Elizabeth did not visit the Minot
place that evening, as she had said she meant to do.
It may be that Sears was a trifle disappointed, but
even he would have been obliged to confess that that
particular evening was not the time for him to receive
callers. He ate his supper a very
small portion of the meal which Judah had provided
for him and, soon afterward, retired to
the spare stateroom and bed. Undressing was a
martyrdom, and he had hard work to keep back the groans
which the pain in his legs tempted him to utter.
There was no doubt that he had twisted those shaky
limbs of his more than he realized. He had wrenched
them severely, how severely he scarcely dared think.
But they forced him to think all that night, and the
next morning Judah insisted on going for the doctor.
Doctor Sheldon examined the “spliced
timbers,” fumed and scolded a good deal, but
at last grudgingly admitted that no irreparable harm
had been done.
“You’re luckier than you
deserve, Cap’n,” he declared. “It’s
a wonder you aren’t ruined altogether.
Now you stay right in that bed until I tell you to
get up. And that won’t be to-day, or to-morrow
either. Perhaps the day after that well,
we’ll see. But those legs of yours need
absolute rest. Judah, you see that they get it,
will you? If he tries to get up you knock him
back again. Those are orders. Understand?”
“Aye, aye, sir,” replied
Judah, promptly. “I’ll have a handspike
handy. He won’t turn out, I’ll see
to it.”
Sears’ protestations that he
couldn’t waste time in bed, that he had too
many important things to attend to, went for nothing.
According to Sheldon and Judah his legs were the only
things of real importance just then and they needed
absolute rest. Down inside him the captain realized
that this was true, and so grumblingly resigned himself
to the two days of imprisonment. With the most
recent issues of the Cape Cod Item and one
or two books from the shelves in the sitting room closet,
books of the vintage of the ’40’s and
’50’s, but fortunately of a strong sea
flavor, he endeavored to console himself, while Judah
attended to the household duties or went down town
on errands.
Elizabeth called that first forenoon,
but did not see him. The doctor had warned Judah
to head off visitors. “They may not do any
harm, but they certainly won’t do any good,
and I want him to have absolute rest,” said
Sheldon. So Judah guarded the outer portal, and,
when he went out, hung up a warning placard.
“OUT. NO ADMITENTS. DOORS LOKED. KEY
UNDER MAT.” The information concerning
the key was for the doctor’s benefit.
But Elizabeth sent her good wishes
and sympathy. So did her mother. So, too,
did Esther Tidditt, and Miss Snowden, and Miss Peasley,
and in fact all the Fair Harbor inmates. For
the first day Mr. Cahoon was kept busy transmitting
messages to the spare stateroom.
But about this time Bayport began
to rock with a new series of sensations and, except
by the very few, Captain Kendrick was forgotten.
The news of Judge Knowles’ various legacies became
known and spread through the village like fire in
a patch of dead weeds. The Fair Harbor sat up
nearly all of one night discussing and commenting upon
the good fortune which had befallen the Berrys.
And by no means all of the time was used in congratulations.
“Humph!” sniffed Susanna
Brackett, her lips squeezed so tightly together that
her mustache stood on end. “Humph!”
Miss Snowden nodded. “Of
course,” she said, “I’m not a person
to hint, or anything of that sort. But but
if somebody’ll tell me why the judge
left all that money to her I should like to hear ’em.”
Mrs. Brackett opened her lips sufficiently
to observe that so should she. “Of course,”
she added, “the five thousand that Lobelia left
Cordelia might have been expected, they was real friendly
always. But why did Judge Knowles leave it all
to Elizabeth and not one cent to her mother? That
I can’t understand.”
Miss Peasley smiled. “We
used to wonder why Elizabeth kept runnin’ to
the judge’s all the time,” she said.
“He was sick and feeble and we thought ‘twas
queer her pesterin’ him so. Now well,
it pays to hang around sick folks, don’t it?
They’re easier to coax, maybe, than the well
kind.... Course I ain’t sayin’ there
was any coaxin’ done.”
Little Mrs. Tidditt’s feathers
had begun to rise. “Oh, no!” she snapped.
“You ain’t sayin’ anything,
any of you. Judge Knowles was business head of
this this old cats’ home afore he
app’inted Cap’n Kendrick to the job, and
you know that. Elizabeth had to go to him
about all sorts of money matters, and you know that,
too. As for her tryin’ to coax him to leave
her money, that’s just rubbish. He always
liked her, thought the world of her ever since she
was a little girl, and he left her the twenty thousand
because of that and for no other reason. That’s
why I think he left it to her; but, if some
of the rest of you would be better satisfied, I’ll
tell her what you say or ain’t
sayin’, Desire and let her answer
it herself.”
