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PAGE 10

Love Of Naomi
by [?]

It was unusual, though, to see Long Oliver driving a horse and trap; and Geake, moreover, had a sudden notion.

“Good-mornin’,” he answered; “whither bound?”

“St. Austell. I’ve a bit of business to do, so I’m takin’ a holiday; in style, as you see.”

“I wonder now,” Geake suggested, forgetting all about the coffin, “if you’d give me a lift. I was just thinkin’ this moment that I’d a bit o’ business there that had clean slipped my mind this week.”

This was transparently false to any one acquainted with Geake’s methodical habits. Long Oliver screwed up his eyes.

“Can’t, I’m afraid. I’m engaged to take up old Missus Oke an’ her niece at Tippet’s corner; an’ the niece’s box. The gal’s goin’ in to St. Austell, into service. So there’s no room. But if there’s any little message I can take–“

“When’ll you be back?”

“Somewhere’s about five I’ll be passin’.”

“Would ‘ee mind waitin’ a moment? I’ve a cheque I want cashed at Climo and Hodges for a biggish sum: but you’m a man I can trust to bring back the money safe.”

“Sutt’nly,” said Long Oliver.

Geake went into the house and wrote a short letter to the bankers. He asked them to send back by messenger, and in return for cheque enclosed, the sum of twenty-five pounds, in five new five-pound notes. He was aware (he said) that the balance of his running account was but a pound or two: but as they held something over fifty pounds of his on deposit, he felt sure they would oblige him and enable him to meet a sudden call.

“Twenty-five pounds is the sum,” he explained; “an’ you must be sure to get it in five-pound notes–new five-pound notes. You’ll not forget that?” He closed the envelope and handed it up to Long Oliver, who buttoned it in his breast-pocket.

“You shall have it, Mr. Geake, by five o’clock this evenin’,” said he, giving the reins a shake on the mare’s back; “so ‘long!” and he rattled off.

A mile, and a trifle more, beyond Geake’s cottage, he came in sight of a man clad in blue sailor’s cloth, trudging briskly ahead. Long Oliver’s lips shaped themselves as if to whistle; but he made no sound until he overtook the pedestrian, when he pulled up, looked round in the man’s face, and said–

“Abe Bricknell!”

The sailor came to a sudden halt, and went very white in the face.

“How do you know my name?” he asked, uneasily.

“‘Recognised ‘ee back in Troy, an’ borrowed this here trap to drive after ‘ee. Get up alongside. I’ve summat to say to ‘ee.”

Bricknell climbed up without a word, and they drove along together.

“Where was you goin’?” Long Oliver asked, after a bit.

“To Charlestown.”

“To look for a ship?”

“Yes.”

“Goin’ back to America?”

“Yes.”

“You’ve been callin’ on William Geake: an’ you didn’ find Naomi at home.”

“Geake don’t want it known.”

“That’s likely enough. You’ve got twenty-five pound’ o’ his in your pocket.”

Abe Bricknell involuntarily put up a hand to his breast.

“Ay, it’s there,” said Long Oliver, nodding. “It’s odd now, but I’ve got twenty-five pound in gold in my pocket; an’ I want you to swop.”

“I don’t take ye, Mister–“

“Long Oliver, I’m called in common. Maybe you remembers me?”

“Why, to be sure! I thought I minded your face. But still I don’t take your meanin’ azactly.”

“I didn’ suppose you would. So I’m goin’ to tell ‘ee. Fourteen year’ back I courted Naomi, an’ she used me worse ‘n a dog. Twelve year’ back she married you. Nine year’ back you went to sea in the John S. Hancock, an’ was wrecked off the Leeward Isles an’ cast up on a spit o’ rock. I’d been hangin’ about New Orleens, just then, at a loose end, an’ bein’ in want o’ cash, took a scamper in the Shawanee, a dirty tramp of a schooner knockin’ in an’ out and peddlin’ notions among the West Indy Islanders. As you know we caught sight o’ your signal an’ took you off, an’ you went to a mad-house. You was clean off your head an’ didn’ know me from Adam; an’ I never let on that I knew you or the ship you’d sailed in. ‘Seemed to me the hand o’ God was in it, an’ I saw my way to cry quits wi’ Naomi.”