If George Morris were asked to say which day of all his life had been
the most thoroughly enjoyable, he would probably have answered that the
seventh of his voyage from New York to Liverpool was the red-letter day
of his life. The sea was as calm as it was possible for a sea to be. The
sun shone bright and warm. Towards the latter part of the day they saw
the mountains of Wales, which, from the steamer's deck, seemed but a low
range of hills. It did not detract from Morris's enjoyment to know that
Mrs. Blanche was now on the troubleless island of Ireland, and that he
was sailing over this summer sea with the lady who, the night before,
had promised to be his wife.
During the day Morris and Katherine sat together on the sunny side of
the ship looking at the Welsh coast. Their books lay unread on the rug,
and there were long periods of silences between them.
"I don't believe," said Morris, "that anything could be more perfectly
delightful than this. I wish the shaft would break."
"I hope it won't," answered the young lady; "the chances are you would
be as cross as a bear before two days had gone past, and would want to
go off in a small boat."
"Oh, I should be quite willing to go off in a small boat if you would
come with me. I would do that now."
"I am very comfortable where I am," answered Miss Katherine. "I know
when to let well enough alone."
"And I don't, I suppose you mean?"
"Well, if you wanted to change this perfectly delightful day for any
other day, or this perfectly luxurious and comfortable mode of travel
for any other method, I should suspect you of not letting well enough
alone."
"I have to admit," said George, "that I am completely and serenely
happy. The only thing that bothers me is that to-night we shall be in
Liverpool. I wish this hazy and dreamy weather could last for ever, and
I am sure I could stand two extra days of it going just as we are now. I
think with regret of how much of this voyage we have wasted."
"Oh, you think it was wasted, do you?"
"Well, wasted as compared with this sort of life. This seems to me like
a rest after a long chase."
"Up the deck?" asked the young lady, smiling at him.
"Now, see here," said Morris, "we may as well understand this first
as last, that unfortunate up-the-deck chase has to be left out of our
future life. I am not going to be twitted about that race every time a
certain young lady takes a notion to have a sort of joke upon me."
"That was no joke, George. It was the most serious race you ever ran in
your life. You were running away from one woman, and, poor blind young
man, you ran right in the arms of another. The danger you have run into
is ever so much greater than the one you were running away from."
"Oh, I realise that," said the young man, lightly; "that's what makes me
so solemn to-day, you know." His hand stole under the steamer rugs and
imprisoned her own.
"I am afraid people will notice that," she said quietly.
"Well, let them; I don't care. I don't know anybody on board this ship,
anyhow, except you, and if you realised how very little I care for their
opinions you would not try to withdraw your hand."
"I am not trying very hard," answered the young woman; and then there
was another long silence. Finally she continued--
"I am going to take the steamer chair and do it up in ribbons when I get
ashore."
"I am afraid it will not be a very substantial chair, no matter what you
do with it. It will be a trap for those who sit in it."
"Are you speaking of your own experience?"
"No, of yours."
"George," she said, after a long pause, "did you like her very much?"
"Her?" exclaimed the young man, surprised. "Who?"
"Why, the young lady you ran away from. You know very well whom I mean."
"Like her? Why, I hate her."
"Yes, perhaps you do now. But I am asking of former years. How long were
you engaged to her?"
"Engaged? Let me see, I have been engaged just about--well, not
twenty-four hours yet. I was never engaged before. I thought I was, but
I wasn't really."
Miss Earle shook her head. "You must have liked her very much," she
said, "or you never would have proposed marriage to her. You would never
have been engaged to her. You never would have felt so badly when she--"
"Oh, say it out," said George, "jilted me, that is the word."
"No, that is not the phrase I wanted to use. She didn't really jilt you,
you know. It was because you didn't have, or thought you didn't have,
money enough. She would like to be married to you to-day."
George shuddered.
"I wish," he said, "that you wouldn't mar a perfect day by a horrible
suggestion."
"The suggestion would not have been so horrible a month ago."
"My dear girl," said Morris, rousing himself up, "it's a subject that I
do not care much to talk about, but all young men, or reasonably young
men, make mistakes in their lives. That was my mistake. My great luck
was that it was discovered in time. As a general thing, affairs in this
world are admirably planned, but it does seem to me a great mistake that
young people have to choose companions for life at an age when they
really haven't the judgment to choose a house and lot. Now, confess
yourself, I am not your first lover, am I?"
Miss Earle looked at him for a moment before replying.
"You remember," she said, "that once you spoke of not having to
incriminate yourself. You refused to answer a question I asked you on
that ground. Now, I think this is a case in which I would be quite
justified in refusing to answer. If I told you that you were my first
lover, you would perhaps be manlike enough to think that after all you
had only taken what nobody else had expressed a desire for. A man does
not seem to value anything unless some one else is struggling for it."
"Why, what sage and valuable ideas you have about men, haven't you, my
dear?"
"Well, you can't deny but what there is truth in them."
