Tom tringle gets an answer.
Faddle as he went down into the country
made up his mind that the law which required such
letters to be delivered by hand was an absurd law.
The post would have done just as well, and would have
saved a great deal of trouble. These gloomy thoughts
were occasioned by a conviction that he could not
carry himself easily or make himself happy among such
“howling swells” as these Alburys.
If they should invite him to the house the matter
would be worse that way than the other. He had
no confidence in his dress coat, which he was aware
had been damaged by nocturnal orgies. It is all
very well to tell a fellow to be as “big a swell”
as anybody else, as Tom had told him. But Faddle
acknowledged to himself the difficulty of acting up
to such advice. Even the eyes of Colonel Stubbs
turned upon him after receipt of the letter would
oppress him.
Nevertheless he must do his best,
and he took a gig at the station nearest to Albury.
He was careful to carry his bag with him, but still
he lived in hope that he would be able to return to
London the same day. When he found himself within
the lodges of Stalham Park he could hardly keep himself
from shivering, and, when he asked the footman at
the door whether Colonel Stubbs were there, he longed
to be told that Colonel Stubbs had gone away on the
previous day to some he did not care what distant
part of the globe. But Colonel Stubbs had not
gone away. Colonel Stubbs was in the house.
Our friend the Colonel had not suffered
as Tom had suffered since his rejection; but
nevertheless he had been much concerned. He had
set his heart upon Ayala before he had asked her,
and could not bring himself to change his heart because
she had refused him. He had gone down to Aldershot
and had performed his duties, abstaining for the present
from repeating his offer. The offer of course
must be repeated, but as to the when, the where, and
the how, he had not as yet made up his mind.
Then Tom Tringle had come to him at Aldershot communicating
to him the fact that he had a rival; and
also the other fact that the other rival like himself
had hitherto been unsuccessful. It seemed improbable
to him that such a girl as Ayala should attach herself
to such a man as her cousin Tom. But nevertheless
he was uneasy. He regarded Tom Tringle as a miracle
of wealth, and felt certain that the united efforts
of the whole family would be used to arrange the match.
Ayala had refused him also, and therefore, up to the
present moment, the chances of the other man were
no better than his own. When Tom left him at Aldershot
he hardly remembered that Tom knew nothing of his
secret, whereas Tom had communicated to him his own.
It never for a moment occurred to him that Tom would
quarrel with him; although he had seen that the poor
fellow had been disgusted because he had refused to
write the letter.
On Christmas Eve he had gone down
to Stalham, and there he had remained discussing the
matter of his love with Lady Albury. To no one
else in the house had the affair been mentioned, and
by Sir Harry he was supposed to remain there only
for the sake of the hunting. With Sir Harry he
was of all guests the most popular, and thus it came
to pass that his prolonged presence at Stalham was
not matter of special remark. Much of his time
he did devote to hunting, but there were half hours
devoted in company with Lady Albury to Ayala’s
perfection and Ayala’s obstinacy.
Lady Albury was almost inclined to
think that Ayala should be given up. Married
ladies seldom estimate even the girls they like best
at their full value. It seems to such a one as
Lady Albury almost a pity that such a one as Colonel
Stubbs should waste his energy upon anything so insignificant
as Ayala Dormer. The speciality of the attraction
is of course absent to the woman, and unless she has
considered the matter so far as to be able to clothe
her thoughts in male vestments, as some women do,
she cannot understand the longing that is felt for
so small a treasure. Lady Albury thought that
young ladies were very well, and that Ayala was very
well among young ladies; but Ayala in getting Colonel
Stubbs for a husband would, as Lady Albury thought,
have received so much more than her desert that she
was now almost inclined to be angry with the Colonel.
“My dear friend,” he said to her one day,
“you might as well take it for granted.
I shall go after my princess with all the energy which
a princess merits.”
“The question is whether she
be a princess,” said Lady Albury.
“Allow me to say that that is
a point on which I cannot admit a doubt. She
is a princess to me, and just at present I must be
regarded as the only judge in the matter.”
