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Lost Treasure
by
“You started this,” he admonished Millie. “Bring light upon mattar.”
“What can I do?” Millie replied. “Shall I go back to the dressmaking as I was?”
Hugh was not mollified. By means of such women man is brought to a penny. He felt dishonored and wounded. Of the London Welsh he was the least. Look at Enos-Harries and Ben Lloyd and Eynon Davies. There’s boys for you. And look at the black John Daniel, who was a prentice with him at Carmarthen. Hark him ordering preacher Kingsend. Watch him on the platform on the Day of David the Saint. And all, dear me, out of J.D.’s Ritfit three-and-sixpence gents’ tunic shirts.
He considered a way, of which he spoke darkly to Millie, lest she might cry out his intention.
“No use troubling,” he said in a changed manner. “Come West and see the shops.”
Westward they two went, pausing at windows behind which were displayed costly blouses.
“That’s plenty at two guineas,” Hugh said of one.
“It’s a Paris model,” said Millie.
“Nothing in her. Nothing.”
“Not much material, I grant,” Millie observed. “The style is fashionable and they charge a lot.”
“I like to see you in her,” said Hugh. “Take in the points and make her with an odd length of silk.”
When the blouse was finished, Hugh took it to a man at whose shop trade the poorest sort of middle-class women, saying: “I can let you have a line like this at thirty-five and six a dozen.”
“I’ll try three twelves,” said the man.
Then Hugh went into the City and fetched up Japanese silk, and lace, and large white buttons; and Millie sewed with her might.
Hugh thrived, and his success was noised among the London Welsh. The preacher of Kingsend Chapel visited him.
“Not been in the Temple you have, Mistar Eevanss, almost since you were spliced,” he said. “Don’t say the wife makes you go to the capel of the English.”
“Busy am I making money.”
“News that is to me, Mistar Eevanss. Much welcome there is for you with us.”
In four years Hugh had eighteen machines, at each of which a skilled woman sat; and he hired young girls to sew through buttons and hook-and-eyes and to make button-holes. These women and girls were under the hand of Millie, who kept count of their comings and goings and the work they performed, holding from their wages the value of the material they spoilt and of the minutes they were not at their task. Millie labored faithfully, her heart being perfect with her husband’s. She and Hugh slept in the kitchen, for all the other rooms were stockrooms or workrooms; and the name by which the concern was called was “The French Model Blouse Co. Manageress–Mme. Zetta, the notorious French Modiste.”
Howsoever bitterly people were pressed, Hugh did not cease to prosper. In riches, honor, and respect he passed many of the London Welsh.
For that he could not provide all the blouses that were requested of him, he rented a big house. That hour men were arrived to take thereto his belongings, Millie said: “I’ll throw the Paisley shawl over my arm. I wouldn’t lose it for anything”; and as she moved away the ten-pound note fell on the ground. “Well, I never!” she cried in her dismay. “It was there all the time.”
Hugh seized the note from her hand.
“You’ve the head of a sieve,” he said. Also he lamented: “All these years we had no interest in him.”