Mr. John Vyner, ship-owner,
pushed his chair back from his writing-table and gazed
with kindly condescension at the chief clerk as he
stood before it with a handful of papers.
“We shall be able to relieve
you of some of your work soon, Hartley,” he
said, slowly. “Mr. Robert will come into
the firm next week.” The chief clerk bowed.
“Three years at Cambridge,”
resumed Mr. Vyner, meditatively, “and two years
spent up and down the world studying the business methods
of other nations ought to render him invaluable to
us.”
“No doubt, sir,” said
Hartley. “It is an excellent training.”
“For a time,” said the
ship-owner, leaning back and placing the tips of his
fingers together, “for a time I am afraid that
he will have to have your room. Later on ha if
a room should ha fall vacant
in the building, we might consider taking it.”
“Yes, sir,” said the other.
“And, of course,” resumed
Mr. Vyner, “there is one great advantage in
your being in the general office which must not be
overlooked; you can keep an eye on the juniors better.”
“It is cheerful, too, sir,”
suggested the chief clerk; “the only thing ”
“Yes?” said Mr. Vyner, somewhat loudly.
Mr. Hartley shrank a little.
“I was going to say that it is rather a small
room for Mr. Robert,” he said, quickly.
“It will do for a time,” said the other.
“And and I think
I told you, sir, that there is an unpleasant sm odour.”
Mr. Vyner knitted his brows.
“I offered to have that seen to, but you said
that you didn’t mind it,” he remarked.
“Just so, sir,” said Hartley;
“but I was thinking of Mr. Robert. He might
not like it; it’s very strong at times very
strong indeed.”
“You ought to have had it attended
to before,” said Mr. Vyner, with some severity.
“You had better call at Gillows’ on your
way home and ask them to send a man up first thing
to-morrow morning.”
He drew his chair to the table again,
and Hartley, after lingering a moment, withdrew to
his own room.
Ten out of his thirty-five years of
service had been passed there, and he stifled a sigh
as he looked at the neat array of drawers and pigeon-holes,
the window overlooking the bridge and harbour, and
the stationer’s almanac which hung over the fireplace.
The japanned letter-rack and the gum-bottle on the
small mantelpiece were old friends.
The day’s work completed, he
walked home in sober thought. It was a pleasant
afternoon in May, but he was too preoccupied to pay
any heed to the weather, and, after informing a man
who stopped him to tell him that he had lost a wife,
six children, and a right leg, that it was just five
minutes past six, resumed his way with a hazy idea
of having been useful to a fellow-creature.
He brightened a little as he left
the bustle of the town behind, and from sheer force
of habit glanced at the trim front-gardens as he passed.
The cloud lifted still more as he reached his own garden
and mentally compared his flowers with those he had
just passed.
His daughter was out, and tea for
one was laid in the front room. He drew his chair
to the table, and taking up the tea-pot, which the
maid had just brought in, poured himself out a cup
of tea.
He looked round the comfortable room
with pleasure. After all, nobody could take that
from him. He stirred his tea and had just raised
the cup to his lips when he set it down untasted and
sat staring blankly before him. A low rumble
of voices from the kitchen fell unpleasantly on his
ear; and his daughter Joan had left instructions too
specific to be misunderstood as to his behaviour in
the event of Rosa entertaining male company during
her absence. He coughed twice, loudly, and was
glad to note the disappearance of the rumble.
Pleased with his success he coughed a third time,
a sonorous cough charged with importance. A whispered
rumble, possibly a suggestion of withdrawal, came from
the kitchen.
“Only his tea gone the wrong
way,” he heard, reassuringly, from Rosa.
The rumble, thus encouraged, deepened
again. It became confident and was heard to laugh.
Mr. Hartley rose and, standing on the hearthrug with
legs apart, resolved to play the man. He leaned
over and rang the bell. The voices stopped.
Then he heard Rosa say, “Not him! you stay where
you are.”
She came slowly in response to the
bell, and thrusting a yellow head in at the door gazed
at him inquiringly.
“I I want a little
more hot water,” said her master, mildly.
“More?” repeated Rosa. “Why,
I brought you over a pint.”
“I want some more,” said
Mr. Hartley. Then a bright thought struck him.
“I am expecting Miss Joan home every minute,”
he added, significantly.
Rosa tossed her head. “She
ain’t coming home till nine,” she remarked,
“so if it’s only for her you want the hot
water, you won’t want it.”
“I I thought I heard a man’s
voice,” he said at last.
“Very good,” said her master, with an
attempt at dignity; “you can go.”
Rosa went, whistling. Mr. Hartley,
feeling that he had done all that could be expected
of a man, sat down and resumed his tea. The rumbling
from the kitchen, as though in an endeavour to make
up for lost time, became continuous. It also
became louder and more hilarious. Pale and determined
Mr. Hartley rose a second time and, seizing the bell-pull,
rang violently.
