“I shall be very glad of having even that opportunity of making you remember me, Miss Nott,” returned Renshaw with a faint smile. “I don’t suppose either that it would be very difficult to get news of your friend—everybody seems to know him.”
“But not as I did,” said Rosey, with an abstracted little sigh.
Mr. Renshaw opened his brown eyes upon her. Was he mistaken? Was this romantic girl only a little coquette playing her provincial airs on him? “You say he and your father didn’t agree? That means, I suppose, that you and he agreed?—and that was the result.”
“I don’t think father knew anything about it,” said Rosey simply.
Mr. Renshaw rose. And this was what he had been waiting to hear! “Perhaps,” he said grimly, “you would also like news of the photographer and Captain Bower, or did your father agree with them better?”
“No,” said Rosey quietly. She remained silent for a moment, and lifting her lashes said, “Father always seemed to agree with you, and that”—she hesitated.
“That’s why you don’t.”
“I didn’t say that,” said Rosey, with an incongruous increase of coldness and color. “I only meant to say it was that which makes it seem so hard you should go now.”
Notwithstanding his previous determination Renshaw found himself sitting down again. Confused and pleased, wishing he had said more—or less—he said nothing, and Rosey was forced to continue.
“It’s strange, isn’t it—but father was urging me this morning to make a visit to some friends at the old Ranch. I didn’t want to go. I like it much better here.”
“But you cannot bury yourself here forever, Miss Nott,” said Renshaw, with a sudden burst of honest enthusiasm. “Sooner or later you will be forced to go where you will be properly appreciated, where you will be admired and courted, where your slightest wish will be law. Believe me, without flattery, you don’t know your own power.”
“It doesn’t seem strong enough to keep even the little I like here,” said Rosey, with a slight glistening of the eyes. “But,” she added hastily, “you don’t know how much the dear old ship is to me. It’s the only home I think I ever had.”
“But the Ranch?” said Renshaw.
“The Ranch seemed to be only the old wagon halted in the road. It was a very little improvement on out-doors,” said Rosey, with a little shiver. “But this is so cosy and snug, and yet so strange and foreign. Do you know I think I began to understand why I like it so since you taught me so much about ships and voyages. Before that I only learned from books. Books deceive you, I think, more than people do. Don’t you think so?”
She evidently did not notice the quick flush that covered his cheeks and apparently dazzled his troubled eyelids, for she went on confidentially:
“I was thinking of you yesterday. I was sitting by the galley door, looking forward. You remember the first day I saw you when you startled me by coming up out of the hatch?”