Sears Kendrick left the Fair Harbor,
perhaps fifteen minutes later, with that thought still
uppermost in his mind. This was not at all the
Egbert Phillips he had expected. From Judge Knowles’
conversation, from Judah Cahoon’s stories, from
fragmentary descriptions he had picked up here and
there about Bayport, he had fashioned an Egbert who
had come to be in his mind a very real individual.
This Egbert of his imagining was an oily, rather flashily
dressed adventurer, a glib talker, handsome in a stage
hero sort of way, with exaggerated politeness and a
toothsome smile. There should be about this individual
a general atmosphere of brilliantine, clothes and
jewelry. On the whole he might have been expected
to look a bit like the manager the captain had seen
standing beside the ticket wagon at the circus, twirling
his mustache with one hand and his cane with the other.
Not quite as showy, not quite as picturesque, but
a marked resemblance nevertheless.
And the flesh and blood Egbert Phillips
was not that kind at all. One was not conscious
of his clothes, except that they were all that they
should be as to fit and style. He wore
no jewelry whatever save his black cuff buttons and
studs. His black tie was not of Bayport’s
fashion, certainly. It was ample, flowing and
picturesque, rather in the foreign way. No other
male in Bayport could have worn that tie and not looked
foolish, yet Mr. Phillips did not look foolish, far
from it. He did not wear a beard, another unusual
bit of individuality, but his long, drooping mustache
was extraordinarily becoming and yes, aristocratic
was the word. His smile was pleasant, his handshake
was cordial, but not overdone, and his voice low and
pleasant. Above all he had a manner, a manner
which caused Sears, who had sailed pretty well over
the world and had met all sorts of people in all sorts
of places, to feel awkward and countrified. Yet
one could tell that Mr. Phillips would not have one
feel that way for the world; it was his desire to put
every one at his or her ease.
He greeted the captain with charming
affability. He had heard of him, of course.
He understood they were neighbors, as one might say.
He looked forward to the pleasure of their better
acquaintance. He had gotten but little further
than this when Mrs. Berry, Miss Snowden and the rest
again swooped down upon him and Sears was left forgotten
on the outside of the circle. He went home soon
afterward and sat down in the Minot kitchen to think
it over.
Egbert had come.... Well? Now what?
He spent the greater part of the afternoon
superintending the stowage of the wood and did not
go back to the Harbor at all. But he was perfectly
certain that he was not missed. The Fair Harbor
for Mariners’ Women fairly perspired excitement.
Caroline Snow, her washing hung upon the lines in
the back yard, found time to scurry down the hill and
tell Judah the news. The captain had limped up
to his room for a forgotten pipe, and when he returned
Judah was loaded with it. He fired his first
broadside before his lodger entered the barn.
“Say, Cap’n Sears,”
hailed Mr. Cahoon, breathlessly, “do you know
who that feller was me and you seen along of Elviry
this forenoon? The tall one with the beaver and and
the gloves and the cane? The one I called the
Prince of Wales or else a lightnin’-rod peddler?
Do you know who he is?”
Sears nodded. “Yes,” he said, shortly.
Judah stared, open-mouthed.
“You do?” he gasped.
“Yes.”
“You mean to tell me you know
he’s that ah er-what’s-his-name Eg
Phillips come back?”
“Yes, Judah.”
“My hoppin’ Henry! Why didn’t
you say so?”
“I didn’t know it then,
Judah. I found it out afterward, when I went up
to the house.”
“Yes but but
you knew it when you and me was eatin’ dinner,
didn’t you? Why didn’t you say somethin’
about it then?”
“Oh I don’t know.
It isn’t important enough to interfere with our
meals, is it?”
Judah slowly shook his head.
“It’s a dum good thing you wan’t
around time of the flood, Cap’n Sears,”
he declared. “’Twould have been the thirty-eighth
day afore you’d have cal’lated ‘twas
sprinklin’ hard enough to notice. Afore
that you’d have called it a thick fog, I presume
likely. If you don’t think this Phillips
man’s makin’ port is important enough
to talk about you take a cruise down to the store to-night.
You’ll hear more cacklin’ than you’d
hear in a henhouse in a week and all account
of just one Egg, too,” he added, with a chuckle.
“Caroline told you he had come,
I suppose? Well, what does she think of him?”
Judah snorted. “She?”
he repeated. “She thinks he’s the
Angel Gabriel dressed up.”
He would have liked to discuss the
new arrival the remainder of the afternoon, but the
captain was not in the mood to listen. Neither
was he more receptive or discussive at supper time.
Judah wanted to talk of nothing else and to speculate
concerning the amount of wealth which Mr. Phillips
might have inherited, upon the probable date of the
reading of Lobelia’s will, upon whether or not
the fortunate legatee might take up his residence
in Bayport.