This not being at all what Miss Peasley
and the others wished, no more was said about undue
influence at the time. But much was said at times
when the pugnacious Esther was not present, and there
was marked speculation concerning what Miss Berry
would do with her money, what Mr. Phillips would do
when he returned to Bayport, whether or not Cordelia
Berry would continue to be matron at the Harbor, and
what Sears Kendrick’s plans for the future might
be.
“Of course,” said Mrs.
Brackett, “the judge fixed it so he would get
his fifteen hundred so long as he stays manager.
But will he stay long? There’s Mr. Phillips
to be considered now, I should think. He’ll
have somethin’ to say about the er retreat
his wife founded, won’t he?”
Mrs. Constance Cahoon made a remark.
“George Kent’ll come in
for a nice windfall some of these days, it looks like,”
she observed, significantly. “What makes
you look so funny, Elviry?”
Miss Snowden smiled. “Will he?” she
inquired.
“Well, won’t he? When he marries
Elizabeth ”
“Yes. Yes, when he does.”
“Well, he’s goin’
to, ain’t he? Why, he’s been keepin’
comp’ny with her for two years. Everybody
cal’lates they’re engaged.”
“Yes. But they don’t say they
are.... Oh, what is it Aurora?”
Mrs. Chase, who had been listening
with her hand at her ears, had caught a little of
the conversation.
“If you mean her and George
Kent is engaged, Constance,” she declared, “they
ain’t. I asked Elizabeth if they was, myself,
asked her much as a month ago, and she said no.
Pretty nigh took my head off, too.”
Elvira’s smile broadened.
She nodded, slowly and with mysterious significance.
“I’m not so sure about that engagement,”
she observed. “Some things I’ve seen
lately have set me to thinking. To thinking a
good deal.... Um ... yes. It looks to me
as if somebody somebody, I mention
no names may have had a hint of what was
coming and began to lay plans according.... No,
I shan’t say any more now. And
I give in that it seems too perfectly ridiculous to
believe. But things like that sometimes do happen,
and ... Well, we’ll wait and see.”
Happy in the knowledge that she had
aroused curiosity as well as envy of her superior
knowledge, she subsided. Mrs. Tidditt concluded
that portion of the discussion.
“Well,” she remarked,
crisply, “I don’t see why we need to sit
here talkin’ about engagements or folks’
gettin’ married. Nobody has shown any symptoms
of wantin’ to marry any of this crowd,
so far as I can make out.”
While the town was at the very height
of its agitation concerning the Knowles will, there
came another earthquake. Egbert Phillips returned.
He alighted from the train at the Bayport depot on
the second morning of Sears’s imprisonment in
the spare stateroom and before night the information
that he imparted confidentially, of course and
the hints he gave concerning his plans for the future,
made the Berry legacies and all the other legacies
take second place as gossip kindlers.
Judah came rushing into the house
later that afternoon, his arms full of bundles purchases
at Eliphalet’s store and his mouth
full of words. He dropped everything, eggs, salt
fish, tea and shoe laces, on the kitchen table and
tore pell-mell into his lodger’s bedroom.
Captain Kendrick, propped up with pillows, was of
course stretched out in bed. There was what appeared
to be a letter in his hand, a letter apparently just
received, for a recently opened envelope lay on the
comforter beside him, and upon his face was an expression
of bewilderment, surprise and marked concern.
Judah was too intent upon his news to notice anything
else and Sears hastily gathered up letter and envelope
and thrust them beneath the pillow. Then Judah
broke loose.
Egbert had come back, had come back
to Bayport to live, for good. He had come on
the morning train. Lots of folks saw him; some
of them had talked with him. “And what
do you cal’late, Cap’n Sears? You’ll
never guess in this world! By the crawlin’
prophets, he swears he ain’t rich, the way all
hands figured out he was. No, sir, he ain’t!
‘Cordin’ to his tell he ain’t got
no money at all, scarcely. All them stocks and and
bonds and and securitums and such like have
gone on the rocks. They was unfort’nate
infestments, he says. He says he’s in straightened
out circumstances, whatever they be, but he’s
come back here to spend his declinin’ days that’s
what Joe Macomber says he called ’em, his declinin’
days in Bayport, ’cause he loves the
old place, ’count of Lobelia, his wife, lovin’
it so, and he can maybe scratch along here on what
income he’s got, and and ”
And so on, for sentence after sentence.
