretion.
She explained her foresight to Jane by telling her
that there was no man of her world in Warehold but
the doctor, and that she wouldn’t think of setting
her cap for him as she would be gray-haired before
he would have the courage to propose. Then she
kissed Jane in apology, and breaking out into a rippling
laugh that Martha heard upstairs, danced out of the
room.
Little Ellen, too, had her innings;
not only was she prettily dressed, presenting the
most joyous of pictures, as with golden curls flying
about her shoulders she flitted in and out of the rooms
like a sprite, but she was withal so polite in her
greetings, dropping to everyone a little French courtesy
when she spoke, and all in her quaint, broken dialect,
that everybody fell in love with her at sight.
None of the other mothers had such a child, and few
of them knew that such children existed.
Jane watched the workings of Lucy’s
mind with many misgivings. She loved her lightheartedness
and the frank, open way with which she greeted everybody
who crossed their threshold. She loved, too, to
see her beautifully gowned and equipped and to hear
the flattering comments of the neighbors on her appearance
and many charms; but every now and then her ear caught
an insincere note that sent a shiver through her.
She saw that the welcome Lucy gave them was not from
her heart, but from her lips; due to her training,
no doubt, or perhaps to her unhappiness, for Jane
still mourned over the unhappy years of Lucy’s
life an unhappiness, had she known it, which
had really ended with Archie’s safe adoption
and Bart’s death. Another cause of anxiety
was Lucy’s restlessness. Every day she
must have some new excitement a picnic
with the young girls and young men, private theatricals
in the town hall, or excursions to Barnegat Beach,
where they were building a new summer hotel.
Now and then she would pack her bag and slip off to
New York or Philadelphia for days at a time to stay
with friends she had met abroad, leaving Ellen with
Jane and Martha. To the older sister she seemed
like some wild, untamable bird of brilliant plumage
used to long, soaring flights, perching first on one
dizzy height and then another, from which she could
watch the world below.
The thing, however, which distressed
Jane most was Lucy’s attitude towards Archie.
She made every allowance for her first meeting at the
station, and knew that necessarily it must be more
or less constrained, but she had not expected the
almost cold indifference with which she had treated
the boy ever since.
As the days went by and Lucy made
no effort to attach Archie to her or to interest herself
either in his happiness or welfare, Jane became more
and more disturbed. She had prayed for this home-coming
and had set her heart on the home-building which was
sure to follow, and now it seemed farther off than
ever. One thing troubled and puzzled her:
while Lucy was always kind to Archie indoors, kissing
him with the others when she came down to breakfast,
she never, if she could help it, allowed him to walk
with her in the village, and she never on any occasion
took him with her when visiting the neighbors.
“Why not take Archie with you,
dear?” Jane had said one morning to Lucy, who
had just announced her intention of spending a few
days in Philadelphia with Max Feilding’s sister
Sue, whom she had met abroad when Max was studying
in Dresden Max was still a bachelor, and
his sister kept house for him. He was abroad
at the time, but was expected by every steamer.
“Archie isn’t invited,
you old goosie, and he would be as much out of place
in Max’s house as Uncle Ephraim Tipple would
be in Parliament.”
“But they would be glad to see
him if you took him. He is just the age now when
a boy gets impressions which last him through ”
“Yes, the gawky and stumble-over-things
age! Piano-stools, rugs, anything that comes
in his way. And the impressions wouldn’t
do him a bit of good. They might, in fact, do
him harm,” and she laughed merrily and spread
her fingers to the blaze. A laugh was often her
best shield. She had in her time dealt many a
blow and then dodged behind a laugh to prevent her
opponent from striking back.
“But, Lucy, don’t you
want to do something to help him?” Jane asked
in a pleading tone.
“Yes, whatever I can, but he
seems to me to be doing very well as he is. Doctor
John is devoted to him and the captain idolizes him.
He’s a dear, sweet boy, of course, and does
you credit, but he’s not of my world, Jane,
dear, and I’d have to make him all over again
before he could fit into my atmosphere. Besides,
he told me this morning that he was going off for
a week with some fisherman on the beach some
person by the name of Fogarty, I think.”
“Yes, a fine fellow; they have
been friends from their boyhood.” She was
not thinking of Fogarty, but of the tone of Lucy’s
voice when speaking of her son.