“Say Cap’n” he observed,
turning an inflamed countenance from the steam of
dishwashing, “don’t you cal’late
maybe he may be wantin’ to er sort
of change things aboard the Fair Harbor? He’ll
be Admiral, as you might say, now, won’t he?”
“Will he?”
“Well won’t he?”
“Don’t know, Judah. I haven’t
thrown up my commission yet, you know.”
“No, course you ain’t,
course you ain’t. I don’t mean he’d
think of disrating you, Cap’n Sears. Nobody’d
be fool-head enough for that.... But, honest,
I would like to look at him and hear him talk.
Caroline Snow, she says he’s the finest, highest-toned
man ever she see.”
“Yes? Well, that’s sayin’ somethin’.”
“Yus, but ‘tain’t
sayin’ too much. She lives down to Woodchuck
Neck and the highest thing down there is a barrel
of cod-livers. They’re good and high when
the sun gets to ’em.”
When the dishes were done he announced
that he guessed likely he might as well go down to
Eliphalet’s and listen to the cackling.
The captain did not object, and so he put on his cap
and departed. But he was back again in less than
a minute.
“He’s comin’, Cap’n,”
he cried, excitedly. “Creepin’ Moses!
He’s comin’ here.”
Sears remained calm. “He
is, eh?” he observed. “Well, is he
creepin’ now?”
“Hey? Creepin’? What are you
talkin’ about?”
“Why, Moses. You said he was comin’,
didn’t you?”
“I said that Egbert man was
comin’. He was just onlatchin’ the
gate when I see him.... Hey? That’s
him knockin’ now. Shall I shall
I let him in, Cap’n Sears?”
“I would if I were you, Judah. If you don’t
I shall have to.”
So Judah did. Mr. Phillips entered
the kitchen, removing his silk hat at the threshold.
Mr. Cahoon followed, too overcome with excitement and
curiosity to remember to take off his own cap.
Sears Kendrick would have risen from the armchair
in which he was seated, but the visitor extended a
gloved hand.
“Don’t. Don’t
rise, I beg of you,” he said, earnestly.
“Pray keep your seat, Captain Kendall.
I have just learned of your most unfortunate accident.
Really, I must insist that you remain just as you are.
You will distress me greatly if you move on my account.
Thank you, thank you. I suppose I should apologize
for running in in this informal way, but I feel almost
as if I had known you for a long time. Our mutual
friends, the Berrys, have told me so much concerning
you since my arrival that I did not stand upon ceremony
at all.”
“That’s right,”
declared the captain, heartily. “I’m
glad you didn’t. Sit down, Mr. Phillips.
Put your hat on the table there.”
Judah stepped forward.
“Give it to me; I’ll take
care of it,” he said, taking the shining beaver
from the visitor’s hand. “I’ll
hang it up yonder in the back entry, then ’twon’t
get knocked onto the floor.... No, no, don’t
set in that chair, that’s got a spliced leg;
it’s liable to land you on your beam ends if
you ain’t careful. Try this one.”
He kicked the infirm chair out of
the way and pushed forward a substitute. “There,”
he added, cheerfully, “that’s solid’s
the rock of Giberaltar. Nothin’ like bein’
sure of your anchorage. Set down, set down.”
He beamed upon the caller. The
latter did not beam exactly. His expression was
a queer one. Sears came to the rescue.
“Mr. Phillips,” he said, “this is
Mr. Cahoon.”
Judah extended a mighty hand.
“Pleased to make your acquaintance,
Mr. Phillips,” he declared. “I’ve
heard tell of you considerable.”
Egbert looked at the hand. His expression was
still queer.
“Oh ah how d’ye
do?” he murmured.
“Mr. Cahoon and I are old friends,”
explained Sears. “I am boardin’ here
with him.”
“Yus,” put in Judah.
“And afore that I shipped cook aboard Cap’n
Sears’s vessels for a good many v’yages.
The cap’n and I get along fust rate. He’s
all right, Cap’n Sears is, I tell ye!”
Mr. Phillips murmured something to
the effect that he was sure of it. He did not
seem very sure of Judah. Mr. Cahoon did not notice
the uncertainty, he pushed his hand nearer to the
visitor’s.
“I’m real glad to meet you,” he
said.
Egbert gingerly took the proffered
hand, moved it up and down once and then dropped it,
after which he looked at his glove. Judah looked
at it, too.
“Kind of chilly outdoor to-night,
is it?” he asked. “Didn’t seem
so to me.”
Again his lodger came to the rescue.
“Well, Mr. Phillips,”
he said, “you gave us all a little surprise,
didn’t you? Of course we expected you in
a general sort of way, but we didn’t know when
you would make port.”