“She shall be a goddess, if
you please,” said Lady Albury.
“Goddess, princess, pink, or
pearl; any name you please supposed to
convey perfection shall be the same to me. It
may be that she is in truth no better, or more lovely,
or divine, than many another young lady who is at
the present moment exercising the heart of many another
gentleman. You know enough of the world to be
aware that every Jack has his Gill. She is my
Gill, and that’s an end of it.”
“I hope then that she may be your Gill.”
“And, in order that she may,
you must have her here again. I should absolutely
not know how to go to work were I to find myself in
the presence of Aunt Dosett in Kingsbury Crescent.”
In answer to this Lady Albury assured him that she
would be quite willing to have the girl again at Stalham
if it could be managed. She was reminding him,
however, how difficult it had been on a previous occasion
to overcome the scruples of Mrs. Dosett, when a servant
brought in word to Colonel Stubbs that there was a
man in the hall desirous of seeing him immediately
on particular business. Then the servant presented
our friend Faddle’s card.
Mr. Samuel Faddle,
1, Badminton Gardens.
“Yes, Sir;” said the servant.
“He says he has a letter which he must put into
your own particular hands.”
“That looks like a bailiff,”
said Lady Albury, laughing. Colonel Stubbs, declaring
that he had no special reason to be afraid of any
bailiff, left the room and went down into the hall.
At Stalham the real hall of the house
was used as a billiard-room, and here, leaning against
the billiard table, the Colonel found poor Faddle.
When a man is compelled by some chance circumstance
to address another man whom he does not know, and
whom by inspection he feels he shall never wish to
know, he always hardens his face, and sometimes also
his voice. So it was with the Colonel when he
looked at Faddle. A word he did say, not in words
absolutely uncivil, as to the nature of the business
in hand. Then Faddle, showing his emotion by
a quaver in his voice, suggested that as the matter
was one of extreme delicacy some more private apartment
might be provided. Upon this Stubbs led the way
into a little room which was for the most part filled
with hunting-gear, and offered the stranger one of
the three chairs which it contained. Faddle sat
down, finding himself so compelled, though the Colonel
still remained standing, and then extracted the fatal
epistle from his pocket. “Colonel Stubbs,”
said he, handing up the missive, “I am directed
by my friend, Mr. Thomas Tringle, junior, to put this
letter into your own hand. When you have read
it I shall be ready to consult with you as to its contents.”
These few words he had learnt by heart on his journey
down, having practised them continually.
The Colonel took the letter, and turning
to the window read it with his back to the visitor.
He read it twice from beginning to end in order that
he might have time to resolve whether he would laugh
aloud at both Faddle and Tringle, or whether it might
not be better to endeavour to soften the anger of
poor Tom by a message which should be at any rate
kindly worded. “This is from my friend,
Tom Tringle,” he said.
“From Mr. Thomas Tringle, junior,”
said Faddle, proudly.
“So I perceive. I am sorry
to think that he should be in so much trouble.
He is one of the best fellows I know, and I am really
grieved that he should be unhappy. This, you know,
is all nonsense.”
“It is not nonsense at all, Colonel Stubbs.”
“You must allow me to be the
judge of that, Mr. Faddle. It is at any rate
nonsense to me. He wants me to go somewhere and
fight a duel, which I should not do with
any man under any circumstances. Here there is
no possible ground for any quarrel whatsoever, as
I will endeavour to explain, myself, to my friend,
Mr. Tringle. I shall be sure to write to him
at once, and so I will bid you good afternoon.”
But this did not at all suit poor
Faddle after so long a journey. “I thought
it probable that you would write, Colonel Stubbs, and
therefore I am prepared to wait. If I cannot be
accommodated here I will wait, will wait
elsewhere.”
“That will not be at all necessary.
We have a post to London twice a day.”
“You must be aware, Colonel
Stubbs, that letters of this sort should not be sent
by post.”
“The kind of letter I shall
write may be sent by post very well. It will
not be bellicose, and therefore there can be no objection.”