Sears heard some of it, but not all. The letter
he had just read the letter from Judge Knowles
which Bradley had handed him before he left Orham was
of itself too startling and disturbing to be dismissed
from his thoughts; but he heard some, enough to make
him realize that there might be, in all probability
was, trouble ahead. Just why Phillips had returned
to Bayport, to take up his abode there permanently,
was hard to understand, but there certainly must be
some reason beside his “love” for the place
and its people. Neither place nor people should,
so it seemed to the captain, appeal strongly to a
citizen of the world, of the fashionable world, like
Mr. Egbert Phillips. It is true that he might
perhaps live cheaper there than in most communities,
but still.... No, Sears was sure that the former
singing teacher had returned to the Cape in pursuance
of a plan. What that plan might be he could not
guess, unless the widower contemplated contesting
his wife’s gift to the Fair Harbor. That
would be a losing fight, was certain to be, for Judge
Knowles had seen to that. But if not that what?
He gave very little thought to the
matter at the time, for Judge Knowles’ letter
and its astounding proposition were monopolizing his
mental machinery. That letter would have, as he
might have expressed it, knocked him on his beam ends
even if the Foam Flake’s unexpected outbreak
had not knocked him there already. The letter
was rather long, but it was to the point, nevertheless.
Judge Knowles begged him him, Sears Kendrick to
accept the appointment of trustee in charge of Elizabeth
Berry’s twenty thousand dollar inheritance.
The latter was hers in trust until she was thirty.
“I have seen enough of you to
believe in you, Kendrick,” so the judge had
written. “Besides, you know the Berrys,
mother and daughter, by this time, better than any
one else even Bradley and you
know my opinion of Cordelia’s headpiece.
I don’t want her soft-headedness or foolishness
to get any of Elizabeth’s money away from her.
Elizabeth is a dutiful daughter and an unselfish girl
and she may feel or be led to feel that
her mother ought to have this money or a large part
of it. I don’t want this to happen.
Of course I expect Elizabeth to share her income with
her mother, but I don’t want the principal disturbed.
After she is thirty she can, of course, do what she
likes with it, but that time isn’t now by some
years. And then there is that Egbert. Look
out for him. I say again, look out for him.
If he ever got a penny of this money I should
turn over in my grave. Perhaps you think I am
an old fool and am treating him with more seriousness
than he deserves. You won’t think so when
you know him as well as I do, mark my words. And
I think you are the one man around here that has had
worldly experience enough, backed by brains and common-sense,
to see through him and handle him. I don’t
mean that there aren’t other smart men in town,
but most of the smartest are in active service and
at sea a good share of the time. You will be
right here for a few years at least. And you are
honest, and you like Elizabeth Berry, and will look
out for her interests.... Of course I can’t
compel you to take this trusteeship, but I hope you
will, as a favor to her and to me. I have written
her a letter similar to this, but I have left her
a free choice in the matter. If she does not want
you for her trustee then that ends it. Being
the kind of girl she is, I think she will be mighty
glad to have you....”
And this was the proposition which
was causing the captain so much anxiety and perplexity.
It interfered with the sleep which Doctor Sheldon
seemed to feel necessary to his patient’s complete
recovery from the setback. It prevented his keeping
those damaged legs of his absolutely quiet. Time
and time again Judah, at work in what he always referred
to as the “galley,” heard his lodger tossing
about in the spare stateroom and occasionally muttering
to himself.
For Sears, facing the problem of accepting
or declining the trust, was quite aware that the dilemma
upon which the judge had perched him had two very
sharp horns. If he declined always
of course supposing that Elizabeth Berry asked him
to accept if he declined he would be acting
contrary to her wishes and Judge Knowles’.
If he did decline, then Bradley would be the trustee.
Knowles, in a part of the letter not quoted, had said
that he imagined that would have to be the alternative.
And Bradley a good man, an honest and capable
man was not a resident of Bayport and could
not, as he could, keep an eye upon the Berrys nor
upon those who might try to influence them. And
Bradley did not know Bayport as he, Kendrick, did.
But on the other hand, suppose Elizabeth
begged him to take the trusteeship and he did take
it? To begin with, he dreaded the added responsibility
and distrusted his ability to handle investments.
His record as a business man ashore was brief enough
and not of a kind to inspire self-confidence.
And what would people say concerning it and him?
He and Elizabeth were in daily contact. Their
association in the management of the Fair Harbor was
close already. If he should be given charge of
her fortune for it was a fortune, in Bayport
eyes would not his every action be liable
to misconstruction? Would not malicious gossip
begin to whisper all sorts of things? To misconstrue
motives and ...? Perhaps they were already whispering.
He had seen Elvira Snowden but once since she and
Mrs. Chase surprised him and Elizabeth in the Eyrie,
but on that one occasion Elvira had, so it seemed to
him, looked queer and knowing. It
was foolish, of course; it was ridiculous, and wicked.
He and Elizabeth were friendly, had come to be very
good friends indeed, but
And here his train of thought stopped
dead, while the same guilty shiver he had before felt
ran up and down his spine.... Good Lord above!
what was he thinking of? What could be
the matter with him? Why, even if things were
as they had been he would be crazy to.... And
now she was a rich woman, rich compared to him, at
least.
