Judge Knowles’s answer to his
caller’s assertion concerning the need of a
physician’s services was another chuckle.
“Sit down, Cap’n,” he ordered.
Kendrick shook his head. “No,” he
began, “I’m ”
“Sit down.”
“Judge, look here: I don’t
suppose you’re serious, but if you are, I tell
you ”
“No, I’m going to tell you.
SIT DOWN.”
This time the invalid’s voice
was raised to such a pitch that Mrs. Tidditt came
hurrying from the kitchen.
“My soul and body, Judge!”
she exclaimed. “What is it? What is
the matter?”
Her employer turned upon her.
“The matter is that that confounded door is
open again,” he snapped.
“Why why, of course ’tis.
I just opened it when I came in.”
“Umph! Yes. Well then, hurry up and
shut it when you go out. Shut it!”
Emmeline, going, not only shut but
slammed the door. The judge smiled grimly.
“Sit down, Kendrick,”
he commanded once more, panting. “Sit down,
I I’m out of breath. Confound
that woman! She seems to think I’m four
years old. Ah ah whew!”
His exhaustion was so apparent that Sears was alarmed.
“Don’t you think, Judge ”
he began, but was interrupted.
“Sshh!” ordered Knowles.
“Wait.... Wait.... I’ll be all
right in a minute!”
The captain waited. It took more
than a minute, and even then the judge’s voice
was husky and his sentences broken, but his determination
was unshaken.
“I want you to listen to me,
Cap’n Kendrick,” he said. “I
know it sounds crazy, this proposal of mine, but it
isn’t. How much do you know about this
Fair Harbor place; its history and so on?”
Captain Sears explained that his sister
had written him some facts concerning it and that
recently Judah Cahoon had told him more details.
The judge wished to know what Judah had told.
When informed he nodded.
“That’s about right, so
far as it goes,” he admitted. “Fairly
straight, for a Bayport yarn. It doesn’t
go far enough, though. Here is the situation:
“Lobelia, when she first conceived
the fool notion,” he said, “came to me,
of course, to arrange it. I was her father’s
lawyer for years, and so naturally I was looking out
for her affairs. I said all I could against it,
but she was determined, and had her way. She,
through me, set aside the Sylvanus Seymour house and
land to be used as a home for what she called ‘mariners’
women’ as long as well, as long as
she should continue to want it used for that purpose.
She would have been contented to pay the bills as
they came, but, of course, there was no business method
in that, so we arranged that she was to hand over to
me fifty thousand dollars in bonds, the income from
that sum, plus the entrance fees and one hundred dollars
yearly paid by each inmate, was to run the place.
That is the way it has been run. She christened
it the Fair Harbor. Heaven knows I had nothing
to do with that.
“For a year or so she lived
there herself and had a beautiful time queening it
over the inmates. Then that Phillips chap drifted
into Bayport.”
The captain interrupted here.
“Oh, then the Fair Harbor was off the ways before
she married Phillips?” he said. “Judah
told me it was afterwards.”
“He’s wrong. No,
the thing had been running two years when that confounded....
Humph! You never met Egbert Phillips, did you,
Cap’n?”
“No.”
“You’ve heard about him?”
“Only what Judah told me the other day.”
“Humph! What did he tell?”
“Why, he he gave
me to understand that this Phillips was a pretty smooth
article.”
“Smooth! Why, Kendrick,
he is.... But there, you’ll meet him some
day and no feeble words of mine could do him justice.
Besides all my words are getting too feeble to waste even
on anything as beautiful as Egbert the great....
And that condemned doctor will be here pretty soon,
so we must get on.... Ah.... Well, he came
here to teach singing, Phillips did, and he had all
the women in tune before the first lesson was over.
They said he was wonderful, and he was good
God, yes! They kept on thinking he was wonderful
until he married Lobelia Seymour.”
“Then they changed their minds, eh?”
“Humph! You don’t
know women, do you, Cap’n? Never mind, you’ve
got time enough left to learn in.... No, they
didn’t change their minds. They thought
Egbert was as wonderful as ever, but they agreed that
Lobelia had roped him in. She had roped him
in! Oh, lord!... Well, they were married
and went to Boston to live. Afterwards they went
to Europe. Five years ago they came back here
for a week’s visit. Cahoon tell you about
that?”
