'He couldn't do anything. They were the right side of the law, or what
they call law out there. There was nothing to do except beat it back
again three hundred miles to the coast. That's where they got the fever
which finished Hank. So you can understand,' concluded the third
officer, 'that Mr. Winfield isn't in what you can call a sunny mood. If
I were you, I'd go and talk to someone else, if conversation's what you
need.'
Kirk stood motionless at the rail, thinking. It was not what was past
that occupied his thoughts, as the third officer had supposed; it was
the future.
The forlorn hope had failed; he was limping back to Ruth wounded and
broken. He had sent her a wireless message. She would be at the dock to
meet him. How could he face her? Fate had been against him, it was
true, but he was in no mood to make excuses for himself. He had failed.
That was the beginning and the end of it. He had set out to bring back
wealth and comfort to her, and he was returning empty-handed.
That was what the immediate future held, the meeting with Ruth. And
after? His imagination was not equal to the task of considering that.
He had failed as an artist. There was no future for him there. He must
find some other work. But he was fit for no other work. He had no
training. What could he do in a city where keenness of competition is a
tradition? It would be as if an unarmed man should attack a fortress.
The thought of the years he had wasted was very bitter. Looking back,
he could see how fate had tricked him into throwing away his one
talent. He had had promise. With hard work he could have become an
artist, a professional, a man whose work was worth money in the open
market. He had never had it in him to be a great artist, but he had had
the facility which goes to make a good worker of the second class. He
had it still. Given the time for hard study, it was still in him to
take his proper place among painters.
But time for study was out of his reach now. He must set to work at
once, without a day's delay, on something which would bring him
immediate money. The reflection brought his mind back abruptly to the
practical consideration of the future.
Before him, as he stood there, the ragged battlements of New York
seemed to frown down on him with a cold cruelty that paralysed his
mind. He had seen them a hundred times before. They should have been
familiar and friendly. But this morning they were strange and sinister.
The skyline which daunts the emigrant as he comes up the bay to his new
home struck fear into Kirk's heart.
He turned away and began to walk up and down the deck.
He felt tired and lonely. For the first time he realized just what it
meant to him that he should never see Hank again. It had been hard,
almost impossible, till now to force his mind to face that fact. He had
winced away from it. But now it would not be avoided. It fell upon him
like a shadow.
Hank had filled a place of his own in Kirk's life. Theirs had been one
of those smooth friendships which absence cannot harm. Often they had
not seen each other for months at a time. Indeed, now that he thought
of it, Hank was generally away; and he could not remember that they had