"I not only can, but I do. On behalf of my fellow men, and on behalf
of myself, I deny it."
"Then, on the other hand," she continued, "if I confessed to you that I
did have half a score or half a dozen of lovers, you would perhaps think
I had been jilting somebody or had been jilted. So you see, taking it
all in, and thinking the matter over, I shall refuse to answer your
question."
"Then you will not confess?"
"Yes, I shall confess. I have been wanting to confess to you for some
little time, and have felt guilty because I did not do so."
"I am prepared to receive the confession," replied the young man,
lazily, "and to grant absolution."
"Well, you talk a great deal about America and about Americans, and
talk as if you were proud of the country, and of its ways, and of its
people."
"Why, I am," answered the young man.
"Very well, then; according to your creed one person is just as good as
another."
"Oh, I don't say that, I don't hold that for a moment. I don't think I
am as good as you, for instance."
"But what I mean is this, that one's occupation does not necessarily
give one a lower station than another. If that is not your belief then
you are not a true American, that is all."
"Well, yes, that is my belief. I will admit I believe all that. What of
it?"
"What of it? There is this of it. You are the junior partner of a large
establishment in New York?"
"Nothing criminal in that, is there?"
"Oh, I don't put it as an accusation, I am merely stating the fact. You
admit the fact, of course?"
"Yes. The fact is admitted, and marked 'Exhibit A,' and placed in
evidence. Now, what next?"
"In the same establishment there was a young woman who sold ribbons to
all comers?"
"Yes, I admit that also, and the young lady's name was Miss Katherine
Earle."
"Oh, you knew it, then?"
"Why, certainly I did."
"You knew it before you proposed to me."
"Oh, I seem to have known that fact for years and years."
"She told it to you."
"She? What she?"
"You know very well who I mean, George. She told it to you, didn't she?"
"Why, don't you think I remembered you--remembered seeing you there?"
"I know very well you did not. You may have seen me there, but you did
not remember me. The moment I spoke to you on the deck that day in the
broken chair, I saw at once you did not remember me, and there is very
little use of your trying to pretend you thought of it afterwards. She
told it to you, didn't she?"
"Now, look here, Katherine, it isn't I who am making a confession, it
is you. It is not customary for a penitent to cross-examine the father
confessor in that style."
"It does not make any difference whether you confess or not, George; I
shall always know she told you that. After all, I wish she had left it
for me to tell. I believe I dislike that woman very much."
"Shake hands, Kate, over that. So do I. Now, my dear, tell me what she
told you."
"Then she did tell you that, did she?"
"Why, if you are so sure of it without my admitting it, why do you ask
again?"
"I suppose because I wanted to make doubly sure."
"Well, then, assurance is doubly sure. I admit she did."
"And you listened to her, George?" said Katherine, reproachfully.
"Listened? Why, of course I did. I couldn't help myself. She said it
before I knew what she was going to say. She didn't give me the chance
that your man had in that story you were speaking of. I said something
that irritated her and she out with it at once as if it had been a crime
on your part. I did not look on it in that light, and don't now. Anyhow,
you are not going back to the ribbon counter."
"No," answered the young lady, with a sigh, looking dreamily out into
the hazy distance. "No, I am not."
"At least, not that side of the counter," said George.
She looked at him for a moment, as if she did not understand him; then
she laughed lightly.
"Now," said Morris, "I have done most of the confession on this
confession of yours. Supposing I make a confession, and ask you to tell
me what she told you."
"Well, she told me that you were a very fascinating young man," answered
Katherine, with a sigh.
"Really. And did after-acquaintance corroborate that statement?"
"I never had occasion to tell her she was mistaken."
"What else did she say? Didn't mention anything about my prospects or
financial standing in any way?"
"No; we did not touch on that subject."
"Come, now, you cannot evade the question. What else did she say to
you about me?"
"I don't know that it is quite right to tell you, but I suppose I may.
She said that you were engaged to her."
"Had been."
"No, were."
"Oh, that's it. She did not tell you she was on her wedding tour?"
"No, she did not."
"And didn't you speak to her about her father being on board?"
Katherine laughed her low, enjoyable laugh.
"Yes," she said, "I did, and I did not think till this moment of how
flustered she looked. But she recovered her lost ground with a great
deal of dexterity."
"By George, I should like to have heard that! I am avenged!"
"Well, so is she," was the answer.
"How is that?"
"You are engaged to me, are you not?"
Before George could make any suitable reply to this bit of humbug, one
of the officers of the ship stopped before them.
"Well," he said, "I am afraid we shall not see Liverpool to-night."
"Really. Why?" asked George.
"This haze is settling down into a fog. It will be as thick as pea-soup
before an hour. I expect there will be a good deal of grumbling among
the passengers."
As he walked on, George said to Katherine, "There are two passengers who
won't grumble any, will they, my dear?"
"I know one who won't," she answered.
The fog grew thicker and thicker; the vessel slowed down, and finally
stopped, sounding every now and then its mournful, timber-shaking
whistle.