Mr. Robert Vyner had
been busy all the afternoon, and the clock still indicated
fifteen minutes short of the time at which he had intended
to leave. He leaned back in his chair, and, yielding
to the slight rotatory movement of that active piece
of furniture, indulged in the first twirl for three
days. Bassett or no Bassett, it was exhilarating,
and, having gone to the limit in one direction, he
obtained impetus by a clutch at the table and whirled
back again. A smothered exclamation from the door
arrested his attention, and putting on the break with
some suddenness he found himself looking into the
pretty, astonished eyes of Joan Hartley.
“I beg your pardon,” she
said, in confusion. “I thought it was my
father.”
“It it got stuck,”
said Mr. Vyner, springing up and regarding the chair
with great disfavour. “I was trying to loosen
it. I shall have to send it back, I’m afraid;
it’s badly made. There’s no cabinet-making
nowadays.”
Miss Hartley retreated to the doorway.
“I am sorry; I expected to find
my father here,” she said. “It used
to be his room.”
“Yes, it was his room,”
said the young man. “If you will come in
and sit down I will send for him.”
“It doesn’t matter, thank
you,” said Joan, still standing by the door.
“If you will tell me where his room is now, I
will go to him.”
“He he is in the
general office,” said Robert Vyner, slowly.
Miss Hartley bit her lip and her eyes grew sombre.
“Don’t go,” said
Mr. Vyner, eagerly. “I’ll go and fetch
him. He is expecting you.”
“Expecting me?” said the
girl. “Why, he didn’t know I was coming.”
“Perhaps I misunderstood him,”
murmured Mr. Vyner. “Pressure of business,”
he said, vaguely, indicating a pile of papers on his
table. “Hardly know what people do say
to me.”
He pushed a comfortable easy-chair
to the window, and the girl, after a moment’s
hesitation, seated herself and became interested in
the life outside. Robert Vyner, resuming his
seat, leaned back and gazed at her in frank admiration.
“Nice view down the harbour,
isn’t it?” he said, after a long pause.
Miss Hartley agreed and sat admiring it.
“Salthaven is a pretty place
altogether, I think,” continued Robert.
“I was quite glad to come back to it. I
like the town and I like the people. Except for
holidays I haven’t been in the place since I
was ten.”
Miss Hartley, feeling that some comment
was expected, said, “Indeed!”
“You have lived here all your
life, I suppose?” said the persevering Robert.
“Practically,” said Miss Hartley.
Mr. Vyner stole a look at her as she
sat sideways by the window. Conscience and his
visitor’s manner told him that he ought to go
for her father; personal inclination told him that
there was no hurry. For the first time in his
experience the office became most desirable place in
the world. He wanted to sit still and look at
her, and for some time, despite her restlessness,
obeyed his inclinations. She turned at last to
ask for her father, and in the fraction of a second
he was immersed in a bundle of papers. Knitted
brows and pursed lips testified to his absorption.
He seized a pen and made an endorsement; looked at
it with his head on one side and struck it out again.
“My father?” said Miss Hartley, in a small
but determined voice.
Mr. Vyner gazed at her in a preoccupied
fashion. Suddenly his face changed.
“Good gracious! yes,”
he said, springing up and going to the door. “How
stupid of me!”
He stepped into the corridor and stood
reflecting. In some circumstances he could be
business-like enough. After reflecting for three
minutes he came back into the room.
“He will be in soon,”
he said, resuming his seat. Inwardly he resolved
to go and fetch him later on when the conversation
flagged, for instance. Meantime he took up his
papers and shook his head over them.
“I wish I had got your father’s
head for business,” he said, ruefully.
Miss Hartley turned on him a face
from which all primness had vanished. The corners
of her mouth broke and her eyes grew soft. She
smiled at Mr. Vyner, and Mr. Vyner, pluming himself
upon his address, smiled back.
“If I knew half as much as he
does,” he continued, “I’d I’d ”
Miss Hartley waited, her eyes bright with expectation.
“I’d,” repeated
Mr. Vyner, who had rashly embarked on a sentence before
he had seen the end of it, “have a jolly easy
time of it,” he concluded, breathlessly.
Miss Hartley surveyed him in pained
surprise. “I thought my father worked very
hard,” she said, with a little reproach in her
voice.
“So he does,” said the
young man, hastily, “but he wouldn’t if
he only had my work to do; that’s what I meant.
As far as he is concerned he works far too hard.
He sets an example that is a trouble to all of us
except the office-boy. Do you know Bassett?”
Miss Hartley smiled. “My
father tells me he is a very good boy,” she
said.
“A treasure!” said Robert.
“‘Good’ doesn’t describe Bassett.
He is the sort of boy who would get off a ’bus
after paying his fare to kick a piece of orange peel
off the pavement. He has been nourished on copy-book
headings and ‘Sanford and Merton.’
