Sears put in a disagreeable day or
two after his call upon the judge. He was dissatisfied
with the ending of their interview. He felt that
he had been foolishly soft-hearted in promising to
call at the Fair Harbor, or, to consider for another
hour the preposterous offer of management of that
institution. He must say no in the end. How
much better to have said it then and there. Fifteen
hundred a year looked like a lot of money to him.
It tempted him, that part of the proposition.
But it did not tempt him sufficiently to overcome
the absurdities of the remaining part. How could
he manage an old woman’s home? And
what would people say if he tried?
Nevertheless, he had promised to visit
the place and look it over and the promise must be
kept. He dreaded it about as much as he had ever
dreaded anything, but he had promised.
So on the morning of the third day following that
of his call upon Judge Knowles he hobbled painfully
and slowly up the front walk of the Fair Harbor to
the formidable front door, with its great South Sea
shells at each end of the granite step relics
of Captain Sylvanus’s early voyages and
its silver-plated name plate with “SEYMOUR”
engraved upon it in Gothic lettering. To one
looking back from the view-point of to-day such a name
plate may seem a bit superfluous and unnecessary in
a village where every one knew not only where every
one else lived, but how they lived and all about them.
The fact remains that in Bayport in the ’70’s
there were many name plates.
Sears gave the glass knob beside the
front door a pull. From the interior of the house
came the resultant “JINGLE; jingle;
jingle, jing, jing.” Then a wait, then
the sound of footsteps approaching the other side
of the door. Then a momentary glimpse of a reconnoitering
eye behind one of the transparent urns engraved in
the ground glass pane. Then a rattle of bolt
and latch and the door opened.
The woman who opened it was rather
good looking, but also she looked well,
if the captain had been ordered to describe her general
appearance instantly, he would have said that she looked
“tousled.” She was fully dressed,
of course, but there was about her a general appearance
of having just gotten out of bed. Her hair, rather
elaborately coiffured, had several loose strands sticking
out here and there. She wore a gold pin an
oval brooch with a lock of hair in it at
her throat, but one end was unfastened. She wore
cotton gloves, with holes in them.
“Good mornin’,” said the captain.
The woman said “Good morning.”
There was no “r” in the “morning”
so, remembering what he had heard concerning Mrs.
Isaac Berry’s rearing, Kendrick decided that
this must be she.
“This is Mrs. Berry, isn’t it?”
he inquired.
“Yes.” The lady’s
tone was not too gracious, in fact there was a trace
of suspicion in it, as if she was expecting the man
on the step to produce a patent egg-beater or the
specimen volume of a set of encyclopedias.
“How do you do, Mrs. Berry,”
went on the captain. “My name is Kendrick.
I’m your neighbor next door, and Judge Knowles
asked me to be neighborly and cruise over and call
some day. So I er so I’ve
cruised, you see.”
Mrs. Berry’s expression changed.
She seemed surprised, perhaps a little annoyed, certainly
very much confused.
“Why why, yes, Mr.
Kendrick,” she stammered. “I’m
so glad you did.... I am so glad to see you....
Ah ah Won’t you
come in?”
Captain Sears entered the dark front
hall. It smelt like most front halls of that
day in that town, a combination smell made up of sandal-wood
and Brussels carpet and haircloth and camphor and damp
shut-up-ness.
“Walk right in, do,” urged
Mrs. Berry, opening the parlor door. The captain
walked right in. The parlor was high-studded and
square-pianoed and chromoed and oil-portraited and
black-walnutted and marble-topped and hairclothed.
Also it had the fullest and most satisfying assortment
of whatnot curios and alum baskets and whale ivory
and shell frames and wax fruit and pampas grass.
There was a majestic black stove and window lambrequins.
Which is to say that it was a very fine specimen of
a very best parlor.
“Do sit down, Mr. Kendrick,”
gushed Mrs. Berry, moving about a good deal but not,
apparently, accomplishing very much. There had
been a feather duster on the piano when they entered,
but it, somehow or other, had disappeared beneath
the piano scarf partially disappeared, that
is, for one end still protruded. The lady’s
cotton dusting-gloves no longer protected her hands
but now peeped coyly from behind a jig-sawed photograph
frame on the marble mantelpiece. The apron she
had worn lay on the floor in the shadow of the table
cloth. These habiliments of menial domesticity
slid, one by one, out of sight or partially
so as she bustled and chatted. When,
after a moment, she raised a window shade and admitted
a square of sunshine to the grand apartment, one would
scarcely have guessed that there was such drudgery
as housework, certainly no one would have suspected
the elegant Mrs. Cordelia Berry of being intimately
connected with it.
She swept in those days
the breadth of skirts made all feminine progress more
or less of a sweep across the room and swished
gracefully into a chair. When she spoke she raised
her eyebrows, at the end of the sentence she lowered
them and her lashes. She smiled much, and hers
was still a pretty smile. She made attractive
little gestures with her hands.
“I am so glad you dropped
in, Mr. Kendrick,” she declared. “So
very glad. Of course if we had known when you
were coming we might have been a little better prepared.
But there, you will excuse us, I know. Elizabeth
and I Elizabeth is my daughter, Mr. Kendrick....
But it is Captain Kendrick, isn’t it?
Of course, I might have known. You look the sea you
know what I mean I can always tell.
My dear husband was a captain. You knew that,
of course. And in the old days at my girlhood
home so many, many captains used to come and
go. Our old home my girlhood home,
I mean was always open. I met my husband
there.... Ah me, those days are not these days!
