Mishaps.Lunch at Tolcarne that day was not one of the most pleasant of meals. Sir Hampton had come in, looking purple instead of red with his walk, to pause at the hall door and dismiss Sanders, the gardener, who stood mopping his face.“Er-rum! Look here, Sanders!” he exclaimed.“Yes, sir,” said Sanders.“Yes, Sir Hampton, man!”“Yes, Sir Hampton,” said Sanders, slowly and impressively, as if he were trying to fix the formula in his mind.“I’ll see you in the morning about a new bed on the lawn, and—er-rum—don’t let this affair be talked about.”“No, sir—Hampton,” said Sanders.He went heavily down the new path, while his master stood apparently loading himself—that is to say, he thrust what seemed to be a white gun-wad into his mouth, before turning into the hall, and letting off a tremendous “Er-rum,” which echoed through the house. The wad, however, was only a digestive tablet, an antidote to the heartburn, from which Sir Hampton suffered; and he strode into the dining-room, where the family was already assembled for luncheon.“Oh, dad—papa,” cried Fin, “such news for you.”“Don’t worry your papa, my dear,” said Miss Matilda, smoothing her handkerchief, which, from being sat upon, resembled a cambric cake; “wait till he has had some refreshment. He is tired. Hampton, will you take a cutlet?”“Don’t, pa. Have some chicken pie.”“Shall I send you a poached egg, dear?” said Lady Rea, who was in difficulties with the mustard-pot, the protruding spoon of which had entangled itself with her open lace sleeve, and the yellow condiment was flowing over the table.“No,” said Sir Hampton, gruffly.“Tut, tut, tut,” said Lady Rea, making matters worse by trying to scrape up the mustard with a spoon.“Hadn’t you better let Edward do that, dear?” said Miss Matilda, with a pained expression of countenance, as she played pat-a-cake once more with her handkerchief.“They do make the mustard so horribly thin,” said Lady Rea. “Finetta, give papa some of the pie.”Fin looked mischievously across at her sister, and then cut a large portion of the patty, enough to have called forth an angry remonstrance at another time; but though Miss Matilda looked perfectly horrified, Sir Hampton was too angry and absorbed to notice it; he only went on eating.“Well, Finetta, dear,” said Lady Rea, “what’s the grand news?”“Seen the sailor, ma, dear; been introduced to him. Such a nice fellow.”“Seen whom?” said Lady Rea, making a last scrape at the mustardy cloth.“Mr Trevor, ma; met him at old Mrs Trelyan’s. Such fun.”“My dear Finetta,” began Miss Matilda; but a shot fired by Sir Hampton stopped her in dismay.“Er-rum—what’s that?” he asked. “Have you met that person?”“What person, papa?” said Finetta. “That—that Penreife man—that Trevor, or whatever his name is?”“Yes, pa, we met him this morning; and he’s the same—”“Er-rum, I know!” exclaimed Sir Hampton, upsetting a carafe in his excitement, and making Miss Matilda start back to save her silk. “I ought to have bought Penreife—it’s one of those persons we saw—I know; I met him this morning—trespass—an insulting—ugh! ugh! ugh!”“Oh, pa!” cried Finetta, “you shouldn’t get in a passion with your mouth full; and so much pepper as there is in that pie.”For Sir Hampton had begun to cough furiously, his face growing deeper in tint, and his eyes protruding, so alarming Lady Rea that she bustled round the table and began to hammer his back, while Miss Matilda offered a glass of water.“Ugh! ugh! ugh! Sit down—sit down!” gasped Sir Hampton. “I—er-rum—I forbid all fixture communication with that—that fellow. If he calls here, I’ll have the door shut in his face. Insulted me grossly this morning, on my own grounds, and a dirty little jackanapes with him talked to me in such a way as I was never spoken to before.”“Oh, Tiny, it’s the horrid little man,” whispered Fin.“Why, my dear Hampy, whatever is it all about?” said Lady Rea. “There, do drink some water, and get cool.”Sir Hampton glanced at his wife and sister, and poured himself out half a tumbler of sherry, which he drained, and then began to cough once more.“Eat a bit of bread, dear,” said Lady Rea. “Quick, you won’t mind mine—I haven’t touched it.”Saying which she held a piece out to him on a fork.“Frances!” ejaculated Miss Matilda.“Ugh! Any one would think I was a bear upon a pole,” coughed Sir Hampton; and he wiped his eyes as he grew better.“But, Hampy, dear,” said Lady Rea, “it will be so strange. Suppose Mr Trevor calls?”“Tell the servants to shut the door in his face,” growled Sir Hampton. “An insulting puppy!”“Oh, pa, dear, don’t be so cross,” said Fin. “Take us out for a drive this afternoon, and let’s see if the box has come from Mudie’s.”“Disgraceful—and on one’s own land, too,” growled Sir Hampton, not heeding his daughter, but still muttering thunder.“But you will take us, papa?” said Fin, leaning on his shoulder.“Such insolence!” muttered Sir Hampton.“Was he trespassing, Hampton?” said Miss Matilda.“Yes, and a pack of fellows along with him,” cried Sir Hampton, firing up once more.“You’ll take us out, pa, dear?” said Fin, getting her cheek against his.“No, no! well, there, yes,” said Sir Hampton; and then, looking like a half-mollified bull, he submitted to having his cheeks patted, and his stiff cravat untied and retied by the busy fingers of his pet child.“In half an hour, dad?”“Yes, yes; only don’t bother. Er-rum!” he ejaculated, as Fin flew to the bell, “tell them to bring round the waggonette.”Sir Hampton rose and left the room, firing a shot as he crossed the hall. Then the footman came in to receive his orders, and directly after Lady Rea looked admiringly across at her daughter.“Ah, Fin, my dear, I wish I could manage your papa as you do.”“Really, Frances,” said Miss Matilda, bridling up, “I don’t think that is a proper way for you to speak respecting a parent to a child.”Poor downright Lady Rea looked troubled and distressed.“Really, Matty,” she began.“Oh, it’s all right,” said Fin, coming to the rescue. “It’s because you don’t understand, Aunt Matty; only married people do. Why don’t you marry Mr Mervyn?”Miss Matilda rose from her chair, smoothed her skirts, gazed in utter astonishment at her niece, and marched out of the room.“Oh, Fin!” exclaimed her sister.“You shouldn’t do it, my dear,” said Lady Rea, in whose gentle eyes the tears were gathering.“I should!” said Fin, stamping her foot and colouring with passion. “I won’t stand here and hear my dear mother snubbed in that way by any one but papa; and if Aunt Matty only dares to do such a thing again, I’ll—I’ll—I’ll say something horrid.”The next moment she had flung her impetuous little self into Lady Rea’s arms, and was sobbing passionately; but only to jerk herself free, and wipe her eyes directly in a snatchy fashion.“It’s so vexatious, too, for papa to turn like that, when Mr Trevor’s one of the nicest, dearest, handsomest fellows you ever saw. Isn’t he, Tiny?”“I thought him very pleasing and gentlemanly,” said Tiny, flushing slightly.“She thought ever so much more of him than that, I know, ma,” said Fin, nodding her head. “But isn’t it vexatious, mamma, dear?”“It’ll all come right, my dear,” said Lady Rea, kissing her child fondly. “There, now, go and get ready, or papa will be cross.”Fin felt ready to say “I don’t care,” so rebellious was the spirit that invested her that day; but she set her teeth, and ran to the door.“You’re coming, mamma?”“No, my dear, Tiny will go with you. I shall stay in this afternoon.”“And leave Aunt Matty to say disagreeable things to you. Then I shall stay, too.”“No, no, dear, go—to please me,” said Lady Rea; and the girl ran off.The waggonette was round, and Sir Hampton was drawing on his gloves, the image of punctuality, when Fin came rushing down, closely followed by her sister, and the party started for the little station town, Saint Kitt’s, passing on the road another handsome new waggonette, with a fine, well-paced pair of horses.“I wonder whose turn-out that is?” said Sir Hampton. “Strange thing that everybody gets better horses than I do.”“I know whose it is,” said Fin, demurely.“Whose?” said Sir Hampton.“Daren’t say,” replied Fin. “Ask Edward. Edward!” she cried, “whose carriage is that?”“Think it’s Mr Trevor’s, ma’am,” said the footman, touching his hat.“Er-rum,” ejaculated Sir Hampton, and Fin nudged her sister and made her colour.The box was at the station, and it was put in the waggonette by a tall porter, whom Fin spoke of to her sister as the signal post, and then she proposed that they should wait and see if anything would come by the train due in a few minutes.Now, Sir Hampton expected something by that train, but he had been so crossed that day, and was in such a contrary mood, that he exclaimed—“Er-rum, absurd; certainly not. Drive back at once.”Fin made a grimace at her sister, who replied with a look of remonstrance; Sir Hampton sat back and frowned at the landscape, as if he thought it too green; and away they bowled just as the whistle of the engine was heard in the distance.Something has been said before about the Cornish lanes, and the way in which the granite bones of Mother Nature peer out and form buttresses to the banks, huge pillars, and mighty corners. The lane they were traversing on their way back was not one of the least rugged, though the road was good; and they had gone at a pretty sharp trot for about a mile, when a cart came rattling along just at a turn of the road where it was narrow; and in making way—click! the box of one wheel caught against a granite buttress pushed forth from the bank, the wheel wriggled about, and fifty Yards farther came off and went trundling down the hill—the coachman fortunately pulling his horses up short, so that the waggonette sidled over against the ferny bank, and no one was hurt.“Such abominable driving,” exclaimed Sir Hampton.“Very sorry, sir,” said the coachman.“Oh, pa, it was those other people’s fault. I saw it all,” said Fin.The coachman gave her a grateful look, and the footman helped all to alight.Five minutes’ inspection showed that the wheel was so much injured that it would take time to repair, and there was nothing for it but to send to the little town to get assistance.“Shall I send Edward with one horse, Sir Hampton, and ride the other home and fetch the barouche.”“Yes—no—yes,” said Sir Hampton, waking to the fact that they were yet eight miles from home, and he had done quite as much walking as he cared for in one day.At this moment the sound of wheels was heard, and the waggonette they had before passed came up, evidently from the station, with two gentlemen inside, the coachman pulling up on seeing that there was an accident, while the gentlemen leaped out.“I trust,” said the elder, raising his hat, “that no one is hurt.”“Er-rum! none; no one,” said Sir Hampton, stiffly.“What misfortune!” said the younger, fixing his glass in his eye, and looking in a puzzled way at the ladies. “Under circumstances, Vanleigh?”“Yes, of course,” said the other, and then raising his hat to the ladies, “as my friend here observes. You will allow me to place the carriage at your disposal?”Sir Hampton looked at the speaker, then at the carriage, then at his own. That was Trevor’s carriage, but these were strangers, and he was not obliged to know. His legs ached; it was a long while to wait; and he was still pondering when the first speaker said—“Allow me,” and offered his arm to Tiny, who glanced at her father, and seeing no commands against the act, suffered herself to be led to the whole waggonette, the other stranger offering his arm to Fin, who just touched it, and then leapt in beside her sister.“Will you follow, Mr—Mr—?”“Er-rum! Sir Hampton Rea, at your service, gentlemen,” said the knight, stiffly.“I beg pardon, Sir Hampton—strangers, you see. My friend here is Sir Felix Landells; my name is Vanleigh—Captain Vanleigh.”“Guards,” said Sir Felix, in the midst of a good deal of formal bowing; and then, all being seated, the waggonette drove off, Sir Hampton, in the conversation which ensued, being most careful to avoid any reference to the destination of his new friends, merely requesting to be set down at the end of the lane leading to Tolcarne, the party separating amidst a profusion of bows.“What a pair of dandies!” said Fin.“A most refined gentleman that Captain Vanleigh,” said Sir Hampton.“What did you think of the other one, dad?” said Fin.“Aristocrat. Er-rum! aristocrat,” said Sir Hampton. “Blue blood there, for a certainty. I hope they’ll call. By the way, Tiny, I thought you unnecessarily cold and formal.”“Did you, papa?” said Tiny. “Indeed, I did not mean to be so.”Here they reached the hall, and the girls went to their room.“Dad’s hooked,” said Fin, throwing herself into a chair. “Tiny, that dandy would come to grief if I knew him long. I should feel obliged to singe his horrid little sticky mustachios; and as for the other—oh, how I could snub him if he looked and talked at me as he did at you.”“I sincerely hope,” said Tiny, “that we shall never see them again.”
