I laid one of Tod"s cards on the table. The captain took it up.
"It"s a great grief to me to leave the house," he remarked. "Especially after having been only a few months in it!--and laying in a stock of the best furniture in a plain way, purchased in the best market! Downright grief."
"Then why do you leave it?" naturally asked Tod.
"Because I have to go afloat again," said the sailor, his face taking a rueful expression. "I thought I had given up the sea for good; but my old employers won"t let me give it up. They know my value as a master, and have offered me large terms for another year or two of service. A splendid new East Indiaman, two thousand tons register, and--and, in short, I don"t like to be ungrateful, so I have said I"ll go."
"Could you not keep on the house until you come back?"
"My sister won"t let me keep it on. Truth to say, she never cared for the sea, and wants to get away from it. That exquisite scene"--extending his hand towards the bay, and to a steamer working her way onwards near the horizon--"has no charms for Miss Copperas; and she intends to betake herself off to our relatives in Leeds. No: I can only give the place up, and dispose of the furniture to whomsoever feels inclined to take it. It will be a fine sacrifice. I shall not get the one half of the money I gave for it: don"t look to. And all of it as good as new!"
I could read Tod"s face as a book, and the eager look in his eyes. He was thinking how much he should like to seize upon the tempting bargain; to make the pretty room we sat in, and the prettier prospect yonder, his own. Captain Copperas appeared to read him also.
"You are doubting whether to close with the offer or not," he said, with a frank smile. "You might make it yours for a hundred and twenty-five pounds. Perhaps--pardon me; you are both but young--you may not have the sum readily at command?"
"Oh yes, I have," said Tod, candidly. "I have it lying at my banker"s, in Worcester. No, it"s not for that reason I hesitate. It is--it is--fancy me with a house on my hands!" he broke off, turning to me with a laugh.
"It is an offer that you will never be likely to meet with again, sir."
"But what on earth could I do with the house and the things afterwards--allowing that we stayed here for a month or two?" urged Tod.
"Why, dispose of them again, of course," was the ready answer of Captain Copperas. "You"d find plenty of people willing to purchase, and to take the house off your hands. Such an opportunity as this need not go begging. I only wish I had not to be off all in a jiffy; I should make a very different bargain."
"I"ll think of it," said Tod, as we got up to leave. "I must say it is a nice little nest."
In the doorway we encountered a tall lady with a brown face and a scarlet top-knot. She wore a thick gold chain, and bracelets to match.
"My sister, Miss Copperas," said the captain. And he explained to her in a few words our business, and the purport of what had pa.s.sed.
"For goodness" sake, don"t lose the opportunity!" cried she, impressively affectionate, as though she had known us all our lives. "So advantageous an offer was never made to any one before: and but for my brother"s obstinately and wickedly deciding to go off to that wretched sea again, it would not be made now. Yes, Alexander," turning to him, "I do call it quite wicked. Only think, sir"--to Tod--"a house full of beautiful furniture, every individual thing that a family can want; a piano here, a table-cloth press in the kitchen; plate, linen, knives, forks; a garden full of roses and a roller for the paths; and all to go for the miserably inadequate sum of a hundred and twenty-five pounds!
But that"s my brother all over. He"s a true sailor. Setting himself up in a home to-day, and selling it off for an old song to-morrow."
"Well, well, f.a.n.n.y," he said, when he could get a word in edgeways to stem the torrent of eloquence, "I have agreed to go, and I must go."
"Have you been over the house?" she resumed, in the same voluble manner. "No? Then do pray come and see it. Oh, don"t talk of trouble.
This is the dining-room," throwing open a door behind her.
It was a little side-room, looking up the coast and over the fields; just enough chairs and tables in it for use. Upstairs we found three chambers, with their beds and other things. It all looked very comfortable, and I thought Captain Copperas was foolish to ask so small a sum.
"This is the linen closet," said Miss Copperas, opening a narrow door at the top of the stairs, and displaying some shelves that seemed to be well-filled. "Sheets, table-cloths, dinner-napkins, towels, pillow-cases; everything for use. Anybody, taking the house, has only to step in, hang up his hat, and find himself at home. Look at those plates and dishes!" she ran on, as we got down again and entered the kitchen.
"They are very nice--and enough to dine ten people."
They were of light blue ware, and looked nice enough on the dresser shelves. The grenadier stood at the table, chopping parsley on a trencher, and did not condescend to take any notice of us.
Out in the garden next, amidst the roses--which grew all round the house, cl.u.s.tering everywhere. They were of that species called the cabbage-rose: large, and fragrant, and most beautiful. It made me think of the Roses by Bendemeer"s stream.
"I should like the place of all things!" cried Tod, as we strolled towards the bay for a sail; and found Druff seated in his boat, smoking.
"I say, Druff, do you know Captain Copperas? Get in, Johnny."
"Lives next door to me, at Rose Lodge," answered Druff.
"Next door! What, is that low whitewashed shanty your abode? How long has Copperas lived here?"
"A matter of some months," said Druff. "He came in the spring."
"Are they nice kind of people?"
"They be civil to me," answered Druff. "Sent my old missis a bottle o"
wine in, and some hot broth t" other day, when she was ill. The captain----"
A sudden lurch put a stop to the discourse, and in a few minutes we glided out of the bay, Tod sitting in a brown reverie, his gaze fixed on the land and on Rose Lodge.
"My mind"s made up, Johnny. I shall take the place."
I dropped my knife and fork in very astonishment. Our sail over, we were at dinner in the bar-parlour of the Whistling Wind.
"Surely you won"t do it, Tod!"
"Surely I shall, lad. I never saw such a nice little nest in all my life. And there"s no risk; you heard what Copperas said; I shall get my money back again when we want to leave it."
"Look here, Tod: I was thinking a bit whilst we sat in the boat. Does it not seem to you to be too good to be genuine?"
It was Tod"s turn now to drop his knife and fork: and he did it angrily.
"Just tell me what you mean, Johnny Ludlow."
"All that furniture, and the piano, and the carpets, and the plate and linen: it looks such a heap to be going for only a hundred and twenty-five pounds."
"Well?"
"I can"t think that Copperas means it."
"_Not mean it!_ Why, you young m.u.f.f? _There are the things_, and he has offered them to me. If Copperas chooses to part with them for half their value, is it my place to tell him he"s a fool? The poor man is driven into a corner through want of time. Sailors are uncommonly improvident."
"It is such an undertaking, Tod."
"It is not your undertaking."
"Of course it is a tremendous bargain; and it is a beautiful little place to have. But I can"t think what the pater will say to it."
"I can," said Tod. "When he hears of it--but that will not be yet awhile--he will come off here post-haste to blow me up; and end by falling in love with the roses. He always says that there is no rose like a cabbage-rose."
"He will never forgive you, Tod; or me either. He will say the world"s coming to an end."
"If you are afraid of him, Johnny, you can take yourself off. Hold up your plate for some more lamb, and hold your tongue."
There was no help for it; anything I could say would have no more weight with Tod than so much wasted water; so I did as he bade me, and held my tongue. Down he went to Captain Copperas ere his dinner was well swallowed, and told him he would take the house. The Captain said he would have a short agreement drawn up; and Tod took out his cheque-book, to give a cheque for the money there and then. But the Captain, like an honest man, refused to receive it until the agreement was executed; and, if all the same, he would prefer money down to a cheque. Cheques were all very good, no doubt, he said; but sailors did not much understand them. Oh, of course, Tod answered, shaking him by the hand; he would get the money.