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PAGE 2

Love Of Naomi
by [?]

Her mother, a large and pale-faced woman of sixty, with an apparently thoughtful contraction of the lips, in reality due to a habit of carrying pins in her mouth, watched Naomi anxiously during this period of her life. And Long Oliver watched her too, though secretly, with eyes screwed up after the fashion of men who have followed the sea.

One day he stopped her on the stairs and asked, abruptly:

“When be you thinkin’ to marry again?”

“Never,” she answered, straight and at once, halting with a hand on her hip and eyeing him.

“Dear me; but you will, I hope.”

“Not to you, anyway.”

“Laws me, no! I don’t want ‘ee; haven’t wanted ‘ee these ten years. But I’d a reason for askin’.”

“Then I’m sure I don’t know what it can be.”

“True–true. Look’ee here, my dear; ’tis ordained for you to marry agen.”

“Aw? Who by?”

“Providence.”

Naomi had treated Long Oliver badly in days gone by, but could still talk to him with more freedom than to other men. Still standing with a hand on her hip, she let fall a horrible sentence about the Almighty–all the more horrible in that it came deliberately, without emphasis, and from quiet lips.

“Woman!” cried a voice above them.

They turned, looked up, and saw the bent figure of a man framed in the street doorway. This was William Geake, who walked in from Gantick every Saturday to collect the sixpences and shillings of Vellan’s Rents for its landlord, a well-to-do wine and spirit merchant at Tregarrick. As a man of indisputable probity and an unwearying walker, Geake was entrusted with many odd jobs of this kind in the country round, filling in with them such idle corners as his trade of carpenter and undertaker to Gantick village might leave in the six working days. On Sundays he put on a long black coat, and became a Rounder, or Methodist local-preacher, walking sometimes twenty miles there and back to terrify the inhabitants of outlying hamlets about their future state.

“Woman!” cried William Geake, “Down ‘pon your knees an’ pray God the roof don’t fall on ‘ee for your vile words.”

“I reckon,” retorted Naomi quietly, with a glance up at the worm-riddled rafters, “you’d do more good by speakin’ to the landlord.”

William Geake had a high brow and bright, nervous eyes, betokening enthusiasm; but he had also a long and square jaw that meant stubbornness. This jaw now began to protrude and his lips to straighten.

“Down ‘pon your knees!” he repeated.

Naomi turned her eyes from him to Long Oliver, who leant against the staircase wall with his arms crossed and a veiled amusement in his face. With a slightly heightened colour, but no flutter of the voice, she repeated her blasphemy; and then, pulling a shilling from her worn purse, tendered it to Geake. This, of course, meant “Mind your own business”; but he waved her hand aside.

“Down ‘pon your knees, woman!” he shouted thunderously. Then, as she showed no disposition to obey, he added, grimly, “Eh? but somebody shall intercede for thee afore thou’rt a minute older.”

And pulling off his hat there and then, he knelt down on the doorstep, with the soles of his hob-nailed boots showing to the street.

“Get up, an’ don’t make yoursel’ a may-game,” said Naomi hurriedly, as one or two children stopped their play, and drew around to stare.

“Father in heaven,” began William Geake, in a voice that fetched the women-folk, all up and down the Chy-pons, to their doors, “Thou, whose property is ever to have mercy, forgive this blaspheming woman! Suffer one who is Thy servant, though a grievous sinner, to intercede for her afore she commits the sin that cannot be forgiven; to pluck her as a brand from the burning–“

By this, the women and a loafing man or two had clustered round, and Colliver’s coal-cart had rattled up and come to a standstill. The Chy-pons is the narrowest street in Troy, and Colliver’s driver could hardly pass now, except over William Geake’s legs.