Lunch at Tolcarne that day was not one of the most pleasant of meals. Sir Hampton had come in, looking purple instead of red with his walk, to pause at the hall door and dismiss Sanders, the gardener, who stood mopping his face.
“Er-rum! Look here, Sanders!” he exclaimed.
“Yes, sir,” said Sanders.
“Yes, Sir Hampton, man!”
“Yes, Sir Hampton,” said Sanders, slowly and impressively, as if he were trying to fix the formula in his mind.
“I’ll see you in the morning about a new bed on the lawn, and—er-rum—don’t let this affair be talked about.”
“No, sir—Hampton,” said Sanders.
He went heavily down the new path, while his master stood apparently loading himself—that is to say, he thrust what seemed to be a white gun-wad into his mouth, before turning into the hall, and letting off a tremendous “Er-rum,” which echoed through the house. The wad, however, was only a digestive tablet, an antidote to the heartburn, from which Sir Hampton suffered; and he strode into the dining-room, where the family was already assembled for luncheon.
“Oh, dad—papa,” cried Fin, “such news for you.”
“Don’t worry your papa, my dear,” said Miss Matilda, smoothing her handkerchief, which, from being sat upon, resembled a cambric cake; “wait till he has had some refreshment. He is tired. Hampton, will you take a cutlet?”
“Don’t, pa. Have some chicken pie.”
“Shall I send you a poached egg, dear?” said Lady Rea, who was in difficulties with the mustard-pot, the protruding spoon of which had entangled itself with her open lace sleeve, and the yellow condiment was flowing over the table.
“No,” said Sir Hampton, gruffly.
“Tut, tut, tut,” said Lady Rea, making matters worse by trying to scrape up the mustard with a spoon.
“Hadn’t you better let Edward do that, dear?” said Miss Matilda, with a pained expression of countenance, as she played pat-a-cake once more with her handkerchief.
“They do make the mustard so horribly thin,” said Lady Rea. “Finetta, give papa some of the pie.”
Fin looked mischievously across at her sister, and then cut a large portion of the patty, enough to have called forth an angry remonstrance at another time; but though Miss Matilda looked perfectly horrified, Sir Hampton was too angry and absorbed to notice it; he only went on eating.
“Well, Finetta, dear,” said Lady Rea, “what’s the grand news?”
“Seen the sailor, ma, dear; been introduced to him. Such a nice fellow.”
“Seen whom?” said Lady Rea, making a last scrape at the mustardy cloth.
“Mr Trevor, ma; met him at old Mrs Trelyan’s. Such fun.”
“My dear Finetta,” began Miss Matilda; but a shot fired by Sir Hampton stopped her in dismay.
“Er-rum—what’s that?” he asked. “Have you met that person?”
“What person, papa?” said Finetta. “That—that Penreife man—that Trevor, or whatever his name is?”
“Yes, pa, we met him this morning; and he’s the same—”
“Er-rum, I know!” exclaimed Sir Hampton, upsetting a carafe in his excitement, and making Miss Matilda start back to save her silk. “I ought to have bought Penreife—it’s one of those persons we saw—I know; I met him this morning—trespass—an insulting—ugh! ugh! ugh!”
“Oh, pa!” cried Finetta, “you shouldn’t get in a passion with your mouth full; and so much pepper as there is in that pie.”
For Sir Hampton had begun to cough furiously, his face growing deeper in tint, and his eyes protruding, so alarming Lady Rea that she bustled round the table and began to hammer his back, while Miss Matilda offered a glass of water.
“Ugh! ugh! ugh! Sit down—sit down!” gasped Sir Hampton. “I—er-rum—I forbid all fixture communication with that—that fellow. If he calls here, I’ll have the door shut in his face. Insulted me grossly this morning, on my own grounds, and a dirty little jackanapes with him talked to me in such a way as I was never spoken to before.”
“Oh, Tiny, it’s the horrid little man,” whispered Fin.
“Why, my dear Hampy, whatever is it all about?” said Lady Rea. “There, do drink some water, and get cool.”
Sir Hampton glanced at his wife and sister, and poured himself out half a tumbler of sherry, which he drained, and then began to cough once more.
“Eat a bit of bread, dear,” said Lady Rea. “Quick, you won’t mind mine—I haven’t touched it.”
Saying which she held a piece out to him on a fork.
“Frances!” ejaculated Miss Matilda.
“Ugh! Any one would think I was a bear upon a pole,” coughed Sir Hampton; and he wiped his eyes as he grew better.
“But, Hampy, dear,” said Lady Rea, “it will be so strange. Suppose Mr Trevor calls?”
“Tell the servants to shut the door in his face,” growled Sir Hampton. “An insulting puppy!”
“Oh, pa, dear, don’t be so cross,” said Fin. “Take us out for a drive this afternoon, and let’s see if the box has come from Mudie’s.”
“Disgraceful—and on one’s own land, too,” growled Sir Hampton, not heeding his daughter, but still muttering thunder.
“But you will take us, papa?” said Fin, leaning on his shoulder.
“Such insolence!” muttered Sir Hampton.
“Was he trespassing, Hampton?” said Miss Matilda.
“Yes, and a pack of fellows along with him,” cried Sir Hampton, firing up once more.
“You’ll take us out, pa, dear?” said Fin, getting her cheek against his.
“No, no! well, there, yes,” said Sir Hampton; and then, looking like a half-mollified bull, he submitted to having his cheeks patted, and his stiff cravat untied and retied by the busy fingers of his pet child.
“In half an hour, dad?”
“Yes, yes; only don’t bother. Er-rum!” he ejaculated, as Fin flew to the bell, “tell them to bring round the waggonette.”
Sir Hampton rose and left the room, firing a shot as he crossed the hall. Then the footman came in to receive his orders, and directly after Lady Rea looked admiringly across at her daughter.
“Ah, Fin, my dear, I wish I could manage your papa as you do.”
“Really, Frances,” said Miss Matilda, bridling up, “I don’t think that is a proper way for you to speak respecting a parent to a child.”
Poor downright Lady Rea looked troubled and distressed.
“Really, Matty,” she began.
“Oh, it’s all right,” said Fin, coming to the rescue. “It’s because you don’t understand, Aunt Matty; only married people do. Why don’t you marry Mr Mervyn?”
Miss Matilda rose from her chair, smoothed her skirts, gazed in utter astonishment at her niece, and marched out of the room.
“Oh, Fin!” exclaimed her sister.
“You shouldn’t do it, my dear,” said Lady Rea, in whose gentle eyes the tears were gathering.
“I should!” said Fin, stamping her foot and colouring with passion. “I won’t stand here and hear my dear mother snubbed in that way by any one but papa; and if Aunt Matty only dares to do such a thing again, I’ll—I’ll—I’ll say something horrid.”
The next moment she had flung her impetuous little self into Lady Rea’s arms, and was sobbing passionately; but only to jerk herself free, and wipe her eyes directly in a snatchy fashion.
“It’s so vexatious, too, for papa to turn like that, when Mr Trevor’s one of the nicest, dearest, handsomest fellows you ever saw. Isn’t he, Tiny?”
“I thought him very pleasing and gentlemanly,” said Tiny, flushing slightly.
“She thought ever so much more of him than that, I know, ma,” said Fin, nodding her head. “But isn’t it vexatious, mamma, dear?”
“It’ll all come right, my dear,” said Lady Rea, kissing her child fondly. “There, now, go and get ready, or papa will be cross.”
Fin felt ready to say “I don’t care,” so rebellious was the spirit that invested her that day; but she set her teeth, and ran to the door.
“You’re coming, mamma?”
“No, my dear, Tiny will go with you. I shall stay in this afternoon.”
“And leave Aunt Matty to say disagreeable things to you. Then I shall stay, too.”
“No, no, dear, go—to please me,” said Lady Rea; and the girl ran off.
The waggonette was round, and Sir Hampton was drawing on his gloves, the image of punctuality, when Fin came rushing down, closely followed by her sister, and the party started for the little station town, Saint Kitt’s, passing on the road another handsome new waggonette, with a fine, well-paced pair of horses.
“I wonder whose turn-out that is?” said Sir Hampton. “Strange thing that everybody gets better horses than I do.”
“I know whose it is,” said Fin, demurely.
“Whose?” said Sir Hampton.
“Daren’t say,” replied Fin. “Ask Edward. Edward!” she cried, “whose carriage is that?”
“Think it’s Mr Trevor’s, ma’am,” said the footman, touching his hat.
“Er-rum,” ejaculated Sir Hampton, and Fin nudged her sister and made her colour.
The box was at the station, and it was put in the waggonette by a tall porter, whom Fin spoke of to her sister as the signal post, and then she proposed that they should wait and see if anything would come by the train due in a few minutes.
Now, Sir Hampton expected something by that train, but he had been so crossed that day, and was in such a contrary mood, that he exclaimed—
“Er-rum, absurd; certainly not. Drive back at once.”
Fin made a grimace at her sister, who replied with a look of remonstrance; Sir Hampton sat back and frowned at the landscape, as if he thought it too green; and away they bowled just as the whistle of the engine was heard in the distance.
Something has been said before about the Cornish lanes, and the way in which the granite bones of Mother Nature peer out and form buttresses to the banks, huge pillars, and mighty corners. The lane they were traversing on their way back was not one of the least rugged, though the road was good; and they had gone at a pretty sharp trot for about a mile, when a cart came rattling along just at a turn of the road where it was narrow; and in making way—click! the box of one wheel caught against a granite buttress pushed forth from the bank, the wheel wriggled about, and fifty Yards farther came off and went trundling down the hill—the coachman fortunately pulling his horses up short, so that the waggonette sidled over against the ferny bank, and no one was hurt.
“Such abominable driving,” exclaimed Sir Hampton.
“Very sorry, sir,” said the coachman.
“Oh, pa, it was those other people’s fault. I saw it all,” said Fin.
The coachman gave her a grateful look, and the footman helped all to alight.
Five minutes’ inspection showed that the wheel was so much injured that it would take time to repair, and there was nothing for it but to send to the little town to get assistance.
“Shall I send Edward with one horse, Sir Hampton, and ride the other home and fetch the barouche.”
“Yes—no—yes,” said Sir Hampton, waking to the fact that they were yet eight miles from home, and he had done quite as much walking as he cared for in one day.
At this moment the sound of wheels was heard, and the waggonette they had before passed came up, evidently from the station, with two gentlemen inside, the coachman pulling up on seeing that there was an accident, while the gentlemen leaped out.