No! And over and over again,
No! He would decline the trusteeship. And
he would make it his business to get well and to sea
again as soon as possible. As soon as she came
to him to mention the judge’s letter and its
insane request he would settle that proposal once and
for all.
But she did not come. On the
third day the doctor refused to permit him to leave
the bed.
“You stay where you are for
another two days,” commanded Sheldon. “It
will do you good, and while I’m boss you shan’t
take chances. Cahoon and I have got you where
we want you now and we’ll keep you there till
we pipe you on deck. Eh, Judah?”
Judah grinned. “Aye, aye,”
was his rejoinder. “Got the handspike ready
to my fist, Doctor. He’ll stay put if I
have to lash him to the bunk with a chain cable.
It’s all for your good, Cap’n Sears.
That’s what my ma used to tell me when she dosed
me up every spring with brimstone and molasses.”
So, reluctantly realizing that it
was for his good, Sears “stayed put.”
He had a few callers, although Judah saw to it that
their calls were brief. Elizabeth was not one
of these. She came at least once a day to inquire
about him, but she did not ask to see him. The
captain, trying not to be disappointed, endeavored
to console himself with the idea that she was following
Judge Knowles’ advice, as repeated by Bradley,
and meant to take plenty of time before making up
her mind concerning the trusteeship.
One of his visitors was George Kent.
On the fourth day, on his way to the Macombers for
dinner, the young fellow called at the Minot place.
Judah was out, but Sears heard his visitor’s
voice and step through the open doors of the dining
room and kitchen and shouted to him to come in.
His manner when he entered was, so it seemed to the
captain, a trifle constrained, but his inquiries concerning
the latter’s health were cordial enough.
As for Sears, he, of course, made it a point to be
especially cordial.
They talked of many things, but not
of their recent encounter on the Orham road.
Sears did not like to be the first to mention it and
it appeared as if Kent wished to avoid it altogether.
But at last, after a short interval of silence, a
break in the conversation, he did refer to it.
“Cap’n Kendrick,”
he said, reddening and looking rather nervous and
uncomfortable, “I I suppose you thought
I was was pretty disagreeable the other
evening. I mean when we met in the rain and Elizabeth
was with you.”
“Eh? Disagreeable?”
“Yes. I wasn’t very
pleasant, I know. I’m sorry. That that
was one of the things I came to say. I lost my
temper, I guess.”
“Well, if you did I don’t
know as I blame you, George. A night like that
is enough to lose any one’s temper. I lost
mine. The Foam Flake ran away with it. But
he’s repentin’ in sackcloth and ashes,
I guess. Judah says the old horse is lamer than
I am.”
He laughed heartily. Kent’s
laugh was short. His uneasiness seemed to increase.
“Yes,” he said, returning
to the subject which was evidently uppermost in his
mind. “Yes, I did er lose
my temper, perhaps. But but it seems
almost as if I had a er well,
some excuse. You see well, you see,
Cap’n Kendrick, I didn’t like it very much,
the idea of Elizabeth’s going over to Orham
with with you, you know.”
Sears looked at him in surprise.
“Why, she went with me because it was the simplest
way to get there,” he explained. “I
was goin’ anyhow, and Bradley had asked her
to be there, too. So, it was natural enough that
we should go together.”
“Well well, I don’t
see why she didn’t tell me she was going.”
“Perhaps she didn’t think to tell you.”
“Nonsense!... I mean....
Well, anyhow, if she had told me I should have looked
out for her, of course. I could have hired a rig
and driven her over.”
“But she knew you were at work
down at the store. She said that, didn’t
she? Seems to me I remember hearin’ her
say that she didn’t want you to to
feel that you must take the afternoon off on her account.”
The young man stirred impatiently.
“That’s foolishness,” he declared.
“She seems to think Bassett has a mortgage on
my life. He hasn’t, not by a long shot.
I don’t mean to keep his books much longer; I’ve
got other things to attend to. My law is getting
on pretty well.”
“Glad to hear it, George.”
“Yes. I shall read with
Bradley for a while longer, of course, but after that well,
I don’t know. I was talking with with
a man who has had a good deal of experience with lawyers real
city lawyers, not the one-horse sort and
he says the thing for an ambitious young fellow to
do is to get into one of those city offices. Then
you have a chance.”
“Oh I see. But
isn’t it kind of hard to get in, unless you have
some acquaintance or influence?”
“I don’t know as it is.
And I guess this man will help me if I want him to.”
“So? That’s good. Did he say
he would?”
“No-o, not exactly, but I think
he will. And he’s got the acquaintances,
all right enough. He knows almost everybody that’s
worth while.”