“I really think, Colonel Stubbs,
that you are making very little of a very serious
matter.”
“Mr. Faddle, I really must manage
my own affairs after my own way. Would you like
a glass of sherry? If not, I need hardly ask you
to stay here any longer.” Upon that he
went out into the billiard-room and rang the bell.
Poor Faddle would have liked the glass of sherry,
but he felt that it would be incompatible with the
angry dignity which he assumed, and he left the house
without another word or even a gesture of courtesy.
Then he returned to London, having taken his bag and
dress coat all the way to Stalham for nothing.
Tom’s letter was almost too
good to be lost, but there was no one to whom the
joke could be made known except Lady Albury. She,
he was sure, would keep poor Tom’s secret as
well as his own, and to her he showed the letter.
“I pity him from the bottom of my heart,”
he said. Lady Albury declared that the writer
of such a letter was too absurd for pity. “Not
at all. Unless he really loved her he wouldn’t
have been so enraged. I suppose he does think
that I injured him. He did tell me his story,
and I didn’t tell him mine. I can understand
it all, though I didn’t imagine he was such
a fool as to invite me to travel all round the world
because of the harsh laws of Great Britain. Nevertheless,
I shall write to him quite an affectionate letter,
remembering that, should I succeed myself, he will
be my first cousin by marriage.”
Before he went to bed that night he
wrote his letter, and the reader may as well see the
whole correspondence;
My dear tringle,
If you will think of it all round you
will see that you have got no cause of quarrel
with me any more than I have with you. If
it be the case that we are both attached to your
cousin, we must abide her decision whether it be in
favour of either of us, or, as may be too probably
the case, equally adverse to both of us. If
I understand your letter rightly, you think that
I behaved unfairly when I did not tell you of my
own affairs upon hearing yours from your own lips.
Why should I? Why should I have been held to
be constrained to tell my secret because you, for
your own sake, had told me yours? Had I been
engaged to your cousin, which I regret
to say is very far from the case, I
should have told you, naturally. I should have
regarded the matter as settled, and should have
acquainted you with a fact which would have concerned
you. But as such was not a fact, I was by
no means bound to tell you how my affairs stood.
This ought to be clear to you, and I hope will
be when you have read what I say.
I may as well go on to declare that under
no circumstances should I fight a duel with you.
If I thought I had done wrong in the matter I would
beg your pardon. I can’t do that as
it is, though I am most anxious to appease
you, because I have done you no wrong.
Pray forget your animosity, which
is in truth
unfounded, and let us
be friends as we were before.
Yours very sincerely,
Jonathan Stubbs.
Faddle reached London the evening
before the Colonel’s letter, and again dined
with his friend at Bolivia’s. At first they
were both extremely angry, acerbating each other’s
wrath. Now that he was safe back in London Faddle
thought that he would have enjoyed an evening among
the “swells” of Stalham, and felt himself
to be injured by the inhospitable treatment he had
received “after going all the way
down there, hardly to be asked to sit down!”
“Not asked to sit down!”
“Well, yes, I was; on
a miserable cane-bottomed chair in a sort of cupboard.
And he didn’t sit down. You may call them
swells, but I think your Colonel Stubbs is a very
vulgar sort of fellow. When I told him the post
isn’t the proper thing for such a letter, he
only laughed. I suppose he doesn’t know
what is the kind of thing among gentlemen.”
“I should think he does know,” said Tom.
“Then why doesn’t he act
accordingly? Would you believe it; he never so
much as asked me whether I had a mouth on. It
was just luncheon time, too.”
“I suppose they lunch late.”
“They might have asked me.
I shouldn’t have taken it. He did say something
about a glass of sherry, but it was in that sort of
tone which tells a fellow that he is expected not
to take it. And then he pretended to laugh.
I could see that he was shaking in his shoes at the
idea of having to fight. He go to the torrid zone!
He would much rather go to a police office if he thought
that there was any fighting on hand. I should
dust his jacket with a stick if I were you.”