“Yes most estimable
gentleman, no doubt, this Mr. Fogarty, but then, dear,
we don’t invite that sort of people to dinner,
do we?” and another laugh rippled out.
“Yes, sometimes,” answered
Jane in all sincerity. “Not Fogarty, because
he would be uncomfortable if he came, but many of the
others just as humble. We really have very few
of any other kind. I like them all. Many
of them love me dearly.”
“Not at all strange; nobody
can help loving you,” and she patted Jane’s
shoulder with her jewelled fingers.
“But you like them, too, don’t
you? You treat them as if you did.”
Lucy lifted her fluted petticoat,
rested her slippered foot on the fender, glanced down
at the embroidered silk stocking covering her ankle,
and said in a graver tone:
“I like all kinds of people in
their proper place. This is my home, and it is
wise to get along with one’s neighbors.
Besides, they all have tongues in their heads like
the rest of the human race, and it is just as well
to have them wag for you as against you.”
Jane paused for a moment, her eyes
watching the blazing logs, and asked with almost a
sigh:
“You don’t mean, dear,
that you never intend to help Archie, do you?”
“Never is a long word, Jane.
Wait till he grows up and I see what he makes of himself.
He is now nothing but a great animal, well built as
a young bull, and about as awkward.”
Jane’s eyes flashed and her
shoulders straightened. The knife had a double
edge to its blade.
“He is your own flesh and blood,
Lucy,” she said with a ring of indignation in
her voice. “You don’t treat Ellen
so; why should you Archie?”
Lucy took her foot from the fender,
dropped her skirts, and looked at Jane curiously.
From underneath the half-closed lids of her eyes there
flashed a quick glance of hate a look that
always came into Lucy’s eyes whenever Jane connected
her name with Archie’s.
“Let us understand each other,
sister,” she said icily. “I don’t
dislike the boy. When he gets into trouble I’ll
help him in any way I can, but please remember he’s
not my boy he’s yours. You took
him from me with that understanding and I have never
asked him back. He can’t love two mothers.
You say he has been your comfort all these years.
Why, then, do you want to unsettle his mind?”
Jane lifted her head and looked at
Lucy with searching eyes looked as a man
looks when someone he must not strike has flung a glove
in his face.
“Do you really love anything,
Lucy?” she asked in a lower voice, her eyes
still fastened on her sister’s.
“Yes, Ellen and you.”
“Did you love her father?” she continued
in the same direct tone.
“Y-e-s, a little
He was the dearest old man in the world and did his
best to please me; and then he was never very well.
But why talk about him, dear?”
“And you never gave him anything
in return for all his devotion?” Jane continued
in the same cross-examining voice and with the same
incisive tone.
“Yes, my companionship whenever
I could. About what you give Doctor John,”
and she looked at Jane with a sly inquiry as she laughed
gently to herself.
Jane bit her lips and her face flushed
scarlet. The cowardly thrust had not wounded
her own heart. It had only uncovered the love
of the man who lay enshrined in its depths. A
sudden sense of the injustice done him arose in her
mind and then her own helplessness in it all.
“I would give him everything
I have, if I could,” she answered simply, all
her insistency gone, the tears starting to her eyes.
Lucy threw her arms about her sister
and held her cheek to her own.
“Dear, I was only in fun; please
forgive me. Everything is so solemn to you.
Now kiss me and tell me you love me.”
That night when Captain Holt came
in to play with the little “Pond Lily,”
as he called Ellen, Jane told him of her conversation
with Lucy, not as a reflection on her sister, but
because she thought he ought to know how she felt
toward Archie. The kiss had wiped out the tears,
but the repudiation of Archie still rankled in her
breast.
The captain listened patiently to
the end. Then he said with a pause between each
word:
“She’s sailin’ without
her port and starboard lights, Miss Jane. One
o’ these nights with the tide settin’
she’ll run up ag’in somethin’ solid
in a fog, and then God help her! If
Bart had lived he might have come home and done the
decent thing, and then we could git her into port
some’er’s for repairs, but that’s
over now. She better keep her lights trimmed.
Tell her so for me.”
What this “decent thing”
was he never said perhaps he had but a vague
idea himself. Bart had injured Lucy and should
have made reparation, but in what way except by marriage he,
perhaps, never formulated in his own mind.