“I trust,” said the elder, raising his hat, “that no one is hurt.”
“Er-rum! none; no one,” said Sir Hampton, stiffly.
“What misfortune!” said the younger, fixing his glass in his eye, and looking in a puzzled way at the ladies. “Under circumstances, Vanleigh?”
“Yes, of course,” said the other, and then raising his hat to the ladies, “as my friend here observes. You will allow me to place the carriage at your disposal?”
Sir Hampton looked at the speaker, then at the carriage, then at his own. That was Trevor’s carriage, but these were strangers, and he was not obliged to know. His legs ached; it was a long while to wait; and he was still pondering when the first speaker said—
“Allow me,” and offered his arm to Tiny, who glanced at her father, and seeing no commands against the act, suffered herself to be led to the whole waggonette, the other stranger offering his arm to Fin, who just touched it, and then leapt in beside her sister.
“Will you follow, Mr—Mr—?”
“Er-rum! Sir Hampton Rea, at your service, gentlemen,” said the knight, stiffly.
“I beg pardon, Sir Hampton—strangers, you see. My friend here is Sir Felix Landells; my name is Vanleigh—Captain Vanleigh.”
“Guards,” said Sir Felix, in the midst of a good deal of formal bowing; and then, all being seated, the waggonette drove off, Sir Hampton, in the conversation which ensued, being most careful to avoid any reference to the destination of his new friends, merely requesting to be set down at the end of the lane leading to Tolcarne, the party separating amidst a profusion of bows.
“What a pair of dandies!” said Fin.
“A most refined gentleman that Captain Vanleigh,” said Sir Hampton.
“What did you think of the other one, dad?” said Fin.
“Aristocrat. Er-rum! aristocrat,” said Sir Hampton. “Blue blood there, for a certainty. I hope they’ll call. By the way, Tiny, I thought you unnecessarily cold and formal.”
“Did you, papa?” said Tiny. “Indeed, I did not mean to be so.”
Here they reached the hall, and the girls went to their room.
“Dad’s hooked,” said Fin, throwing herself into a chair. “Tiny, that dandy would come to grief if I knew him long. I should feel obliged to singe his horrid little sticky mustachios; and as for the other—oh, how I could snub him if he looked and talked at me as he did at you.”
“I sincerely hope,” said Tiny, “that we shall never see them again.”
Polly’s troubles.“By the way, Pratt,” said Trevor, as they were strolling through the grounds, “what aged man should you take Vanleigh to be?”“Close upon forty,” said Pratt; “but he takes such care of himself, and dresses so young, that he keeps off the assaults of old Father Time.”“He can’t be so old as that,” said Trevor, thoughtfully; “and yet he must begetting on. He was much older than we were, you know, in the old days.”“Yes,” said Pratt; “bless him, I love Van dearly. I suppose they’ll be here soon. H’m!”“Eh?” said Trevor.“I said H’m!” replied Pratt.“Yes, I know,” said Trevor, laughing; “but what does H’m mean?”“Shall I make mischief, or shan’t I? Well, I don’t know that it would be making mischief, for it seems quite natural.”“My dear Frank, don’t play the Sphinx, please, for I’m one of the most dense men under the sun. Now, then, speak out.”“Only thinking, and putting that and that together,” said Pratt, relighting his cigar. “Well?”“Well—handsome young bailiff seen in the copse yonder; pretty girl is seen going rather hurriedly along path leading to copse; and elderly lady who holds post of housekeeper, and who, by the way, seems to know it, is seen to peer through window, and then to come to door, as if in search of pretty girl. I say only, what does it mean?”“Means a bit of sweethearting, apparently,” said Trevor, laughing. “Well, I suppose it’s all right!”“Not if the old lady catches them, perhaps; so let’s go and talk to the old lady.”Trevor shrugged his shoulders, and the couple walked back towards the house, where Mrs Lloyd was standing, evidently fidgeted about something or another.“I tell you she must have gone out,” she was saying as they came up.But just at that moment the sound of carriage wheels was heard, and the waggonette drew up at the door with Vanleigh and Landells.“Jove!” said the latter, “what out-of-the-way place, Trevor. Thought never get here.”A sharp sniff drew his attention to Mrs Lloyd, who stood with her husband just inside the door.“Not bad,” said Vanleigh, superciliously.“Ah, you’ll like it when you’ve been down a day or two,” said Trevor. “I’m heartily glad to see you both.”“Thanks,” said Vanleigh, as his host led the way into the hall. “Ah, quite mediaeval.”“Mrs Lloyd, you’ve got the oak room ready for Captain Vanleigh?” said Trevor.“No, Master Dick, I’ve ordered the blue room for him.”Trevor’s brow clouded, but he only bit his lip.“Then you’ve arranged that Sir Felix shall have the oak room?”“No, Master—sir,” she said, correcting herself in a very stately way, “Sir Felix will sleep in the chintz chamber.”Trevor flushed, but he turned it off lightly.“These are our old butler and housekeeper, Vanleigh,” he said. “Mrs Lloyd there was almost like a mother to me as a child.”“Indeed,” said Vanleigh, superciliously; and Sir Felix fixed his glass and had a good stare at the old lady, who looked every whit the mistress of the house.“Grey mare?” he said, in a whisper.“Old favoured servants,” said Trevor, in return; and the young men walked into the drawing-room.“Don’t stand staring there,” said Mrs Lloyd, fiercely, to the footman; “take up these portmantees.”The man gave her a surly look.“He’ll go to ruin, that he will,” said Mrs Lloyd, in a voice of suppressed anger, to her husband, as soon as they were alone; “and there you stand without a word to say for yourself.”“Well, what can I do, my dear?” said Lloyd, feebly.“Nothing—nothing; what you have always done—nothing. But I’ll stop it soon. I won’t be made quite a nonentity of. Where’s that girl? Go and look for her. Or, no, you must see to the dinner; and mind this, Lloyd—she’s to be kept out of sight while these fine sparks are here. I don’t like the looks of that dark fellow at all.”Mrs Lloyd hurried away to meet Polly, just about to enter the housekeeper’s room.“And pray, where have you been, madam?”“Only out in the grounds, aunt—it was so fine,” was the reply.Mrs Lloyd looked at her till a red glow overspread the girl’s face.“Look here,” said Mrs Lloyd, catching her by one hand; “you are not a fool, Polly. You understand what I mean, don’t you?”The girl looked up at her with a shiver, and then her eyes fell.“Don’t you try to thwart me, mind, or you’ll be sorry for it to the last day of your life. Now, look here, do you mind me?”“Yes, aunt.”“You are to keep in the housekeeper’s room here till those friends of Master Dick’s are gone. And don’t you try to deceive me, because I can read that pink and white face of yours like a book.”Mrs Lloyd flung the little maiden’s hand away from her, walked to a drawer, and brought out some new linen, which she set the girl to sew, while she went about the house seeing to the arrangements for her master’s guests.As a matter of course, little Polly had “a good cry,” making several damp places on the new linen; and then, with a sob, she wished herself safe back at her old aunt’s in the Welsh mountains, where she was poor, but happy and free as the goats.“I’d go to-morrow if I could,” she sobbed, and then the needle hand fell upon the stiff, hard work, and she closed her wet eyes till a faint smile came across her face like a little ray of sunshine; and she whispered softly to herself, as if it were a great secret, “No, I don’t think I would.”
“By the way, Pratt,” said Trevor, as they were strolling through the grounds, “what aged man should you take Vanleigh to be?”
“Close upon forty,” said Pratt; “but he takes such care of himself, and dresses so young, that he keeps off the assaults of old Father Time.”
“He can’t be so old as that,” said Trevor, thoughtfully; “and yet he must begetting on. He was much older than we were, you know, in the old days.”
“Yes,” said Pratt; “bless him, I love Van dearly. I suppose they’ll be here soon. H’m!”
“Eh?” said Trevor.
“I said H’m!” replied Pratt.
“Yes, I know,” said Trevor, laughing; “but what does H’m mean?”
“Shall I make mischief, or shan’t I? Well, I don’t know that it would be making mischief, for it seems quite natural.”
“My dear Frank, don’t play the Sphinx, please, for I’m one of the most dense men under the sun. Now, then, speak out.”
“Only thinking, and putting that and that together,” said Pratt, relighting his cigar. “Well?”
“Well—handsome young bailiff seen in the copse yonder; pretty girl is seen going rather hurriedly along path leading to copse; and elderly lady who holds post of housekeeper, and who, by the way, seems to know it, is seen to peer through window, and then to come to door, as if in search of pretty girl. I say only, what does it mean?”
“Means a bit of sweethearting, apparently,” said Trevor, laughing. “Well, I suppose it’s all right!”
“Not if the old lady catches them, perhaps; so let’s go and talk to the old lady.”
Trevor shrugged his shoulders, and the couple walked back towards the house, where Mrs Lloyd was standing, evidently fidgeted about something or another.
“I tell you she must have gone out,” she was saying as they came up.
But just at that moment the sound of carriage wheels was heard, and the waggonette drew up at the door with Vanleigh and Landells.
“Jove!” said the latter, “what out-of-the-way place, Trevor. Thought never get here.”
A sharp sniff drew his attention to Mrs Lloyd, who stood with her husband just inside the door.
“Not bad,” said Vanleigh, superciliously.
“Ah, you’ll like it when you’ve been down a day or two,” said Trevor. “I’m heartily glad to see you both.”
“Thanks,” said Vanleigh, as his host led the way into the hall. “Ah, quite mediaeval.”
“Mrs Lloyd, you’ve got the oak room ready for Captain Vanleigh?” said Trevor.
“No, Master Dick, I’ve ordered the blue room for him.”
Trevor’s brow clouded, but he only bit his lip.
“Then you’ve arranged that Sir Felix shall have the oak room?”
“No, Master—sir,” she said, correcting herself in a very stately way, “Sir Felix will sleep in the chintz chamber.”
Trevor flushed, but he turned it off lightly.
“These are our old butler and housekeeper, Vanleigh,” he said. “Mrs Lloyd there was almost like a mother to me as a child.”
“Indeed,” said Vanleigh, superciliously; and Sir Felix fixed his glass and had a good stare at the old lady, who looked every whit the mistress of the house.
“Grey mare?” he said, in a whisper.
“Old favoured servants,” said Trevor, in return; and the young men walked into the drawing-room.
“Don’t stand staring there,” said Mrs Lloyd, fiercely, to the footman; “take up these portmantees.”
The man gave her a surly look.
“He’ll go to ruin, that he will,” said Mrs Lloyd, in a voice of suppressed anger, to her husband, as soon as they were alone; “and there you stand without a word to say for yourself.”
“Well, what can I do, my dear?” said Lloyd, feebly.
“Nothing—nothing; what you have always done—nothing. But I’ll stop it soon. I won’t be made quite a nonentity of. Where’s that girl? Go and look for her. Or, no, you must see to the dinner; and mind this, Lloyd—she’s to be kept out of sight while these fine sparks are here. I don’t like the looks of that dark fellow at all.”
Mrs Lloyd hurried away to meet Polly, just about to enter the housekeeper’s room.
“And pray, where have you been, madam?”
“Only out in the grounds, aunt—it was so fine,” was the reply.
Mrs Lloyd looked at her till a red glow overspread the girl’s face.
“Look here,” said Mrs Lloyd, catching her by one hand; “you are not a fool, Polly. You understand what I mean, don’t you?”
The girl looked up at her with a shiver, and then her eyes fell.
