At Sunwich Port, Part 4. eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 46 pages of information about At Sunwich Port, Part 4..

At Sunwich Port, Part 4. eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 46 pages of information about At Sunwich Port, Part 4..

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!”

[Illustration:  “‘Puppy!’ said the invalid.”]

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.

CHAPTER XX

Charmed at the ease with which he had demolished the objections of Mr. Adolphus Swann and won that suffering gentleman over to his plans, Hardy began to cast longing glances at Equator Lodge.  He reminded himself that the labourer was worthy of his hire, and it seemed moreover an extremely desirable thing that Captain Nugent should know that he was labouring in his vineyard with the full expectation of a bounteous harvest.  He resolved to call.

Kate Nugent, who heard the gate swing behind him as he entered the front garden, looked up and stood spellbound at his audacity.  As a fairly courageous young person she was naturally an admirer of boldness in others, but this seemed sheer recklessness.  Moreover, it was recklessness in which, if she stayed where she was, she would have to bear a part or be guilty of rudeness, of which she felt incapable.  She took a third course, and, raising her eyebrows at the unnecessarily loud knocking with which the young man announced his arrival, retreated in good order into the garden, where her father, in a somewhat heated condition, was laboriously planting geraniums.  She had barely reached him when Bella, in a state of fearsome glee, came down the garden to tell the captain of his visitor.

[Illustration:  “Bella, in a state of fearsome glee, came down the garden to tell the captain of his visitor.”]

“Who?” said the latter, sharply, as he straightened his aching back.

“Young Mr. Hardy,” said Bella, impressively.  “I showed ’im in; I didn’t ask ’im to take a chair, but he took one.”

“Young Hardy to see me!” said the captain to his daughter, after Bella had returned to the house.  “How dare he come to my house?  Infernal impudence!  I won’t see him.”

“Shall I go in and see him for you?” inquired Kate, with affected artlessness.

“You stay where you are, miss,” said her father.  “I won’t have him speak to you; I won’t have him look at you.  I’ll——­”

He beat his dirty hands together and strode off towards the house.  Jem Hardy rose from his chair as the captain entered the room and, ignoring a look of black inquiry, bade him “Good afternoon.”

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At Sunwich Port, Part 4. from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.