For the next month or two Master Hardy’s
existence was brightened by the efforts of an elderly
steward who made no secret of his intentions of putting
an end to it. Mr. Wilks at first placed great
reliance on the saw that “it is the early bird
that catches the worm,” but lost faith in it
when he found that it made no provision for cases in
which the worm leaning from its bedroom window addressed
spirited remonstrances to the bird on the subject
of its personal appearance.
To the anxious inquiries of Miss Nugent,
Mr. Wilks replied that he was biding his time.
Every delay, he hinted, made it worse for Master Hardy
when the day of retribution should dawn, and although
she pleaded earnestly for a little on account he was
unable to meet her wishes. Before that day came,
however, Captain Nugent heard of the proceedings,
and after a painful interview with the steward, during
which the latter’s failings by no means escaped
attention, confined him to the house.
An excellent reason for absenting
himself from school was thus denied to Master Hardy;
but it has been well said that when one door closes
another opens, and to his great satisfaction the old
servant, who had been in poor health for some time,
suddenly took to her bed and required his undivided
attention.
He treated her at first with patent
medicines purchased at the chemist’s, a doctor
being regarded by both of them as a piece of unnecessary
extravagance; but in spite of four infallible remedies
she got steadily worse. Then a doctor was called
in, and by the time Captain Hardy returned home she
had made a partial recovery, but was clearly incapable
of further work. She left in a cab to accept
a home with a niece, leaving the captain confronted
with a problem which he had seen growing for some
time past.
“I can’t make up my mind
what to do with you,” he observed, regarding
his son.
“I’m very comfortable,” was the
reply.
“You’re too comfortable,” said his
father.
“You’re running wild.
It’s just as well poor old Martha has gone;
it has brought things to a head.”
“We could have somebody else,” suggested
his son.
The captain shook his head.
“I’ll give up the house and send you to
London to your Aunt Mary,” he said, slowly; “she
doesn’t know you, and once I’m at sea
and the house given up, she won’t be able to
send you back.”
Master Hardy, who was much averse
to leaving Sunwich and had heard accounts of the lady
in question which referred principally to her strength
of mind, made tender inquiries concerning his father’s
comfort while ashore.
“I’ll take rooms,”
was the reply, “and I shall spend as much time
as I can with you in London. You want looking
after, my son; I’ve heard all about you.”
His son, without inquiring as to the
nature of the information, denied it at once upon
principle; he also alluded darkly to his education,
and shook his head over the effects of a change at
such a critical period of his existence.
“And you talk too much for your
age,” was his father’s comment when he
had finished. “A year or two with your
aunt ought to make a nice boy of you; there’s
plenty of room for improvement.”
He put his plans in hand at once,
and a week before he sailed again had disposed of
the house. Some of the furniture he kept for
himself; but the bulk of it went to his sister as
conscience-money.
Master Hardy, in very low spirits,
watched it taken away. Big men in hob-nailed
boots ran noisily up the bare stairs, and came down
slowly, steering large pieces of furniture through
narrow passages, and using much vain repetition when
they found their hands acting as fenders. The
wardrobe, a piece of furniture which had been built
for larger premises, was a particularly hard nut to
crack, but they succeeded at last-in three
places.
A few of his intimates came down to
see the last of him, and Miss Nugent, who in some
feminine fashion regarded the move as a triumph for
her family, passed by several times. It might
have been chance, it might have been design, but the
boy could not help noticing that when the piano, the
wardrobe, and other fine pieces were being placed in
the van, she was at the other end of the road a position
from which such curios as a broken washstand or a
two-legged chair never failed to entice her.
It was over at last. The second
van had disappeared, and nothing was left but a litter
of straw and paper. The front door stood open
and revealed desolation. Miss Nugent came to
the gate and stared in superciliously.
“I’m glad you’re going,” she
said, frankly.
Master Hardy scarcely noticed her.
One of his friends who concealed strong business
instincts beneath a sentimental exterior had suggested
souvenirs and given him a spectacle-glass said to have
belonged to Henry VIII., and he was busy searching
his pockets for an adequate return. Then Captain
Hardy came up, and first going over the empty house,
came out and bade his son accompany him to the station.
A minute or two later and they were out of sight;
the sentimentalist stood on the curb gloating over
a newly acquired penknife, and Miss Nugent, after being
strongly reproved by him for curiosity, paced slowly
home with her head in the air.
Sunwich made no stir over the departure
of one of its youthful citizens. Indeed, it lacked
not those who would have cheerfully parted with two
or three hundred more. The boy was quite chilled
by the tameness of his exit, and for years afterwards
the desolate appearance of the platform as the train
steamed out occurred to him with an odd sense of discomfort.
In all Sunwich there was only one person who grieved
over his departure, and he, after keeping his memory
green for two years, wrote off fivepence as a bad
debt and dismissed him from his thoughts.
Two months after the Conqueror
had sailed again Captain Nugent obtained command of
a steamer sailing between London and the Chinese ports.