“That’s the kind to tie
to. Who is he? Somebody up in Boston?”
George shifted again. “I’d
rather not mention his name just now,” he said.
“Our talks have been rather er confidential
and I don’t know that I should have said anything
about them. But I’ve got plans, you see.
Then there is my aunt’s estate. I am the
administrator of that.”
“Oh? I didn’t know. Your aunt,
eh?”
“Yes, my Aunt Charlotte, mother’s
sister. She was single and lived up in Meriden,
Connecticut. She died about a month ago and left
everything to my half-sister and me my
married sister in Springfield, you know. I have
charge of of the estate, settling it and
all that.”
Sears smiled inwardly at the self-satisfaction
with which the word “estate” was uttered.
But outwardly he was serious enough.
“Good for you, George!”
he exclaimed. “Congratulations. I hope
you’ve come in for a big thing.”
His visitor colored slightly.
“Well well, of course,” he admitted,
“the estate isn’t very large, but ”
“But it’s an estate. I’m glad
for you, son.”
“Yes er yes....
But really, Cap’n, I didn’t mean to talk
about that. I I just wanted to say
that that I was sorry if I er wasn’t
as polite as I might have been the other night, and well,
I thought it seemed as if I I
ought to say to say ”
Whatever it was it seemed to be hard
to say. The captain tried to help.
“Yes, of course, George,”
he prompted. “Heave ahead and say it.”
“Well well, it’s
just this, Cap’n Kendrick: Elizabeth and
you are are together a good deal, in the
Fair Harbor affairs, you know, and and she
doesn’t think, of course and you are
a lot older than she is but all the same ”
Sears interrupted.
“Here! Hold on, George!” he put in,
sharply. “What’s all this?”
Kent’s embarrassment increased.
“Why why, nothing,” he stammered.
“Nothing, of course. But you see, Cap’n,
people are silly they don’t stop
to count ages and things like that. They see you
with her so much.... And when they see you taking
her to ride alone ”
“Here! That’ll do!”
All the cordiality had left the captain’s voice.
“George,” he said, after a moment, “I
guess you’d better not say any more. I
don’t think I had better hear it. Miss Elizabeth
is a friend of mine. She is, as you say, years
younger than I am. I am with her a good
deal, have to be because of our Fair Harbor work together.
I took her to Orham with me just as I’d take
her mother, or you, or any other friend who had to
go and wanted a lift. But but
if you or any one else is hintin’ that....
There, there! George, don’t be foolish.
Maybe you’d better run along now. The doctor
says I mustn’t get excited.”
His visitor looked remarkably foolish,
but the stubbornness had not altogether left his face
or tone as he said: “Well, that’s
all right, Cap’n. I knew you would understand.
I didn’t mean anything, but but,
you see, in Elizabeth’s case I feel a a
sort of responsibility. You you understand.”
Even irritated and angry as he was,
Sears could not help smiling at the last sentence.
“George,” he observed,
“you’ve been fairly open and aboveboard
in your remarks to me. Suppose I ask you a question.
Just what is your responsibility in the case?
I have heard said, and more than once, that you and
Elizabeth Berry are engaged to be married. Is
it so?”
The young man grew redder yet, hesitated,
and turned to the door.
“I I’m not at liberty to say,”
he declared.
“Wait! Hold on! There
is this responsibility business. If you’re
not engaged well, honestly, George, I don’t
quite see where your responsibility comes in.”
Kent hesitated a moment longer.
Then he seemed to make up his mind.
“Well, then, we are er er practically,”
he said.
“Practically?... Oh! Well, I I
certainly do congratulate you.”
George had his hand on the latch, but turned back.
“Don’t please
don’t tell any one of it,” he said earnestly.
“It it mustn’t be known yet....
You see, though, why I I feel as if you as
if we all ought to be very careful of of
appearances and and such things.”
“Yes.... Yes, of course. Well, all
right, George. Good-by. Call again.”
Judah, who had been over at the Fair
Harbor doing some general chores around the place,
came in a little later. His lodger called to him.
“Judah,” he commanded,
“come in here. I want to talk to you.”
When Mr. Cahoon obeyed the order, he was told to sit
down a moment.
“I want to ask you some questions,”
said the captain. “What is the latest news
of Egbert Phillips? Where is he nowadays?
And what is he doin’?”
Judah was quite ready to give the
information, even eager, but he hesitated momentarily.
“Sure you want me to talk about
him, Cap’n?” he asked. “Last
time I said anything about him day afore
yesterday ’twas you told me to shut
up. Said you had somethin’ more important
to think about.”
“Did I, Judah? Well, ’twas true then,
I guess.”
“Um-hm. And you ordered
me not to mention his name again till you h’isted
signals, or somethin’ like that.”