“No.”
“Probably he didn’t know
about it. They did, though, and stayed here with
me, of course. Lobelia settled that, I imagine one
of the times when she settled something herself.
And while she was here she and I settled something
else. She added a codicil to her will making the
fifty thousand dollars in my possession and the house
and Seymour land a gift, absolute, to the Fair Harbor.
And she appointed me as sole trustee of the fund and
financial manager of the home, with authority to appoint
my own successor. And her husband didn’t
know a thing about it. Didn’t when they
went away; I’m sure I don’t know whether
he does now or not, but he didn’t then.
No, sir, we settled the Fair Harbor fund and Egbert’s
hash, so far as it was concerned. Ha, ha!
And a blessed good job, too, Kendrick.... Hand
me that glass of water, will you? Thanks.”
He drank a swallow or two of water
and lay back upon the pillow. Captain Sears was
a little anxious. He suggested that, perhaps,
he had better be told the rest another time.
“I think you had better rest
now, Judge,” he counseled. The judge consigned
the “rest” idea to a place where, according
to tradition, there is very little of it.
“I want you to hear this,”
he snapped. “Don’t bother me, but
listen.... Where was I?... Oh, yes....
Well, Lobelia and her husband went away, to Europe
again. They have been there ever since, living
in Italy. Egbert finds the climate there agrees
with him, I suppose Humph!...
I have had letters from Lobelia. The later ones
were shorter and not encouraging. She wrote that
she wasn’t well and the doctors didn’t
seem to help her much. After two or three of
these letters I wrote one, myself to the
American consul at Florence. He is the son of
a good friend of mine. I explained the situation
and asked him to find out just what ailed her and
what the prospects were. His reply explained things.
Poor Lobelia is in my position except that
my age entitles me to be there and hers doesn’t;
she has an incurable disease and she is likely to
die at any time. No hope for her. And now,
it seems she has found it out. About a month
ago I had another letter from her.... Humph!...
Wait a minute, Cap’n. Give me that glass
again, will you. Sorry to be such a condemned
nuisance particularly to other people....
Wait! Hold on! When I’ve finished
you can talk. Hear the rest of it first.
“Lobelia’s latest last,
I shouldn’t wonder letter was a sad
sort of a thing. I’m a tough old fellow,
but I declare I’m sorry for that poor woman.
Fool to marry Phillips? Of course she was, but
most of us are fools, some time or other. And,
if I don’t miss my guess, she has repented of
her foolishness many times and all the time. She
wrote me she knew she was going to die. And she
said But here is the letter.
Read it, that page of it.”
He fumbled among the papers and books
on the table beside him, selected a sheet of paper,
covered with closely written lines, and extended it
in a shaking hand to his caller.
“That explains things a little,”
he said. “It’s illuminating.
Read it.”
Captain Sears read.... “And
so I am very anxious, dear Judge Knowles, whatever
else happens, that the Fair Harbor shall always be
as it is, a home for sisters and widows and daughters
of men who went down to the sea in ships, as father
did. I know he would have liked it. And
please, after I’m gone, don’t let
it be sold or given up, or anything like that.
I am asking this of you, because I know I can trust
you. You have proved it so many times. And I
never have written you this before but it is true I
have so little left except the Fair Harbor and its
endowment. You will wonder where the money has
gone. I do not know. It seems to have slipped
away little by little and neither my husband nor I
can account for....”
The page ended there. The captain
would have handed it back to Knowles, but the latter
asked him to put it on the table.
“Put it in the envelope and
put the envelope in the drawer, will you, Kendrick?”
he said. “My housekeeper is a good housekeeper,
but what is mine is hers including correspondence....
Well, you see? She can’t account for the
disappearance of the money. I can. When you
have a five thousand dollar income and spend ten thousand
you can account for a lot.... Humph! Well,
the fact is that I am expecting to hear of Lobelia’s
death at any time. She may be dead to-day or
to-morrow or next week. And as soon
as I hear of it I shall say to myself.... Humph!
Cap’n, you know how the Old Farmer’s Almanac,
along in November, prophesies the weather, don’t
you? ‘About this time look out for snow.’
Yes, well, on a date about a month after the day I
hear of Lobelia Phillips’s death I should write
on the calendar: ’About this time look
for Egbert.’ ... Humph.... Eh?
