Part 18 (2/2)
”I sent enough of that money to the States to keep the girl in luxury.
The rest of it I put back into my trading ventures. I got a larger boat. I did unheard-of things; and everything I touched turned into gold. All into gold!
”From time to time I got letters from Beatrice. First they were careful scrawls which said nothing. Then the handwriting grew more fluent. It alarmed me to notice the growth of her mind; I was afraid that when I finally saw her, she would see in me only a barbarian. So I educated myself in odd hours. I've read a book while a hurricane was standing my s.h.i.+p on her beam ends.”
McTee, leaning forward with a frown of almost painful interest, understood. He saw it in the wild light of the old man's eyes; a species of insanity, this love of the old man for the child he had never seen.
”Notice my language now? Never a taint of the beach lingo in it. I rubbed all that out. Aye, McTee, it took me ten years to educate myself for that girl's sake. In the meantime, I made money, as I've said. Ten years of that!
”Beatrice was in college, and six months ago I got the word that she had graduated. A month later I heard that she was going into a decline.
It was nothing very serious, but the doctors feared for the strength of her lungs. It made me glad. Now I knew that she would need me. An old man is like a woman, McTee; he needs to have things dependent on him.
”I turned everything I had into cash. I did it so hurriedly that I must have lost close to twenty per cent on the forced sales. What did I care? I had enough, and I made myself into a grandfather who could meet Beatrice's educated friends on their own level.
”I kept this old s.h.i.+p, the _Heron_, out of the list of my boats. I am going back to Beatrice with gold in my hands and gold in my brain! All for her. But is she not worth it? Look!”
He thrust the second portrait into McTee's hands. It showed a rather thin-faced girl with abnormally large eyes and a rather pathetic smile.
It was an appealing face rather than a pretty one.
”Beautiful!” said McTee with forced enthusiasm.
”Yes, beautiful! A little pinched, perhaps, but she'll fill out as she grows older. And those are her grandmother's eyes! Aye!”
He took the photograph and touched it lightly.
His voice grew lower, and the roughness was plainly a tremolo now: ”The doctors say she's sick, a little sick, quite sick, in fact. Twice every day I make them send me wireless reports of her condition. One day it's better--one day it's worse.”
He began to walk the cabin, his step marvelously elastic and nervous for so aged a man.
”Is it not well, McTee? Let her be at death's door! I shall come to her bedside with gold in either hand and raise her up to life! She shall owe everything to me! Will that not make her love me? Will it?”
He grasped McTee's shoulder tightly.
”I'm not a pretty lad to look at, eh, lad?”
McTee poured himself a drink hastily, and drained the gla.s.s before he answered.
”A pretty man? Nonsense, Henshaw! A little weather-beaten, but a tight craft at that; she'll wors.h.i.+p the ground you walk! Character, Henshaw, that's what these new American girls want to see in a man!”
Henshaw sighed with deep relief.
”Ah-h, McTee, you comfort me more than a drink on a stormy night! For reward, you shall see what I'm bringing back to her. Come!”
He rose and led McTee into his bedroom, for two cabins were retained for the captain's use. Filling one corner of the room was a huge safe almost as tall as a man.
He squatted before the safe and commenced to work the combination with a swift sureness which told McTee at once that the old buccaneer came here many times a day to gloat over his treasure. At length the door of the safe fell open. Inside was a great ma.s.s of little canvas bags.
McTee was panting as if he had run a great distance at full speed.
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