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"Quinn! Explain yourself!"
What could she say? "Jenkins and I were fighting, sir."
There was a rumble of amusement from their audience.
The top of Harkness's head went pink. "All of you, clear off! Back to work!" As the men receded, chuckling, Harkness returned his attention to Mary. "WHY were you fighting?"
"He called me a liar and a thief, sir. I called him stupid."
"I see. And who began this childishness?"
Mary glanced at Jenkins. He was still clutching his face and appeared to be choking back tears. Eventually, he managed to gasp, "Me, sir."
Harkness stared at them for a long minute, that muscle beneath his eye spasming repeatedly. "I am very disappointed in you both. I expected better from you, Jenkins, because you've worked on this building site for nearly two years. And I expected better from you especially, Quinn, because…"
As the cliches began, Mary wondered whether Harkness would enquire into the root of the dispute. What was special about the tea round? Why had Jenkins been willing to attack her for it? She was also annoyed by her inability to blend in on a building site. In her first five minutes on the job she'd nearly blown her cover, twice. Now, she had drawn the attention of nearly every man on site by getting into a fist-fight.
"…Do I make myself clear?"
She nodded. "Yes, sir."
Jenkins, still clutching his face, made a noise that could have been "Yes, sir."
"Then shake hands like men."
As Jenkins released his cheek to offer his hand, Mary saw that he was indeed crying. Yet through the tears, he mumbled, "No hard feelings."
She looked into his eyes, startled and cautious. "Same here."
"I don't want to hear of further fisticuffs – or any sort of squabbling – between the two of you."
Mary mopped her nose with her sleeve. The bleeding seemed to be slowing.
"Oh, for heaven's sake." A large linen handkerchief was thrust into her face.
She took it. "Thank you, sir." It smelled of scent: the discreet, expensive type.
"Now back to work, both of you."
As Harkness disappeared back into his office, Mary and Jenkins remained where they were, stiff and uncertain. Finally, Jenkins said, "S'pose we best start the tea round."
Mary glanced up with some surprise. One of the working clock faces showed the time as a quarter past ten. "Now? Bit early, isn't it?"
He shot her a wary look. "Lots to do. Come on." Perhaps it was a boy thing: girls could hold grudges for ever and a day, but it seemed Jenkins really had forgotten the fight. He quizzed her as they walked around the perimeter of the site. "You go to Harky's church?"
"No."
"How'd you get the job, then?"
She shrugged. "Said I needed it."
Jenkins examined her through slitted eyes. "Hmph."
"How'd you get your job?" And why was simply asking for one so improbable?
"Most of us boys here is the same: got in through our old men."
"How old are you?"
"How old d'you think?"
Mary looked at him carefully. He was a scrawny, freckly little thing – an eight-year-old with an old man's eyes. "Thirteen."
He looked gratified. "Thirteen next month. How old's you?"
"Twelve."
"This ain't your first job, then."
"First job on a building site," said Mary, truthfully enough. She looked about. "Where're we going?"
A sly look crossed Jenkins's swollen face. "Sure you's not churchy?"
"I've already said I'm not."
"Not a teetotaller?"
"A teetotaller?" It was a large word for a boy like Jenkins.
"One of 'em what thinks a little beer is poison."
"No, I'm not."
"Then how come you's Harky's pet?"
"How can I be his pet when I only started today?" This was exactly what she'd feared – but Jenkins's answer surprised her.
"You's on the tea round. Took me a year 'n a half to get on the tea round, and here you are on your first day taking it over."
Mary was mystified. "I don't know why that is. And what's so special about the tea round, anyway?"
Jenkins looked at her suspiciously. "If I tell you, you got to share the take."
Take? Mary had a sudden idea of what that might be: teetotalling plus tea-drinking could equal a nice little profit. "I'm not sure what you mean, but I don't mind sharing. What is it?"
"We'll go halves," Jenkins persisted.