JOAN HARTLEY’S letter to her
father was not so easy to write as she had imagined.
She tore up draft after draft, and at last, in despair,
wrote him a brief and dutiful epistle, informing him
that she had changed her name to Tremblett. She
added in a postscript that she
expected he would be surprised; and, having finished
her task, sat trying to decide whether to commit it
to the post or the flames.
It was a question that occupied her
all the evening, and the following morning found her
still undecided. It was not until the afternoon,
when a letter came from Captain Trimblett, declining
in violent terms and at great length to be a party
to her scheme, that she made up her mind. The
information that he had been recalled to Salthaven
on the day following only served to strengthen her
resolution, and it was with a feeling of almost pious
thankfulness that she realized the advantages of such
an arrangement. She went out and posted her letter
to her father, and then, with a mind at ease, wrote
a nice letter to Captain Trimblett, full of apologies
for her precipitancy, and regretting that he had not
informed her before of what she called his change
of mind. She added that, after mature deliberation,
she had decided not to return to Salthaven until after
he had sailed.
Captain Trimblett got the letter next
morning and, hurrying off to the nearest post-office,
filled up a telegraph-form with a few incisive words
dashed off at white heat. He destroyed six forms
before he had arrived at what he considered a happy
mean between strength and propriety, and then at the
lady clerk’s earnest request altered one of
the words of the seventh. A few hours later he
was on his way to Salthaven.
It was late when he arrived and the
office of Vyner and Son was closed. He went on
to Laurel Lodge, and, after knocking and ringing for
some time in vain, walked back to the town and went
on board his ship. The new crew had not yet been
signed on, and Mr. Walters, the only man aboard, was
cut short in his expressions of pleasure at the captain’s
return and sent ashore for provisions.
“Time you went to sea again,”
said the captain a little later as the boatswain went
on his hands and knees to recover the pieces of a plate
he had dropped.
“I wish I’d gone a month
ago, sir,” said Mr. Walters. “Shore’s
no place for a sailorman.”
The captain grunted, and turning suddenly
surprised the eye of Mr. Walters fixed upon him with
an odd, puzzled expression that he had noticed before
that evening. Mr. Walters, caught in the act,
ducked from sight, and recovered a crumb that was
trying to pass itself off as a piece of china.
“What are you staring at me for?” demanded
the captain.
“Me, sir?” said the boatswain. “I
wasn’t staring.”
He rose with his hands full of pieces
and retreated to the door. Almost against his
will he stole another glance at the captain and blinked
hastily at the gaze that met his own.
“If I’ve got a smut on my nose ”
began the captain, ferociously.
“No, sir,” said Mr. Walters, disappearing.
“Come here!” roared the other.
The boatswain came back reluctantly.
“If I catch you making those
faces at me again,” said the captain, whom the
events of the last day or two had reduced to a state
of chronic ill-temper, “I’ll I’ll ”
“Yessir,” said Mr. Walters, cheerfully.
“I ”
He disappeared again, but his voice
came floating down the companion-ladder. “I
’ope you’ll accept my
good wishes.”
Captain Trimblett started as though
he had been stung, and his temperature rose to as
near boiling point as science and the human mechanism
will allow. Twice he opened his mouth to bellow
the boatswain back again, and twice his courage failed
him. He sat a picture of wrathful consternation
until, his gaze falling on a bottle of beer, he emptied
it with great rapidity, and pushing his plate away
and lighting his pipe sat trying to read a harmless
meaning into Mr. Walters’s infernal congratulations.
He rose early next morning and set
off for Laurel Lodge, a prey to gloom, which the furtive
glances of Mr. Walters had done nothing to dissipate.
Hartley was still in his bedroom when he arrived, but
Rosa showed him into the dining-room, and, having
placed a chair, sped lightly upstairs.
“I’ve told him,”
she said, returning in a breathless condition and
smiling at him.
The captain scowled at her.
“And he says he’ll be down in a minute.”
“Very good,” said the captain, with a
nod of dismissal.
Miss Jelks went as far as the sideboard,
and, taking out a tablecloth, proceeded to set the
breakfast, regarding the captain with unaffected interest
as she worked.
“He ain’t been very well the last day
or two,” she said, blandly.
The captain ignored her.
“Seems to have something on
his mind,” continued Miss Jelks, with a toss
of her head, as she placed the sugar-bowl and other
articles on the table.
The captain regarded her steadily
for a moment, and then, turning, took up a newspaper.
“I should think he never was
what you’d call a strong man,” murmured
Miss Jelks. “He ain’t got the look
of it.”