Egbert bowed. “I scarcely
knew myself,” he said. “My plans were
somewhat vague and ah rather
hurriedly made, naturally. Of course my great
sorrow, my bereavement ”
He paused, sighed and then brushed
the subject away with a wave of his glove.
“You won’t mind, I’m
sure,” he said, “if I don’t dwell
upon that just now. It is too recent, the shock
is too great, I really cannot.... But I am so
sorry to hear of your disability. A railway wreck,
I understand. Outrageous carelessness, no doubt.
Really, Captain Kendrick, one cannot find excuses
for the reckless mismanagement of your American railways....
Why, what is it? Don’t you agree with me?”
The captain had looked up momentarily.
Now he was looking down again.
“Don’t you agree with
me?” repeated Egbert. “Surely you,
of all people, should not excuse their recklessness.”
Sears shook his head. “Oh,
I wasn’t tryin’ to,” he replied.
“I was only wonderin’ why you spoke of
’em as ‘your’ railroads. They
aren’t mine, you know. That is, any more
than they are Judah’s or yours or
any other American’s. No such luck.”
Mr. Phillips coughed, smiled, coughed
again, and then explained that he had used the word
‘your’ without thinking.
“I have been so long an ah shall
I say exile, Captain Kendall,” he observed,
“that I have, I presume, fallen somewhat into
the European habit of thinking and ah speaking.
Habit is a peculiar thing, is it not?”
Mr. Cahoon, intensely interested in
the conversation, evidently felt it his duty to contribute
toward it.
“You’re right there, Mr.
Phillips,” he announced, with emphasis.
“Don’t talk to me about habits! When
a man’s been to sea as long’s I have he
runs afoul of pretty nigh every kind of habit there
is, seems so. Why, I knew a feller one time down
to Surinam ’twas I was cook and steward
aboard the old Highflyer and this
feller he wan’t a white man, nor
he wan’t all nigger nuther, kind of in between,
one of them er er octoreens,
that’s what he was well, this feller
he had the dumdest habit. Every day of his life,
about the middle of the dog watch he’d up and ”
“Judah.”
“Aye, aye, Cap’n Sears?”
“You’ll be late down at the store, won’t
you?”
“Hey? Oh, I don’t
care how late I be. I don’t know’s
I’m so dreadful partic’lar about goin’
down there to-night, anyhow. Don’t know
but I’d just as live stay here.”
“I’d go.”
“Hey? Oh, I ”
“I’d go, if I were you.
You know there’s likely to be a good deal goin’
on.”
“Think so, do you?” Judah was evidently
on the fence. “Course, I
Well, maybe I had better, come to think of it.
Good night, Mr. Phillips.
I’ll tell you about that octoreen feller next
time I see you. So long,
Cap’n Sears. I’ll report about,”
with a wink, “the cacklin’ later.
Creepin’! it’s most eight now, ain’t
it?”
He hurried out. Egbert looked rather relieved.
He smiled tolerantly.
“Evidently an eccentric, your er man,”
he observed.
“He has his ways, like the majority
of us, I guess,” declared the captain, crisply.
“Underneath he is as square and big-hearted as
they make. And he’s a good friend of mine.”
“Oh, yes; yes, I’m sure of it. Captain
Kendall ”
“Kendrick, not Kendall.”
Mr. Phillips begged pardon for the
mistake. It was inexcusable, he admitted.
He had heard the captain’s name mentioned so
frequently since his arrival in Bayport, especially
by Mrs. Berry and her daughter, “so favorably,
even enthusiastically mentioned,” that he certainly
should have remembered it. “I am not quite
myself, I fear,” he added. “My recent
bereavement and the added shock of the death of my
dear old friend the judge have had their effect.
My nerves are well, you understand, I am
sure.”
He made a lengthy call. He talked
a great deal, and his conversation was always interesting.
He spoke much of his dear wife, of life abroad, of
Genoa and Leghorn, ports which the captain had visited,
and of the changes in Bayport since his last sojourn
in the village. But he said almost nothing concerning
his plans for the future, and of the Fair Harbor very
little. In fact, Sears had the feeling that he
was waiting for him to talk concerning that institution.
This the captain would not do and, at last, Mr. Phillips
himself touched lightly upon the fringes of the subject.
“Do you find your duties in
connection with the ah retreat
next door arduous, Captain Kendrick?” he inquired.
“Eh?... Oh, no, I don’t
know as I’d call ’em that, exactly.”
“I imagine not, I imagine not.
You are you are, I gather, a sort of oh
What should I call you, captain; in your official capacity,
you know?”
He laughed pleasantly. Sears smiled.
“Give it up,” he replied.