“Yes, seems to me I did.
Well, the signals are up. What is he doin’?”
“Doin’? He ain’t
doin’ nothin’ much. He’s
roomin’ up to the Central House yet, but from
what I hear tell he ain’t goin’ to stay
there. He’s cal’latin’, so
the folks down to the store say, to find some nice
home place where he can board. He don’t
call it boardin’. Thoph Black says he said
what he wanted was a snug little den where him and
his few remainin’ household gods could be together.
Thoph said he couldn’t make out what household
gods was, and I’m plaguey sure I can’t.
Sounds heathenish to me. And I told Thoph, says
I, ’That ain’t no way to hunt a boardin’
house, goin’ round hollerin’ for a den.
If I was takin’ in boarders and a feller hove
alongside and says, “Can I hire one of them
dens of yours?” he’d get somethin’
that he wan’t lookin’ for.’
Huh! Den! Sounds like a circus menagerie,
don’t it? Not but what I’ve seen
boardin’-house rooms that was like dens.
Why, one time, over in Liverpool ’twas, me and
a feller named ”
“Yes, yes, all right, Judah.
I’ve heard about it. But what else is he
doin’? Where does he go? Is he makin’
friends? Is he talkin’ much about his plans?
What do folks say about him?”
Judah answered the last question first.
“They like him,” he declared.
“All hands are so kind of sorry for him, you
see. Course we all cal’lated he was rich,
but he ain’t. And them bonds and such that
him and his wife had all went to nawthin’ and
he come back here after she died, figgerin’,
I presume likely, same as anybody would, that he owned
the Fair Harbor property and that the fifty thousand
was just a sort of er loan, as
you might say. He told Joe Macomber or
George Kent, I forget which ’twas he’s
with George consider’ble; I guess likely ’twas
him that, of course, he wouldn’t
have disturbed the property or the fifty thousand for
the world, not for a long spell anyhow, but ownin’
it give him a feelin’ of security, like an anchor
to wind’ard, you understand, and ”
“So folks like him, do they?”
“You bet you they do. He
don’t complain a mite, that’s one reason
they like him. Says at first, of course, he was
kind of took all aback with his canvas flappin’,
but now he’s thought it over and realizes ’twas
his dear wife’s notion and her wishes is law
and gospel to him, so he’s resigned.”
“And he doesn’t blame anybody, then?”
Mr. Cahoon hesitated. “Why er no,
not really, fur’s I hear. Anyhow, if there
was any influence used same as it shouldn’t be,
he says, he forgives them that used it. And,
so far as that goes, he don’t repute no evil
motives to nobody, livin’ or dead.”
“Repute? Oh, impute, you mean.”
“I guess so, some kind of ‘pute’.
He uses them old-fashioned kind of words all the time.
That’s why he’s so pop’lar amongst
the Shakespeare Readin’ Society and the rest.
They’ve took him up, I tell ye! Minister
Dishup and his wife they’ve had him to dinner,
and Cap’n Elkanah and his wife have had him
to supper and yesterday noon he was up here to the
Harbor for dinner.”
“Oh, was he?”
“Yus. He made ’em
a little speech, too. All hands came into the
parlor after dinner and he kind of of preached
to ’em. Told about his travelin’
in foreign lands and a lot about Lobelia and how she
loved the Harbor and everybody in it, and how him
and her used to plan for it, and the like of that.
Desire Peasley told me that ‘twas the most movin’
talk ever she listened to. Said about
everybody was cryin’ some. ’Twas a
leaky session, I judged. Oh, they love him over
to the Harbor, I tell you!”
The captain was silent for a moment.
Then he asked, “Did I understand you to say
he and young Kent were friendly?”
“Yes, indeed. He seems
to have took quite a fancy to George. Drops in
to see him at the store and last night he went home
along with him to your sister’s to
Sary’s. Had supper and spent the evenin’,
I believe.”
Judah was dismissed then and the talk
ended, but Sears had now something else to think about.
There was little doubt in his mind who the “man
of experience” was, the person who had advised
Kent concerning the getting of a position with a law
firm in the city. He wondered what other advice
might have been given. Was it Mr. Phillips who
had suggested to Kent the impropriety of Elizabeth’s
being seen so much in his Kendrick’s company?
If so, why had he done it? What was Egbert’s
little plan?
Of course it was possible that there
was no plan of any kind. Sears had taken a dislike
to Phillips when they met and that fact, and Judge
Knowles’ hatred of the man, might, he realized,
have set him to hunting mares’ nests. Well,
he would not hunt any more at present. He would
await developments. But he would not lie in that
bed and wait for them. He had been there long
enough. In spite of Judah’s protests and
with the latter’s help, commandeered and insisted
upon, he got up, dressed, and spent the rest of that
afternoon and evening in the rocking chair in the
kitchen.