Jane winced under the captain’s
outburst, but she held her peace. She knew how
outspoken he was and how unsparing of those who differed
from him and she laid part of his denunciation to
this cause.
Some weeks after this conversation
the captain started for Yardley to see Jane on a matter
of business, and incidentally to have a romp with
the Pond Lily. It was astonishing how devoted
the old sea-dog was to the child, and how she loved
him in return. “My big bear,” she
used to call him, tugging away at his gray whiskers.
On his way he stopped at the post-office for his mail.
It was mid-winter and the roads were partly blocked
with snow, making walking difficult except for sturdy
souls like Captain Nat.
“Here, Cap’n Holt, yer
jest the man I been a-waitin’ for,” cried
Miss Tucher, the postmistress, from behind the sliding
window. “If you ain’t goin’
up to the Cobdens, ye kin, can’t ye? Here’s
a lot o’ letters jest come that I know they’re
expectin’. Miss Lucy’s” (many
of the village people still called her Miss Lucy,
not being able to pronounce her dead husband’s
name) “come in yesterday and seems as if she
couldn’t wait. This storm made everything
late and the mail got in after she left. There
ain’t nobody comin’ out to-day and here’s
a pile of ’em furrin’ most
of ’em. I’d take ’em myself
if the snow warn’t so deep. Don’t
mind, do ye? I’d hate to have her disapp’inted,
for she’s jes’ ’s sweet as they
make ’em.”
“Don’t mind it a mite,
Susan Tucher,” cried the captain. “Goin’
there, anyhow. Got some business with Miss Jane.
Lord, what a wad o’ them!”
“That ain’t half what
she gits sometimes,” replied the postmistress,
“and most of ’em has seals and crests stamped
on ’em. Some o’ them furrin lords,
I guess, she met over there.”
These letters the captain held in
his hand when he pushed open the door of the sitting-room
and stood before the inmates in his rough pea-jacket,
his ruddy face crimson with the cold, his half-moon
whiskers all the whiter by contrast.
“Good-mornin’ to the hull
o’ ye!” he shouted. “Cold as
blue blazes outside, I tell ye, but ye look snug enough
in here. Hello, little Pond Lily! why ain’t
you out on your sled? Put two more roses in your
cheeks if there was room for ’em. There,
ma’am,” and he nodded to Lucy and handed
her the letters, “that’s ’bout all
the mail that come this mornin’. There
warn’t nothin’ else much in the bag.
Susan Tucher asked me to bring ’em up to you
count of the weather and ‘count o’ your
being in such an all-fired hurry to read ’em.”
Little Ellen was in his arms before
this speech was finished and everybody else on their
feet shaking hands with the old salt, except poor,
deaf old Martha, who called out, “Good-mornin’,
Captain Holt,” in a strong, clear voice, and
in rather a positive way, but who kept her seat by
the fire and continued her knitting; and complacent
Mrs. Dellenbaugh, the pastor’s wife, who, by
reason of her position, never got up for anybody.
The captain advanced to the fire,
Ellen still in his arms, shook hands with Mrs. Dellenbaugh
and extended three fingers, rough as lobster’s
claws and as red, to the old nurse. Of late years
he never met Martha without feeling that he owed her
an apology for the way he had treated her the day
she begged him to send Bart away. So he always
tried to make it up to her, although he had never
told her why.
“Hope you’re better, Martha?
Heard ye was under the weather; was that so?
Ye look spry ’nough now,” he shouted in
his best quarter-deck voice.
“Yes, but it warn’t much.
Doctor John fixed me up,” Martha replied coldly.
She had no positive animosity toward the captain not
since he had shown some interest in Archie but
she could never make a friend of him.
During this greeting Lucy, who had
regained her chair, sat with the letters unopened
in her lap. None of the eagerness Miss Tucher
had indicated was apparent. She seemed more intent
on arranging the folds of her morning-gown accentuating
the graceful outlines of her well-rounded figure.
She had glanced through the package hastily, and had
found the one she wanted and knew that it was there
warm under her touch the others did not
interest her.
“What a big mail, dear,”
remarked Jane, drawing up a chair. “Aren’t
you going to open it?” The captain had found
a seat by the window and the child was telling him
everything she had done since she last saw him.
“Oh, yes, in a minute,”
replied Lucy. “There’s plenty of time.”