See, don’t you, Cap’n Kendrick?”
Kendrick smiled, he couldn’t
help it. He tugged thoughtfully at his beard.
“Yes,” he admitted, “I
guess likely I see. But I don’t see where
I come in. You can handle Egbert, Judge, or I
don’t know much about men.”
The judge snorted. “Handle
him,” he repeated. “I think I could
handle him and enjoy the job. The
trouble is I shan’t have the chance. I won’t
be here. I’ll be in the graveyard.”
He spoke of it as casually as he might
of Boston or New York. Again his listener could
not help but protest.
“Why, Judge,” he began,
“that’s perfectly ridiculous. You ”
The judge interrupted. “Perhaps,”
he said, drily. “In fact, I agree with
you. The graveyard is a ridiculous place for anybody
to be, but I shall be there and soon.
But I am not going to let it interfere with my plans
concerning the Fair Harbor. Lobelia Seymour I’ve
known since she was a little girl, and whether I’m
dead or alive, I’m going to have her wishes
carried out. That’s why I’m telling
you these things, Sears Kendrick. I am counting
on you to carry them out.”
The captain leaned back in his chair.
“Why pick on me?” he asked, drily.
“Why? Because I’ve
got to pick on somebody and do it while I have the
strength to pick. You and I have never been close
friends, Kendrick, but I’ve watched you and
kept track of you for years, in a general sort of
way. Your sister and I have had a long acquaintanceship.
There’s another woman who made a mistake....
Eh?”
Sears nodded.
“I’m afraid so,”
he admitted. “Joel is a good enough fellow,
in his way, but ”
“But that’s
it. Well, he’s got a good wife and she’s
your sister. I know you can handle this Fair
Harbor job if you will and if you take it on I shall
go to well, to that graveyard we were talking
about, with an easier mind. Look here why ”
“Hold on a minute, Judge.
Heave to and let me say a word. If there wasn’t
any other reason why I shouldn’t feel like takin’
the wheel of an old woman’s home there would
be this one: You need a business man there and
I’m no business man.”
“How do you know you’re not?”
“Because I’ve just proved
it. You heard somethin’ of how my voyage
in business ashore turned out. I’ll tell
you the truth about it.”
He did, briefly, giving the facts
of his disastrous sojourn in ship-chandlery.
“So that’s how good a
business man I am,” he said in conclusion.
“And I’m a cripple besides. Much
obliged, Judge, but you’ll have to ship another
skipper, I’m afraid.”
He was rising but Judge Knowles barked
a profane order for him to keep his seat.
“I know all that,” he
snapped. “Knew about it just after it happened.
And I know, too, that you paid your share of the debts
dollar for dollar. I’ll risk you in this
job I’m offering you.... Yes, and you’re
the only man I will risk the only one in
sight, that is. Come now, don’t say no.
Think it over. I’ll give you a week to think
it over in. I’d give you a month, but I
might not be here at the end of it.... Will you
take the offer under consideration and then come back
and have another talk with me? Eh? Will
you?”
The captain hesitated. He wanted
to say no, of course, should say it sooner or later,
but he hated to be too abrupt in his refusal.
After all, the offer, although absurd, was, in a way,
a compliment and he liked the old judge. So he
hesitated, stammered and then asked another question.
“You’ve got a skipper
aboard the Fair Harbor already, haven’t you?”
he inquired. “Judah told me that Cap’n
Ike Berry’s widow was runnin’ the place.”
“Humph! That isn’t all he told you,
is it?”
Kendrick smiled. “Why” he
hesitated, “I ”
“Come, come, come! Of course
he told you that Cordelia Berry was another one of
those mistakes we’ve been talking about.
She is, but her husband was one of my best friends
and his daughter is another. No mistake there,
Cap’n Kendrick, I tell you.... But you’ve
met Elizabeth, I understand, eh?”
He chuckled as he said it. Sears
was surprised and a trifle confused. Evidently
she had told of their encounter in Judah’s garden.
“Well, yes,” he admitted. “We
met.”
“Ha, ha! So I heard.
Handled the poultry pretty well, didn’t she?
She ought to, she’s had experience in handling
old hens for some time.”