From the gratified lips of Mr. Wilks, Sunwich heard
of this new craft, the particular glory of which appeared
to be the luxurious appointments of the steward’s
quarters. Language indeed failed Mr. Wilks in
describing it, and, pressed for details, he could
only murmur disjointedly of satin-wood, polished brass,
and crimson velvet.
Jack Nugent hailed his father’s
departure with joy. They had seen a great deal
of each other during the latter’s prolonged stay
ashore, and neither had risen in the other’s
estimation in consequence. He became enthusiastic
over the sea as a profession for fathers, and gave
himself some airs over acquaintances less fortunately
placed. In the first flush of liberty he took
to staying away from school, the education thus lost
being only partially atoned for by a grown-up style
of composition engendered by dictating excuses to
the easy-going Mrs. Kingdom.
At seventeen he learnt, somewhat to
his surprise, that his education was finished.
His father provided the information and, simply as
a matter of form, consulted him as to his views for
the future. It was an important thing to decide
upon at short notice, but he was equal to it, and,
having suggested gold-digging as the only profession
he cared for, was promptly provided by the incensed
captain with a stool in the local bank.
He occupied it for three weeks, a
period of time which coincided to a day with his father’s
leave ashore. He left behind him his initials
cut deeply in the lid of his desk, a miscellaneous
collection of cheap fiction, and a few experiments
in book-keeping which the manager ultimately solved
with red ink and a ruler.
A slight uneasiness as to the wisdom
of his proceedings occurred to him just before his
father’s return, but he comforted himself and
Kate with the undeniable truth that after all the
captain couldn’t eat him. He was afraid,
however, that the latter would be displeased, and,
with a constitutional objection to unpleasantness,
he contrived to be out when he returned, leaving to
Mrs. Kingdom the task of breaking the news.
The captain’s reply was brief
and to the point. He asked his son whether he
would like to go to sea, and upon receiving a decided
answer in the negative, at once took steps to send
him there. In two days he had procured him an
outfit, and within a week Jack Nugent, greatly to his
own surprise, was on the way to Melbourne as apprentice
on the barque Silver Stream.
He liked it even less than the bank.
The monotony of the sea was appalling to a youth
of his tastes, and the fact that the skipper, a man
who never spoke except to find fault, was almost loquacious
with him failed to afford him any satisfaction.
He liked the mates no better than the skipper, and
having said as much one day to the second officer,
had no reason afterwards to modify his opinions.
He lived a life apart, and except for the cook, another
martyr to fault-finding, had no society.
In these uncongenial circumstances
the new apprentice worked for four months as he had
never believed it possible he could work. He
was annoyed both at the extent and the variety of
his tasks, the work of an A.B. being gratuitously
included in his curriculum. The end of the voyage
found him desperate, and after a hasty consultation
with the cook they deserted together and went up-country.
Letters, dealing mainly with the ideas
and adventures of the cook, reached Sunwich at irregular
intervals, and were eagerly perused by Mrs. Kingdom
and Kate, but the captain forbade all mention of him.
Then they ceased altogether, and after a year or
two of unbroken silence Mrs. Kingdom asserted herself,
and a photograph in her possession, the only one extant,
exposing the missing Jack in petticoats and sash, suddenly
appeared on the drawing-room mantelpiece.
The captain stared, but made no comment.
Disappointed in his son, he turned for consolation
to his daughter, noting with some concern the unaccountable
changes which that young lady underwent during his
absences. He noticed a difference after every
voyage. He left behind him on one occasion a
nice trim little girl, and returned to find a creature
all legs and arms. He returned again and found
the arms less obnoxious and the legs hidden by a long
skirt; and as he complained in secret astonishment
to his sister, she had developed a motherly manner
in her dealings with him which was almost unbearable.
“She’ll grow out of it
soon,” said Mrs. Kingdom; “you wait and
see.”
The captain growled and waited, and
found his sister’s prognostications partly fulfilled.
The exuberance of Miss Nugent’s manner was certainly
modified by time, but she developed instead a quiet,
unassuming habit of authority which he liked as little.
“She gets made such a fuss of,
it’s no wonder,” said Mrs. Kingdom, with
a satisfied smile. “I never heard of a
girl getting as much attention as she does; it’s
a wonder her head isn’t turned.”
“Eh!” said the startled
captain; “she’d better not let me see anything
of it.”
“Just so,” said Mrs. Kingdom.
The captain dwelt on these words and
kept his eyes open, and, owing to his daughter’s
benevolent efforts on his behalf, had them fully occupied.
He went to sea firmly convinced that she would do something
foolish in the matrimonial line, the glowing terms
in which he had overheard her describing the charms
of the new postman to Mrs. Kingdom filling him with
the direst forebodings.
It was his last voyage. An unexpected
windfall from an almost forgotten uncle and his own
investments had placed him in a position of modest
comfort, and just before Miss Nugent reached her twentieth
birthday he resolved to spend his declining days ashore
and give her those advantages of parental attention
from which she had been so long debarred.
Mr. Wilks, to the inconsolable grief
of his ship-mates, left with him. He had been
for nearly a couple of years in receipt of an annuity
purchased for him under the will of his mother, and
his defection left a gap never to be filled among
comrades who had for some time regarded him in the
light of an improved drinking fountain.