What my dear father would have said if he could have
known.... But we don’t know what is in store
for us, do we?... Oh, dear!... It’s
such charming weather, isn’t it, Captain Kendrick?”
The captain admitted the weather’s
charm. He had not heard a great deal of his voluble
hostess’s chatter. He was there, in a way,
on business and he was wondering how he might, without
giving offence, fulfill his promise to Judge Knowles
and see more of the interior of the Fair Harbor.
Of the matron of that institution he had already seen
enough to classify and appraise her in his mind.
Mrs. Berry rambled on and on.
At last, out of the tumult of words, Captain Sears
caught a fragment which seemed to him pertinent and
interesting.
“Oh!” he broke in.
“So you knew I was er hopeful
of droppin’ in some time or other?”
“Why, yes. Elizabeth knew.
Judge Knowles told her you said you hoped to.
Of course we were delighted.... The poor dear
judge! We are so fond of him, my daughter
and I. He is so so essentially aristocratic.
Oh, if you knew what that means to me, raised as I
was among the people I was. There are times when
I sit here in this dreadful place in utter despair utter....
Oh oh, of course, Captain Kendrick, I wouldn’t
have you imagine that Elizabeth and I don’t
like this house. We love it. And
dear ’Belia Seymour is my closest friend.
But, you know ”
She paused, momentarily, and the captain
seized the opportunity
“So Judge Knowles told you I
was liable to call, did he?” he queried.
He was somewhat surprised. He wondered if the
Judge had hinted at a reason for his visit.
“Why, yes,” replied Mrs.
Berry, “he told Elizabeth. She said
Oh, here you are, dearie. Captain Kendrick, our
next door neighbor, has run in for a little call.
Isn’t it delightful of him? Captain Kendrick,
this is my daughter, Elizabeth.”
She had entered from the door behind
the captain’s chair. Now she came forward
as he rose from it.
“How do you do, Cap’n
Kendrick?” she said. “I am very glad
to see you again. Judge Knowles told me you were
planning to call.”
She extended her hand and the captain
took it. She was smiling, but it seemed to him
that the smile was an absent-minded one. In fact of
course it might be entirely his imagination he
had a feeling that she was troubled about something.
However, he had no time to surmise
or even reply to her greeting. Mrs. Berry had
caught a word in that greeting which to her required
explanation.
“Again?” she repeated.
“Why, Elizabeth, have you and Captain Kendrick
met before?”
“Yes, Mother, that day when
our hens got into Mr. Cahoon’s garden. You
remember I told you at the time.”
“I don’t remember any
such thing. I remember Elvira said that she and
Aurora met him one afternoon, but I don’t remember
your saying anything about it.”
“I told you. No doubt you have forgotten
it.”
“Nonsense! you know I never
forget. If there is one thing I can honestly
pride myself on it is a good memory. You may have
thought you told me, but Why,
what’s that noise?”
The noise was a curious babble or
chatter, almost as if the sound-proof door if
there was such a thing of a parrot cage
had been suddenly opened. It came from somewhere
at the rear of the house and was, apparently, produced
by a number of feminine voices all speaking very fast
and simultaneously.
Elizabeth turned, glanced through
the open door behind her, and then at Mrs. Berry.
There was no doubt now concerning the troubled expression
upon her face. She was troubled.
“Mother ” she
began, quickly. “Excuse us, Cap’n
Kendrick, please mother, have Elvira and
Susan Brackett been talking to you about buying that
collection of of what they call garden statuary
at Mrs. Seth Snowden’s auction in Harniss?”
And now Mrs. Berry, too, looked troubled.
She turned red, stammered and fidgetted.
“Why why, Elizabeth,”
she said, “I I don’t see why
you want to discuss that now. We have a visitor
and I’m sure Captain Kendrick isn’t interested.”
Her daughter did not seem to care
whether the visitor was interested or not.
“Tell me, mother, please,”
she urged. “Have they been talking with
you about their plan to buy that those
things?”
Mrs. Berry’s confusion increased.
“Why why, yes,” she admitted.
“Elvira did tell me about it, something about
it. She said it was beautiful the
fountain and the the deer and and
how pretty they would look on the lawn and ”
“Mother, you didn’t give
them the least encouragement, did you? They say Elvira
and Mrs. Brackett say you told them you thought it
a beautiful idea and that you were in favor of what
they call their committee going to the sale next Monday
and buying those those cast-iron dogs and
children with the Fair Harbor money? I am sure
you didn’t say that, did you, mother?...
I’m awfully sorry, Cap’n Kendrick, to
bring this matter into the middle of your call, but
really it is very important and it can’t be
postponed, because.... Tell me, Mother, they
will be here in a moment. You didn’t say
any such thing, did you?”
Mrs. Berry’s fine eyes they
had been called “starlike” twenty years
before, by romantic young gentlemen filled
with tears. She wrung her hands.
“I I only said ”
she stammered, “I Oh, I don’t
think I said anything except except that
Well, they were so sure they were lovely and a great
bargain and you know Captain Snowden’s
estate in Harniss was perfectly charming.
You know it was, Elizabeth!”
“Mother, you didn’t tell them they might
buy them?”
“Why why, no, I I
don’t think I did. I I couldn’t
have because I never do anything like that without
consulting you.... Oh, Elizabeth, please,
don’t let us have a scene here, with Captain
Kendrick present. What will he think?
Oh, dear, dear!”
Her handkerchief was called into requisition.