The captain’s temper got the
better of him. “Who are you talking about?”
he demanded, turning sharply.
Miss Jelks’s eyes shone, but
there was no hurry, and she smoothed down a corner
of the tablecloth before replying.
“Your father-in-law, sir,”
she said, with a faint air of surprise.
Captain Trimblett turned hastily to
his paper again, but despite his utmost efforts a
faint wheezing noise escaped him and fell like soft
music on the ears of Miss Jelks. In the hope that
it might be repeated, or that manifestations more
gratifying still might be vouchsafed to her, she lingered
over her task and coughed in an aggressive fashion
at intervals.
She was still busy when Hartley came
downstairs, and, stopping for a moment at the doorway,
stood regarding the captain with a look of timid disapproval.
The latter rose and, with a significant glance in the
direction of Rosa, shook hands and made a remark about
the weather.
“When did you return?”
inquired Hartley, trying to speak easily.
“Last night,” said the
other. “I came on here, but you were out.”
Hartley nodded, and they sat eying
each other uneasily and waiting for the industrious
Rosa to go. The captain got tired first, and throwing
open the French windows slipped out into the garden
and motioned to Hartley to follow.
“Joan wrote to you,” he
said, abruptly, as soon as they were out of earshot.
“Yes,” said the other, stiffly.
“Understand, it wasn’t
my fault,” said the captain, warmly. “I
wash my hands of it. I told her not to.”
“Indeed!” said Hartley,
with a faint attempt at sarcasm. “It was
no concern of mine, of course.”
The captain turned on him sharply,
and for a moment scathing words hung trembling on
his lips. He controlled himself by an effort.
“She wrote to you,” he
said, slowly, “and instead of waiting to see
me, or communicating with me, you spread the news
all over the place.”
“Nothing of the kind,”
said Hartley. “As a matter of fact, it’s
not a thing I am anxious to talk about. Up to
the present I have only told Rosa.”
“Only!” repeated the choking
captain. “Only! Only told Rosa!
Where was the town-crier? What in the name of
common-sense did you want to tell her for?”
“She would have to be told sooner
or later,” said Hartley, staring at him, “and
it seemed to me better to tell her before Joan came
home. I thought Joan would prefer it; and if
you had heard Rosa’s comments I think that you’d
agree I was right.”
The captain scarcely listened.
“Well, it’s all over Salthaven by now,”
he said, resignedly.
He seated himself on the bench with
his hands hanging loosely between his knees, and tried
to think. In any case he saw himself held up to
ridicule, and he had a strong feeling that to tell
the truth now would precipitate a crisis between Vyner
and his chief clerk. The former would probably
make a fairly accurate guess at the circumstances responsible
for the rumour, and act accordingly. He glanced
at Hartley standing awkwardly before him, and, not
without a sense of self-sacrifice, resolved to accept
the situation.
“Yes; Rosa had to be told,”
he said, philosophically. “Fate again; you
can’t avoid it.”
Hartley took a turn or two up and down the path.
“The news came on me like a like
a thunderbolt,” he said, pausing in front of
the captain. “I hadn’t the slightest
idea of such a thing, and if I say what I think ”
“Don’t!” interrupted
the captain, warmly. “What’s the good?”
“When were you married?”
inquired the other. “Where were you married?”
“Joan made all the arrangements,”
said the captain, rising hastily. “Ask
her.”
“But ” said the astonished
Hartley.
“Ask her,” repeated the
captain, walking toward the house and flinging the
words over his shoulder. “I’m sick
of it.”
He led the way into the dining-room
and, at the other’s invitation, took a seat
at the breakfast-table, and sat wondering darkly how
he was to get through the two days before he sailed.
Hartley, ill at ease, poured him out a cup of coffee
and called his attention to the bacon-dish.
“I can’t help thinking,”
he said, as the captain helped himself and then pushed
the dish toward him “I can’t
help thinking that there is something behind all this;
that there is some reason for it that I don’t
quite understand.”
The captain started. “Never
mind,” he said, with gruff kindness.
“But I do mind,” persisted
the other. “I have got an idea that it has
been done for the benefit if you can call
it that of a third person.”
The captain eyed him with benevolent
concern. “Nonsense,” he said, uneasily.
“Nothing of the kind. We never thought of
you.”
“I wasn’t thinking of
myself,” said Hartley, staring; “but I
know that Joan was uneasy about you, although she
pretended to laugh at it. I feel sure in my own
mind that she has done this to save you from Mrs.