With this she picked up the bunch of letters, ran
her eye through the collection, and then, with the
greatest deliberation, broke one seal after another,
tossing the contents on the table. Some she merely
glanced at, searching for the signatures and ignoring
the contents; others she read through to the end.
One was from Dresden, from a student she had known
there the year before. This was sealed with a
wafer and bore the address of the cafe where he took
his meals. Another was stamped with a crest and
emitted a slight perfume; a third was enlivened by
a monogram in gold and began: “Ma chère
amie,” in a bold round hand. The one
under her hand she did not open, but slipped into
the pocket of her dress. The others she tore into
bits and threw upon the blazing logs.
“I guess if them fellers knew
how short a time it would take ye to heave their cargo
overboard,” blurted out the captain, “they’d
thought a spell ’fore they mailed their manifests.”
Lucy laughed good-naturedly and Jane
watched the blaze roar up the wide chimney. The
captain settled back in his chair and was about to
continue his “sea yarn,” as he called it,
to little Ellen, when he suddenly loosened the child
from his arms, and leaning forward in his seat toward
where Jane sat, broke out with:
“God bless me! I believe
I’m wool-gathering. I clean forgot what
I come for. It is you, Miss Jane, I come to see,
not this little curly head that’ll git me ashore
yet with her cunnin’ ways. They’re
goin’ to build a new life-saving station down
Barnegat way. That Dutch brig that come ashore
last fall in that so’easter and all them men
drownded could have been saved if we’d had somethin’
to help ’em with. We did all we could,
but that house of Refuge ain’t half rigged and
most o’ the time ye got to break the door open
to git at what there is if ye’re in a hurry,
which you allus is. They ought to have a
station with everything ’bout as it ought to
be and a crew on hand all the time; then, when somethin’
comes ashore you’re right there on top of it.
That one down to Squam is just what’s wanted
here.”
“Will it be near the new summer
hotel?” asked Lucy carelessly, just as a matter
of information, and without raising her eyes from the
rings on her beautiful hands.
“’Bout half a mile from
the front porch, ma’am” he preferred
calling her so “from what I hear.
’Tain’t located exactly yet, but some’er’s
along there. I was down with the Gov’ment
agent yesterday.”
“Who will take charge of it,
captain?” inquired Jane, reaching over her basket
in search of her scissors.
“Well, that’s what I come
up for. They’re talkin’ about me,”
and the captain put his hands behind Ellen’s
head and cracked his big knuckles close to her ear,
the child laughing with delight as she listened.
The announcement was received with
some surprise. Jane, seeing Martha’s inquiring
face, as if she wanted to hear, repeated the captain’s
words to her in a loud voice. Martha laid down
her knitting and looked at the captain over her spectacles.
“Why, would you take it, captain?”
Jane asked in some astonishment, turning to him again.
“Don’t know but I would.
Ain’t no better job for a man than savin’
lives. I’ve helped kill a good many; ’bout
time now I come ’bout on another tack.
I’m doin’ nothin’ haven’t
been for years. If I could get the right kind
of a crew ’round me men I could depend
on I think I could make it go.”
“If you couldn’t nobody
could, captain,” said Jane in a positive way.
“Have you picked out your crew?”
“Yes, three or four of ’em.
Isaac Polhemus and Tom Morgan Tom sailed
with me on my last voyage and maybe Tod.”
“Archie’s Tod?”
asked Jane, replacing her scissors and searching for
a spool of cotton.
“Archie’s Tod,”
repeated the captain, nodding his head, his big hand
stroking Ellen’s flossy curls. “That’s
what brought me up. I want Tod, and he won’t
go without Archie. Will ye give him to me?”
“My Archie!” cried Jane,
dropping her work and staring straight at the captain.
“Your Archie, Miss Jane, if
that’s the way you put it,” and he stole
a look at Lucy. She was conscious of his glance,
but she did not return it; she merely continued listening
as she twirled one of the rings on her finger.
“Well, but, captain, isn’t
it very dangerous work? Aren’t the men often
drowned?” protested Jane.
“Anything’s dangerous
‘bout salt water that’s worth the doin’.
I’ve stuck to the pumps seventy-two hours at
a time, but I’m here to tell the tale.”
“Have you talked to Archie?”
“No, but Tod has. They’ve
fixed it up betwixt ’em. The boy’s
dead set to go.”
“Well, but isn’t he too young?”