Sears Kendrick rose from his chair. Obviously
he must go and, just as obviously, he knew that in
order to fulfill his promise to the judge in spirit
as well as letter he ought to stay. This was
just the sort of situation to shed light upon the
inner secrets of the Fair Harbor and its management....
Nevertheless, he was not going to stay. His position
was much too spylike to suit him. But before
he could move there were other developments.
While Miss Berry and her mother had
been exchanging hurried questions and answers the
parrot-cage babble from the distant places somewhere
at the end of the long entry beyond the door had been
continuous. Now it suddenly grew louder.
Plainly the babblers were approaching along that entry
and babbling as they came.
A moment more and they were in the
room, seven of them. In the lead was the dignified
Miss Elvira herself, an impressive figure of gentility
in black silk and a hair breast pin. Close behind
her, of course, was the rotund Mrs. Aurora Chase,
and equally close yes even a little in
advance of Aurora, was a solidly built female with
gray hair, a square chin, and a very distinct mustache.
The others were in the rear, but as they came in one
of these, a little woman in a plain gingham dress,
who wore steel spectacles upon a sharp little nose,
left the group and took a stand a little apart, regarding
the company with lifted chin and a general air of
determination and uncompromising defiance. Later
on Captain Sears was destined to learn that the little
woman was Mrs. Esther Tidditt, and the lady with the
mustache Mrs. Susanna Brackett. And that the
others were respectively Mrs. Hattie Thomas, Miss Desire
Peasley, and Mrs. Constance Cahoon. Each of the
seven was, of course, either a captain’s widow
or his sister.
Just at the moment the captain, naturally,
recognized nobody except Miss Snowden and Mrs. Chase.
Nor did he notice individual peculiarities except
that something, excitement or a sudden jostle or something,
had pushed Aurora’s rippling black locks to
one side, with the result that the part which divided
the ripples, instead of descending plumb-line fashion
from the crown of the head to a point directly in the
center of the forehead, now had a diagonal twist and
ended over the left eye. The effect was rather
astonishing, as if the upper section of the lady’s
head had slipped its moorings.
He had scarcely time to notice even
this, certainly none in which to speculate concerning
its cause. Miss Snowden, who held a paper in her
hand, stepped forward and began to speak, gesticulating
with the paper as she did so. She paid absolutely
no attention to the masculine visitor. She was
trembling with excitement and it is doubtful if she
even saw him.
“Mrs. Berry,” she began,
“we are here we have come here, these
ladies and I we have come here we
Oh, what is it?”
This last was addressed to Mrs. Chase,
who was tugging at her skirt.
“Talk louder,” cautioned
Aurora, in a stage whisper. “I can’t
hear you.”
With an impatient movement Miss Snowden
freed her garment and began again.
“Mrs. Berry,” she repeated,
“we are here, these ladies and I, to to
ask a question and to express our opinion on a very
important matter. We are all agreed ”
Here she was again interrupted, this
time by Mrs. Esther Tidditt, the little woman in the
gingham dress. Mrs. Tidditt’s tone was brisk
and sharp.
“No, we ain’t agreed neither,”
she announced, with a snap of her head which threatened
shipwreck to the steel spectacles. “I
think it’s everlastin’ foolishness.
Don’t you say I’m agreed to it,
Elvira Snowden.”
Elvira drew her thin form erect and
glared. “We are practically agreed,”
she proclaimed crushingly. “You are the
only one who doesn’t agree.”
“Humph! And I’m the
only one that is practical. Of all the silly ”
“Esther Tidditt, was you appointed
to do the talking for this committee or was I?”
“You was, but that don’t
stop me from talkin’ when I want to. I ain’t
on the committee, thank the good lord. I’m
my own committee.”
This declaration of independence was
received with an outburst of indignant exclamations,
in the midst of which Mrs. Chase could be heard demanding
to be told what was the matter and who said what.
Elizabeth Berry stilled the hubbub.
“Hush, hush!” she pleaded.
“Don’t, Esther, please. You can say
your word later. I want mother and
Cap’n Kendrick to hear this, all of
it.”
The captain was still standing.
He had risen when the “committee” entered
the room. Its members, most of them, had been
so intent upon the business which had brought them
there that they had ignored his presence. Now,
of course, they turned to look at him. There was
curiosity in their look but by no means enthusiastic
approval. Miss Snowden’s nod was decidedly
snippy. She looked, sniffed and turned again
to Mrs. Berry.
“We want your mother to hear
it,” she declared. “We’ve come
here so she shall hear it all of it.
If if others who may not
be ’specially interested want to hear they can,
I suppose. I don’t know why not.... We
haven’t anything to hide. We ain’t
ashamed are not, I should say. Are
we?” turning to those behind and beside her.
Mrs. Brackett announced that she certainly
should say not, so did several others. There
was a general murmur of agreement. Every one
continued to look at the captain. He was embarrassed.
“I think perhaps I had better
be goin’,” he said, addressing Miss Berry.
“I ought to be gettin’ home, anyway.”
But the young lady would not have it.
“Cap’n Kendrick,”
she said, earnestly, “I hope you won’t
go. Judge Knowles told me you were going to call.
I was very glad when I found you had called now at
this time. And I should like to have you stay.
You can stay, can’t you?”
Sears hesitated. “Why why,
yes, I presume likely I can,” he admitted.
“And will you please?”
He looked at her and she at him. Then he nodded.
“I’ll stay,” he said, and sat down
in his chair.