Ever read ’Sanford and Merton’?”
“I I tried to once,” said Joan.
“There was no ‘trying’
with Bassett,” said Mr. Vyner, rather severely.
“He took to it as a duck takes to water.
By modelling his life on its teaching he won a silver
medal for never missing an attendance at school.”
“Father has seen it,” said Joan, with
a smile.
“Even the measles failed to
stop him,” continued Robert. “Day
by day, a little more flushed than usual, perhaps,
he sat in his accustomed place until the whole school
was down with it and had to be closed in consequence.
Then, and not till then, did Bassett feel that he had
saved the situation.”
“I don’t suppose he knew it, poor boy,”
said Joan.
“Anyway, he got the medal,”
said Robert, “and he has a row of prizes for
good conduct. I never had one; not even a little
one. I suppose you had a lot?”
Miss Hartley maintained a discreet silence.
“Nobody ever seemed to notice
my good conduct,” continued Mr. Vyner, still
bent on making conversation. “They always
seemed to notice the other kind fast enough; but the
‘good’ seemed to escape them.”
He sighed faintly, and glancing at
the girl, who was looking out of the window again,
took up his pen and signed his blotting-paper.
“I suppose you know the view
from that window pretty well?” he said, putting
the paper aside with great care.
“Ever since I was a small girl,”
said Joan, looking round. “I used to come
here sometimes and wait for father. Not so much
lately; and now, of course ”
Mr. Vyner looked uncomfortable.
“I hope you will come to this room whenever
you want to see him,” he said, earnestly.
“He he seemed to prefer being in
the general office.”
Miss Hartley busied herself with the
window again. “Seemed to prefer,”
she said, impatiently, under her breath. “Yes.”
There was a long silence, which Mr.
Vyner, gazing in mute consternation at the vision
of indignant prettiness by the window, felt quite unable
to break. He felt that the time had at last arrived
at which he might safely fetch Mr. Hartley without
any self-upbraidings later on, and was just about
to rise when the faint tap at the door by which Bassett
always justified his entrance stopped him, and Bassett
entered the room with some cheques for signature.
Despite his habits, the youth started slightly as
he saw the visitor, and then, placing the cheques before
Mr. Vyner, stood patiently by the table while he signed
them.
“That will do,” said the
latter, as he finished. “Thank you.”
“Thank you, sir,” said
Bassett. He gave a slow glance at the window,
and, arranging the cheques neatly, turned toward the
door.
“Will Mr. Hartley be long?” inquired Joan,
turning round.
“Mr. Hartley, miss?” said
Bassett, pausing, with his hand on the knob.
“Mr. Hartley left half an hour ago.”
Mr. Vyner, who felt the eyes of Miss
Hartley fixed upon him, resisted by a supreme effort
the impulse to look at her in return.
“Bassett!” he said, sharply.
“Sir?” said the other..
“Didn’t you,” said Mr. Vyner, with
a fine and growing note of indignation in his voice “didn’t
you tell Mr. Hartley that Miss Hartley was here waiting
for him?”
“No, sir,” said Bassett,
gazing at certain mysterious workings of the junior
partner’s face with undisguised amazement.
“I ”
“Do you mean to tell me,”
demanded Mr. Vyner, looking at him with great significance,
“that you forgot?”
“No, sir,” said Bassett; “I didn’t ”
“That will do,” broke
in Mr. Vyner, imperiously. “That will do.
You can go.”
“But,” said the amazed youth, “how
could I tell ”
“That will do,”
said Mr. Vyner, very distinctly.
“I don’t want any excuses.
You can go at once. And the next time you are
told to deliver a message, please don’t forget.
Now go.”
With a fine show of indignation he
thrust the gasping Bassett from the room.
He rose from his chair and, with a
fine show of indignation, thrust the gasping Bassett
from the room, and then turned to face the girl.
“I am so sorry,” he began.
“That stupid boy you see how stupid
he is ”
“It doesn’t matter, thank
you,” said Joan. “It it
wasn’t very important.”
“He doesn’t usually forget
things,” murmured Mr. Vyner. “I wish
now,” he added, truthfully, “that I had
told Mr. Hartley myself.”
He held the door open for her, and,
still expressing his regret, accompanied her down-stairs
to the door. Miss Hartley, somewhat embarrassed,
and a prey to suspicions which maidenly modesty forbade
her to voice, listened in silence.
“Next time you come,”
said Mr. Vyner, pausing just outside the door, “I
hope ”
Something dropped between them, and
fell with a little tinkling crash on to the pavement.
Mr. Vyner stooped, and, picking up a pair of clumsily
fashioned spectacles, looked swiftly up at the office
window.
“Bassett,” he said, involuntarily.
He stood looking at the girl, and
trying in vain to think of something to say.
Miss Hartley, with somewhat more colour than usual,
gave him a little bow and hurried off.