“I told Elizabeth Miss Berry, I mean when
I first took the berth that I scarcely knew what it
was.”
“Ha, ha! Yes, I can imagine.
Miss Berry charming girl, isn’t she,
captain intimated to me that your position
was somewhat ah general.
You exercise a sort of supervision over the finances
and management, in a way, do you not?”
“In a way, yes.”
“Yes. Of course, my dear
sir, you understand that I am not unduly curious.
I don’t mean to be. This ah Fair
Harbor was, as you know, very dear to the heart of
Mrs. Phillips and, now that she has been taken from
me, I feel, of course, a sense of trust, of sacred
responsibility. We had understood, she and I,
that our dear friend Judge Knowles was
in supreme charge nominally, I mean; of
course Mrs. Berry was in actual charge and,
therefore, I confess to a natural feeling of shall
I say surprise, on learning that the judge had appointed
another person, an understudy, as it were?”
“Well, you couldn’t be
any more surprised than I was when the judge asked
me to take the job. And Elizabeth and her mother
know that I hesitated considerable before I did take
it. Judge Knowles was in his last sickness, he
couldn’t attend to things himself.”
Mr. Phillips raised a protesting hand.
“Please don’t misunderstand me,”
he said. “Don’t, I beg of you, think
for a moment that I am objecting to the judge’s
action, or even criticizing it. It was precisely
the thing he should have done, what Mrs. Phillips
and I would have wished him to do. And as for
his choice of ah appointee ”
Captain Sears interrupted. “As
to that,” he said, “you can criticize as
much as you please. You can’t object any
more than I did when me made me the offer.”
The protesting hand was again raised.
“Criticism or objection was the very farthest
from my mind, I assure you,” Egbert declared.
“I was about to say that Judge Knowles showed
his usual ah acumen when he selected
a man as well known and highly esteemed as yourself,
sir. The mention of the name of Captain Kendall ”
“Kendrick.”
“Kendrick, of course. I
apologize once more. But, if you will permit me
to say so, a man as well and favorably known to us
all as you are, sir, is certainly the ideal occupant
of the ah place.”
“Thanks. You knew of me,
then? I don’t think you and I have ever
met before, have we?”
“No; no, I believe I have never before had the
pleasure.”
“Thanks. I was pretty sure
I hadn’t. I’ve been away from Bayport
a good deal. I wasn’t here when you and
your wife came back about five years ago,
wasn’t it? And, of course, I didn’t
know you when you used to live here. Let’s
see; you used to teach singin’-school, didn’t
you?”
This question was asked in the most
casual fashion. Mr. Phillips did not answer at
once. He coughed, changed his position, and then
smiled graciously.
“Yes,” he said. “Yes,
I I did something of the sort, for a time.
Music has always been a one might call
it a ah hobby of mine. But,
regarding your duties as well, whatever
those duties are, Captain Kendrick: You say they
are not arduous. And your ah compensation?
That, I understand, is not large? Pardon my referring
to it, but as Mrs. Phillips was the owner and benefactress
of the Fair Harbor, and as I am shall I
say heir to her interests, why, perhaps
my excuse for asking for information is ah a
reasonable one.”
He paused, and with another smile
and wave of the hand, awaited his host’s reply.
Sears looked at him.
“I guess you know what my wages
are, Mr. Phillips,” he observed. “Don’t
you?”
“Why why ah ah ”
“Didn’t Cordelia tell you? She knows.
So does Elizabeth.”
“Why why, Mrs. Berry
did mention a figure, I believe. I seem to recall ah ah something.”
“If you remember fifteen hundred
a year, you will have it right. That is the amount
I’m paid for bein’ in general command over
there. As you say, it isn’t very large,
but perhaps it’s large enough for what I do.”
“Oh ah, don’t
misunderstand me, Captain Kendrick, please don’t.
I was not questioning the amount of your salary.”
“Wasn’t you? My mistake. I thought
you was.”
“No; indeed no. My only
feeling in regard to it was its ah trifling
size. It pardon me, but it seemed such
a small sum for you to accept, a man of your attainments.”
“My attainments, as you call
’em, haven’t got me very far I’m
a poor man and, just now at any rate, I’m a
cripple, a wreck on a lee shore. Fifteen hundred
a year isn’t so small to me.”
Mr Phillips apologized. He was
sorry he had referred to the subject. But the
captain, he was sure, understood his motive for asking,
and, now that so much had been said, might he say
just a word more.
“Our dear Cordelia Mrs.
Berry ” he went on, “intimated
that your ah compensation was
paid by the judge, himself.”
“Yes it was. Judge Knowles
paid it with his own money. It doesn’t come
out of the Fair Harbor funds.”
“Yes, yes, of course, of course.