“Young or old, he’s tough
as a marline-spike A1, and copper fastened
throughout. There ain’t a better boatman
on the beach. Been that way ever since he was
a boy. Won’t do him a bit of harm to lead
that kind of life for a year or two. If he was
mine it wouldn’t take me a minute to tell what
I’d do.”
Jane leaned back in her chair, her
eyes on the crackling logs, and began patting the
carpet with her foot. Lucy became engrossed in
a book that lay on the table beside her. She
didn’t intend to take any part in the discussion.
If Jane wanted Archie to serve as a common sailor that
was Jane’s business. Then again, it was,
perhaps, just as well for a number of reasons to have
him under the captain’s care. He might become
so fond of the sea as to want to follow it all his
life.
“What do you think about it, Lucy?” asked
Jane.
“Oh, I don’t know anything
about it. I don’t really. I’ve
lived so long away from here I don’t know what
the young men are doing for a living. He’s
always been fond of the sea, has he not, Captain Holt?”
“Allus,” said the captain
doggedly; “it’s in his blood.”
Her answer nettled him. “You ain’t
got no objections, have you, ma’am?” he
asked, looking straight at Lucy.
Lucy’s color came and went.
His tone offended her, especially before Mrs. Dellenbaugh,
who, although she spoke but seldom in public had a
tongue of her own when she chose to use it. She
was not accustomed to being spoken to in so brusque
a way. She understood perfectly well the captain’s
covert meaning, but she did not intend either to let
him see it or to lose her temper.
“Oh, not the slightest,”
she answered with a light laugh. “I have
no doubt that it will be the making of him to be with
you. Poor boy, he certainly needs a father’s
care.”
The captain winced in turn under the
retort and his eyes flashed, but he made no reply.
Little Ellen had slipped out of the
captain’s lap during the colloquy. She
had noticed the change in her friend’s tone,
and, with a child’s intuition, had seen that
the harmony was in danger of being broken. She
stood by the captain’s knee, not knowing whether
to climb back again or to resume her seat by the window.
Lucy, noticing the child’s discomfort, called
to her:
“Come here, Ellen, you will tire the captain.”
The child crossed the room and stood
by her mother while Lucy tried to rearrange the glossy
curls, tangled by too close contact with the captain’s
broad shoulder. In the attempt Ellen lost her
balance and fell into her mother’s lap.
“Oh, Ellen!” said her
mother coldly; “stand up, dear. You are
so careless. See how you have mussed my gown.
Now go over to the window and play with your dolls.”
The captain noted the incident and
heard Lucy’s reproof, but he made no protest.
Neither did he contradict the mother’s statement
that the little girl had tired him. His mind
was occupied with other things the tone
of the mother’s voice for one, and the shade
of sadness that passed over the child’s face
for another. From that moment he took a positive
dislike to her.
“Well, think it over, Miss Jane,”
he said, rising from his seat and reaching for his
hat. “Plenty of time ‘bout Archie.
Life-savin’ house won’t be finished for
the next two or three months; don’t expect to
git into it till June. Wonder, little Pond Lily,
if the weather’s goin’ to be any warmer?”
He slipped his hand under the child’s chin and
leaning over her head peered out of the window.
“Don’t look like it, does it, little one?
Looks as if the snow would hold on. Hello! here
comes the doctor. I’ll wait a bit good
for sore eyes to see him, and I don’t git a
chance every day. Ask him ’bout Archie,
Miss Jane. He’ll tell ye whether the lad’s
too young.”
There came a stamping of feet on the
porch outside as Doctor John shook the snow from his
boots, and the next instant he stepped into the room
bringing with him all the freshness and sunshine of
the outside world.
“Good-morning, good people,”
he cried, “every one of you! How very snug
and cosey you look here! Ah, captain, where have
you been keeping yourself? And Mrs. Dellenbaugh!
This is indeed a pleasure. I have just passed
the dear doctor, and he is looking as young as he did
ten years ago. And my Lady Lucy! Down so
early! Well, Mistress Martha, up again I see;
I told you you’d be all right in a day or two.”
This running fire of greetings was
made with a pause before each inmate of the room a
hearty hand-shake for the bluff captain, the pressing
of Mrs. Dellenbaugh’s limp fingers, a low bow
to Lucy, and a pat on Martha’s plump shoulder.