“Don’t you try to thwart me, mind, or you’ll be sorry for it to the last day of your life. Now, look here, do you mind me?”
“Yes, aunt.”
“You are to keep in the housekeeper’s room here till those friends of Master Dick’s are gone. And don’t you try to deceive me, because I can read that pink and white face of yours like a book.”
Mrs Lloyd flung the little maiden’s hand away from her, walked to a drawer, and brought out some new linen, which she set the girl to sew, while she went about the house seeing to the arrangements for her master’s guests.
As a matter of course, little Polly had “a good cry,” making several damp places on the new linen; and then, with a sob, she wished herself safe back at her old aunt’s in the Welsh mountains, where she was poor, but happy and free as the goats.
“I’d go to-morrow if I could,” she sobbed, and then the needle hand fell upon the stiff, hard work, and she closed her wet eyes till a faint smile came across her face like a little ray of sunshine; and she whispered softly to herself, as if it were a great secret, “No, I don’t think I would.”
Mrs Jenkles’s Morning Call.“Been waiting, old lady?” said Sam Jenkles, throwing open the apron of the cab as he reached his wife’s side.“Not a minute, Sam; but why weren’t you driving? Is he restive?”“Restive!” said Sam; “I only wish he was. I’d give ’arf a sovrin’ to see ’im bolt.”“And suppose I was in the cab!” said Mrs Jenkles.“There, don’t you be alarmed. Jump in. Ratty wouldn’t run away with you inside, my dear—nor any one else.”Sam rattled the apron down, hopped on to his perch, chirruped to Ratty, and, for a wonder, he went decently out on to Pentonville Hill, past the Angel, along Upper Street, and round by the Cock at Highbury.“What do you think of that, old lady?” said Sam, opening his little lid to peer down at his wife. “Comfortable?”“Comfortable—yes,” said Mrs Jenkles, looking up and beaming. “And you said he wouldn’t go.”“He knows as you’re here,” said Sam; “and that’s his aggrawating nature. He’s a-selling me.”“Selling you, Sam?”“Yes; a-making out as I grumbles without cause. Sit fast; I’ll bowl yer up there in no time.”“No, Sam, don’t—pray, don’t go fast!” said his wife, in alarm.“You sit still; it’s all right, I tell yer. Good wives is scarce, Sally, so you won’t be spilled.”Only half convinced, Mrs Jenkles held on very tightly by the sides of the cab, till, well up now in the geography of the place, Sam ran round by the better road, and drew up at B. Sturt’s grocery warehouse.“No,” said Sam, as Mrs Jenkles made for the shop; “side door, and ring once.”As he spoke, Barney’s ill-looking face appeared at the door; and as Mrs Jenkles went and rang—“Mornin’,” said Sam.Barney scowled, and blew a cloud of tobacco at him.“Keb, sir?” said Sam, mounting to his perch.Barney growled, and then spat.“Run yer up to town in no time. Cheap trains to S’burban ’andicap,” said Sam, grinning.But Barney turned his back as the cab drove off, and asked his wife—“What, them people wanted with kebs now?”Mrs Lane admitted her visitor, and, in a hesitating way, asked her upstairs, where her daughter, looking very pale, was seated by the window, working for very life at the hard, blue cloth garments upon which they were engaged.The girl rose as Mrs Jenkles entered, and bent towards her, flushing slightly beneath the scrutinising gaze to which she was subjected.At the same time, Mrs Jenkles made a short bob, and then another to Mrs Lane, who placed a chair for her, which she declined to take.“It was my husband, ma’am,” said Mrs Jenkles, “who came up to you the other day.”“Yes,” said Mrs Lane. “You have come from him. He brought you to-day?”“I said I should come and see you,” said Mrs Jenkles, looking sharply from one to the other.“And he told you?” said Mrs Lane, hesitatingly.“Yes; my husband tells me everything,” said Mrs Jenkles, stiffly.“Then you know how good he was to mamma?” said the girl, coming forward.“My husband’s one of the best men under the sun, Miss; only he has his weaknesses.”“Yes, it was weak,” said Mrs Lane, with a touch of bitterness in her voice—“and to such strangers.”“If you mean about the money, ma’am,” said Mrs Jenkles, in the same uncompromising manner, “I don’t; I meant something else.”Mrs Lane directed an imploring look at her daughter, and the girl hastily took up her work, as did her mother, and stitched away.“That may have been weak, and it may not,” said Mrs Jenkles, who took in everything. “It all depends.”“It was a most generous act,” said Mrs Lane, in a low, pained voice, “and will bear its fruit. But you will sit down?”Mrs Jenkles seated herself on the very edge of her chair, bolt upright, while Mrs Lane drew out a well-worn purse, took from it half a sovereign, and laid it upon the table.“I am ashamed to offer you so little of it back,” said Mrs Lane, “but it was all we could get together in so short a time. You shall have the rest—as we can make it up.”“Thanky,” said Mrs Jenkles, shortly; but without attempting to touch the coin.There was a pause then, only broken by that weary sound of hard stitching, which tells of sore fingers and aching eyes.“How much more have you got in that purse?” said Mrs Jenkles, shortly.A faint flush of resentment appeared in the mothers face, and the daughter darted an angry look at the speaker. But it died out in an instant, as with a sad, weary action, Mrs Lane reopened the purse, and shook out two more coins beside the half-sovereign upon the table.“Two shillings,” she said, faintly; “it is all.”Mrs Jenkles sat very still, and the stitching went on like the ticking of two clocks, measuring out the short span of the workers’ lives.Mrs Jenkles’s eyes were busy, and she saw, as they went over the room, how shabbily it was furnished, how thinly mother and daughter were clothed, how pale and weary was their aspect, while the girl’s eyes were unnaturally bright.At last Mrs Jenkles’s eyes caught sight of a little white corner in one of the compartments of the open purse, and she gave a hysterical gulp.There was a heap of thick cloth work lying on the table between the two women—the one coarse, unrefined, but comfortably clothed and fed, the other refined and worn to skin and bone—and this heap covered Mrs Jenkles’s actions as she rose, walked to the table, and then, without a word, went out of the room.“Has she gone?” whispered Netta, as Mrs Jenkles’s retreating footsteps were heard.“Yes,” said Mrs Lane, with a weary sigh, and she worked on.“It was very, very cruel,” said the girl, with her voice shaking, and, in spite of her efforts, a heavy sob would make its way from her breast, and the tears stole down her cheeks. “Mother, darling, what shall we do?”“Hope and wait,” was the response, in a low, pained voice. “It was only their due. The husband was very kind.”“But the two shillings—for bread,” sobbed the girl. “Mamma, does papa know—can he know of this?”Mrs Lane leaned back in her chair, and held one hand over her eyes for a few moments; then, with a gesture to her child to be silent, she once more bent over her work.Netta brushed the tears from her eyes, drew in her breath as if in pain, and worked on in silence for a quarter of an hour, when steps were once more heard upon the stairs.The eyes of mother and daughter met, those of the latter in dread; but it was not the heavy step of Barney, nor the snatchy shuffle of his wife, but a quick, decided, solid footstep, and the moment afterwards Mrs Jenkles re-entered the room, and closed the door.Mrs Lane rose in surprise, and took a step to meet her. Directly after, completely broken down, she was sobbing on the coarse, uneducated woman’s neck; for she had seen at a glance that the money still lay upon the table by the empty purse—empty now, for the duplicate it had contained was gone—as, with a loving, sisterly movement, the cabman’s wife slipped back upon her finger the ring she had been to redeem, and then, kissing her upon the forehead, whispered—“My poor dear, what you must have suffered! Hush, hush! There, there!” said Mrs Jenkles, after a pause, with tears streaming down her own simple, honest face; and she patted and tried to soothe her forsaken sister as she would a child.“There, there, there; don’t you cry too, my pretty,” she said, as Netta flew to her, and kissed her on the cheek. “Come, come, come, we must hold up. There, that’s better; now sit down.”“And I said God had forsaken us in our distress,” sobbed Mrs Lane. “I little thought what forms his angels took.”“There, there, there,” said Mrs Jenkles, wiping her eyes with a rapid motion; “if you talk like that you’ll drive me away. I told Sam I’d come up to see, for I didn’t know; and he is so easily led away, and I thought all sorts of things. But, bless and save us, he never told me half enough. There, there, wipe your eyes.”As she spoke, with a delicacy for which one might not have given her credit, she turned her back, leaving mother and daughter sobbing in each other’s arms, while she slipped the money back in the purse, and placed it on the chimney-piece. Her next act was to take off her bonnet and shawl, hang them behind the door, and take up Netta’s work and chair, beginning to stitch away with a vigour that astonished the girl, as she tore herself away from her mother, and came to resume her toil.“No, no, my dear; I’ll give you a rest while you see about a bit of dinner; for,” she said, with a cheery smile, “you’ll let me have a bit with you to-day, now, won’t you? I’ll try and earn it.”The girl’s tears were ready to flow again, but Mrs Jenkles’s finger was shaken menacingly at her, and she turned to her mother, who rose, dried her eyes, and came and kissed the broad, smooth forehead.“God will bless you for this,” she said, softly; and then the work went on once more, with such sunshine in the room as had not seemed to enter it for weeks.“Ah!” said Mrs Jenkles, as she bit off a fresh length of thread with her firm, white teeth. “Rents are dear up this part, I suppose.”“I pay seven and sixpence a week for this and the back room,” said Mrs Lane.“They’d be dear at half with such furniture,” said Mrs Jenkles.There was another spell of sewing, when Mrs Lane said that she would see about the dinner; and then, as if reading Mrs Jenkles’s thoughts—“I don’t like letting Netta go out alone.”“And quite right, too, with her face,” said Mrs Jenkles. “But she looks tired. You ought to walk out every day for an hour or two.”The girl gave her a pitiful look.So the day wore on, Mrs Jenkles taking dinner and tea with them, and seeing that each of them partook of a hearty meal, leaving about half-past nine with a bundle.It was sharp work to get home before Sam should arrive from the yard; but Mrs Jenkles managed it, had the table laid, the supper out, and the beer fetched, before he came in, took off his shiny hat and old coat, and seating himself began to fill his pipe.“Well, old lady,” he said, “what time did yer get back?”“About a quarter of an hour ago,” said Mrs Jenkles, as she took out some of the work upon which she had been engaged.Sam whistled and stared.“What’s them?” he said, pointing with his pipe at the work.“Only some slop-work I want to finish.”Mrs Jenkles seemed so busy, that she could not look up and meet her husband’s eye. In fact, to use her own expression, she was all of a twitter, and did not know what Sam would say; for though she nominally ruled him, Sam had a will of his own.“Well, and did you find out about ’em?”“Yes, Sam,” said Mrs Jenkles, without raising her eyes.“Bad lot, aint they?” he said, puffing away at his pipe.Mrs Jenkles shook her head.“What, aint I been took in, then?” said Sam. “Aint they deep, designing people, as got hold of yer poor innocent husband, and swindled him out of thirty bob?”“Oh, Sam, Sam!” exclaimed Mrs Jenkles, with her lip quivering, “I never see anything so pitiful in my life.”