The judge’s interest in my beloved wife’s ah whims perhaps
that is too frivolous a word was extraordinarily
fine. But now the judge has passed on.”
“Yes. More’s the pity.”
“I heartily agree with you,
it is a great pity. An irreparable loss....
But he has gone.”
“Yes.”
Just here the dialogue came to a peculiar
halt. Mr. Phillips seemed to be waiting for his
companion to say something and the captain to be waiting
for Phillips himself to say it first. As a consequence
neither said it. When the conversation was resumed
it was once more of a general nature. It was
not until just beyond the end of the call that the
Fair Harbor was again mentioned. And, as at first,
it was the caller who led up to it.
“Captain Kendrick,” he
observed, “you are, like myself, a man of the
world, a man of wide experience.”
This was given forth as a positive
statement, not a question, yet he seemed to expect
a reply. Sears obliged.
“Oh, I don’t know,” he demurred.
“Pardon me, but I do. I
am accustomed to judge persons and characters, and
I think I may justly pride myself on making few mistakes.
From what I had heard I expected to find you a man
of the world, a man of experience and judgment.
Judge Knowles’ selection of you as the ah temporary
head of the Fair Harbor would have indicated that,
of course, but, if you will permit me to say so, this
interview has confirmed it.”
Again he paused, as if expecting a
reply. And again the captain humored him.
“Much obliged,” he said.
The Phillips hand waved the thanks
away. There was another perceptible wait.
Then said Egbert, “Captain Kendrick, as one man
of the world to another, what do you think of the ah institution
next door?”
Sears looked at him. “What
do I think of it?” he repeated.
“Yes, exactly. It was,
as you know, the darling of my dear wife’s heart.
When she loaned her shall we say her ancestral
home, and ah money to the purpose
she firmly believed the Fair Harbor for Mariners’
Women to be an inspiration for good. She believed
its founding to be the beginning of a great work.
Is it doing that work, do you think? In your
opinion, sir, is it a success?”
Captain Sears slowly stroked his close-cropped
beard. What was the man driving at?
“Why I don’t
know as I know exactly what you mean by success,”
he hesitated. “It’s takin’
care of its er boarders and it’s
makin’ a home for ’em. That is what
your wife wanted it to do, didn’t she?”
“Oh, yes, yes, quite so.
But that is not precisely what I mean. Put it
this way, sir: In your opinion, as a man of affairs ”
“Here, here, just a minute.
I’m not a man of affairs. I’m a broken-down
sea cap’n on shore, that’s all.”
Again the upraised hand. “I
know what you are, Captain Kendrick,” said Egbert.
“That, if you will permit me to say so, is why
I am asking your opinion. The success of a ah proposition
depends, as I see it, upon the amount of success achieved
in proportion to the amount of energy, capital ah whatnot
invested. Now, considering the sum needed to
support the Fair Harbor paid, as doubtless
you know, Captain Kendrick, from the interest of an
amount loaned and set aside by my dear wife some years
ago considering that sum, I say, added to
the amount sunk, or invested, in the house, land,
furnishings, et cetera, is it your opinion that
the institution’s success is a sufficient return?
Or, might not the same sums, put into other ah charities,
reap larger rewards? Rewards in the shape of
good to our fellow men and women, Captain Kendrick?
What do you think?”
Sears crossed his knees.
“I don’t know,” he said.
“Of course, of course.
One does not know. But it is a question to be
considered, is it not?”
“Why why, yes, maybe.
Do I understand that you are thinkin’ of givin’
up the Fair Harbor? Doin’ away with it?”
“Oh, no, no, no!” Mr.
Phillips pushed the surmise deeper into the background
with each negative. “I am not considering
anything of that sort, Captain Kendrick.”
“Well humph!
My mistake again. I thought you just said you
were considerin’ it.”
“Only as a question, Captain,
only as a question. While my wife lived, of course,
the Fair Harbor her Fair Harbor was
a thing fixed, immovable. Now that she has been
taken from me, it devolves upon me, the care of her
trusts, her benefactions.”
“Yes. So you said, Mr. Phillips.”
“I believe I did say so.
Yes. And therefore, as I see it, a part of that
trust is to make sure that every penny of her ah charity
is doing the greatest good to the greatest number.”
“And you think the Fair Harbor
isn’t gettin’ its money’s worth?”
“Oh, no, no, no. I don’t
say that. I don’t say that at all.
I am sure it must be. I am merely considering,
that is all, merely considering.... Well, Captain
Kendrick, I must go. We shall see each other often,
I trust. I have-ah a suite at the
Central House and if you will do me the honor of calling
I shall greatly appreciate it. Pray drop in at
any time, sir. Don’t, I beg of you, stand
upon ceremony.”
Sears promised that he would not.