“I presume likely. Then
I don’t see why you don’t let her keep
on handlin’ ’em. What do you want
me for?”
“Oh, damnation, man, haven’t
I told you! I want you because I’m going
to die and somebody some man must
take my place.... Look here, Kendrick. I
appoint you general manager of the Fair Harbor, take
it or leave it. But if you leave it don’t
do it for a week, and, before you do, promise me you’ll
go over there some day and look around. Meet Cordelia
and talk to her, meet Elizabeth and talk to her.
Meet some of the er hens and
talk to them. But, this is the main thing, look
around, listen, see for yourself. Then you can
come back and, if you accept, we’ll discuss
details. Will you do that much?”
Captain Sears looked troubled.
“Why, yes, I suppose so,” he said, reluctantly,
“to oblige you, Judge. But it’s wasted
time, I shan’t accept. Of course I thank
you for the offer and all that, but I might as well,
seems to me, say no now as next week.”
“No such thing. And you will go there and
look around?”
“Why yes, I guess
so. But won’t the Berry woman and the rest
of ’em think I’m nosin’ in where
I don’t belong? I should, if I were they,
and I’d raise a row about it, too.”
“Nonsense. They can’t
object to your making a neighborly call, can they?
And if they do, let ’em. A healthy row won’t
do a bit of harm over there. Give ’em the
devil, it’s what they need.... See here,
will you go?”
“Yes.”
“Good! And, remember, you
are appointed to this job this minute if you want
it. Or you may take it at any time during the
week; don’t bother to speak to me first.
Fifteen hundred a year, live with Cahoon or whoever
you like, precious little to do except be generally
responsible for the Fair Harbor oh, how
I hate that syrupy, sentimental name! financially
and in a business way.... Easy berth, as you sailors
would say, eh? Ha, ha!... Well, good day,
Cap’n. Can you find your way out? If
not call that eternally-lost woman of mine and she’ll
pilot you.... Ah.... yes.... And just hand
me that water glass once more.... Thanks....
I shall hope to hear you’ve accepted next time
I see you. We’ll talk details and sign
papers then, eh?... Oh, yes, we will. You
won’t be fool enough to refuse. Easy berth,
you know, Kendrick. And don’t forget Egbert;
eh? Ha, ha.... Umph ah, yes....
Where’s that damned housekeeper?”
Mike Callahan asked no questions as
he drove his passenger back to the General Minot place no
direct questions, that is but it was quite
evident that his curiosity concerning the reasons for
Captain Kendrick’s visit was intense.
“Well, the ould judge seen you
at last, Cap’n,” he observed.
“Yes.”
“I expect ’twas a great satisfaction to
him, eh?”
“Maybe so. Looks as if
it was smurrin’ up for rain over to the west’ard,
doesn’t it?”
Mr. Callahan delivered his passenger
at the Minot back door and departed, looking grumpy.
Then Mr. Cahoon took his turn.
“Well, Cap’n Sears,” he said, eagerly,
“you seen him.”
“Yes, Judah, I saw him.”
“Um-hm. Pretty glad to see you, too,
wan’t he?”
“I hope so.”
“Creepin’ prophets, don’t
you know so? Ain’t he been sendin’
word by Emmeline Tidditt that he wanted to see you
more’n a million times?”
“Guess not. So far as I know he only wanted
to see me once.”
“No, no, no. You know what
I mean, Cap’n Sears.... Well er er you
seen him, anyway?”
“Yes, I saw him.”
“Um-hm ... so you said.”
“Yes, I thought I did.”
“Oh, you did yes, you did....
Um-hm er yes.”
So Judah, too, was obliged to do without
authentic information concerning Judge Knowles’s
reason for wishing to meet Sears Kendrick. He
hinted as far as he dared, but experience gained through
years of sea acquaintanceship with his former commander
prevented his doing more than hint. The captain
would tell just exactly what he wished and no more,
Judah knew. He knew also that attempting to learn
more than that was likely to be unpleasant as well
as unprofitable. It was true that his beloved
“Cap’n Sears” was no longer his commander
but merely his lodger, nevertheless discipline was
discipline. Mr. Cahoon was dying to know why
the judge wished to talk to the captain, but he would
have died in reality rather than continue to work
the pumps against the latter’s orders, expressed
or intimated. Judah was no mutineer.