“Poof!” exclaimed Sam, bursting out into a guffaw, as he turned in his seat, hugged the back of the chair, and shook with laughter. “That’s my poor, silly, soft old wife, as can’t be trusted out. Did they offer to pay you any of the money back?”Mrs Jenkles nodded.“How much?”“Half a sovereign, Sam.”“Well, that’s something; and jolly honest, too!”“But I didn’t take it, Sam,” said Mrs Jenkles, dropping her work, to go and rest her hands upon his shoulder.“You didn’t take it?”“No, Sam, dear.”“Then you’ve been and let ’em have more.”“Yes, Sam, dear.”“There’s a wife for you,” he said—“there’s a helpmate; and I aint made my guv’nor’s money to-day by four bob.”“I couldn’t help it, Sam—I couldn’t, indeed,” she said; bursting into tears; “it was so pitiful—she’s a real lady, I’m sure, and her daughter, straining over that heart-breaking work; oh! it was more than I could bear.”“I wasn’t such a werry great fool, Sally,” he said.“Oh no, Sam. Oh no. But I haven’t told you all yet.”“You haven’t?”“No, dear.”“Well, put me out of my misery at once,” said Sam, “that’s all.”“Don’t be angry with me, Sam, it’ll come back to us some way, I hope; and if it don’t, we shall only have done what thousands more would have done if they had only known.”“Let’s have it,” said Sam, gruffly.“They’re paying seven and six, Sam, for those wretched rooms, and the woman’s a horrid creature.”“Yes, she is that,” said Sam, nodding.“And the poor young lady’s frightened to death of the man, who insulted her once. He is a dreadful-looking fellow.”“Wuss, ever so much,” said Sam, nodding at his pipe-bowl.“And I—I—”“Told ’em about our being about to be empty; that’s about what you did,” said Sam.“Yes, Sam.”“Well, you’re a nice one. Of course you’ve put the rent up?”“No, I haven’t, Sam,” said Mrs Jenkles. “I’ve—”“Asked only the same. Why, our rooms is a palace to theirs—not as I ever see a palace to know.”“They’re smaller, Sam,” said Mrs Jenkles.“Precious little,” said Sam. “Well, you’ve offered ’em at six bob, eh? Well, you are a nice one; and doing their work, too!”“No, Sam, dear, I told them they could have them for five shillings a week.”“Five!” shouted Sam.“Yes, dear,” said Mrs Jenkles, pitifully; “don’t be cross, dear. They said they wouldn’t take them.”“That’s a comfort,” said Sam.“But,” exclaimed Mrs Jenkles, hurriedly, “I persuaded them to come. I told them that they would be saving half a crown a week, and that in twelve weeks they would have paid off the thirty shillings you lent them, and they’re coming.”“And how many more weeks will it take to pay off the money you lent them?” said Sam, facing round sharply.“Only three, dear; it was only seven and sixpence, Sam.”“You’ll ruin me,” said Sam. “You know as we’re as poor as can be,” he went on, with his eyes averted from her.“No, Sam, we’re not; for we’ve a comfortable home, and we always save a little.”“And you go and make jellies and give away.”“How did you know that?” said Mrs Jenkles, sharply.“Ah! you women can’t go on long in your wicked ways without being found out,” said Sam. “I heerd on it.”“The poor child was dying, same as our poor little Dick was, Sam, and—and—”Sam turned his head farther away.“And now you invite poor people to come, as ’ll never be able to pay their bit o’ rent; an’ the end on it all ’ll be the workus.”“Oh, Sam; pray, pray, don’t! Do I deserve all this?” and the poor woman burst out sobbing.“God bless you! no, old lady,” cried Sam, pulling her on to his knee, and giving her a sounding kiss, as she laid her head upon his shoulder. “It ’ll all come right in the long run; see if it don’t. Life aint worth having if you can’t do, a bit o’ good in it.”“Then you really aint cross with me, Sam?”“Not a bit,” said Sam. “Look at me. Sally, my old gal, it’s my belief as them angels as takes the toll at the gate up above in the shiny way ’ll let you go through free.”“Sam!” cried Mrs Jenkles, trying to lay her hand on his mouth.“And look here, old lady,” he continued, stroking her face; “when that does come off, which I hope it won’t be for scores o’ years to come, you keep werry, werry tight hold o’ my hand, and then, perhaps, I shall stand a chance of getting into heaven too.”End of Volume One.
“Been waiting, old lady?” said Sam Jenkles, throwing open the apron of the cab as he reached his wife’s side.
“Not a minute, Sam; but why weren’t you driving? Is he restive?”
“Restive!” said Sam; “I only wish he was. I’d give ’arf a sovrin’ to see ’im bolt.”
“And suppose I was in the cab!” said Mrs Jenkles.
“There, don’t you be alarmed. Jump in. Ratty wouldn’t run away with you inside, my dear—nor any one else.”
Sam rattled the apron down, hopped on to his perch, chirruped to Ratty, and, for a wonder, he went decently out on to Pentonville Hill, past the Angel, along Upper Street, and round by the Cock at Highbury.
“What do you think of that, old lady?” said Sam, opening his little lid to peer down at his wife. “Comfortable?”
“Comfortable—yes,” said Mrs Jenkles, looking up and beaming. “And you said he wouldn’t go.”
“He knows as you’re here,” said Sam; “and that’s his aggrawating nature. He’s a-selling me.”
“Selling you, Sam?”
“Yes; a-making out as I grumbles without cause. Sit fast; I’ll bowl yer up there in no time.”
“No, Sam, don’t—pray, don’t go fast!” said his wife, in alarm.
“You sit still; it’s all right, I tell yer. Good wives is scarce, Sally, so you won’t be spilled.”
Only half convinced, Mrs Jenkles held on very tightly by the sides of the cab, till, well up now in the geography of the place, Sam ran round by the better road, and drew up at B. Sturt’s grocery warehouse.
“No,” said Sam, as Mrs Jenkles made for the shop; “side door, and ring once.”
As he spoke, Barney’s ill-looking face appeared at the door; and as Mrs Jenkles went and rang—
“Mornin’,” said Sam.
Barney scowled, and blew a cloud of tobacco at him.
“Keb, sir?” said Sam, mounting to his perch.
Barney growled, and then spat.
“Run yer up to town in no time. Cheap trains to S’burban ’andicap,” said Sam, grinning.
But Barney turned his back as the cab drove off, and asked his wife—“What, them people wanted with kebs now?”
Mrs Lane admitted her visitor, and, in a hesitating way, asked her upstairs, where her daughter, looking very pale, was seated by the window, working for very life at the hard, blue cloth garments upon which they were engaged.
The girl rose as Mrs Jenkles entered, and bent towards her, flushing slightly beneath the scrutinising gaze to which she was subjected.
At the same time, Mrs Jenkles made a short bob, and then another to Mrs Lane, who placed a chair for her, which she declined to take.
“It was my husband, ma’am,” said Mrs Jenkles, “who came up to you the other day.”
“Yes,” said Mrs Lane. “You have come from him. He brought you to-day?”
“I said I should come and see you,” said Mrs Jenkles, looking sharply from one to the other.
“And he told you?” said Mrs Lane, hesitatingly.
“Yes; my husband tells me everything,” said Mrs Jenkles, stiffly.
“Then you know how good he was to mamma?” said the girl, coming forward.
“My husband’s one of the best men under the sun, Miss; only he has his weaknesses.”
“Yes, it was weak,” said Mrs Lane, with a touch of bitterness in her voice—“and to such strangers.”
“If you mean about the money, ma’am,” said Mrs Jenkles, in the same uncompromising manner, “I don’t; I meant something else.”
Mrs Lane directed an imploring look at her daughter, and the girl hastily took up her work, as did her mother, and stitched away.
“That may have been weak, and it may not,” said Mrs Jenkles, who took in everything. “It all depends.”
“It was a most generous act,” said Mrs Lane, in a low, pained voice, “and will bear its fruit. But you will sit down?”
Mrs Jenkles seated herself on the very edge of her chair, bolt upright, while Mrs Lane drew out a well-worn purse, took from it half a sovereign, and laid it upon the table.
“I am ashamed to offer you so little of it back,” said Mrs Lane, “but it was all we could get together in so short a time. You shall have the rest—as we can make it up.”
“Thanky,” said Mrs Jenkles, shortly; but without attempting to touch the coin.
There was a pause then, only broken by that weary sound of hard stitching, which tells of sore fingers and aching eyes.
“How much more have you got in that purse?” said Mrs Jenkles, shortly.
A faint flush of resentment appeared in the mothers face, and the daughter darted an angry look at the speaker. But it died out in an instant, as with a sad, weary action, Mrs Lane reopened the purse, and shook out two more coins beside the half-sovereign upon the table.
“Two shillings,” she said, faintly; “it is all.”
Mrs Jenkles sat very still, and the stitching went on like the ticking of two clocks, measuring out the short span of the workers’ lives.
Mrs Jenkles’s eyes were busy, and she saw, as they went over the room, how shabbily it was furnished, how thinly mother and daughter were clothed, how pale and weary was their aspect, while the girl’s eyes were unnaturally bright.
At last Mrs Jenkles’s eyes caught sight of a little white corner in one of the compartments of the open purse, and she gave a hysterical gulp.
There was a heap of thick cloth work lying on the table between the two women—the one coarse, unrefined, but comfortably clothed and fed, the other refined and worn to skin and bone—and this heap covered Mrs Jenkles’s actions as she rose, walked to the table, and then, without a word, went out of the room.
“Has she gone?” whispered Netta, as Mrs Jenkles’s retreating footsteps were heard.
“Yes,” said Mrs Lane, with a weary sigh, and she worked on.
“It was very, very cruel,” said the girl, with her voice shaking, and, in spite of her efforts, a heavy sob would make its way from her breast, and the tears stole down her cheeks. “Mother, darling, what shall we do?”
“Hope and wait,” was the response, in a low, pained voice. “It was only their due. The husband was very kind.”
“But the two shillings—for bread,” sobbed the girl. “Mamma, does papa know—can he know of this?”
Mrs Lane leaned back in her chair, and held one hand over her eyes for a few moments; then, with a gesture to her child to be silent, she once more bent over her work.
Netta brushed the tears from her eyes, drew in her breath as if in pain, and worked on in silence for a quarter of an hour, when steps were once more heard upon the stairs.
The eyes of mother and daughter met, those of the latter in dread; but it was not the heavy step of Barney, nor the snatchy shuffle of his wife, but a quick, decided, solid footstep, and the moment afterwards Mrs Jenkles re-entered the room, and closed the door.
Mrs Lane rose in surprise, and took a step to meet her. Directly after, completely broken down, she was sobbing on the coarse, uneducated woman’s neck; for she had seen at a glance that the money still lay upon the table by the empty purse—empty now, for the duplicate it had contained was gone—as, with a loving, sisterly movement, the cabman’s wife slipped back upon her finger the ring she had been to redeem, and then, kissing her upon the forehead, whispered—
“My poor dear, what you must have suffered! Hush, hush! There, there!” said Mrs Jenkles, after a pause, with tears streaming down her own simple, honest face; and she patted and tried to soothe her forsaken sister as she would a child.
“There, there, there; don’t you cry too, my pretty,” she said, as Netta flew to her, and kissed her on the cheek. “Come, come, come, we must hold up. There, that’s better; now sit down.”
“And I said God had forsaken us in our distress,” sobbed Mrs Lane. “I little thought what forms his angels took.”
“There, there, there,” said Mrs Jenkles, wiping her eyes with a rapid motion; “if you talk like that you’ll drive me away. I told Sam I’d come up to see, for I didn’t know; and he is so easily led away, and I thought all sorts of things. But, bless and save us, he never told me half enough. There, there, wipe your eyes.”