He was finding it hard to keep from smiling.
A “suite” at the Central House, Bayport’s
one hostelry, tickled him. He knew the rooms
at that hit or miss tavern.
“Good-by, Captain Kendrick,”
said Mr. Phillips. “Upon one thing I feel
sure you may congratulate yourself, that is that your
troubles and petty annoyances as ah manager
of the Fair Harbor are practically over.”
“Oh,” observed the captain.
“Yes. I think I shall be
able to relieve you of that care very shortly.
And the sooner the better, I presume you are saying.
Yes? Ha, ha!”
“Thanks. Goin’ to appoint somebody
else, eh?”
“Oh, no, no! My dear
sir! Why, I I really I thought
you understood. I mean to say simply that, while
I am here in person, and as long as I am here, I shall
endeavor to look after the matters myself and consequently
relieve you, that is all. Judge Knowles appointed
you and paid you a very wise and characteristic
thing for him to do; but he, poor man, is dead.
One could scarcely expect you to go on performing
your duties gratuitously. That is why I congratulate
you upon the lifting of the burden from your shoulders.”
“Oh, yes. Um-hm. I see.
Thank you, Mr. Phillips.”
“I should thank you, sir, for
all you have already done. I do sincerely....
Oh, by the way, Captain Kendrick, perhaps it would
be as well that nothing be said concerning this little
business talk of ours. One knows how trifles
are distorted, mole hills made mountains, and all
that, in communities like well, like dear
old Bayport. We love our Bayporters, bless them,
but they will talk. Ha, ha! So, captain,
if you will consider our little chat confidential ”
“I will.”
“Thank you, sir, thank you.
And we shall see each other frequently. I am
counting upon it. Au revoir, Captain Kendrick.
Don’t rise, I beg of you.”
He was gone, the door closed behind
him. Sears filled his pipe, lighted it, and leaned
back in his chair to review and appraise his impressions.
The appraisal was not altogether satisfactory.
It was easy to say that he did not like Egbert Phillips,
for it was the truth he did not like him.
But to affirm truthfully that that dislike was founded
upon anything more substantial than prejudice due
to Judge Knowles’ detestation was not so easy.
The question which continually intruded was this:
Suppose he had met Mr. Phillips for the first time,
never having heard of him before would
he have disliked and distrusted him under those circumstances?
He could not be quite sure.
For, leaving aside Egbert’s
airy condescension and his to the captain’s
New England mind overdone politeness, there
was not so much fault to be found with his behavior
or words during the interview just ended. He had
asked questions concerning the Fair Harbor, had hinted
at the possibility of its discontinuance, had more
than hinted at the dropping of Kendrick as its manager.
Well always bearing in mind the fact that
he was ignorant of his wife’s action which gave
the Seymour house and land to the Fair Harbor and
gave, not loaned, the money for its maintenance bearing
in mind the fact that Egbert Phillips believed himself
the absolute owner of all, with undisputed authority
to do as he pleased with it then....
Well, then Captain Sears was obliged to admit that
he, himself, might have questioned and hinted very
much as his visitor had done. And as for the
condescension and the “manner” these
were, after all, not much more than eccentricities,
and developed, very likely, during his life abroad.
Lobelia Phillips’ will would
be opened and read soon, probably at once. Whew!
Sears whistled as he thought of the staggering disillusionment
which was coming to the widower. How would he
take it? Was Judge Knowles right in his belief
that the rest of the Seymour inheritance had been
wasted and lost? If so, the elegant personage
who had just bowed himself out of the Minot kitchen
would be in a bad way indeed. Sears was sorry
for him.
And yet he did not like the man.
No, he did not.... And he did distrust him.
Judah came back from his sojourn at
the store brimful of talk and chuckles. As he
had prophesied, all Bayport had heard of the arrival
of the great man and all Bayport was discussing him.
He had the finest rooms at the Central House.
He had three trunks count them three!
Not to mention bags and a leather hat box. He
had given the driver of the depot wagon a dollar over
and above his regular charge. He remembered Eliphalet
Bassett the first time he saw him, and called him by
name.
There was a lot more of this, but
Sears paid little attention to it. Judah summed
it all up pretty well in his final declaration, given
as his lodger was leaving the kitchen for the “spare
stateroom.”
“By Henry!” declared Judah,
who seemed rather disgusted, “I never heard
such a powwowin’ over one man in my life.
Up to ’Liphalet’s ’twan’t
nothin’ but ‘Egbert Phillips,’ ‘Egbert
Phillips,’ till you’d think ’twas
a passel of poll-parrots all mockin’ each other.
