Once Aboard the Lugger-- The History of George and his Mary
n Meath
k-browed George laboured to the station. Silent
bles she ate it, tears in her pretty eyes. In the restaurant George bought himself a huge cigar. This man was a de
ad no
elped his poor Mary to a corner; roughly dumped the cat
ad no
t Mary, putting a giant sniff upon her emotions,
that George made answer. "Thos
ad no
y they alighted; silently labou
o kind; and I-" He checked. "Could you let us have some tea, Mrs. Pinking? Afterwards I'll have a talk
m the table, gloomily gazing from the window. Tiny sniffs
. Most painfully his Mary was spluttering over a cup of tea. With tremb
r. "Don't cry, darling
d, "I'm not crying-I'm la-laughing," a
ackcloth skirts; scu
clear pipe of his Mary's glee, clear, compelling, setting him off again. When she would gasp for breath the
d have seen yourself standing th
When I misto
"Mr. Marra
: "Mrs. M
rge wiped his running eyes; Mary tremendously blew her lit
r after that,
It's no good being miserable o
that golden head upon his manly shoulder; he fetched his right arm about her; she nursed her
wed their prospec
e cart," George summed
s' ridiculous specific. "We've got each
just about three pounds-over from what Marrapit gave m
gled the
drawing her dusky hangings about the room when a
I
ng. Like a great gay bundle of many-coloured toy balloons suddenly released, they
legs; paced th
he was most tremendous. She watche
ight as rain." He caught the admiring glance in his Mary's eye; inhaled and gusted fort
!" she softl
haven't refused it, I mean. Well, I shall take it. The screw's pretty rotten, but up in the North-in the N
actical, womanish side of her. "C
lisations. George jerked back: "How do I know? Oh, don't interrupt like th
cused herself. "Of
ake the job, dearest. I'll take it for next month. And-listen-we'll marr
k; could only breat
everybody go hang! We'll have to work it through a registrar. I'm not quite sure how it's done, but I'll find out tomorrow. I know you both have to have been resident in the place fo
still had the refusal of this locum?-rather! but he would make certain, tomorrow. Was he sure they both could live upon the salary?-rather! he would prove it to-morrow. Could they really get married at a registrar's within a few
nd flood of their delight when
d. "I must fix it up with Mrs. Pinking.
o expect but going out to work again; and you weren't qualified. And now-now, although we've lost our little Runnygate home" (she could not stop
d her. "It will. Righ
ng future. "Think of us being together always in a week or so-belonging! Wh
"Why, you old goos
d him: "N
d we'll have all our meals and everything in here.
which the sweetest women trudge
said; and again tre
ed the damp. "Well?" he a
a room here. We can't have
le. He broke out: "Wh
ght! Georgie, it w
ht! 'Pon my soul, Mary, I simply don't understa
to tell. "You don'
so exasperating after the-the devil of a day I've had. Just when I've fixed up
"Don't you see? we're engaged, dear; and being engag
e had had a devil of a day; a
're always thinking of people, you women
the instinctive reply in the instinctive sweet
his arms: "O
te himself; went to his Mary. "Mary, don't be suc
but she held her st
be right, Geo
t and hard, paying to his Mary no smallest attention, he made the arrangements. Miss Humfray would take on her bedroom again. By the week. If Mrs. Pinking wo
ood night; busied herse
reserve his stony bearing; denied his pretty
ight," he said to her. "I'll
ight," she whispered; strang
n the stairs before she could command he
o plunge into the river, he called back, "I? I
l door
oung man, who furiously had been pacing London, paced and repaced the street from end to end, gazing the windows of the house wh
er ending to