“Thank you,” said Elizabeth. “Now,
Elvira.... Wait, mother, please.”
Miss Snowden sniffed once more.
“Now that that important matter is settled I
suppose I may be allowed to go on,” she
observed, with sarcasm. “Very good, I will
do so in spite of the presence of of those
not ahem intimately concerned.
Mrs. Berry, on behalf of this committee here, a committee
of the whole ”
“No such thing,” this
from Mrs. Tidditt. “I’m part of the
whole but I ain’t part of that committee.
Stick to the truth, Elviry pays better.”
“Hush, Esther,” begged
Miss Berry. “Let her go on, please.
Go on, Elvira.”
The head of the committee breathed
fiercely through her thin nostrils. Then she
made another attempt.
“I address you, Mrs. Cordelia
Berry,” declaimed Elvira, “because you
are supposed I say supposed to
be officially the managing director or
directress, to speak correct of this institution.
Not,” she added, hastily, “that it is
an institution in any sense of the word like
a home or any such thing. We all know that, I
hope and trust. Although,” with a venomous
glance in the direction of Mrs. Esther, “there
appear to be some that know precious little.
I mention no names.”
“You don’t need to,”
retorted the Tidditt lady promptly. “Never
mind, I know enough not to vote to buy a lot of second-handed
images and critters just because they belong to one
of your relations. I know that much, Elviry Snowden.”
This was a body blow and Elvira visibly
winced. For just an instant Captain Sears thought
she was contemplating physical assault upon her enemy.
But she recovered and, white and scornful, proceeded.
“I shan’t deign to answer
such low er insinuations,”
she declared, her voice shaking. “I scorn
them and her that makes them. I scorn them both.
BOTH!”
This last “Both” was fired
like a shot from a “Big Bertha.” It
should have annihilated the irreverent little female
in the gingham gown. It did not, however; she
merely laughed. The effect of the blast was still
further impaired by Mrs. Chase, who although listening
with all her ears, such as they were, had evidently
heard neither well nor wisely.
“That’s right, Elviry,”
proclaimed Aurora, “that’s just what I
say. Why, the lion alone is worth the money.”
Mrs. Brackett touched the Snowden
arm. “Never mind, Elvira,” she said.
“Don’t pay any attention. Go right
ahead and read the resolutions.”
Elvira drew a long breath, two long
breaths. “Thank you, Susanna,” she
said, “I shall. I’m going to.
Mrs. Berry,” she added, turning to that lady,
who was quite as much agitated as any one present and
was clutching her chair arm with one hand and her
daughter’s arm with the other. “Mrs.
Berry,” repeated Miss Snowden, “this resolution
drawn up and signed by the committee of the whole
here present signed with but one exception,
I should say, one trifling exception ”
this with a glare at Mrs. Tidditt “is,
as I said, addressed to you because you are supposed ”
a glare at Elizabeth this time “to
be in charge of the Fair Harbor and what goes on and
is done within its er pórticos.
Ahem! I will now read as follows.”
And she proceeded to read, using both
elocution and gestures. The resolutions made
a rather formidable document. They were addressed
to “Mrs. Cordelia Imogene Berry, widow of the
late Captain Isaac Stephens Berry, in charge of the
Fair Harbor for Mariners’ Women at Bayport,
Massachusetts, United States of America. Madam:
Whereas ”
There were many “Whereases.”
Captain Kendrick, listening intently, found the path
of his understanding clogged by them and tangled by
Miss Elvira’s flowers of rhetoric. He gathered,
nevertheless, that the “little group of ladies
resident at the Fair Harbor, having been reared amid
surroundings of culture, art and refinement”
were, naturally, desirous of improving their present
surroundings. Also that a “truly remarkable
opportunity” had come in their way by which the
said surroundings might be improved and beautified
by the expenditure of a nominal sum, seventy-five
dollars, no more. With this seventy-five dollars
might be bought “the entire collection of lawn
statuary and the fountain which adorned the grounds
of the estate of the late lamented deceased Captain
Seth Snowden at Harniss and now the property of his
widow, namely to wit, Mrs. Hannah Snowden.”
“And I’ll say this,”
put in Elvira, before reading further, “although
hints and insinuations have been cast at me in the
hearing of those present to-day about my being a relation relative,
that is of Captain Seth, and he was my
uncle on my father’s side, nevertheless it’s
just because I am a relation relative that
we are able to buy all those elegant things for as
cheap a price as seventy-five dollars when they cost
at least five hundred and.... But there!
I will proceed.
“’The said statuary, etcetera,
consisting of the following, that is to say:
“’N. Item ...
1 Lawn Fountain. Hand painted iron. Representing
two children beneath umbrella.’”
“And it’s the cutest thing,”
put in the hitherto silent Desire Peasley, with enthusiastic
suddenness. “There’s them two young
ones standin’ natural as life under that umbrella just
same as anybody would stand under an umbrella
if ‘twas rainin’ like fury and
the water squirts right down over top of ’em
and drips off the ribs off the ribs of the
umbrella, I mean and there they stand and and
Well, when I see that I says, ‘My
glory!’ I says, ‘what’ll they contrive
next?’ That’s what I said. All hands
heard me.... What’s that you’re mutterin’,
Esther Tidditt?”
“I wasn’t mutterin’,
’special. I just said I bet they heard you
if they was anywheres ’round.”
“Is that so? Do tell!
Well, I’ll have you to understand ”
Elvira and Miss Berry together intervened
to calm this new disturbance. Then the former
went on with the reading of the “resolutions.”