Later on in the evening Tom declared
that this was what he would do, but, before he came
to that, a third bottle of Signor Bolivia’s
champagne had been made to appear. The evening
passed between them not without much enjoyment.
On the opening of that third cork the wine was declared
to be less excellent than what had gone before, and
Signor Bolivia was evoked in person. A gentleman
named Walker, who looked after the establishment,
made his appearance, and with many smiles, having
been induced to swallow a bumper of the compound himself,
declared, with a knowing shake of the head and an astute
twinkle of the eye, that the wine was not equal to
the last. He took a great deal of trouble, he
assured them, to import an article which could not
be surpassed, if it could be equalled, in London, always
visiting Epernay himself once a-year for the purpose
of going through the wine-vaults. Let him do
what he would an inferior bottle, or, rather,
a bottle somewhat inferior, would sometimes
make its way into his cellar. Would Mr. Tringle
let him have the honour of drawing another cork, so
that the exact amount of difference might be ascertained?
Tom gave his sanction; the fourth cork was drawn; and
Mr. Walker, sitting down and consuming the wine with
his customers, was enabled to point out to a hair’s
breadth the nature and the extent of the variation.
Tringle still thought that the difference was considerable.
Faddle was, on the whole, inclined to agree with Signor
Bolivia. It need hardly be said that the four
bottles were paid for, or rather scored
against Tringle, who at the present time had a little
account at the establishment.
“Show a fellar fellar’s
letters morrer.” Such or something like
it was Faddle’s last request to his friend as
they bade each other farewell for the night in Pall
Mall. But Faddle was never destined to see the
Colonel’s epistle. On his attempting to
let himself in at Badminton Gardens, he was kidnapped
by his father in his night-shirt and dressing-gown;
and was sent out of London on the following morning
by long sea down to Aberdeen, whither he was intrusted
to the charge of a stern uncle. Our friend Tom
saw nothing more of his faithful friend till years
had rolled over both their heads.
By the morning post, while Tom was
still lying sick with headache, for even
with Signor Bolivia’s wine the pulling of many
corks is apt to be dangerous, there came
the letter from the Colonel. Bad as Tom was,
he felt himself constrained to read it at once, and
learned that neither the Torrid zone or Arctic circle
would require his immediate attendance. He was
very sick, and perhaps, therefore, less high in courage
than on the few previous days. Partly, perhaps,
from that cause, but partly, also, from the Colonel’s
logic, he did find that his wrath was somewhat abated.
Not but what it was still present to his mind that
if two men loved the same girl as ardently, as desperately,
as eternally as he loved Ayala, the best thing for
them would be to be put together like the Kilkenny
cats, till whatever remnant should be left of one might
have its chance with the young lady. He still
thought that it would be well that they should fight
to the death, but a glimmering of light fell upon
his mind as to the Colonel’s abnegation of all
treason in the matter. “I suppose it wasn’t
to be expected that he should tell,” he said
to himself. “Perhaps I shouldn’t have
told in the same place. But as to forgetting
animosity that is out of the question! How is
a man to forget his animosity when two men want to
marry the same girl?”
About three o’clock on that
day he dressed himself, and sat waiting for Faddle
to come to him. He knew how anxious his friend
would be to see the Colonel’s letter. But
Faddle by this time had passed the Nore, and had added
sea-sickness to his other maladies. Faddle came
to him no more, and the tedious hours of the afternoon
wore themselves away in his lodgings till he found
his solitude to be almost more unbearable than his
previous misfortunes. At last came the time when
he must go out for his dinner. He did not dare
to attempt the Mountaineers. And as for Bolivia,
Bolivia with his corks, and his eating-house, and
his vintages, was abominable to him. About eight
o’clock he slunk into a quiet little house on
the north side of Oxford Street, and there had two
mutton chops, some buttered toast, and some tea.
As he drank his tea he told himself that on the morrow
he would go back to his mother at Merle Park, and get
from her such consolation as might be possible.