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CHAPTER V
GOOD FAIRIES
But what of the fairies?
So far the old witch had had it all her own way, and that she had done very badly, if not quite her worst, you will have to admit. She had David by day in a cubby-hole office adjoining a noisy throbbing shop, making drawings of mechanical devices out of Radbourne's or an irritable foreman's brain; by his easel in the lonesome apartment at night, working out on paper from d.i.c.k Holden's notes the ideas of d.i.c.k's clients, who knew exactly what they wanted but not how it would look; saying sadly but sternly, "Begone!" to ideas of his own (in ecclesiastic architecture) that might nevermore hope to have a real birth. She had taken from him what no one could restore, the fine silky bloom of his youth; and something worth even more, though that was a loss he was not yet ready to admit. Worst of all, she had him convinced that he was a failure, a weakling and misfit, a sort of green fool who had asked for the moon and been properly punished for his temerity. And that was a skein even fairies would find hard to unravel.
But there was one who was willing to try.
Who ever heard of a fairy with red Dundrearies? n.o.body, of course, but you shall hear of one now. Although the whiskers are really beside the case; all a good fairy needs is a pair of keen eyes and a heart as big as a drum.
An odd fish, no doubt of it, was Jonathan Radbourne, though a good man to work for and, as Jim Blaisdell had said and David soon found, by no means a fool. There was no hint of masterfulness about him, which was because he never thought of himself as a master. He never gave orders and never reproved; he made polite requests and sometimes, gently and apologetically, he showed where mistakes had been made. If you happened to do about what you were paid for doing, he beamed with delight and thanked you as though you had done him a favor. He was always busy and nearly always on the move, flitting back and forth between office and shop with hopping little strides that made him more robin-like than ever, and really accomplished a great deal. But he often found time for friendly little chats with his employees on topics that had no connection with the business, such as the babies at home, the rheumatic old mother, the state of the heart or the lungs; he made it a specialty to know all their troubles. And he always was smiling--on that mouth it was really a grin--a crooked cheery smile that made others smile, too, and he never acknowledged bad weather.
From the first he made a habit of seeking out David. His manner on such occasions was one of shy wistful friendliness, not quite sure of its welcome, that gave David an impulse to pat him on the head and say, "There, there, little man! It's all right. You're my chief and my time is all yours--though _I'd_ rather use it for work." However, he never said that, but was always respectful and polite. He took advantage of these chats to learn more of his duties. With unwearied patience Jonathan explained them, as well as other details of the business, expressing delight at David's interest.
David saw that he had much to learn and he had grave doubts that he was earning his salary. He knew next to nothing of mechanics and did not always understand when Jonathan or Hegner, the foreman, explained some new device for which drawings were needed. But that wrought no change in Jonathan's manner.
"I'm afraid," he would say, "we weren't very clear on that." And he would go over the explanation once more.
When the drawings were correct: "Very good!" he would beam. "I wish I could draw as beautifully as you."
"Do you think," David asked on one such occasion, when he had been in the position nearly a month, "that I'm really the man you want?
Sometimes I seem pretty slow."
"Oh, you mustn't think that," Jonathan said warmly. "You're catching on faster than I ever hoped for. You don't know what a help you are to me. The draftsmen I've had before used only their hands. You use your head."
"Thank you," said David, grateful for the a.s.surance, even if the good will behind it was a trifle obvious.
"And you find your work interesting, don't you?"
"I'm learning to like it--very much."
He tried to make his answer convincing. But when he had left the office, Jonathan shook his head and sought out his bookkeeper.
"That's a very nice young man, Miss Summers," he said. "Mr. Quentin, I mean."
Miss Summers agreed.
"But I'm afraid he's pretty heartsore yet."
Miss Summers looked a question.
"He's a young architect," Jonathan explained, "who didn't make good.
I'm afraid this work seems a come-down to him."
"That's too bad," said Miss Summers.
"If you get a chance, I wish you would try to make things cheerful for him here."
"Of course," said Miss Summers, who understood Jonathan quite well.
"_We've_ got to try that. We must make a little conspiracy to that end. I'll try to think up some details."
Miss Summers smiled as though she liked making little conspiracies with Jonathan. "Of course," she said again, and looked upon that as a promise.
Very quietly she set about keeping it. A little timidly, too; which was strange, since with others in the office and shop she was not in the least timid. She could do little, it is true--a cheery "Good morning" and a friendly nod at evening, an occasional smile when something brought David into her office, once in a long while a brief little chat in which she, with a breath-taking sense of having an adventure, took the lead. Another young man might have detected her friendliness and considered his charms. But David, though his grave courtesy never failed, neither thought of his charms nor was conscious of hers. Her charms, to be sure, were not of a striking sort; at least at first glance. She was a frail-looking body whose face was nearly always pale and sometimes, toward evening of a hot day, rather pinched; her arms were too slender to be pretty and the cords of her broad white neck stood out. She was not very tall and, perched on her stool at the tall old-fas.h.i.+oned desk by the window, she seemed more girlish even than her years, which were four-and-twenty. She did not look at all like an iris, even a white iris girl; David would almost as soon have suspected Miss Brown.
"I might," thought Miss Summers, "be a part of the furniture, for all he sees in me." She did not think it resentfully, though with an odd little twinge of disappointment. She regarded him as a very superior young man, the sort she had always wanted to know. But she had made a promise and she would not desert the conspiracy.
She noticed that he never ate or went out at the noon hour, as if there were no such thing as an inner man demanding attention. Thereafter her luncheon, which was always carried in a dainty little basket, was seasoned with a conviction of gross selfishness. And one day, after she had eaten, she went, basket in hand, to the door of David's little room.
"Mr. Quentin--" she began.
Instantly David was on his feet--one of his habits she liked so well; other men in the office did not have it. "Yes, Miss Summers?"
She held out the basket. In the bottom reposed two fat cookies and a big apple whose ruddy cheeks had a rival in hers at the moment.
"My eyes were bigger than my appet.i.te. Would you care for them?"
"Thank you, Miss Summers," he said politely, "but I never eat at noon."
"I _wish_ you would," she insisted. "If you don't, they--they'll spoil."
"By to-morrow? Hardly, I should think. Thank you, no," he repeated.
"I find it doesn't agree--"
He saw her face fall.
"On second thought I believe I will. They look so tempting. It's very good of you to think of it."
He took the basket from her hands. But she did not leave. She stood, still hesitant, looking up at him. He motioned to his chair, the only one in the room.
"Won't you sit down?"
"But where will you sit?"
He answered by brus.h.i.+ng some papers from the corner of the table and seating himself there. She took the chair--and the sense of adventure was very vivid.
David bit into a cooky. "Fine! This is good of you. Ordinarily I'm not hungry at all at noon--habit, you know. But to-day I am. How did you happen to guess it?"
"I didn't guess it. I just thought--" She looked up at him again, timidly. "Often I bring more than I can eat, and if--"
He had to smile at that. "Isn't that a little obvious? I could go out if I wanted to, you know."
"Oh, I didn't mean _that_!" She was overcome by confusion.