Simeon Ryder had been down to deacon’s meetin’
in the Orthodox vestry and, nigh’s I can find
out, ’twas just the same down there. ‘Cordin’
to Sim’s tell they talked about the Lord’s
affairs for ten minutes and about this Egg man’s
for forty.”
“But why?” queried the
captain. “He isn’t the only fellow
that has been away from Bayport and come back again.”
Mr. Cahoon shook his head. “I
know it,” he admitted, “but none of the
rest ever had quite so much fuss made over ’em.
I cal’late, maybe, it’s on account of
the way he’s been led up to, as you might say.
I went one time to a kind of show place in New York,
Barnum’s Museum ’twas. There was
a great sign outdoor sayin’, ’Come on aboard
and see the White Whale,’ or somethin’
similar. Well, I’d seen about every kind
of a whale but a white one, so I cal’lated
maybe I’d might as well spend a quarter and
see that. There was a great big kind of tank place
full of water and a whole passel of folks hangin’
around the edge of it with their mouths open, gawpin’
at nothin’ nothin’ but the water,
that’s all there was to see. And a man
up on a kind of platform he was preachin’ a
sort of sermon, wavin’ his arms and hollerin’
about how rare and scurce white whales was, and how
the museum folks had to scour all creation afore they
got this one, and about how the round heads of Europe ”
“Crowned heads, wasn’t it, Judah?”
“Hey? I don’t know,
maybe so. Cabbage heads it ought to have been,
‘cordin’ to my notion. Well, anyhow,
’twas some kind of Europe heads, and they had
all pretty nigh broke the necks belongin’ to
’em gettin’ to see this whale, and how
lucky we was because we could see it for the small
sum of twenty-five cents, and so on, and so on until
all hands of us was just kind of on tiptoe, as you
might say. And then, all to once, the water in
the tank kind of riz up, you know, and somethin’
white might have been the broadside of a
barn for all we had time to see of it showed
for a jiffy, there was a ‘Woosh,’ and the
white thing went under again.’ And that
was all. The man said we was now able to tell
our children that we’d seen a white whale and
that the critter would be up to breathe again in about
an hour, or week after next, or some such time....
Anyhow, what I’m tryin’ to get at is that
’twan’t the whale itself that counted
so much as ‘twas the way that preachin’
man led up to him. This Egbert he’s been
preached about and guessed about and looked for’ard
to so long that all Bayport’s been on tiptoe,
like us folks around that museum tank.... Well,
this Phillips whale has made a big ‘Woosh’
in town so fur. Can he keep it up? That’s
what I’m wonderin’.”
The sensation kept up for the next
day and the next at least, and there were no signs
of its abating. Over at the Fair Harbor Captain
Sears found himself playing a very small second fiddle.
Miss Snowden, Mrs. Brackett and their following, instead
of putting themselves out to smile upon the captain
and to chat with him, ignored him almost altogether,
or, if they did speak, spoke only of Mr. Phillips.
He was the most entertaining man, so genteel,
his conversation was remarkable, he had traveled everywhere.
Mrs. Berry, of course, was in ecstasies
concerning him. He was her ideal of a gentleman,
she said, so aristocratic. “So like
the men I associated with in the old days,”
she said. “Of course,” she added,
“he is an old friend. Dear ’Belia
and he were my dearest friends, you know, Captain
Kendrick.”
The captain was curious to learn Elizabeth’s
opinion of him. He found that opinion distinctly
favorable.
“He is different,” she
said. “Different, I mean, from any one I
ever met. And at first I thought him conceited.
But he isn’t really, he is just well,
different. I think I shall like him.”
Sears smiled. “If you don’t
you will be rather lonesome here in the Harbor, I
judge,” he observed.
She looked at him quickly. “You
don’t like him, do you, Cap’n Kendrick?”
she said. “Why?”
“Why why, I don’t say I don’t
like him, Elizabeth.”
“No, you don’t say it,
but you look it. I didn’t think you took
sudden dislikes, Cap’n. It doesn’t
seem like you, somehow.”
He could not explain, and he felt
that he had disappointed her.
On the third day the news came that
Mr. Phillips had left town, gone suddenly, so Judah
said.
“He took the afternoon train
and bought a ticket for Boston, so they tell me,”
declared the latter. “He’s left his
dunnage at the Central House, so he’s comin’
back, I cal’late; but nobody knows where he’s
gone, nor why he went. Went over to Orham this
mornin’ hired a horse-’n’-team
down to the livery stable and went come
back about one o’clock, wouldn’t speak
to nobody, went up to his room, never et no dinner,
and then set sail for Boston on the up train.
Cur’us, ain’t it? Where do you cal’late
likely he’s gone, Cap’n Sears?”
“Give it up, Judah. And,”
speaking quickly in order to head off the question
he saw the Cahoon lips already forming, “I can’t
guess why he’s gone, either.”