As she spoke, with a delicacy for which one might not have given her credit, she turned her back, leaving mother and daughter sobbing in each other’s arms, while she slipped the money back in the purse, and placed it on the chimney-piece. Her next act was to take off her bonnet and shawl, hang them behind the door, and take up Netta’s work and chair, beginning to stitch away with a vigour that astonished the girl, as she tore herself away from her mother, and came to resume her toil.
“No, no, my dear; I’ll give you a rest while you see about a bit of dinner; for,” she said, with a cheery smile, “you’ll let me have a bit with you to-day, now, won’t you? I’ll try and earn it.”
The girl’s tears were ready to flow again, but Mrs Jenkles’s finger was shaken menacingly at her, and she turned to her mother, who rose, dried her eyes, and came and kissed the broad, smooth forehead.
“God will bless you for this,” she said, softly; and then the work went on once more, with such sunshine in the room as had not seemed to enter it for weeks.
“Ah!” said Mrs Jenkles, as she bit off a fresh length of thread with her firm, white teeth. “Rents are dear up this part, I suppose.”
“I pay seven and sixpence a week for this and the back room,” said Mrs Lane.
“They’d be dear at half with such furniture,” said Mrs Jenkles.
There was another spell of sewing, when Mrs Lane said that she would see about the dinner; and then, as if reading Mrs Jenkles’s thoughts—
“I don’t like letting Netta go out alone.”
“And quite right, too, with her face,” said Mrs Jenkles. “But she looks tired. You ought to walk out every day for an hour or two.”
The girl gave her a pitiful look.
So the day wore on, Mrs Jenkles taking dinner and tea with them, and seeing that each of them partook of a hearty meal, leaving about half-past nine with a bundle.
It was sharp work to get home before Sam should arrive from the yard; but Mrs Jenkles managed it, had the table laid, the supper out, and the beer fetched, before he came in, took off his shiny hat and old coat, and seating himself began to fill his pipe.
“Well, old lady,” he said, “what time did yer get back?”
“About a quarter of an hour ago,” said Mrs Jenkles, as she took out some of the work upon which she had been engaged.
Sam whistled and stared.
“What’s them?” he said, pointing with his pipe at the work.
“Only some slop-work I want to finish.”
Mrs Jenkles seemed so busy, that she could not look up and meet her husband’s eye. In fact, to use her own expression, she was all of a twitter, and did not know what Sam would say; for though she nominally ruled him, Sam had a will of his own.
“Well, and did you find out about ’em?”
“Yes, Sam,” said Mrs Jenkles, without raising her eyes.
“Bad lot, aint they?” he said, puffing away at his pipe.
Mrs Jenkles shook her head.
“What, aint I been took in, then?” said Sam. “Aint they deep, designing people, as got hold of yer poor innocent husband, and swindled him out of thirty bob?”
“Oh, Sam, Sam!” exclaimed Mrs Jenkles, with her lip quivering, “I never see anything so pitiful in my life.”
“Poof!” exclaimed Sam, bursting out into a guffaw, as he turned in his seat, hugged the back of the chair, and shook with laughter. “That’s my poor, silly, soft old wife, as can’t be trusted out. Did they offer to pay you any of the money back?”
Mrs Jenkles nodded.
“How much?”
“Half a sovereign, Sam.”
“Well, that’s something; and jolly honest, too!”
“But I didn’t take it, Sam,” said Mrs Jenkles, dropping her work, to go and rest her hands upon his shoulder.
“You didn’t take it?”
“No, Sam, dear.”
“Then you’ve been and let ’em have more.”
“Yes, Sam, dear.”
“There’s a wife for you,” he said—“there’s a helpmate; and I aint made my guv’nor’s money to-day by four bob.”
“I couldn’t help it, Sam—I couldn’t, indeed,” she said; bursting into tears; “it was so pitiful—she’s a real lady, I’m sure, and her daughter, straining over that heart-breaking work; oh! it was more than I could bear.”
“I wasn’t such a werry great fool, Sally,” he said.
“Oh no, Sam. Oh no. But I haven’t told you all yet.”
“You haven’t?”
“No, dear.”
“Well, put me out of my misery at once,” said Sam, “that’s all.”
“Don’t be angry with me, Sam, it’ll come back to us some way, I hope; and if it don’t, we shall only have done what thousands more would have done if they had only known.”
“Let’s have it,” said Sam, gruffly.
“They’re paying seven and six, Sam, for those wretched rooms, and the woman’s a horrid creature.”
“Yes, she is that,” said Sam, nodding.
“And the poor young lady’s frightened to death of the man, who insulted her once. He is a dreadful-looking fellow.”
“Wuss, ever so much,” said Sam, nodding at his pipe-bowl.
“And I—I—”
“Told ’em about our being about to be empty; that’s about what you did,” said Sam.
“Yes, Sam.”
“Well, you’re a nice one. Of course you’ve put the rent up?”
“No, I haven’t, Sam,” said Mrs Jenkles. “I’ve—”
“Asked only the same. Why, our rooms is a palace to theirs—not as I ever see a palace to know.”
“They’re smaller, Sam,” said Mrs Jenkles.
“Precious little,” said Sam. “Well, you’ve offered ’em at six bob, eh? Well, you are a nice one; and doing their work, too!”
“No, Sam, dear, I told them they could have them for five shillings a week.”
“Five!” shouted Sam.
“Yes, dear,” said Mrs Jenkles, pitifully; “don’t be cross, dear. They said they wouldn’t take them.”
“That’s a comfort,” said Sam.
“But,” exclaimed Mrs Jenkles, hurriedly, “I persuaded them to come. I told them that they would be saving half a crown a week, and that in twelve weeks they would have paid off the thirty shillings you lent them, and they’re coming.”
“And how many more weeks will it take to pay off the money you lent them?” said Sam, facing round sharply.
“Only three, dear; it was only seven and sixpence, Sam.”
“You’ll ruin me,” said Sam. “You know as we’re as poor as can be,” he went on, with his eyes averted from her.
“No, Sam, we’re not; for we’ve a comfortable home, and we always save a little.”
“And you go and make jellies and give away.”
“How did you know that?” said Mrs Jenkles, sharply.
“Ah! you women can’t go on long in your wicked ways without being found out,” said Sam. “I heerd on it.”
“The poor child was dying, same as our poor little Dick was, Sam, and—and—”
Sam turned his head farther away.
“And now you invite poor people to come, as ’ll never be able to pay their bit o’ rent; an’ the end on it all ’ll be the workus.”
“Oh, Sam; pray, pray, don’t! Do I deserve all this?” and the poor woman burst out sobbing.
“God bless you! no, old lady,” cried Sam, pulling her on to his knee, and giving her a sounding kiss, as she laid her head upon his shoulder. “It ’ll all come right in the long run; see if it don’t. Life aint worth having if you can’t do, a bit o’ good in it.”
“Then you really aint cross with me, Sam?”
“Not a bit,” said Sam. “Look at me. Sally, my old gal, it’s my belief as them angels as takes the toll at the gate up above in the shiny way ’ll let you go through free.”
“Sam!” cried Mrs Jenkles, trying to lay her hand on his mouth.
“And look here, old lady,” he continued, stroking her face; “when that does come off, which I hope it won’t be for scores o’ years to come, you keep werry, werry tight hold o’ my hand, and then, perhaps, I shall stand a chance of getting into heaven too.”
End of Volume One.
Love Minor.Little Polly wiped her eyes after her happy thoughts; for the shower had passed, and the gleam of sunshine augmented till her face grew dimpled, and she went on stitching busily. It was very evident that she had some consolation—some pleasant unguent for the irritation caused by Aunt Lloyd; for at the end of half an hour she was singing away at some old Welsh ditty, in a sweet, bird-like voice, filling up, when she forgot the words, with a melodious little hum, which was only checked on the appearance of her tyrant, that lady mating occasional incursions. Sometimes Aunt Lloyd required table linen; then she came to unlock the press where the dessert was laid out, and hand it to the footman, counting the fruit on the dishes as she did so.“Now, Robert, what are you looking at there?” she said, sharply, as she caught the man’s eyes straying in the direction of Polly. “Mind your work, if you please.”Polly did not get snubbed, for she had been bending diligently over her stitching, which, as soon as the tray of dessert had gone, came in for a close inspection; but, as it was very neatly done, there was no complaint.“Hold out your hands, child,” said Mrs Lloyd, suddenly; and she examined the finger roughened by the hard material and contact with the needle. “Ah, that stuffs too stiff; it shall be washed first. Mend those.”The linen was doubled up, put away, and some soft material placed in the girl’s hands, over which she had been diligently at work one hour, when Mrs Lloyd returned for coffee from her stores, with which she again departed, muttering about “Such a set to bring down!” and Polly’s musical little voice began once more.Let’s see: the dictionary says that an enchanter is one who calls down by chanting or singing—one who practises sorcery by song. Polly, then, must have been an enchantress, for her little ditty about the love of some deserted maid had the effect of bringing cousin Humphrey Lloyd through the shrubbery to the open window of the housekeeper’s room; and just in the midst of one of the sweetest of the little trills there was a rustle amongst the laurels, and a deep voice whispered “Polly!”“Oh, my!” ejaculated Polly, dropping her work, and starting farther from the window. “What will aunt say?”Now, her instructions had been stringent; and knowing that it would be like high treason to speak to Humphrey, she determined that she would not, just as an industrious young needle, which had been warned not to get rusty by associating with common bits of steel, might have gone on busily through its work like the one Polly held in her hand.But supposing that, instead of a common piece of steel, a magnet that had been rubbed with the loadstone of love should come in its way, what could the poor needle do?Even as did little Polly—vow that aunt would be so cross; and then feel herself drawn, drawn closer and closer to the iron-barred window, till her little hands were caught in two strong, muscular fists, which pressed them so hard that they almost hurt.“Oh! you mustn’t, mustn’t come!” sobbed Polly. “If aunt found it out she would almost kill me!”“No, no, little one,” said Humphrey; “why should she?”“You—you don’t know aunt,” whispered Polly. “She’s ordered me not to speak to you.”“Not to speak to me!”“Yes; nor to any one else. She would be so angry if she knew. You don’t want to get me scolded.”“No, no,” he whispered—“not for worlds.”“Pray, pray, go then; and you must not speak to me any more.”“But Polly, dear Polly,” whispered Humphrey, “tell me one thing, and then I’ll go and wait years and years, if you like, only tell me that.”Humphrey stopped short, for a singular phenomenon occurred. Polly’s fingers seemed to suddenly change from within his hands to his wrists, and to become bony and firm, a sharp voice at the same moment exclaiming—“Who’s this?”Humphrey Lloyd was a man, every inch of him, and he spoke out boldly—“Well, if you must know, it’s me—Humphrey.”“Go round to the side door, and come to my room,” said Mrs Lloyd, in a low, angry voice.Humphrey was heard to go rustling through the laurels, as Mrs Lloyd exclaimed—“Go up to your room, Miss, this instant; and don’t you stir till I call you down.”Shivering with fear and shame, Polly made her escape to run up to her room, throw herself on the bed, and cry as if her heart would break, just missing Humphrey, who came round without loss of time.“Now,” said Mrs Lloyd, as soon as the door was closed, “what have you to say to this?”“Only that it was my fault,” said Humphrey—“all my fault; so don’t blame the poor little girl. It was all my doing.”“Now, look here, Humphrey Lloyd,” exclaimed the housekeeper, speaking in a low, angry voice, “you like your place here?”“Yes, if you and he could treat me a little better.”“Never mind about that,” said Mrs Lloyd.“It’s no use to mind,” said Humphrey, bitterly. “If I had been a dog instead of your own flesh and blood, you couldn’t have treated me worse.”“Treated you badly!” exclaimed Mrs Lloyd; “haven’t you been well fed, educated, and placed in a good situation?”“Yes—all that,” said Humphrey. “And for reward you fly in my face. Now, look here, Humphrey. If you so much as look at that girl again, let alone speak to her, off you go. You shall not stay on the premises another day.”“Well,” said Humphrey, “that’s pleasant; but all the same I don’t see what power you have in the matter, so long as I satisfy the young master.”“Then just content yourself with satisfying your young master, sir, and mind, that girl’s not for you, so let’s have no more of it. Now go.”“But look here,” said Humphrey. “I told you to go,” said Mrs Lloyd, pointing. “Your place is at the keeper’s lodge. Go and stay there, and don’t go thinking you can influence Master Dick—Mr Trevor—to keep you, because even if you could, the girl should go away, and you should see her no more. Now go.”“Poor little lassie,” muttered Humphrey, as, in obedience to Mrs Lloyd’s pointing finger, he slowly left the room, walked heavily along the passage, and out into the dark evening, to pass round the house, and cross the lawn, where he could see through the open windows into the dining-room.“Nice for me,” he muttered. “Forbidden to go near her—girl in my own station. What does the old woman mean?”He stood gazing in at the merry, laughing party of young, well-dressed men.“Nice to be you,” he thought; “plenty of money to spend; people to do all you tell them to; nobody to thwart you. But I wonder what the old lady means.”He laughed to himself directly after, in a low, bitter fashion.“No, not so bad as that,” he said, half aloud. “She’s ambitious, and scheming, but that would be going too far.”
