The Three Black Pennys eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 349 pages of information about The Three Black Pennys.

The Three Black Pennys eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 349 pages of information about The Three Black Pennys.
other small thing?” At the sharpening note of her voice James Polder hurriedly proceeded with general facts.  “You’ll want to see the Works, as much as I can show you.  Hardly any of the public are let through now.  It will interest you, sir, to see what the Penny iron trade has become.  I can take you down this afternoon.  Harriet will find us some lunch.”  The latter moved in a sensuous deliberation, followed by a thin, acidulous trail of smoke, into inner rooms.  “When do you have to go back?” Polder asked.

“This evening,” Howat told him; “we just stopped to—­”

“To see how you were,” Mariana interrupted him baldly, studying the younger man with a concerned frown.  “You ought to rest, you know,” she decided.  “That’s possible,” he returned.  “I thought of asking for a couple of weeks.  I hurried back right after I was married.  They are coming to me.”  She enigmatically regarded Howat Penny; he saw that she was about to speak impetuously; but, to his great relief, she stopped.  “It’s been pretty hard on Harriet,” he said instead.  “After the stage and audiences, and all that.”  Mariana’s expression was cold.  Confound her, why didn’t she help the fellow!  Howat Penny fidgeted with his stick.  What a stew Polder had gotten himself into.  This was worse, even, than the marriage threatened.

Lunch was a spasmodic affair of cutlets hardening in grease, blue boiled potatoes, sandy spinach and blanched ragged bread.  There was more beer; but Jim, his wife proceeded, liked whiskey and water with his meals.  The former glanced uneasily at Mariana, tranquilly cutting up her cutlet.  The diamonds on her narrow, delicate hand flashed, the emerald at her throat was superb.  Their surroundings were doubly depressing contrasted with her fastidious dress and person.  Before her composure Harriet Polder seemed over-florid; a woman of trite phrases, commonplace, theatrical attitudes and emotions.  As lunch progressed the latter relapsed into a sulky silence; she glanced surreptitiously at Mariana’s apparel; and consumed cigarettes with a straining assumption of easy indifference.

Howat Penny was acutely uncomfortable, and Polder scowled at his plate.  The whiskey and water shook in a tense, unsteady hand.  He rose from the table with a violent relief.  He proposed almost immediately that they go over to the Works, and Mariana turned pleasantly to his wife.  “Shall you get a hat?” The other hesitated, then asserted defiantly, “I’ve always said I wouldn’t go into that rackety place, and I won’t now.  It’s bad enough to have it tramped back over things.”  Mariana extended a hand.  “Then good-bye,” she proceeded.  “I think we won’t get back here.  We’re tremendously obliged for the lunch.  It has been interesting to see where Jim lives.”  Harriet Polder’s cheeks were darker than pink as they moved out to the sidewalk.  “Jim,” she called, with an unmistakably proprietary sounding of the familiar diminution; “don’t forget my cigarettes, and a half pound of liver for Cherette.”

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The Three Black Pennys from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.