And that evening Elizabeth came to
see him. He was almost sure why she had come,
and as soon as she entered, sent Judah down town after
smoking tobacco. Judah declared there was “up’ards
of ha’f a plug aboard the ship somewheres”
and wanted to stay and hunt for it, but the captain,
who had the plug in his pocket, insisted on his going.
So he went and Sears and Elizabeth were alone.
He was ready for the interview. If she asked
him to accept the trusteeship of her twenty thousand
dollars he meant to refuse, absolutely.
And she did ask him that very thing.
After inquiries concerning his injured limbs and repeated
cautions concerning his never taking such risks again,
“even with the old Foam Flakes,” she came
directly to the subject. She spoke of Judge Knowles’
letter to her, the letter which Bradley had handed
her at the time when he gave Sears his. She had
read it over and over again, she said.
“You know what he wrote me,
Cap’n Kendrick,” she went on. “I
can’t show you the letter, it is too personal,
too too.... Oh, I can’t show
it to any one now, not even to mother.
But you must know what he asked or suggested,
because he says he has written you a letter asking
you to take charge of my money for me, to be my trustee.
I suppose you must think it queer that I have let
all these days go by without coming to speak with
you about it. I hope ”
He interrupted. “Now, Elizabeth,
before we go any further,” he said, earnestly,
“don’t you suppose any such thing.
The judge wrote me he had asked us both not to decide
in a hurry, but to take plenty of time to think it
over. I have thought it over, in fact, I haven’t
thought of much else since I opened that letter, and
I have made up my mind ”
“Wait. Please wait a minute.
I haven’t been taking time to think over that
at all. I have been thinking about the whole matter;
whether I should accept the money so very,
very, very much money ”
“What! Not accept it?
Of course you’ll take it. He wanted you
to take it. It was what he wanted as much as
anybody could want anything. Why, don’t
you dare ”
“Hush! hush! You mustn’t
be so excited. And you mustn’t move from
that chair. If you do I shall go home this minute.
I am going to accept the money.”
“Good! Of course you are.”
“Yes, I am. Because I do
believe that he wanted me to have it so much.
I know people will say perhaps they are
already saying all sorts of wicked, mean things.
I don’t I won’t let myself think
what some of them may be saying about my influencing
the judge, or things like that. But I don’t
care that is, I care ever so much more for
what he said and what he wished. And he
wanted you to take care of the money for me. You
will, won’t you, Cap’n Kendrick?”
Now it was Sears’ turn.
He had gone over a scene like this, the scene which
he had foreseen, many times. He was kind, but
he was firm. He told her that he should not accept
the trusteeship. He could not. It was too
great a responsibility for a man with as little and
that little unfortunate business experience
as he had had.
“It needs a banker or a lawyer
for that job, Elizabeth,” he declared.
“What does a sailor know about handlin’
money? You go to Bradley; Bradley’s the
man.”
But she did not want Bradley.
The judge only mentioned Bradley as second choice.
“He wanted you, Cap’n
Kendrick. He had every confidence in you.
You should see what he says about your ability and
common-sense and and honesty in the letter.
Please.”
“No, Elizabeth. As far
as honesty goes I guess he’s right. I am
honest, at least I hope I should be. But for
the rest he’s partial there.
He seemed to take a fancy to me, and goodness knows
I liked him. But you mustn’t feel you’ve
got to do this thing. He wrote me it was only
a suggestion. You are absolutely free he
wrote me so to go to Bradley or ”
“No.” She rose to
her feet. “I shan’t go to Bradley
or anybody but you. I am like him, Cap’n
Kendrick; I trust you. I have come to know you
and to believe in you. I like you. Why,
you don’t know how glad I was to find that he
wanted you to do this for me. Glad! I I
felt ”
“Why, Elizabeth!”
He had not meant to speak. The
words were forced from him involuntarily. Her
tone, her eyes, the eager earnestness in her voice....
He did not say any more, nor did he look at her.
Instead he looked at the patchwork comforter which
had fallen from his knees to the floor, and fervently
hoped that he had not already said too much. He
stooped and picked up the comforter.
“And you will do it for me, won’t you?”
she pleaded.
“I can’t. It wouldn’t be right.”
“Then I shall not take the money
at all. He gave it to me, he asked me the
very last thing he asked was that you should do it.
He put the trust in your hands. And you won’t
do it for him or for me?”
“Well, but but
Oh, good Lord! how can I?”
“Why can’t you?”
The real reason he could not tell
her. According to Kent whether inspired
by Phillips or not made little difference people
were already whispering and hinting. How much
more would they hint and whisper if they knew that
he had taken charge of her money? The thought
had not occurred to her, of course; the very idea
was too ridiculous for her to imagine; but that made
but one more reason why he must think for her.
