Richard Richard
By Hughes Mearns

Constable & Co.
Ltd. London

Published 1921

TO
LELIA CORA
OF
PETERSBURG, VIRGINIA

CONTENTS

CHAP. PAGE
I. STONY BROKE[ 1]
II. EVEN[ 15]
III. “SAW YUH!”[ 33]
IV. ORRIS ROOT AND CARBOLIC ACID[ 47]
V. THE CARD ON THE DOOR[ 62]
VI. ASSISTANT WIDOW[ 77]
VII. GETTING WARM![ 87]
VIII. “MAN OVERBOARD!”[ 97]
IX. “WE SHALL SEE”[ 114]
X. THE FAITH OF A TREE[ 127]
XI. TSHOTI-NON-DA-WAGA[ 143]
XII. SAINT PHŒBE[ 161]
XIII. THE HOME FOR INDIGENT DRAKES[ 179]
XIV. “JAWN”[ 195]
XV. THE LADY DETECTIVE[ 213]
XVI. TREMOR CORDIS[ 230]
XVII. LOVE LIMERICKS OF A LEFT-TENANT[ 249]
XVIII. HARDY PERENNIALS[ 267]
XIX. MICHAELMAS DAISY AND ROSE-BUGS[ 282]
XX. SETH’S WHIP[ 294]
XXI. POET[ 311]
XXII. THE COUNCIL FIRE[ 328]
XXIII. THE RACE[ 345]
XXIV. PROUD MISS PIDDIWIT[ 368]

RICHARD RICHARD

CHAPTER I
STONY BROKE

Ever since the “first breakfast,” groups of passengers had been trooping down the gang-plank, hurrying with guide-book and satchel to “do” Naples, Vesuvius, Pompeii, etc., before the steamer should sail again in the evening. An angular chap in proper steamer négligé lounged contentedly on the starboard rail and watched them go. By eight o’clock he seemed to have the starboard rail to himself.

At that hour he was leaning heavily forward, presumably watching the ant-like stevedores loading and unloading the steamer, but he was quite aware of another lone passenger, slowly moving towards him. He had seen her come on at Genoa—anyone would have noticed the clean-cut, tailor-made figure—and on the journey from Genoa to Naples he had noted her once or twice striding the deck alone; but he did not know even so much as her name. He did not know her, but, as she came up to him and lingered at the starboard rail, he knew instinctively that he would borrow money from her.