Little Polly wiped her eyes after her happy thoughts; for the shower had passed, and the gleam of sunshine augmented till her face grew dimpled, and she went on stitching busily. It was very evident that she had some consolation—some pleasant unguent for the irritation caused by Aunt Lloyd; for at the end of half an hour she was singing away at some old Welsh ditty, in a sweet, bird-like voice, filling up, when she forgot the words, with a melodious little hum, which was only checked on the appearance of her tyrant, that lady mating occasional incursions. Sometimes Aunt Lloyd required table linen; then she came to unlock the press where the dessert was laid out, and hand it to the footman, counting the fruit on the dishes as she did so.
“Now, Robert, what are you looking at there?” she said, sharply, as she caught the man’s eyes straying in the direction of Polly. “Mind your work, if you please.”
Polly did not get snubbed, for she had been bending diligently over her stitching, which, as soon as the tray of dessert had gone, came in for a close inspection; but, as it was very neatly done, there was no complaint.
“Hold out your hands, child,” said Mrs Lloyd, suddenly; and she examined the finger roughened by the hard material and contact with the needle. “Ah, that stuffs too stiff; it shall be washed first. Mend those.”
The linen was doubled up, put away, and some soft material placed in the girl’s hands, over which she had been diligently at work one hour, when Mrs Lloyd returned for coffee from her stores, with which she again departed, muttering about “Such a set to bring down!” and Polly’s musical little voice began once more.
Let’s see: the dictionary says that an enchanter is one who calls down by chanting or singing—one who practises sorcery by song. Polly, then, must have been an enchantress, for her little ditty about the love of some deserted maid had the effect of bringing cousin Humphrey Lloyd through the shrubbery to the open window of the housekeeper’s room; and just in the midst of one of the sweetest of the little trills there was a rustle amongst the laurels, and a deep voice whispered “Polly!”
“Oh, my!” ejaculated Polly, dropping her work, and starting farther from the window. “What will aunt say?”
Now, her instructions had been stringent; and knowing that it would be like high treason to speak to Humphrey, she determined that she would not, just as an industrious young needle, which had been warned not to get rusty by associating with common bits of steel, might have gone on busily through its work like the one Polly held in her hand.
But supposing that, instead of a common piece of steel, a magnet that had been rubbed with the loadstone of love should come in its way, what could the poor needle do?
Even as did little Polly—vow that aunt would be so cross; and then feel herself drawn, drawn closer and closer to the iron-barred window, till her little hands were caught in two strong, muscular fists, which pressed them so hard that they almost hurt.
“Oh! you mustn’t, mustn’t come!” sobbed Polly. “If aunt found it out she would almost kill me!”
“No, no, little one,” said Humphrey; “why should she?”
“You—you don’t know aunt,” whispered Polly. “She’s ordered me not to speak to you.”
“Not to speak to me!”
“Yes; nor to any one else. She would be so angry if she knew. You don’t want to get me scolded.”
“No, no,” he whispered—“not for worlds.”
“Pray, pray, go then; and you must not speak to me any more.”
“But Polly, dear Polly,” whispered Humphrey, “tell me one thing, and then I’ll go and wait years and years, if you like, only tell me that.”
Humphrey stopped short, for a singular phenomenon occurred. Polly’s fingers seemed to suddenly change from within his hands to his wrists, and to become bony and firm, a sharp voice at the same moment exclaiming—
“Who’s this?”
Humphrey Lloyd was a man, every inch of him, and he spoke out boldly—
“Well, if you must know, it’s me—Humphrey.”
“Go round to the side door, and come to my room,” said Mrs Lloyd, in a low, angry voice.
Humphrey was heard to go rustling through the laurels, as Mrs Lloyd exclaimed—
“Go up to your room, Miss, this instant; and don’t you stir till I call you down.”
Shivering with fear and shame, Polly made her escape to run up to her room, throw herself on the bed, and cry as if her heart would break, just missing Humphrey, who came round without loss of time.
“Now,” said Mrs Lloyd, as soon as the door was closed, “what have you to say to this?”
“Only that it was my fault,” said Humphrey—“all my fault; so don’t blame the poor little girl. It was all my doing.”
“Now, look here, Humphrey Lloyd,” exclaimed the housekeeper, speaking in a low, angry voice, “you like your place here?”
“Yes, if you and he could treat me a little better.”
“Never mind about that,” said Mrs Lloyd.
“It’s no use to mind,” said Humphrey, bitterly. “If I had been a dog instead of your own flesh and blood, you couldn’t have treated me worse.”
“Treated you badly!” exclaimed Mrs Lloyd; “haven’t you been well fed, educated, and placed in a good situation?”
“Yes—all that,” said Humphrey. “And for reward you fly in my face. Now, look here, Humphrey. If you so much as look at that girl again, let alone speak to her, off you go. You shall not stay on the premises another day.”
“Well,” said Humphrey, “that’s pleasant; but all the same I don’t see what power you have in the matter, so long as I satisfy the young master.”
“Then just content yourself with satisfying your young master, sir, and mind, that girl’s not for you, so let’s have no more of it. Now go.”
“But look here,” said Humphrey. “I told you to go,” said Mrs Lloyd, pointing. “Your place is at the keeper’s lodge. Go and stay there, and don’t go thinking you can influence Master Dick—Mr Trevor—to keep you, because even if you could, the girl should go away, and you should see her no more. Now go.”
“Poor little lassie,” muttered Humphrey, as, in obedience to Mrs Lloyd’s pointing finger, he slowly left the room, walked heavily along the passage, and out into the dark evening, to pass round the house, and cross the lawn, where he could see through the open windows into the dining-room.
“Nice for me,” he muttered. “Forbidden to go near her—girl in my own station. What does the old woman mean?”
He stood gazing in at the merry, laughing party of young, well-dressed men.
“Nice to be you,” he thought; “plenty of money to spend; people to do all you tell them to; nobody to thwart you. But I wonder what the old lady means.”
He laughed to himself directly after, in a low, bitter fashion.
“No, not so bad as that,” he said, half aloud. “She’s ambitious, and scheming, but that would be going too far.”
Kinks in the Line.Matters were not so pleasant, though, with the four occupants of the dining-room as Humphrey Lloyd believed. Vanleigh had his skeleton in the cupboard and was very impecunious; Sir Felix had wealth, but he was constantly feeling that his friend Vanleigh was an incubus whom he would give the world to shake off, but wanted the moral courage; Pratt suffered from poverty, and now told himself that he must be bored by his friend’s affairs; lastly, Trevor had come down to his old home thinking it would be a bower of roses, and it was as full of thorns, as it could possibly be.The dinner had been a failure. At every turn the influence of Mrs Lloyd was perceptible, and proof given that so far she had been sole mistress of the house.“By the way, Vanleigh, try that claret,” said Trevor, in the course of the dinner. “Lloyd, the claret to Captain Vanleigh.”The Captain tasted it, and set down his glass.Pratt took a glass, and made a point of drinking it.Trevor saw there was something wrong.“Bring me that claret,” he said.The butler poured him out a glass of very thin, poor wine.Lloyd was then proceeding to fill Sir Felix’s glass, but he declined.“I thought we had some good old claret,” said Trevor, fuming.“Yes, sir,” said the butler.“Fetch a bottle directly,” exclaimed Trevor. “Really, gentlemen, I am very sorry,” he continued, as the butler went out of the room. “It’s a mistake. Here, Robert, what champagne’s that?”The footman brought a bottle from the ice-pail.“Why, confound it all!” cried Trevor, “I said the dry Clicquot was to be brought—such fools!”“Mr Lloyd did get out the Clicker, sir; but Mrs Lloyd said the second best would do, sir,” replied the footman, glad of an opportunity to change the responsibility.“Then all the wine is of the ordinary kind?” said Trevor.“Yes, sir,” said the footman.“Look here, Lloyd,” said Trevor, as the butler came into the room, “you made a mistake about that claret. See that the other wine is right; and if not, change it.”The butler looked aghast and hurried out, to return in a few minutes with a basket of bottles, which he changed for those already in the room.Trevor said no more, but he was evidently making up his mind to suppress the mutiny with a high hand on the morrow; for, as the dinner went on, he became aware that in many little things his orders had been departed from. There was a paucity of plate, when an abundance lay in the chests; the dinner was good, by stretching a point, but not such as would please men accustomed to thechefsof Pall Mall; and when at last the coffee was brought in it was of the most economical quality.“There,” said Trevor, “I’ll set all right to-morrow, I’m very sorry, Vanleigh; but things are all sixes and sevens here. Pratt, pass the claret. Landells, try that port.”“Never drink port, dear boy,” said the Baronet.“Then let’s go into the billiard-room; or what do you say, Van—would you prefer my room and a rubber?”“Don’t much care for billiards to-night,” said Vanleigh. “By the way, though,” he said, “will your estimable housekeeper permit smoking in the dining-room.”“Oh, come, Van,” said Sir Felix, “don’t be hard on your host.”“Shall I ring for cigars, Dick?” said Pratt, reaching out his hand.“Do, please,” was the reply. “Smoke where you like, gentlemen, and make yourselves at home. I don’t want to be hard on the old people. You see, it’s a particular case. I’ve been away for years. I left a boy, and they have had it all their own way. Oh, Lloyd, bring in the cigar boxes, and brandy and soda.”“Here, sir?” said the butler, hesitating.“Here? Yes, here directly,” said Trevor; and he looked annoyed as he caught a glance passing from Vanleigh to Sir Felix.“It’s all right, Dick,” said Pratt. “It’s a nice estate, but weedy. Pull ’em up, one at a time.”“By the way, Van,” said Sir Felix, “didn’t tell Trevor of our ’venture.”“No,” said Vanleigh, kicking at his friend beneath the table; “been so taken up with other things. Brought home some neighbours of yours—without leave—in the waggonette.”“Neighbours—without leave?” said Trevor, passing the claret. “We are all ears.”“Some of us,” muttered Pratt, glancing at Sir Felix, and then looking perfectly innocent.“Neighbours of yours—a Sir Hampton Court.”“No, no—Weir or Here, or name of that sort,” said Sir Felix.“Carriage broke down—two daughters—deuced fine girls, too.”“Vewy,” said Sir Felix, arranging his gummy moustache.“Good heavens!” exclaimed Trevor. “No one hurt?”