“‘N. Item ...
1 Hand painted lion. Iron....’ Hush,
Aurora!... Yes, ‘lion,’ that’s
right.... I did say ‘iron.’ It’s
an iron lion, isn’t it?... Oh, do
be quiet! We’ll never get through if everybody
keeps interrupting. ’N ... Item
... 1 Hand painted lion iron’ iron
lion, I mean.... Oh, my soul and body! If
everybody keeps talking I shan’t know what I
mean.... ’A very wonderful piece of statuary.
In perfect condition. Paint needs touching up,
that’s all.
“‘N Item....
1 Deer. Hand painted iron. Perfectly lovely ’”
“Stuff!” This from the
irrepressible Mrs. Tidditt, of course. “One
horn is broke off and it looks like the Old Harry.
No, I’ll take that back; the Old Harry is supposed
to have two horns. But that deer image is a sight,
just the same. Why, it ain’t got any paint
left on it.”
“Nonsense! It may need
a little paint, here and there, but ”
“Humph! A little here and
a lot there and a whole lot more in between.
Elvira Snowden, that image looks as if ’twas
struck with leprosy, like Lazarus in the Bible; you
know it well as I do.”
Sears Kendrick enjoyed the reading
of these resolutions. If it were not for certain
elements in the situation he would have considered
the morning’s performance the most amusing entertainment
he had witnessed afloat or ashore. He managed
not to laugh aloud, although he was obliged to turn
his head away several times and to cough at intervals.
Once or twice he and Elizabeth Berry exchanged glances
and the whimsical look of resignation and humorous
appreciation in her eyes showed that she, too, was
keenly aware of the joke.
But at other times she was serious
enough and it was her expression at these times which
prevented the captain’s accepting the whole ridiculous
affair as a hilarious farce. Then she looked deeply
troubled and careworn and anxious. He began to
realize that this affair, funny as it was, was but
one of a series, a series of annoyances and trials
and petty squabbles which, taken in the aggregate,
were anything but funny to her. For it was obvious,
the truth of what Judah Cahoon had said and Judge
Knowles intimated, that this girl, Elizabeth Berry,
was bearing upon her young shoulders the entire burden
of responsibility for the conduct and management of
affairs in the Fair Harbor for Mariners’ Women
at Bayport. Her mother was supposed to bear this
burden, but it was perfectly obvious that Cordelia
Berry was incapable of bearing any responsibilities,
including her own personal ones.
Miss Snowden solemnly read the concluding
paragraph of the resolutions. It summed up those
preceding it and announced that those whose names
were appended, “being guests at the Fair Harbor,
the former home of our beloved benefactress and friend
Mrs. Lobelia Phillips, nee Seymour, are unanimously
agreed that as a simple matter of duty to the institution
and those within its gates, not to mention the beautifying
of Bayport, the collection of lawn statuary and fountain
now adorning the estate of the late deceased Captain
Seth Snowden be bought, purchased and obtained from
that estate at the very low price of seventy-five
dollars, this money to be paid from the funds in the
Fair Harbor treasury, and the said statuary and fountain
to be erected and set up on the lawns and grounds
of the Fair Harbor. Signed ”
Miss Elvira read the names of the
signers. They included, as she took pains to
state, the names of every guest in the Fair Harbor
with one ahem exception.
“And I’m it, praise the
lord,” announced Mrs. Tidditt, promptly.
“I ain’t quite crazy yet, nor I ain’t
a niece-in-law of Seth Snowden’s widow neither.”
“Esther Tidditt, I’ve
stood your hints and slanders long enough.”
“Nobody’s payin’
me no commissions for gettin’ rid of their
old junk for ’em.”
“Esther, be still! You
shouldn’t say such things. Elvira, stop stop!”
Miss Berry stepped forward. Mrs. Tidditt was bristling
like a combative bantam and Elvira was shaking from
head to feet and crooking and uncrooking her fingers.
“There mustn’t be any more of this,”
declared Elizabeth. “Esther, you must apologize.
Stop, both of you, please. Remember, Cap’n
Kendrick is here.”
This had the effect of causing every
one to look at the captain once more. He felt
unpleasantly conspicuous, but Elizabeth’s next
speech transferred the general gaze from him to her.
“There isn’t any use in
saying much more about this matter, it seems to me,”
she said. “It comes down to this: You
and the others, Elvira, think we should buy the the
statues and the fountain because they would, you think,
make our lawns and grounds more beautiful.”
“We don’t think at all we
know,” declared Elvira. Mrs. Brackett said,
“Yes indeed, we do,” and there was a general
murmur of assent. Also a loud sniff from the
Tidditt direction.
“And your mother thinks so,
too,” spoke up Miss Peasley, from the group.
“She told me herself she thought they were lovely.
Didn’t you, Cordelia? You know you did.”
Before Mrs. Berry could answer her
embarrassment and distress seemed to be bringing her
again to the verge of tears her daughter
went on.
“It doesn’t make a bit
of difference what mother and I think about their beauty and
all that,” she said. “The whole thing
comes down to the matter of whether or not we can
afford to buy them. And we simply cannot.
We haven’t the money to spare. Spending
seventy-five dollars for anything except the running
expenses of the Harbor is now absolutely impossible.
I told you that, Elvira, when you first suggested it.”
Miss Snowden, still trembling, regarded
her resentfully. “Yes, you told
me,” she retorted. “I know you did.