Jane came last, as she always did.
She had risen to greet him and was now unwinding the
white silk handkerchief wrapped about his throat and
helping him off with his fur tippet and gloves.
“Thank you, Jane. No, let
me take it; it’s rather wet,” he added
as he started to lay the heavy overcoat over a chair.
“Wait a minute. I’ve some violets
for you if they are not crushed in my pocket.
They came last night,” and he handed her a small
parcel wrapped in tissue paper. This done, he
took his customary place on the rug with his back to
the blazing logs and began unbuttoning his trim frock-coat,
bringing to view a double-breasted, cream-white waistcoat he
still dressed as a man of thirty, and always in the
fashion as well as a fluffy scarf which
Jane had made for him with her own fingers.
“And what have I interrupted?”
he asked, looking over the room. “One of
your sea yarns, captain?” here he
reached over and patted the child’s head, who
had crept back to the captain’s arms “or
some of my lady’s news from Paris? You
tell me, Jane,” he added, with a smile, opening
his thin, white, almost transparent fingers and holding
them behind his back to the fire, a favorite attitude.
“Ask the captain, John.”
She had regained her seat and was reaching out for
her work-basket, the violets now pinned in her bosom her
eyes had long since thanked him.
“No, do you tell me,”
he insisted, moving aside the table with her sewing
materials and placing it nearer her chair.
“Well, but it’s the captain
who should speak,” Jane replied, laughing, as
she looked up into his face, her eyes filled with his
presence. “He has startled us all with
the most wonderful proposition. The Government
is going to build a life-saving station at Barnegat
beach, and they have offered him the position of keeper,
and he says he will take it if I will let Archie go
with him as one of his crew.”
Doctor John’s face instantly
assumed a graver look. These forked roads confronting
the career of a young life were important and not to
be lightly dismissed.
“Well, what did you tell him?”
he asked, looking down at Jane in the effort to read
her thoughts.
“We are waiting for you to decide,
John.” The tone was the same she would
have used had the doctor been her own husband and the
boy their child.
Doctor John communed with himself
for an instant. “Well, let us take a vote,”
he replied with an air as if each and every one in
the room was interested in the decision. “We’ll
begin with Mistress Martha, and then Mrs. Dellenbaugh,
and then you, Jane, and last our lady from over the
sea. The captain has already sold his vote to
his affections, and so must be counted out.”
“Yes, but don’t count
me in, please,” exclaimed Lucy with a merry laugh
as she arose from her seat. “I don’t
know a thing about it. I’ve just told the
dear captain so. I’m going upstairs this
very moment to write some letters. Bonjour,
Monsieur lé Docteur; bonjour, Monsieur
lé Capitaine and Madame Dellenbaugh,”
and with a wave of her hand and a little dip of her
head to each of the guests, she courtesied out of the
room.
When the door was closed behind her
she stopped in the hall, threw a glance at her face
in the old-fashioned mirror, satisfied herself of
her skill in preserving its beautiful rabbit’s-foot
bloom and freshness, gave her blonde hair one or two
pats to keep it in place, rearranged the film of white
lace about her shapely throat, and gathering up the
mass of ruffled skirts that hid her pretty feet, slowly
ascended the staircase.
Once inside her room and while the
vote was being taken downstairs that decided Archie’s
fate she locked her door, dropped into a chair by the
fire, took the unopened letter from her pocket, and
broke the seal.
“Don’t scold, little woman,”
it read. “I would have written before, but
I’ve been awfully busy getting my place in order.
It’s all arranged now, however, for the summer.
The hotel will be opened in June, and I have the best
rooms in the house, the three on the corner overlooking
the sea. Sue says she will, perhaps, stay part
of the summer with me. Try and come up next week
for the night. If not I’ll bring Sue with
me and come to you for the day.
“Your own Max.”
For some minutes she sat gazing into the fire, the
letter in her hand.
“It’s about time, Mr.
Max Feilding,” she said at last with a sigh of
relief as she rose from her seat and tucked the letter
into her desk. “You’ve had string
enough, my fine fellow; now it’s my turn.
If I had known you would have stayed behind in Paris
all these months and kept me waiting here I’d
have seen you safe aboard the steamer. The hotel
opens in June, does it? Well, I can just about
stand it here until then; after that I’d go
mad. This place bores me to death.”