“Calm yourself, my friend,” said Vanleigh, proceeding in a most unruffled way. “The ladies were uninjured, and we—”“Brought back—home,” said Sir Felix, feebly.“I’m heartily glad of it—I am, indeed,” said Trevor, earnestly. “Frank, old fellow, that will be an excuse for a call; and we can patch up the encounter. We were both horribly hot.”“Fever heat?” said Pratt.“Yes, and I daresay the old fellow’s as sorry now as I am. I’ll—Well, Lloyd,” he continued, as the butler came in, looking rather alarmed, and rubbing his hands softly, “where are the cigars?”“Mustn’t smoke!” said Vanleigh, in a whisper to Sir Felix, but heard by Pratt.“If you please, sir, Mrs Lloyd thought you would like a fire in the smoking-room, sir, and I’ve taken the cigars in there.”“Bring—”Trevor caught Pratt’s eye, and he checked himself.“Lloyd,” he said, very quietly. “I don’t think you understand me yet. Go and fetch those cigar boxes.”The butler directed a pitiful, appealing look at the speaker, and then went out, leaving Trevor tapping the mahogany table excitedly, till Pratt tried to throw himself into the breach, with a remark about Sir Hampton; but no one answered, for Trevor was hard at work keeping down his annoyance, Vanleigh was picking his white teeth with a gold point, and Sir Felix was intent upon the tints in the glass he held up before his eye.In another minute the butler returned with the cigars, and then departed to fulfil the other part of his orders.“Now, Vanleigh, since we are favoured,” said Trevor, laughing, “try one of these. I know they are genuine, for I got them myself at the Havanna.”“Really,” said Vanleigh, with a show of consideration, “I’ll give up my smoke, and I’m sure Flick will.”“Oh, yes, dear boy; don’t mind me.”“For goodness’ sake, gentlemen, don’t make bad worse,” said Trevor; “take your cigars and light up. Hallo, Frank! Don’t go out, man.”“Not going,” said Pratt, who had already lit a tremendous cigar, and was puffing away as he took a chair to the window.“Then, why have you gone there?”“To smoke the curtains for the benefit of Mrs Lloyd,” was the reply; and he proceeded to put his intention in force.After an hour they adjourned to Trevor’s room, where they had refreshments brought in, and were soon deep in a rubber of whist, Pratt being partner with Vanleigh, and playing his very worst; but all the same, luck and his partner’s skill carried them through, so that they won rather heavily. Time glided away, and the cigars were so good that for the first time that evening Trevor felt comfortable.“Well,” he thought, “we shall have no more of Mrs Lloyd to-night, and to-morrow I’ll set things right. Me to lead? Good that—there’s a trump.”At that moment the door opened, and Mrs Lloyd appeared, bearing a waiter with four flat candlesticks, and looking the very image of austerity.“The house is all locked up now, sir,” she said, in a cold, hard voice. “It is half-past ten.”“Thank you, Mrs Lloyd,” said Trevor, and his face twitched with annoyance.“Is half-past ten—bedtime—Mrs Lloyd?” said Pratt, laying down his cards.“Yes, sir, it is,” said Mrs Lloyd, severely.“And you’ve brought us our candles,” said Frank, taking the waiter. “Thank you, Mrs Lloyd; don’t you sit up. Good night.”Pratt’s good-humoured, smiling face puzzled the housekeeper. She allowed herself to be backed out, and the door closed behind her.
Matters were not so pleasant, though, with the four occupants of the dining-room as Humphrey Lloyd believed. Vanleigh had his skeleton in the cupboard and was very impecunious; Sir Felix had wealth, but he was constantly feeling that his friend Vanleigh was an incubus whom he would give the world to shake off, but wanted the moral courage; Pratt suffered from poverty, and now told himself that he must be bored by his friend’s affairs; lastly, Trevor had come down to his old home thinking it would be a bower of roses, and it was as full of thorns, as it could possibly be.
The dinner had been a failure. At every turn the influence of Mrs Lloyd was perceptible, and proof given that so far she had been sole mistress of the house.
“By the way, Vanleigh, try that claret,” said Trevor, in the course of the dinner. “Lloyd, the claret to Captain Vanleigh.”
The Captain tasted it, and set down his glass.
Pratt took a glass, and made a point of drinking it.
Trevor saw there was something wrong.
“Bring me that claret,” he said.
The butler poured him out a glass of very thin, poor wine.
Lloyd was then proceeding to fill Sir Felix’s glass, but he declined.
“I thought we had some good old claret,” said Trevor, fuming.
“Yes, sir,” said the butler.
“Fetch a bottle directly,” exclaimed Trevor. “Really, gentlemen, I am very sorry,” he continued, as the butler went out of the room. “It’s a mistake. Here, Robert, what champagne’s that?”
The footman brought a bottle from the ice-pail.
“Why, confound it all!” cried Trevor, “I said the dry Clicquot was to be brought—such fools!”
“Mr Lloyd did get out the Clicker, sir; but Mrs Lloyd said the second best would do, sir,” replied the footman, glad of an opportunity to change the responsibility.
“Then all the wine is of the ordinary kind?” said Trevor.
“Yes, sir,” said the footman.
“Look here, Lloyd,” said Trevor, as the butler came into the room, “you made a mistake about that claret. See that the other wine is right; and if not, change it.”
The butler looked aghast and hurried out, to return in a few minutes with a basket of bottles, which he changed for those already in the room.
Trevor said no more, but he was evidently making up his mind to suppress the mutiny with a high hand on the morrow; for, as the dinner went on, he became aware that in many little things his orders had been departed from. There was a paucity of plate, when an abundance lay in the chests; the dinner was good, by stretching a point, but not such as would please men accustomed to thechefsof Pall Mall; and when at last the coffee was brought in it was of the most economical quality.
“There,” said Trevor, “I’ll set all right to-morrow, I’m very sorry, Vanleigh; but things are all sixes and sevens here. Pratt, pass the claret. Landells, try that port.”
“Never drink port, dear boy,” said the Baronet.
“Then let’s go into the billiard-room; or what do you say, Van—would you prefer my room and a rubber?”
“Don’t much care for billiards to-night,” said Vanleigh. “By the way, though,” he said, “will your estimable housekeeper permit smoking in the dining-room.”
“Oh, come, Van,” said Sir Felix, “don’t be hard on your host.”
“Shall I ring for cigars, Dick?” said Pratt, reaching out his hand.
“Do, please,” was the reply. “Smoke where you like, gentlemen, and make yourselves at home. I don’t want to be hard on the old people. You see, it’s a particular case. I’ve been away for years. I left a boy, and they have had it all their own way. Oh, Lloyd, bring in the cigar boxes, and brandy and soda.”
“Here, sir?” said the butler, hesitating.
“Here? Yes, here directly,” said Trevor; and he looked annoyed as he caught a glance passing from Vanleigh to Sir Felix.
“It’s all right, Dick,” said Pratt. “It’s a nice estate, but weedy. Pull ’em up, one at a time.”
“By the way, Van,” said Sir Felix, “didn’t tell Trevor of our ’venture.”
“No,” said Vanleigh, kicking at his friend beneath the table; “been so taken up with other things. Brought home some neighbours of yours—without leave—in the waggonette.”
“Neighbours—without leave?” said Trevor, passing the claret. “We are all ears.”
“Some of us,” muttered Pratt, glancing at Sir Felix, and then looking perfectly innocent.
“Neighbours of yours—a Sir Hampton Court.”
“No, no—Weir or Here, or name of that sort,” said Sir Felix.
“Carriage broke down—two daughters—deuced fine girls, too.”
“Vewy,” said Sir Felix, arranging his gummy moustache.
“Good heavens!” exclaimed Trevor. “No one hurt?”
“Calm yourself, my friend,” said Vanleigh, proceeding in a most unruffled way. “The ladies were uninjured, and we—”
“Brought back—home,” said Sir Felix, feebly.
“I’m heartily glad of it—I am, indeed,” said Trevor, earnestly. “Frank, old fellow, that will be an excuse for a call; and we can patch up the encounter. We were both horribly hot.”
“Fever heat?” said Pratt.
“Yes, and I daresay the old fellow’s as sorry now as I am. I’ll—Well, Lloyd,” he continued, as the butler came in, looking rather alarmed, and rubbing his hands softly, “where are the cigars?”
“Mustn’t smoke!” said Vanleigh, in a whisper to Sir Felix, but heard by Pratt.
“If you please, sir, Mrs Lloyd thought you would like a fire in the smoking-room, sir, and I’ve taken the cigars in there.”
“Bring—”
Trevor caught Pratt’s eye, and he checked himself.
“Lloyd,” he said, very quietly. “I don’t think you understand me yet. Go and fetch those cigar boxes.”
The butler directed a pitiful, appealing look at the speaker, and then went out, leaving Trevor tapping the mahogany table excitedly, till Pratt tried to throw himself into the breach, with a remark about Sir Hampton; but no one answered, for Trevor was hard at work keeping down his annoyance, Vanleigh was picking his white teeth with a gold point, and Sir Felix was intent upon the tints in the glass he held up before his eye.
In another minute the butler returned with the cigars, and then departed to fulfil the other part of his orders.
“Now, Vanleigh, since we are favoured,” said Trevor, laughing, “try one of these. I know they are genuine, for I got them myself at the Havanna.”
“Really,” said Vanleigh, with a show of consideration, “I’ll give up my smoke, and I’m sure Flick will.”
“Oh, yes, dear boy; don’t mind me.”
“For goodness’ sake, gentlemen, don’t make bad worse,” said Trevor; “take your cigars and light up. Hallo, Frank! Don’t go out, man.”
“Not going,” said Pratt, who had already lit a tremendous cigar, and was puffing away as he took a chair to the window.
“Then, why have you gone there?”
“To smoke the curtains for the benefit of Mrs Lloyd,” was the reply; and he proceeded to put his intention in force.
After an hour they adjourned to Trevor’s room, where they had refreshments brought in, and were soon deep in a rubber of whist, Pratt being partner with Vanleigh, and playing his very worst; but all the same, luck and his partner’s skill carried them through, so that they won rather heavily. Time glided away, and the cigars were so good that for the first time that evening Trevor felt comfortable.
“Well,” he thought, “we shall have no more of Mrs Lloyd to-night, and to-morrow I’ll set things right. Me to lead? Good that—there’s a trump.”
At that moment the door opened, and Mrs Lloyd appeared, bearing a waiter with four flat candlesticks, and looking the very image of austerity.
“The house is all locked up now, sir,” she said, in a cold, hard voice. “It is half-past ten.”
“Thank you, Mrs Lloyd,” said Trevor, and his face twitched with annoyance.
“Is half-past ten—bedtime—Mrs Lloyd?” said Pratt, laying down his cards.
“Yes, sir, it is,” said Mrs Lloyd, severely.
“And you’ve brought us our candles,” said Frank, taking the waiter. “Thank you, Mrs Lloyd; don’t you sit up. Good night.”
Pratt’s good-humoured, smiling face puzzled the housekeeper. She allowed herself to be backed out, and the door closed behind her.