You are always telling us we can’t do this or
that. But why should you tell us?
That is what we can’t understand. You
ain’t aren’t manager
here, so far as we know. We never heard of your
appointment. We always understood your mother
was the manager, duly appointed. Isn’t she?”
“Of course she is, but ”
“Yes, and when we have spoken
to her two or three of us at different
times she has said she thought buying these
things was a lovely idea. I shouldn’t be
surprised if she thought so now.... Cordelia,
don’t you think the Fair Harbor ought to buy
those statues and that fountain?”
This pointed appeal, of course, placed
Mrs. Berry directly in the limelight and she wilted
beneath its glare. She reddened and then paled.
Her fingers fidgetted with the pin at her throat.
She picked up her handkerchief and dropped it.
She looked at Elvira and the committee and then at
her daughter.
“Why why, I don’t
know,” she faltered. “I think of
course I think the the statuary is very
beautiful. I I said so. I I
am always fond of pretty things. You know I am,
Elizabeth, you ”
“Wait a minute, Cordelia.
Didn’t you tell me you thought the Fair Harbor
ought to buy them? Didn’t you tell Suzanna
and me just that?”
Mrs. Berry squirmed. She did
not answer but, so far as Sears Kendrick was concerned,
no answer was necessary. He was as certain as
if she had sworn it that she had told them just that
thing. And, looking at Elizabeth’s face,
he could see that she, too, was certain of it.
“Didn’t you, Cordelia?” persisted
Miss Snowden.
“Why why, I don’t
know. Perhaps I did, but but what difference
does it make? You heard what Elizabeth said.
She says we can’t afford it. She always
attends to such matters, you know she does.”
“Yes,” with sarcastic
emphasis, “we do, but we don’t know why
she should. And in this case we aren’t
going to stand it. You are supposed to be managing
this place, Cordelia Berry, and if you are willing
to turn your duties over to a a mere child
we aren’t willing to let you. Once more
I ask you ”
Elizabeth interrupted. “There,
there, Elvira,” she said, “what is
the use? It isn’t a question of mother’s
opinion or what she has said before. It is just
a matter of money. We can’t afford it.”
Miss Snowden ignored her. “We
shall not,” she repeated, “permit our
future and and all like that to be ruined
by the whims of a mere child. That is final.”
She pronounced the last sentence with
solemn emphasis. The pause which followed should
have been impressive but Mrs. Tidditt spoiled the
effect.
“Mere child!” she repeated,
significantly. “Well, I presume likely she
is a mere child compared to some folks.
Only she just looks childish and they act that way.”
There was another outburst of indignant
exclamations from the committee. The head of
that body turned to her followers.
“It is quite evident,”
she declared, furiously, “that this conference
is going to end just as the others have. But
this time we are not going to sit back and be trampled
on. There are those higher up to be appealed to
and we shall appeal to them. Come!”
She stalked majestically to the door
and marched out and down the hall, the committee following
her. Only Mrs. Tidditt remained, and she but for
a moment.
“They’re goin’ to
the back room to have another meetin’,”
she whispered. “If there’s anything
up that amounts to anything, ’Lizabeth, I’ll
come back and let you know.”
Elizabeth did not answer, but Kendrick
offered a suggestion. “You don’t
belong to this committee,” he observed.
“Perhaps they won’t let you into the meetin’.”
The eyes behind the steel spectacles
snapped sparks. “I’d like to see
’em try to keep me out,” declared Mrs.
Esther, and hurried after the others. Elizabeth
turned to her mother.
“Mother,” she said, earnestly,
“we must be very firm in this matter. We
simply can’t afford to spend any money just now
except for necessities. If they come to you again
you must tell them so. You will, won’t you?”
And now Mrs. Berry’s agitation
reached its climax. She turned upon her daughter.
“Oh, I suppose so,” she
cried hysterically, “I suppose so! I shall
have to go through another scene and be spoken to
as if as if I were dirt under these women’s
feet instead of being as far above them in in
position and education and refinement as the clouds.
Why can’t I have peace just a little
peace and quiet? Why must I always have
to undergo humiliation after humiliation? I ”
“Mother, mother, please don’t ”
But her mother was beyond reason.
“And you ”
she went on, “you, my own daughter, why must
you always take the other side, and put me in such
positions, and and humiliate me before before
Oh, why can’t I die? I wish I were
dead! I do! I do!”
She burst into a storm of hysterical
sobs and hurried toward the door. Elizabeth would
have gone to her but she pushed her aside and rushed
into the front hall and up the stairs. They heard
her sobs upon the upper landing.
Sears Kendrick, feeling more like
an interloper than ever, looked in embarrassment at
the flowered carpet. He did not dare look at the
young woman beside him. He had never in his life
felt more sorry for any one. Judge Knowles had
said he hoped that he Kendrick might
obtain a general idea of the condition of affairs
in the Fair Harbor. The scenes he had just witnessed
had given him a better idea of that condition than
anything else could have done. And, somehow or
other, it was the last of those scenes which had affected
him most. Elizabeth Berry had faced the sarcasms
and sneers of the committee, had never lost her poise
or her temper, had never attempted to shift the responsibility,
had never reproached her mother for the hesitating
weakness which was at the base of all the trouble.
And, in return, her mother had accused her of all
sorts of things.
And yet when Elizabeth spoke it was
in defence of that mother.
“I hope, Cap’n Kendrick,”
she said, “that you won’t misunderstand
my mother or take what she just said too seriously.