“Does anybody want to see me?” he inquired,
as Rosa’s head appeared.
“You? No,” was the reply.
“I thought,” said her
master, gazing steadily at the window, “I thought
somebody was inquiring for me.”
“Well, there hasn’t been,” said
Rosa.
Mr. Hartley, with a magisterial knitting
of the brows, which had occasionally been found effective
with junior clerks, affected to ponder.
“I I thought I heard a man’s
voice,” he said at last.
“Nobody’s been inquiring
for you,” said Rosa calmly. “If they
did I should come in and let you know. Nobody’s
been for you that I’ve heard of, and I don’t
see how they could come without me knowing it.”
“Just so,” said Mr. Hartley. “Just
so.”
He turned to the mantelpiece for his
tobacco-jar, and Rosa, after standing for some time
at the “ready” with a hostile stare, cleared
her throat noisily and withdrew. The voices in
the kitchen broke out with renewed vehemence; Mr.
Hartley coughed again a cough lacking in
spirit and, going out at the front door,
passed through the side-entrance to the garden and
tended his plants with his back to the kitchen window.
Hard at work at the healthful pastime
of weeding, his troubles slipped from him. The
path became littered with little tufts of grass, and
he Was just considering the possibility of outflanking
the birch-broom, which had taken up an advantageous
position by the kitchen window, when a young man came
down the side-entrance and greeted him with respectful
enthusiasm.
“I brought you these,”
he said, opening a brown leather bag and extracting
a few dried roots. “I saw an advertisement.
I forget the name of them, but they have beautiful
trumpet-shaped flowers. They are free growers,
and grow yards and yards the first year.”
“And miles and miles the second,”
said Mr. Hartley, regarding them with extraordinary
ferocity. “Bindweed is the name, and once
get it in your garden and you’ll never get rid
of it.”
“That wasn’t the name
in the advertisement,” said the other, dubiously.
“I don’t suppose it was,”
said Hartley. “You’ve got a lot to
learn in gardening yet, Saunders.”
“Yes, sir,” said the other;
“I’ve got a good teacher, though.”
Mr. Hartley almost blushed. “And
how is your garden getting on?” he inquired.
“It’s it’s getting on,”
said Mr. Saunders, vaguely.
“I must come and have a look at it,” said
Hartley.
“Not yet,” said the young
man, hastily. “Not yet. I shouldn’t
like you to see it just yet. Is Miss Hartley
well?”
Mr. Hartley said she was, and, in
an abstracted fashion, led the way down the garden
to where an enormous patch of land or so
it seemed to Mr. Saunders awaited digging.
The latter removed his coat and, hanging it with great
care on an apple tree, turned back his cuffs and seized
the fork.
“It’s grand exercise,”
said Mr. Hartley, after watching him for some time.
“Grand,” said Mr. Saunders, briefly.
“As a young man I couldn’t
dig enough,” continued the other, “but
nowadays it gives me a crick in the back.”
“Always?” inquired Mr. Saunders, with
a slight huskiness.
“Always,” said Mr. Hartley. “But
I never do it now; Joan won’t let me.”
Mr. Saunders sighed at the name and
resumed his digging. “Miss Hartley out?”
he asked presently, in a casual voice.
“Yes; she won’t be home
till late,” said the other. “We can
have a fine evening’s work free of interruptions.
I’ll go and get on with my weeding.”
He moved off and resumed his task;
Mr. Saunders, with a suppressed groan, went on with
his digging. The ground got harder and harder
and his back seemed almost at breaking-point.
At intervals he had what gardeners term a “straight-up,”
and with his face turned toward the house listened
intently for any sounds that might indicate the return
of its mistress.
“Half-past eight,” said
Hartley at last; “time to knock off. I’ve
put a few small plants in your bag for you; better
put them in in the morning before you start off.”
Mr. Saunders thanked him, and reaching
down his coat put it on and followed Mr. Hartley to
the house. The latter, steering him round by the
side-entrance, accompanied him to the front gate.
“If you would like to borrow
my roller or lawn-mower at any time,” he said,
cordially, “I should be very pleased to lend
them to you. It isn’t very far.”
Mr. Saunders, who would sooner have
died than have been seen dragging a roller through
the streets, thanked him warmly. With an idea
of prolonging his stay, he suggested looking at them.
“They’re locked up now,”
said Mr. Hartley. “See them another time.
Good-night.”
“Good-night,” said Mr.
Saunders. “I’ll look in to-morrow
evening, if I may.”
“No use to-morrow,” Mr.
Hartley called after him; “there will be nobody
at home but Joan.”