Any hopes which Hardy might have entertained
as to the attitude of Miss Nugent were dispelled the
first time he saw her, that dutiful daughter of a
strong-willed sire favouring him with a bow which was
exactly half an inch in depth and then promptly bestowing
her gaze elsewhere. He passed Captain Nugent
next day, and for a week afterwards he had only to
close his eyes to see in all its appalling virulence
the glare with which that gentleman had acknowledged
his attempt at recognition.
He fared no better in Fullalove Alley,
a visit to Mr. Wilks eliciting the fact that that
delectable thoroughfare had been put out of bounds
for Miss Nugent. Moreover, Mr. Wilks was full
of his own troubles and anxious for any comfort and
advice that could be given to him. All the alley
knew that Mrs. Silk had quarrelled with her son over
the steward, and, without knowing the facts, spoke
their mind with painful freedom concerning them.
“She and Teddy don’t speak
to each other now,” said Mr. Wilks, gloomily,
“and to ’ear people talk you’d think
it was my fault.”
Hardy gave him what comfort he could.
He even went the length of saying that Mrs. Silk
was a fine woman.
“She acts like a suffering martyr,”
exclaimed Mr. Wilks. “She comes over ’ere
dropping hints that people are talking about us, and
that they ask ’er awkward questions. Pretending
to misunderstand ’er every time is enough to
send me crazy; and she’s so sudden in what she
says there’s no being up to ’er.
On’y this morning she asked me if I should be
sorry if she died.”
“What did you say?” inquired his listener.
“I said ‘yes,’”
admitted Mr. Wilks, reluctantly. “I couldn’t
say anything else; but I said that she wasn’t
to let my feelings interfere with ’er in any
way.”
Hardy’s father sailed a day
or two later, and after that nothing happened.
Equator Lodge was an impregnable fortress, and the
only member of the garrison he saw in a fortnight
was Bella.
His depression did not escape the
notice of his partner, who, after first advising love-philtres
and then a visit to a well-known specialist for diseases
of the heart, finally recommended more work, and put
a generous portion of his own on to the young man’s
desk. Hardy, who was in an evil temper, pitched
it on to the floor and, with a few incisive remarks
on levity unbecoming to age, pursued his duties in
gloomy silence.
A short time afterwards, however,
he had to grapple with his partner’s work in
real earnest. For the first time in his life
the genial shipbroker was laid up with a rather serious
illness. A chill caught while bathing was going
the round of certain unsuspected weak spots, and the
patient, who was of an inquiring turn of mind, was
taking a greater interest in medical works than his
doctor deemed advisable.
“Most interesting study,”
he said, faintly, to Hardy, as the latter sat by his
bedside one evening and tried to cheer him in the usual
way by telling him that there was nothing the matter
with him. “There are dozens of different
forms of liver complaint alone, and I’ve got
’em all.”
“Liver isn’t much,”
said his visitor, with the confidence of youth.
“Mine is,” retorted the
invalid; “it’s twice its proper size and
still growing. Base of the left lung is solidifying,
or I’m much mistaken; the heart, instead of
waltzing as is suitable to my time of life, is doing
a galop, and everything else is as wrong as it can
be.”
“When are you coming back?” inquired the
other.
“Back?” repeated Swann.
“Back? You haven’t been listening.
I’m a wreck. All through violating man’s
primeval instinct by messing about in cold water.
What is the news?”
Hardy pondered and shook his head.
“Nugent is going to be married in July,”
he said, at last.
“He’d better have had
that trip on the whaler,” commented Mr. Swann;
“but that is not news. Nathan Smith told
it me this morning.”
“Nathan Smith?” repeated the other, in
surprise.
“I’ve done him a little
service,” said the invalid. “Got
him out of a mess with Garth and Co. He’s
been here two or three times, and I must confess I
find him a most alluring rascal.”
“Birds of a feather-” began
Hardy, superciliously.
