A "hard" man was Captain William Rodway of Sydney, New South Wales, and he prided himself upon the fact. From the time he was twenty years of age, he had devoted himself to making and saving money, and now at sixty he was worth a quarter of a million.
He began life as cabin boy on a north-country collier brig; was starved, kicked, and all but worked to death; and when he came to command a ship of his own, his north-country training stood him in good stead-starving, kicking, and working his crew to death came as naturally to him as breathing. He spared no one, nor did he spare himself.
From the very first everything went well with him. He saved enough money by pinching and grinding his crew-and himself-to enable him to buy the vessel to which he had been appointed. Then he bought others, established what was known as Rodway's Line, gave up going to sea himself, rented an office in a mean street, where he slept and cooked his meals, and worked harder than ever at making money, oblivious of the sneers of those who railed at his parsimony. He was content.
One Monday morning at nine o'clock he took his seat as usual in his office, and began to open his pile of letters, his square-set, hard face, with its cold grey eyes, looking harder than ever, for he had been annoyed by the old charwoman who cleaned his squalid place asking him for more wages.
He was half-way through his correspondence when a knock sounded.
"Come in," he said gruffly.
The door opened, and a handsome, well-built young man of about thirty years of age entered.
"Good morning, Captain Rodway."
"Morning, Lester. What do you want? Why are you not at sea?" and he bent his keen eyes upon his visitor.
"I'm waiting for the water-boat; but otherwise I'm ready to sail."
"Well, what is it then?"
"I want to know if it is a fact that you will not employ married men as captains?"
"It is."
"Will you make no exception in my favour?"
"No."
"I have been five years in your employ as mate and master of the Harvest Home, and I am about to marry."
"Do as you please, but the day you marry you leave my service."
The young man's face flushed. "Then you can give me my money, and I'll leave it to-day."
"Very well. Sit down," replied the old man, reaching for his wages book.
"There are sixty pounds due to you," he said; "go on board and wait for me. I'll be there at twelve o'clock with the new man, and we'll go through the stores and spare gear together. If everything is right, I'll pay your sixty pounds-if not, I'll deduct for whatever is short. Good morning."