She is not very well, and very nervous, and, as you
see, her position here is a trying one sometimes.”
The captain could not keep back the
speech which was at his tongue’s end.
“Your position is rather
tryin’, too, isn’t it?” he observed.
“It sort of would seem that way to
me.”
She smiled sadly. “Why,
yes it is,” she admitted. “But
I am younger and and perhaps I can bear
it better.”
It occurred to him that the greatest
pity of all was the fact that she should be obliged
to bear it. He did not say so, however, and she
went on, changing the subject and speaking very earnestly.
“Cap’n Kendrick,”
she said, “I am very glad you heard this this
disagreement this morning. Judge Knowles told
me you were going to call at the Harbor here and when
he said it he well, I thought he looked
more than he said, if you know what I mean. I
didn’t ask any questions and he said nothing
more, but I guess perhaps he wanted you to to
see well, to see what he wasn’t well
enough to see or something like that.”
She paused. The captain was embarrassed.
He certainly felt guilty and he also felt as if he
looked so.
“Why why, Miss Berry,”
he stammered, “I hope you you mustn’t
think ”
She waved his protestations aside.
“It doesn’t make a bit
of difference,” she said. “No matter
why you came I am very glad you did. This ridiculous
statuary business is just one well, symptom,
so to speak. If it wasn’t that, it might
be something else. It comes, you see, from my
position here which really isn’t
any position at all and their position,
Elvira Snowden’s and the rest. They pay
a certain sum to get here in the first place and a
small sum each year. There is the trouble.
They think they pay for board and lodging and are
guests. Of course what they pay amounts to almost
nothing, but they don’t realize that, or don’t
want to, and they expect to have their own way.
Mother is well, she is nervous and high
strung and she hates scenes. They take advantage
of her, some of them no doubt they don’t
consider it that, but it seems to me so and
so I have been obliged to take charge, in a way.
They don’t understand that and resent it.
I don’t know that I blame them much. Perhaps
I should resent it if I were in their place.
Only.... But never mind that now.
“This is only one of a good
many differences of opinion we have had,” she
went on. “In the old days and
not older than a year ago, for that matter if
the differences were too acute I used to go to Judge
Knowles. He always settled everything, finally
and sensibly. But now, since he has been so sick,
I well, I simply can’t go to him.
He has been very kind to us, to mother and me, and
I am very fond of him. He was a great friend
of my father’s and I think he likes me for father’s
sake. And now I will not trouble him in his sickness
with my troubles I will not.”
She raised her head as she said it
and Captain Sears, regarding her, was again acutely
conscious of the fact that it was a very fine head
indeed.
“I understand,” he said.
“Yes, I knew you would.
And I know I could fight this out by myself. And
shall, of course. But, nevertheless, I am glad
you were here as well, as a witness, if
it ever comes to that. You heard what Elvira Miss
Snowden said about appealing to those higher
up. I suppose she means Mrs. Phillips, the one
who founded the Harbor. If they should write to
her I What is it, Esther?”
Mrs. Tidditt had rushed into the room,
bristling. She waved her arms excitedly.
“’Lizbeth, ‘Lizbeth,”
she whispered, “they’re goin’ to
tell him. They’re makin’ up the yarn
now that they’re goin’ to tell him.”
“Tell him? Tell who?”
“Judge Knowles. They’ve
decided to go right straight over to the judge’s
house and and do what they call appeal to
him about them images. Elviry she’s goin’,
and Susanna, and Desire Peasley, too, for what I know.
What do you want me to do? Ain’t there
any way I can help stop ’em?”
For the first time in that distressing
forenoon Captain Kendrick saw Miss Berry’s nerve
shaken. She clasped her hands.
“Oh dear!” she cried.
“Oh, dear, that is the very thing they mustn’t
do! I wouldn’t have Judge Knowles worried
or troubled about this for the world. I have
kept everything from him. He is so ill!
If those women go to him and Oh,
but they mustn’t, they mustn’t! I
can’t let them.”
Mrs. Tidditt, diminutive but combative,
offered a suggestion.
“Do you want me to go out and
stop ’em?” she demanded. “I’ll
go and stand in the kitchen doorway, if you want me
to. They won’t get by if I’m there,
not in a hurry, anyway.”
“Oh no, no, Esther, of course not.”
“I tell you what I’ll
do. I’ll go and tell Emmeline not to let
’em in the judge’s house. She’s
my cousin and she’ll do what I ask sometimes if
I don’t ask much.”
“No, that wouldn’t do
any good, any permanent good. But they must not
go to the judge. They must not. He has been
so kind and forbearing and he is so very sick.
The doctor told me that he.... They shan’t
go. They can say anything they please to me,
but they shan’t torment him.”
She started toward the door through
which Mrs. Tidditt had entered. At the threshold
she paused for an instant and turned.
“Please excuse me, Cap’n
Kendrick,” she said. “I almost forgot
that you were here. I think I wouldn’t
wait if I were you. There will be another scene
and I’m sure you have had scenes enough.
I have, too, but.... Oh, well, it will be all
right, I’m sure. Please don’t wait.
Thank you for calling.”
She turned again but the captain stopped
her. As she faced him there in the doorway their
eyes had met. Hers were moist for the
first time she was close to the breaking point and
there was a look in them which caused him to forget
everything except one, namely, that the crowd in the
“parrot cage” at the other end of that
hall should not trouble her further. It was very
seldom that Captain Sears Kendrick, master mariner,
acted solely on impulse. But he did so now.
