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"Suppose you give me the job?" says Molly, quietly.
He looks her up, down and across, with an eye like a gimlet; she takes the scrutiny cheerfully, as her duty and his due, offers him her clear, grey eyes (her only reference for character) and her capable, trim, broad-shouldered figure as security for fitness.
"I suppose you know your own business best," he says brusquely.
"You're engaged. What name do you wish to go by?"
"My own," says she, "Molly d.i.c.kett."
So now, you see! The secret is out, and you may observe her again piloted by the first mate, scouting through the shops of Buenos Ayres for a blue-and-white striped cotton frock, broad enough through the shoulders. Ap.r.o.ns she purchased and caps (larger caps than Mrs.
Cope's, who compromised on white lawn bow-knots) and high-laced, rubber-soled, white canvas boots, only to be procured in English shops for sporting-goods. Their price caused the first mate to whistle.
"What's the idea of all this?" he demanded suddenly. "Of course, you know, you must be up to some game. Your kind doesn't s.h.i.+p as stewardess."
"What game were _you_ up to?" Molly replied quickly. "Your kind doesn't s.h.i.+p as first mate, does it?"
"What kind?" he said gruffly.
"The 'd.i.c.ky' kind," she answered.
He blurted out some amazed incoherence, and,
"Oh, I've seen Harvard men, before," she a.s.sured him pleasantly.
Molly took the best of care of her two ladies and accepted their gratuities with a grave courtesy. They confided to the captain, at New York, that she seemed unusually refined for her position, and he replied that for all he knew, she might be.
"We'll never see _her_ again," the first mate grumbled sourly, when she stepped off the gangplank, and the captain shrugged his shoulders non-committally.
They did, nevertheless, but her mother never did. After that one dreadful interview in the d.i.c.kett library (it had used to be the sitting-room in her college days) when Eleanor had cried, and Kathryn's letter had been read aloud, and Mr. d.i.c.kett had vainly displayed his bank-book, and her mother had literally trembled with rage, there was nothing for it but oblivion--oblivion, and silence.
"A stewardess! My daughter a stewardess! I believe we could put you in an asylum--you're not decent!"
Mrs. d.i.c.kett's cheeks were greyish and mottled.
"Come, come, mother! Come, come!" said Mr. d.i.c.kett. "There's some mistake, I'm sure. If you'd only come and live with us, Molly--we're all alone, now, you know, and Lord knows there's plenty for all. It doesn't seem quite the thing, I must say, though. It--it hurts your mother's pride, you see."
"I'm sorry," said Molly, sadly. It is incredible, but she had never antic.i.p.ated it! She was really very simple and direct, and life seemed so clear and good to her, now.
"To compare yourself with that Englishman is ridiculous, and you know it," sobbed Eleanor. "What if he _was_ a cow-boy? He didn't wear a cap and ap.r.o.n--and it was for his health--and George is too angry to come over, even!"
"It's for my health, too," Molly urged, trying to keep her temper. "I never was the same after I went on that vacation to Maine--I told you before. Life isn't worth living, unless you're well."
"But you could have the south chamber for your own sitting-room, as George suggested, and do your writing at your own time," Mr. d.i.c.kett began.
"I've told you I'm not a writer," she interrupted shortly.
"George would rather have paid out of his own pocket----"
"We'll leave George out of this, I think," said Molly, her foot tapping dangerously.
"Then you may leave me out, too!" cried George's wife. "I have my children to think of. If you are determined to go and be a chambermaid, this ends it. Come, mother!"
Mrs. d.i.c.kett avoided her husband's grasp and went to the door with Eleanor. It is hard to see how these things can be, but the cave-woman and her whelpish brood are far behind us now, and Molly's mother was cut to the dividing of the bone and the marrow. The two women went out of the room and Molly stood alone with her father.
"I'm sorry, father," she said quietly. "I can't see that I should change my way of life when it is perfectly honourable and proper, just to gratify their silly pride. You must realise that I have to be independent--I'm thirty years old and I haven't had a cent that I didn't earn for more than ten years. I have never been so well and so--so contented since I left college, really."
"Really?" Mr. d.i.c.kett echoed in dim amazement.
"Really. And mother never liked me--never. Oh, it's no use, father, she never has. I can't waste any more of my life. I've found what suits me--if I ever change, I'll let you know. I'll write you, anyway, now and then. Good-bye, father. Shake hands."
And so it was over, and she jumped into the waiting "hack" ("it was some comfort," Eleanor said, "that she wore that handsome broadcloth and the feather-boa") and left them.
Perhaps you had rather leave her, yourself? Remember, she had dined the brother of a baronet (and dined him well, too)! And George Farwell had never earned her salary on _The Day_. Still, if you will stick by her a little longer, you may feel a little more tolerant of her, and that is much, in this critical civilisation of ours.
She leaned over the rail in her striped blue-and-white, and the first mate leaned beside her. The sapphire sea raced along and the milky froth flew off from their bow. The sun beat down on her dark head, and there was a song in her heart--oh, there's no doubt of it, the girl was disgracefully happy!
"A fine trip, won't it be?" she said contentedly, and drew a deep breath, and washed her lungs clean of all the murk and cobwebs left behind.
"Yes," said the first mate. "My last, by the way."
"Your last?" she repeated vaguely. "Your last?"
He nodded and swallowed in his throat. "Shall I tell you why?"
"Yes, tell me why," she said, and stared at the s.h.i.+p's boat, lashed to the side.
"I've told you about myself," he blurted out roughly, "and my family, and all that. It can't be helped--now. We look at things differently.
A man either wants to be an attache fooling around Baden, or he doesn't. I don't, that's all. And I go bad in offices. And I won't take money from them--or anybody. This suits me well enough. Probably I'm not ambitious."
"Then if it suits you," Molly began, but he put his hand over hers.
"It doesn't suit me to love any woman as much as I've loved you since Buenos Ayres," he said, "and feel that to get her I must give up this and settle down into a smelly office. It doesn't suit me to find that life is just h.e.l.l without her, but to know that if I know anything about myself I couldn't live any other way but this, and that no decent man could ask a woman to lead the rolling-stone life that I lead--she wouldn't, anyhow."
Molly's eyes were fastened on the bow of the s.h.i.+p's boat; her heart pounded against the rail; she had never felt so frightened in her life.
And suddenly she became aware that she was staring at the letters E-L-L-A, and they looked very tiny, like the letters of the Lord's Prayer written in carved ivory toys, and something she had not thought of since she first left New York flashed into her mind, and she trembled slightly. Then all the vexed and broken, many-coloured fragments of her life clicked and settled into place, quietly and inevitably, as they do in a child's kaleidoscope, and the final pattern stood out, finished. She smiled slightly and thinks that perhaps she prayed. Then,
"Why don't you give the woman a chance?" said Molly d.i.c.kett.
Mr. d.i.c.kett pushed little Penelope gently off his knee and stroked a whitening whisker.
"Molly's baby was a boy, mother--I know you'd want to hear," he said.
Mrs. d.i.c.kett was silent.
"Her husband's bought a third interest in the boat," he went on firmly, "and she says he'll probably be captain some day."
"Indeed," said Mrs. d.i.c.kett.