Part 1 (2/2)

”Distresses her very much,” concluded Mangles, dexterously s.h.i.+fting his cigar by a movement of the tongue from the port to the starboard side of his mouth. Cartoner did not seem to be very much interested in Miss Netty Cahere. He was a man having that air of detachment from personal environments which is apt to arouse curiosity in the human heart, more especially in feminine hearts. People wanted to know what there was in Cartoner's past that gave him so much to think about in the present.

The two men had not spoken again when Miss Netty Cahere came on deck.

She was accompanied by the fourth officer, a clean-built, clean-shaven young man, who lost his heart every time he crossed the Atlantic. He was speaking rather earnestly to Miss Cahere, who listened with an expression of puzzled protest on her pretty face. She had wondering blue eyes and a complexion of the most delicate pink and white which never altered. She was slightly built, and carried herself in a subtly deprecating manner, as if her own opinion of herself were small, and she wished the world to accept her at that valuation. She made no sign of having perceived her uncle, but nevertheless dismissed the fourth officer, who reluctantly mounted the ladder to the bridge, looking back as he went.

Mr. Mangles threw his cigar overboard.

”She don't like smoke,” he growled.

Cartoner looked at the cigar, and absent-mindedly threw his cigarette after it. He had apparently not made up his mind whether to go or stay, when Miss Cahere approached her uncle, without appearing to notice that he was not alone.

”I suppose,” she said, ”that that was one of the officers of the s.h.i.+p, though he was very young--quite a boy. He was telling me about his mother. It must be terrible to have a near relation a sailor.”

She spoke in a gentle voice, and it was evident that she had a heart full of sympathy for the suffering and the poor.

”I wish some of my relations were sailors,” replied Mr. Mangles, in his deepest tones. ”Could spare a whole crew. Let me introduce my friend, Mr. Cartoner--Miss Cahere.”

He completed the introduction with an old-fas.h.i.+oned and ceremonious wave of the hand. Miss Cahere smiled rather shyly on Cartoner, and it was his eyes that turned away first.

”You have not been down to meals,” he said, in his gentle, abrupt way.

”No; but I hope to come now. Are there many people? Have you friends on board?”

”There are very few ladies. I know none of them.”

”But I dare say some of them are nice,” said Miss Cahere, who evidently thought well of human nature.

”Very likely.”

And Cartoner lapsed into his odd and somewhat disconcerting thoughtfulness.

Miss Cahere continued to glance at him beneath her dark lashes--dark lashes around blue eyes--with a guileless and wondering admiration. He certainly was a very good-looking man, well set up, with that quiet air which bespeaks good breeding.

”Have you seen the s.h.i.+p on the other side?” she asked, after a pause; ”a sailing s.h.i.+p. You cannot see it from here.”

As she spoke she made a little movement, as if to show him the spot from whence the s.h.i.+p was visible. Cartoner followed her meekly, and Mr.

Mangles, left behind in his deck-chair, slowly sought his cigar-case.

”There,” said Miss Cahere, pointing out a sail on the distant horizon.

”One can hardly see it now. When I first came on deck it was much nearer. That s.h.i.+p's officer pointed it out to me.”

Cartoner looked at the s.h.i.+p without much enthusiasm.

”I think,” said Miss Cahere, in a lower voice--she had a rather confidential manner--”I think sailors are very nice, don't you?

But . . . well, I suppose one ought not to say that, ought one?”

”It depends what you were going to say.”

Miss Cahere laughed, and made no reply. Her laugh and a glance seemed, however, to convey the comfortable a.s.surance that whatever she had been about to say would not have been applicable to Cartoner himself. She glanced at his trim, upright figure.

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