"What do you think, Mary?" asked the judge at last. "Do you think we had better try it a little longer and see how it works out?"
"No," said Mary quietly, "I move that we stop everything else but making bearings."
In vain Uncle Stanley arose to his feet, and argued, and reasoned, and sat down again, and brought his fist down on his knee, and turned a rich, brown colour. After a particularly eloquent period he caught a sight of Mary's face among the roses—calm, cool and altogether unmoved—and he stopped almost on the word.
"That's having a woman, in business," he bitterly told himself. "Might as well talk to the wind. Never mind … It may take a little longer—but in the end…."
Judge Cutler made a minute in the director's book that all work on improvements was to stop at once.
"And now," he said, "the next thing is to speed up the manufacture of bearings."
"Easily said," Uncle Stanley shortly laughed.
"There must be some way of doing it," persisted the judge, taking the argument on himself again. "Why did our earnings fall down so low last year?"
"Because I can manufacture bearings, but I can't manufacture men," reported Uncle Stanley. "We are over three hundred men short, and it's getting worse every day. Let me tell you what munition factories are paying for good mechanics—"
Mary still sat in her wicker chair, back of the flowers, and looked around at the paintings on the walls—of the Josiah Spencers who had lived and laboured in the past. "They all look quiet, as though they never talked much," she thought. "It seems so silly to talk, anyhow, when you know what you are going to do."