As soon as the permanency of his position was assured, and his means warranted the step, Richard transported himself and his effects to a comfortable chamber in the same house with Mr. Pinkham, the school-master, the perpetual falsetto of whose flute was positively soothing after four months of William Durgin’s bass. Mr. Pinkham having but one lung, and that defective, played on the flute.
“You see what you’ve gone and done, William,” remarked Mrs. Durgin plaintively, “with your ways. There goes the quietest young man in Stillwater, and four dollars a week!”
“There goes a swell, you’d better say. He was always a proud beggar; nobody was ever good enough for him.”
“You shouldn’t say that, William. I could cry, to lose him and his cheerfulness out of the house,” and Mrs. Durgin began to whimper.
“Wait till he’s out of luck again, and he’ll come back to us fast enough. That’s when his kind remembers their friends. Blast him! he can’t even take a drop of beer with a chum at the tavern.”
“And right, too. There’s beer enough taken at the tavern without him.”
“If you mean me, mother, I’ll get drunk tonight.”
“No, no!” cried Mrs. Durgin, pleadingly, “I didn’t mean you, William, but Peters and that set.”
“I thought you couldn’t mean me,” said William, thrusting his hands into the pockets of his monkey-jacket, and sauntering off in the direction of the Stillwater hotel, where there was a choice company gathered, it being Saturday night, and the monthly meeting of the Union.
Mr. Slocum had wasted no time in organizing a shop for his experiment in ornamental carving. Five or six men, who had worked elsewhere at this branch, were turned over to the new department, with Stevens as foreman and Richard as designer. Very shortly Richard had as much as he could do to furnish the patterns required. These consisted mostly of scrolls, wreaths, and mortuary dove-wings for head-stones. Fortunately for Richard he had no genius, but plenty of a kind of talent just abreast with Mr. Slocum’s purpose. As the carvers became interested in their work, they began to show Richard the respect and good-will which at first had been withheld, for they had not quite liked being under the supervision of one who had not served at the trade. His youth had also told against him; but Richard’s pleasant, off-hand manner quickly won them. He had come in contact with rough men on shipboard; he had studied their ways, and he knew that with all their roughness there is no class so sensitive. This insight was of great service to him. Stevens, who had perhaps been the least disposed to accept Richard, was soon his warm ally.
“See what a smooth fist the lad has!” he said one day holding up a new drawing to the shop. “A man with a wreath of them acorns on his head-stone oughter be perfectly happy, damn him!”
It was, however, an anchor with a broken chain pendent—a design for a monument to the late Captain Septimius Salter, who had parted his cable at sea—which settled Richard’s status with Stevens.