“No,” he said, again. “No,
I can’t.”
“But why? You haven’t told me why.”
He tried to tell her why, but his
words were merely repetitions of what he had said
before. He was not a good business man, he did
not know how to handle money, even his own money.
The judge had been very ill when he wrote those letters,
if he had been well and himself he never would have
thought of him as trustee. She listened for a
time, her impatience growing. Then she rose.
“Very well,” she said.
“Then I shall not accept the twenty thousand.
To me one wish of Judge Knowles’ is as sacred
as the other. He wanted you to take that trust
just as much as he wanted me to have the money.
If you won’t respect one wish I shall not respect
the other.”
He could not believe she meant it,
but she certainly looked and spoke as if she did.
He faltered and hesitated, and she pressed her advantage.
And at last he yielded.
“All right,” he said desperately.
“All right or all wrong, whichever
it turns out to be. I’ll take the trustee
job try it for a time anyhow. But,
I tell you, Elizabeth, I’m afraid we’re
both makin’ a big mistake.”
She was not in the least afraid, and said so.
“You have made me very happy,
Cap’n Kendrick,” she declared. “I
can’t thank you enough.”
He shook his head, but before he could
reply there came a sharp knock on the outer door,
the back door of the house.
“Who on earth is that?”
exclaimed Sears. Then he shouted, “Come
in.”
The person who came in was George Kent.
“Why, George!” said Elizabeth.
Then she added. “What is it? What is
the matter?”
The young man looked as if something
was the matter. His expression was not at all
pleasant.
“Evenin’, George,”
said the captain. “Glad to see you.
Sit down.”
Kent ignored both the invitation and the speaker.
“Look here,” he demanded,
addressing Miss Berry: “do you know what
time it is? It is ten o’clock.”
His tone was so rude so
boyishly rude that Sears looked up quickly
and Elizabeth drew back.
“It’s nearly ten o’clock,”
repeated Kent. “And you are over here.”
“George!” exclaimed Sears, sharply.
“You are over here with him again.”
It was Elizabeth who spoke now. She said but
one word.
“Well?” she asked.
There was an icy chill about that
“Well?” which a more cautious person that
George Kent might have noticed and taken as a warning.
But the young man was far from cautious at that moment.
“Well?” he repeated
hotly. “I don’t think it’s well
at all. I come see you and I find
you over here. And I find that every one else
knows you are here. And they think it queer,
too; I could see that they did.... Of course,
I don’t say ”
“I think you have said enough.
I came here to talk with Cap’n Kendrick on a
business matter. I told mother where I was going
when I left the house. The others heard me, I
suppose; I certainly did not try to conceal it.
Why should I?”
“Why should you? Why, you
should because because
Well, if you don’t know why you shouldn’t
be here, he does.”
“He? Cap’n Kendrick?”
“Yes. I I told
him why, myself. Only this noon I told him.
I was here and I told him people were beginning to
talk about you and he being together so much and and
his taking you to ride, and all that sort of thing.
I told him he ought to be more careful of appearances.
I said of course you didn’t think, but he ought
to. I explained that ”
“Stop!” Her face was crimson
and she was breathing quickly. “Do you mean
to say that that people are talking are
saying things about about.... What
people?”
“Oh oh, different
ones. Of course they don’t say anything
much er not yet. But if
we aren’t careful they will. You see ”
“Wait. Are they are
they saying that that
Oh, it is too wicked and foolish to speak!
Are they saying that Cap’n Kendrick and I ”
Sears spoke. “Hush, hush,
Elizabeth!” he begged. “They aren’t
sayin’ anything, of course. George is is
just a little excited over nothin’, that’s
all. He has heard Elvira or some other cat over
there at the Harbor, probably. They’re
jealous because you have had this money left you.”
“It is nothing to do with the
money,” Kent asserted. “Didn’t
I tell you this noon that you that we had
to be careful of appearances? Didn’t I
say ”
Again Elizabeth broke in.
“You have said all I want to
hear in this room, now,” she declared.
“There are a good many things for us both to
say and listen to, but not here....
Good night, Cap’n Kendrick. I am sorry I
kept you up so late, and I hope all this I
hope you won’t let this wicked nonsense trouble
you. It isn’t worth worrying about.
Good night.”
“But, Elizabeth,” urged
Sears, anxiously, “don’t you think ”
“Good night. George, you
had better come with me. I have some things to
say to you.”
She went out. Kent hesitated,
paused for a moment, and then followed her. When
Judah returned with the tobacco and a fresh cargo of
rumors concerning Egbert Phillips he found his lodger
not the least interested in either smoke or gossip.