“Don’t flatter me,”
said Swann, putting his hand out of the bed-clothes
with a deprecatory gesture.
“I am not worthy to sit at his
feet. He is the most amusing knave on the coast.
He is like a sunbeam in a sick room when you can once
get him to talk of his experiences. Have you
seen young Nugent lately? Does he seem cheerful?”
“Yes, but he is not,” was the reply.
“Well, it’s natural for
the young to marry,” said the other, gravely.
“Murchison will be the next to go, I expect.”
“Possibly,” returned Hardy, with affected
calmness.
“Blaikie was saying something
about it this morning,” resumed Swann, regarding
him from half-closed lids, “but he was punching
and tapping me all about the ribs while he was talking,
and I didn’t catch all he said, but I think
it’s all arranged. Murchison is there nearly
every day, I understand; I suppose you meet him there?”
Mr. Hardy, whistling softly, rose
and walked round the room, uncorking medicine bottles
and sniffing at their contents. A smile of unaffected
pleasure lit up his features as he removed the stopper
from one particularly pungent mixture.
“Two tablespoonfuls three times
a day,” he read, slowly. “When did
you have the last, Swann? Shall I ring for the
nurse?”
The invalid shook his head impatiently.
“You’re an ungrateful dog,” he
muttered, “or you would tell me how your affair
is going. Have you got any chance?”
“You’re getting light-headed
now,” said Hardy, calmly. “I’d
better go.”
“All right, go then,”
responded the invalid; “but if you lose that
girl just for the want of a little skilled advice
from an expert, you’ll never forgive yourself-I’m
serious.”
“Well, you must be ill then,”
said the younger man, with anxiety.
“Twice,” said Mr. Swann,
lying on his back and apparently addressing the ceiling,
“twice I have given this young man invaluable
assistance, and each time he has bungled.”
Hardy laughed and, the nurse returning
to the room, bade him “good-bye” and departed.
After the close atmosphere of the sick room the air
was delicious, and he walked along slowly, deep in
thought. From Nathan Smith his thoughts wandered
to Jack Nugent and his unfortunate engagement, and
from that to Kate Nugent. For months he had been
revolving impossible schemes in his mind to earn her
gratitude, and possibly that of the captain, by extricating
Jack. In the latter connection he was also reminded
of that unhappy victim of unrequited affection, Edward
Silk.
It was early to go indoors, and the
house was dull. He turned and retraced his steps,
and, his thoughts reverting to his sick partner, smiled
as he remembered remarks which that irresponsible person
had made at various times concerning the making of
his last will and testament. Then he came to
a sudden standstill as a wild, forlorn-hope kind of
idea suddenly occurred to him. He stood for
some time thinking, then walked a little way, and
then stopped again as various difficulties presented
themselves for solution. Finally, despite the
lateness of the hour, he walked back in some excitement
to the house he had quitted over half an hour before
with the intention of speaking to the invalid concerning
a duty peculiarly incumbent upon elderly men of means.
The nurse, who came out of the sick
room, gently closing the door after her, demurred
a little to this second visit, but, receiving a promise
from the visitor not to excite the invalid, left them
together. The odour of the abominable physic
was upon the air.
“Well?” said the invalid.
“I have been thinking that I
was rather uncivil a little while ago,” said
Hardy.
“Ah!” said the other. “What
do you want?”
“A little of that skilled assistance you were
speaking of.”
Mr. Swann made an alarming noise in
his throat. Hardy sprang forward in alarm, but
he motioned him back.
“I was only laughing,” he explained.
Hardy repressed his annoyance by an
effort, and endeavoured, but with scant success, to
return the other’s smile.
“Go on,” said the shipbroker, presently.
“I have thought of a scheme
for upsetting Nugent’s marriage,” said
Hardy, slowly.
“It is just a forlorn hope which
depends for its success on you and Nathan Smith.”
“He’s a friend of Kybird’s,”
said the other, drily.
