No girl, before she came to love, ever scrutinized a suitor so closely as old Jamie did St. Clair. The little old Scotch clerk was quicker far to see the first blossoms of love in her heart than Mercedes herself, than any mother could have been, for each one bore a pang for him; and he, who had renounced, and then set his heart to share each feeling with her, who had wanted but her confidence, wanted but to share with her as some girl might her heart histories, now found himself far outstripping her in conscious knowledge. He did not realize the impossibility of the sympathy he dreamed. He had fondly thought his man's love a justification for that intimacy from which, in natures like Mercedes', even a mother's love is excluded. All Jamie's judgment was against the man, and yet his heart was in touch with hers to feel its stirring for him. The one told him he was not respectable; the other that he was Poor Jamie watched his daughter like any dowager, that summer. But the consciousness of his own sin (for so now he always thought of it) troubled him terribly. How could he urge his lady to repel the advances of this man without being open to the charge of selfishness, of jealousy? Jamie forgot that the girl had never known he loved her. He made feeble attempts to egg on Hughson. The honest teamster was but a lukewarm lover. His point of view was that the girl looked down upon him, and this chilled his passion. He had come to own his teams Then Jamie bade Hughson to come no more, for his love for Mercedes was so true that he felt in his heart why St. Clair appealed more to hers. But the summer was a long and anxious one, and he was glad when it was over and they were back in Salem Street. They had made no other acquaintance at Nantasket. "Society" to Jamie remained a sealed book. Clever Mercedes was not clever enough to see he knew she blamed him for it. St. Clair only laughed. "These people are nobody," said he; and he talked of fashionable and equipaged friends he had known in other places. Where? Jamie suspected, race-courses; his stories of them bore usually an equine flavor. But he was not a horse-dealer; his hands were too white for that. "It isna that I'm discontented with the place or the salary in the past," said Jamie, "but our expenses are increasing. I have rented a house in Worcester Square." "In Worcester Square? And the one in Salem Street?" "'Tis too small for me family needs," said Jamie. "I have sold it." "Too small?" "Me daughter is about to be married," said Jamie reluctantly. "Dear me!" exclaimed the Bowdoins in a breath. "May we congratulate her?" "Ye may do as ye like," said Jamie. "'Tis one Mr. David St. Clair,—a gentleman, as he tells me." "Yes, sir. He wants work—that is"—Jamie hesitated. "He has no occupation?" Jamie was visibly irritated. "If I bring the gentleman down, ye may ask him your ain sel'." "No, no," said Mr. James. "That is, we should, of course, be glad to meet the gentleman at any time. What is his name?" "David St. Clair." "David Sinclair," repeated the old gentleman. "Mercedes Silva," said Mr. James musingly. "McMurtagh, if you please," said Jamie. "Jamie," said old Mr. Bowdoin, "our business is going away. The steamers will ruin it. For a long time there has not been enough to occupy a man of your talents. And the old bookkeeper at the bank—the Old Colony Bank—has got to resign. I've already asked the place for you. The salary is—more than we here can afford to pay you. In fact, we may close the counting-room." Jamie rubbed his nose and shifted his feet. "I may come down here every day or so, just to keep my trusts up. I'll use it for a writing-room; it's near the bank"— "An' I'll come down an' keep the books for you, sir," said Jamie; and the "sir" from his lips was like a caress from another man. |