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The Meanness Of Rosy
by
“Well, just then there comes a yell from the bushes along the shore. Then another yell and a most tremendous cracking and smashing. Then out of them bushes comes tearing a little man with spectacles and a black enamel-cloth carpetbag, heaving sand like a steam-shovel and seemingly trying his best to fly. And astern of him comes more yells and a big, husky Kanaka woman, about eight foot high and three foot in the beam, with her hands stretched out and her fingers crooked.
“Julius used to swear that that beach was all of twenty yards wide and that the little man only lit three times from bush to wharf. And he didn’t stop there. He fired the carpetbag at the schooner’s stern and then spread out his wings and flew after it. His fingers just hooked over the rail and he managed to haul himself aboard. Then he curled up on the deck and breathed short but spirited. The Kanaka woman danced to the stringpiece and whistled distress signals.
“Cap’n George Simmons looked down at the wrecked flying machine and grunted.
“‘Umph!’ says he. ‘You don’t look like a man the girls would run after. Lady your wife?’
“The little feller bobbed his specs up and down.
“‘So?’ says George. ”Ow can I bear to leave thee, ‘ey? Well, ain’t you ashamed of yourself to be running off and leaving a nice, ‘andsome, able-bodied wife that like? Look at ‘er now, over there on ‘er knees a praying for you to come back.’
“There was a little p’int making out from the beach close by the edge of the channel and the woman was out on the end of it, down on all fours. Her husband raised up and looked over the rail.
“‘She ain’t praying,’ he pants, ducking down again quick. ‘She’s a-picking up stones.’
“And so she was. Julius said he thought sure she’d cave in the Emily’s ribs afore she got through with her broadsides. The rocks flew like hail. Everybody got their share, but Cap’n George got a big one in the middle of the back. That took his breath so all the way he could express his feelings was to reach out and give his new passenger half a dozen kicks. But just as soon as he could he spoke, all right enough.
“‘You mis’rable four-eyed shrimp!’ he says. ”Twould serve you right if I ‘ove to and made you swim back to ‘er. Blow me if I don’t believe I will!’
“‘Aw, don’t, Cap’n; PLEASE don’t!’ begs the feller. ‘I’ll be awful grateful to you if you won’t. And I’ll make it right with you, too. I’ve got a good thing in that bag of mine. Yes, sir! A beautiful good thing.’
“‘Oh, well,’ says the skipper, bracing up and smiling sweet as he could for the ache in his back. ‘I’ll ‘elp you out. You trust your Uncle George. Not on account of what you’re going to give me, you understand,’ says he. ‘It would be a pity if THAT was the reason for ‘elpin’ a feller creat– Sparrow, if you touch that bag I’ll break your blooming ‘ead. ‘Ere! you ‘and it to me. I’ll take care of it for the gentleman.’
“All the rest of that day the Cap’n couldn’t do enough for the passenger. Give him a big dinner that took Teunis two hours to cook, and let him use his own pet pipe with the last of Jule’s tobacco in it, and all that. And that evening in the cabin, Rosy told his story. Seems he come from Bombay originally, where he was born an innocent and trained to be a photographer. This was in the days when these hand cameras wa’n’t so common as they be now, and Rosy–his full name was Clarence Rosebury, and he looked it–had a fine one. Also he had some plates and photograph paper and a jug of ‘developer’ and bottles of stuff to make more, wrapped up in an old overcoat and packed away in the carpetbag. He had landed in the Fijis first-off and had drifted over to Hello Island, taking pictures of places and natives and so on, intending to use ’em in a course of lectures he was going to deliver when he got back home. He boarded with the Kanaka lady at Hello till his money give out, and then he married her to save board. He wouldn’t talk about his married life–just shivered instead.