“Stop,” he cried.
“Miss Elizabeth, don’t go. Stay where
you are.... Here you ”
turning to Mrs. Tidditt. “You go and tell
those folks I want to see ’em. Tell ’em
to come aft here now.”
There was a different note in his
voice, a note neither Elizabeth nor the Tidditt woman
had before heard. Yet if Judah Cahoon had been
present he would have recognized it. He had heard
it many times, aboard many tall ships, upon many seas.
It was the captain’s quarter-deck voice and
it meant business.
Mrs. Tidditt and Elizabeth had not
heard it, and they looked at the speaker in surprise.
Captain Sears looked at them, but not for long.
“Lively,” he commanded.
“Do you hear? Go for’ard and tell
that crew in the galley, or the fo’castle, or
wherever they are, to lay aft here. I’ve
got somethin’ to say to ’em.”
It was seldom that Esther Tidditt
was at a loss for words. As a usual thing her
stock was unlimited. Now she merely gasped.
“You you ”
she stammered. “You want me to ask to
ask Elviry and Susanna and them to come in here?”
“Ask? Who said anything
about askin’? I want you to tell ’em
I say for them to come here. It’s an order,
and you can tell ’em so, if you want to.”
Mrs. Tidditt gasped again. “Well!”
she exclaimed. “Well, my good lordy, if
this ain’t A-ll right, I’ll
tell ’em.”
She hastened down the corridor.
Elizabeth ventured a faint protest.
“But, Cap’n Kendrick ”
she began. He stopped her.
“It is all right, Miss Elizabeth,”
he said. “I’m handlin’ this
matter now. All you’ve got to do is look
on.... Well, are they comin’ or must I
go after ’em?”
Apparently he had forgotten that his
lameness made going anywhere a slow proceeding.
As a matter of fact he had. He had forgotten everything
except the business of the moment and the joy of being
once more in supreme command.
The message borne by Mrs. Tidditt
had, presumably, been delivered. The messenger
had left the dining room door open and through it came
a tremendous rattle of tongues. Obviously the
captain’s order had created a sensation.
Elizabeth listened.
“Well?” repeated Sears, again. “Are
they goin’ to come?”
Miss Berry smiled faintly. “I
think they will come,” she answered. “If
they are as as curious as I am they will.”
They were. At any rate they came.
Miss Snowden, Mrs. Brackett and Mrs. Chase in the
lead, the others following. Mrs. Tidditt brought
up the rear, marshaling the stragglers, as it were.
Elvira was, of course, the spokeswoman.
She was the incarnation of dignified and somewhat
resentful surprise.
“We have been told,” she
began, loftily, “we have been told, Cap’n
Kendrick, that you wished to speak to us. We can’t
imagine why, but we have came come, I should
say. Do you wish to speak to us?”
Kendrick nodded. “Yes,”
he said crisply, “I do. I want to tell you
that you mustn’t go to Judge Knowles about buyin’
those iron statues of Cap’n Seth’s or
about anything else. He is sick and mustn’t
be worried. Miss Berry says so, and I agree with
her.”
He paused From the committee came
a gasp, or concert of gasps and muttered exclamations,
indicating astonishment. Elvira voiced the feeling.
“You agree with her!”
she exclaimed. “You agree? Why I
never did!”
“Yes. And I agree with
her, too, about buyin’ those er lions
and dogs and hogs, or whatever they are.
I don’t say they aren’t worth seventy-five
dollars or more or less I don’t
know. But I do say that, until I have had time
to look into things aboard here, I don’t want
any money spent except for stores and other necessities.
There isn’t a bit of personal feelin’
in this, you must understand, it is business, that’s
all.”
He paused once more, to let this sink
in. It sank apparently and when it again came
to the surface an outburst of incoherent indignation
came with it. Every committee-woman said something,
even Mrs. Chase, although her observations were demands
to know what was being said by the rest. Elizabeth
was the only one who remained silent. She was
gazing, wide-eyed, at the captain, and upon her face
was a strange expression, an expression of eagerness,
dawning understanding, and yes, of hope.
Miss Snowden was so completely taken
aback that she was incapable of connected speech.
Mrs. Susanna Brackett, however, was of a temperament
less easily upset. She stepped forward.
“Cap’n Kendrick,”
she demanded, “what are you talkin’ about?
What right have you got to say how the Fair Harbor
money shall be spent? What are you interferin’
here for I’d like to know?”
“I’m not interferin’. I’m
taking charge, that’s all.
“Takin’ charge?... My land
of love!... Charge of what?”
“Of this craft here, this Fair
Harbor place. Judge Knowles offered me the general
management of it three days ago.”
Even the Brackett temperament was
not proof against such a shock. Susanna herself
found difficulty in speaking.
“You you ”
she sputtered. “My soul to heavens!
Do you mean Are you crazy?”
“Um maybe. But,
anyhow, crazy or not, I’m in command aboard here
from now on. Miss Elizabeth here and
her mother, of course will be captain and
mate, same as they’ve always been, but I’ll
be well, commodore or admiral, whichever
you like to call it. It’s a queer sort of
a job for a man like me,” he added, with a grim
smile, “but it looks as if it was what we’d
all have to get used to.”
For a moment there was silence, absolute
silence, in the best parlor of the Fair Harbor for
Mariners’ Women. Then that silence was broken.
“What is he sayin’?”
wailed Mrs. Aurora Chase. “Elviry Snowden,
why don’t you tell me what he’s a-sayin’?”