“That is the most important
thing of all,” rejoined Hardy. “That
is, next to your shrewdness and tact; everything depends
upon you, really, and whether you can fool Smith.
It is a great thing in our favour that you have been
taking him up lately.”
“Are you coming to the point
or are you not?” demanded the shipbroker.
Hardy looked cautiously round the
room, and then, drawing his chair close to the bed,
leaned over the prostrate man and spoke rapidly into
his ear.
“What?” cried the astounded
Mr. Swann, suddenly sitting up in his bed. “You-you
scoundrel!”
“It’s to be done,” said Hardy.
“You ghoul!” said the
invalid, glaring at him. “Is that the way
to talk to a sick man? You unscrupulous rascal!”
“It’ll be amusement for
you,” pleaded the other, “and if we are
successful it will be the best thing in the end for
everybody. Think of the good you’ll do.”
“Where you get such rascally
ideas from, I can’t think,” mused the
invalid. “Your father is a straightforward,
honest man, and your partner’s uprightness is
the talk of Sunwich.”
“It doesn’t take much
to make Sunwich talk,” retorted Hardy.
“A preposterous suggestion to
make to a man of my standing,” said the shipbroker,
ignoring the remark. “If the affair ever
leaked out I should never hear the end of it.”
“It can’t leak out,”
said Hardy, “and if it does there is no direct
evidence. They will never really know until you
die; they can only suspect.”
“Very well,” said the
shipbroker, with a half-indulgent, half-humorous glance.
“Anything to get rid of you. It’s
a crack-brained scheme, and could only originate with
a young man whose affections have weakened his head-I
consent.”
“Bravo!” said Hardy and
patted him on the back; Mr. Swann referred to the
base of his left lung, and he apologized.
“I’ll have to fix it up
with Blaikie,” said the invalid, lying down
again. “Murchison got two of his best patients
last week, so that it ought to be easy. And
besides, he is fond of innocent amusement.”
“I’m awfully obliged to you,” said
Hardy.
“It might be as well if we pretended
to quarrel,” said the invalid, reflectively,
“especially as you are known to be a friend of
Nugent’s. We’ll have a few words-before
my housekeeper if possible, to insure publicity-and
then you had better not come again. Send Silk
instead with messages.”
Hardy thanked him and whispered a
caution as a footstep was heard on the landing.
The door opened and the nurse, followed by the housekeeper
bearing a tray, entered the room.
“And I can’t be worried
about these things,” said Swann, in an acrimonious
voice, as they entered. “If you are not
capable of settling a simple question like that yourself,
ask the office-boy to instruct you.
“It’s your work,”
retorted Hardy, “and a nice mess it’s in.”
“H’sh!” said the
nurse, coming forward hastily. “You must
leave the room, sir. I can’t have you
exciting my patient.”
Hardy bestowed an indignant glance at the invalid.
“Get out!” said that
gentleman, with extraordinary fierceness for one in
his weak condition. “In future, nurse,
I won’t have this person admitted to my room.”
“Yes, yes; certainly,”
said the nurse. “You must go, sir; at once,
please.”
“I’m going,” said
Hardy, almost losing his gravity at the piteous spectacle
afforded by the house-keeper as she stood, still holding
the tray and staring open-mouthed at the combatants.
“When you’re tired of skulking in bed,
perhaps you’ll come and do your share of the
work.”
Mr. Swann rose to a sitting position,
and his demeanour was so alarming that the nurse,
hastening over to him, entreated him to lie down, and
waved Hardy peremptorily from the room.
“Puppy!” said the invalid,
with great relish. “Blockhead!”
He gazed fixedly at the young man
as he departed and then, catching sight in his turn
of the housekeeper’s perplexity, laid himself
down and buried his face in the bed-clothes.
The nurse crossed over to her assistant and, taking
the tray from her, told her in a sharp whisper that
if she ever admitted Mr. Hardy again she would not
be answerable for the consequences.