But, although he did not say so, he
could have guessed why Mr. Phillips had gone to Orham.
Bradley, the Orham lawyer, had written the day before
to say that the will of Lobelia Phillips would be opened
and read at his office on Thursday morning. And
this was Thursday. Bradley had suggested Sears’s
coming over to be present at the reading of the will.
“As you are so deeply interested in the Fair
Harbor,” he wrote, “I should think you
might or ought to be on hand.
I don’t believe Phillips will object.”
But the captain had not accepted the
invitation. Knowing, as he did, the disappointment
which was in store for Egbert, he had no wish to see
the blow fall. So he remained at home, but that
afternoon Bradley himself drove into the Minot yard.
“I just stopped for a minute,
Cap’n, he said. I had some other business
in town here; that brought me over, but I wanted to
tell you that we opened that will this morning.”
Sears looked a question. “Well?”
he queried.
Bradley nodded. “It was
just about as we thought, and as the judge said,”
he declared. “The papers were there, of
course, telling of the gift of the fifty thousand
to the Harbor, of the gift of the land and house,
everything. There was one other legacy, a small
one, and then she left all the rest, ’stocks,
bonds, securities, personal effects and cash’
to her beloved husband, Egbert Phillips. That’s
all there was to it, Kendrick. Short but sweet,
eh?”
Sears nodded. “Sweet enough,”
he agreed. “And how did the beloved husband
take it?”
“Well ... well, he was pretty
nasty. In fact he was about as nasty as anybody
could be. He went white as a sheet and then red
and then white again. I didn’t know, for
a minute or two, what was going to happen, didn’t
know but what I should have a fight on my hands.
However, I didn’t. I don’t think
he’s the fighting kind, not that kind of a fight.
He just took it out in being nasty. Said of course
he should contest the gift, hinted at undue influence,
spoke of thieves and swindlers not naming
’em, though and then, when I suggested
that he had better think it over before he said too
much, pulled up short and walked out of the office.
Yes, he was pretty nasty. But, honestly, Cap’n
Kendrick, when I think it over, I don’t know
that he was any nastier than I, or any other fellow,
might have been under the circumstances. It was
a smash between the eyes for him, that’s what
it was. Met him, have you?”
“Yes.”
“What do you think of him?”
“I don’t know yet.”
“Neither do I. He’s a polite chap, isn’t
he?”
“No doubt about that. Say,
Bradley, do you think he’s got much left of
the ‘stocks, bonds,’ and all the rest that
the will talked about?”
“I give it up. Of course
we shall talk about that by and by, I suppose, but
we haven’t yet. You know what Judge Knowles
declared; he was perfectly sure that there wouldn’t
be anything left that this fellow and Lobelia
had thrown away every loose penny of old Seymour’s
money. And, of course, he prophesied that this
Egbert man would be back here as soon as his wife
died to sell the Fair Harbor, ship and cargo, and get
the money for them. The biggest satisfaction the
old judge got out of life along toward the last of
it was in knowing that he and Lobelia had fixed things
so that that couldn’t be done. He certainly
hated Phillips, the judge did.”
“Um-hm. But he might have been prejudiced.”
“Yes. Sometimes I wonder if he wasn’t.”
“Tell me, Bradley: Did
you know this Phillips man when he was skipper of
the singin’ school here in Bayport? Before
he married Lobelia?”
“No. Nor I didn’t
meet him when he and his wife were on here the last
time. I was up in the State House serving out
my two terms as county representative.”
“I see.... Oh! You
spoke of Lobelia’s leavin’ another legacy.
Who was that to? If it isn’t a secret.”
“It is, so far. But it
won’t be very long. She left five thousand,
in cash and in Judge Knowles’s care, for Cordelia
Berry over here at the Harbor. She and Lobelia
were close friends, you know. Cordelia is to
have it free and clear, but I am to invest it for her.
She doesn’t know her good luck yet. I am
going over now to tell her about it.... Oh, by
the way, Cap’n: Judge Knowles’s nephew,
the man from California, is expecting to reach Bayport
next Sunday. He can’t stay out a little
while, and so I shall have to hurry up that will and
the business connected with it. Can you come
over to my office Monday about ten?”
“Why, I suppose likely I could,
but what do you want me for?”
“I don’t, except in the
general way of always wanting to see you, Cap’n.
But Judge Knowles wanted you especially.”
“He did! Wanted me?”
“Yes. Seems so. He
left a memorandum of those he wanted on hand when his
will was read. You are one, and Elizabeth Berry
is another. Will you come?”
“Why why, yes, I suppose so.
But what in the world ”
“I don’t know. But
I imagine we’ll all know Monday. I’ll
look for you then, Cap’n.”