Chinnery. If it hadn’t ”
He stopped suddenly as the captain,
uttering a strange gasping noise, rose and stood over
him. For a second or two the captain stood struggling
for speech, then, stepping back with a suddenness that
overturned his chair, he grabbed his cap from the sideboard
and dashed out of the house. The amazed Mr. Hartley
ran to the window and, with some uneasiness, saw his
old friend pelting along at the rate of a good five
miles an hour.
Breathing somewhat rapidly from his
exertions, the captain moderated his pace after the
first hundred yards, and went on his way in a state
of mind pretty evenly divided between wrath and self-pity.
He walked in thought with his eyes fixed on the ground,
and glancing up, too late to avoid him, saw the harbour-master
approaching.
Captain Trimblett, composing his features
to something as near his normal expression as the
time at his disposal would allow, gave a brief nod
and would have passed on. He found his way, however,
blocked by sixteen stone of harbour-master, while
a big, red, clean-shaven face smiled at him reproachfully.
“How are you?” said Trimblett, jerkily.
The harbour-master, who was a man
of few words, made no reply. He drew back a little
and, regarding the captain with smiling interest, rolled
his head slowly from side to side.
“Well! Well! Well!” he said
at last.
Captain Trimblett drew himself up
and regarded him with a glance the austerity of which
would have made most men quail. It affected the
harbourmaster otherwise.
“C ck!” he
said, waggishly, and drove a forefinger like a petrified
sausage into the other’s ribs.
The assault was almost painful, and,
before the captain could recover, the harbour-master,
having exhausted his stock of witticisms, both verbal
and physical, passed on highly pleased with himself.
It was only a sample of what the day
held in store for the captain, and before it was half
over he was reduced to a condition of raging impotence.
The staff of Vyner and Son turned on their stools as
one man as he entered the room, and regarded him open-eyed
for the short time that he remained there. Mr.
Vyner, senior, greeted him almost with cordiality,
and, for the second time in his experience, extended
a big white hand for him to shake.
“I have heard the news, captain,”
he said, in extenuation.
Captain Trimblett bowed, and in response
to an expression of good wishes for his future welfare
managed to thank him. He made his escape as soon
as possible, and, meeting Robert Vyner on the stairs,
got a fleeting glance and a nod which just admitted
the fact of his existence.
The most popular man in Salthaven
for the time being, he spent the best part of the
day on board his ship, heedless of the fact that numerous
acquaintances were scouring the town in quest of him.
One or two hardy spirits even ventured on board, and,
leaving with some haste, bemoaned, as they went, the
change wrought by matrimony in a hitherto amiable and
civil-spoken mariner.
The one drop of sweetness in his cup
was the news that Mrs. Chinnery was away from home
for a few days, and after carefully reconnoitring from
the bridge of the Indian Chief that evening
he set off to visit his lodgings. He reached
Tranquil Vale unmolested, and, entering the house
with a rather exaggerated air of unconcern, nodded
to Mr. Truefitt, who was standing on the hearthrug
smoking, and hung up his cap. Mr. Truefitt, after
a short pause, shook hands with him.
“She’s away,” he said, in a deep
voice.
“She? Who?” faltered the captain.
“Susanna,” replied Mr. Truefitt, in a
deeper voice still.
The captain coughed and, selecting
a chair with great care, slowly seated himself.
“She left you her best wishes,”
continued Mr. Truefitt, still standing, and still
regarding him with an air of severe disapproval.
“Much obliged,” murmured the captain.
“She would do it,” added
Mr. Truefitt, crossing to the window and staring out
at the road with his back to the captain. “And
she said something about a silver-plated butter-dish;
but in the circumstances I said ‘No.’
Miss Willett thought so too.”
“How is Miss Willett?”
inquired the captain, anxious to change the subject.
“All things considered, she’s
better than might be expected,” replied Mr.
Truefitt, darkly.
Captain Trimblett said that he was
glad to hear it, and, finding the silence becoming
oppressive, inquired affectionately concerning the
health of Mrs. Willett, and learned to his discomfort
that she was in the same enigmatical condition as
her daughter.
“And my marriage is as far off
as ever,” concluded Mr. Truefitt. “Some
people seem to be able to get married as often as they
please, and others can’t get married at all.”
“It’s all fate,”
said the captain, slowly; “it’s all arranged
for us.”
Mr. Truefitt turned and his colour rose.
“Your little affair was arranged for you, I
suppose?” he said, sharply.
“It was,” said the captain, with startling
vehemence.
Mr. Truefitt, who was lighting his
pipe, looked up at him from lowered brows, and then,
crossing to the door, took his pipe down the garden
to the summer-house.