“Ah, my child, you are late,”
said the Master of the Ceremonies, as Claire ran to
meet him and kissed his cheek. “`Early to bed
and early to rise makes a man healthy, wealthy, and
wise.’ It will do the same for you, my
child, and add bloom to your cheek, though, of course,
we cannot be early in the season.”
“I am a little late, papa dear,”
said Claire, ringing a tinkling bell, with the result
that Isaac, in his striped jacket and the stiffest
of white cravats, entered, closed the door behind
him, and then stood statuesque, holding a brightly-polished
kettle, emitting plenty of steam.
“Any letters, Isaac?”
“No, sir, none this morning,”
and then Isaac carefully poured a small quantity of
the boiling water into the teapot, whose lid Claire
had raised, and stood motionless while she poured
it out again, and then unlocked a very small tea-caddy
and spooned out three very small spoonfuls one
apiece, and none for the over-cleaned and de-silvered
plated pot. This done, Isaac filled up, placed
the kettle on the hob, fetched a Bible and prayer-book
from a sideboard, placed them at one end of the table
and went out.
“Why is not Morton down?” said the Mc
sternly.
“He came down quite an hour
ago, papa. He must have gone for a walk.
Shall we wait?”
“Certainly not, my child.”
At that moment there was a little
scuffling outside the door, which was opened directly
after by Isaac, who admitted Eliza and a very angular-looking
woman with two pins tightly held between her lips pins
that she had intended to transfer to some portion of
her garments, but had not had time. These three
placed themselves before three chairs by the door,
and waited till the Mc had gracefully replaced
his snuff-box, and taken two steps to the table, where
he and Claire sat down. Then the servants took
their seats, and then “Master” opened the
Bible to read in a slow, deliberate way, and as if
he enjoyed the names, that New Testament chapter on
genealogies which to youthful ears seemed to be made
up of a constant repetition of the two words, “which
was.”
This ended, all rose and knelt down,
Isaac with the point of his elbow just touching the
point of Eliza’s elbow, for he comforted his
conscience over this tender advance by the reflection
that marriage, though distant, was a sacred thing;
and he made up for his unspiritual behaviour to a
great extent by saying the “Amens”
in a much louder voice than Cook, and finished off
in the short space of silence after the Master of
the Ceremonies had read the last Collect, and when
all were expected to continue their génuflexions
till that personage sighed and made a movement as
if to rise, by adding a short extempore prayer of his
own, one which he had repeated religiously for the
past four years without effect, the supplication being:
“And finally, may we all get
the arrears of our wages, evermore. Amen.”
Isaac had finished his supplementary
prayer; the Mc sighed and rose, and, the door
being opened by the footman, the two maids stepped
out. Isaac followed, and in a few minutes returned
with a very coppery rack, containing four thin pieces
of toast, and a little dish whose contents were hidden
by a very battered cover. These were placed with
the greatest form upon the table, and the cover removed
with a flourish, to reveal two very thin and very
curly pieces of streaky bacon, each of which had evidently
been trying to inflate itself like the frog in the
fable, but with no other result than the production
of a fatty bladdery puff, supported by a couple of
patches of brown.
Isaac handed the toast to father and
daughter, and then went off with the cover silently
as a spirit, and the breakfast was commenced by the
Mc softly breaking a piece of toast with his delicate
fingers and saying:
“I am displeased with Morton.
After yesterday’s incident, he should have
been here to discuss with me the future of his campaign.”
“Here he is, papa,” cried
Claire eagerly, and she rose to kiss her brother affectionately
as he came rather boisterously into the room, looking
tall, thin and pale, but healthy and hungry, as an
overgrown boy of nineteen would look who had been
out at the seaside before breakfast.
“You were not here to prayers,
Morton,” said the Mc sternly.
“No, father; didn’t know
it was so late,” said the lad, beginning on the
toast as soon as he was seated.
“I trust that you have not been
catching er er dabs,
this morning.” The word was distasteful
when the fish was uncooked, and required an effort
to enunciate.
“Oh, but I have, though.
Rare sport this morning. Got enough for dinner.”
The Mc was silent for a few moments,
and gracefully sipped his thin tea. He was displeased,
but there was a redeeming feature in his son’s
announcement enough fish for dinner.
There would be no need to order anything of the butcher.
“Hush, Morton,” said Claire
softly, and she laid her soft little hand on his,
seeing their father about to speak.
“I am er sorry
that you should be so thoughtless, Morton,” said
his father; “at a time, too, when I am making
unheard-of efforts to obtain that cornetcy for you;
how can you degrade yourself you, the son
of a er man a er gentleman
in my position, by going like a common boy down below
that pier to catch er dabs!”
“Well, we want them,”
retorted the lad. “A good dinner of dabs
isn’t to be sneezed at. I’m as hungry
as hungry, sometimes. See how thin I am.
Why, the boys laugh, and call me Lanky Denville.”
“What is the opinion of boys
to a young man with your prospects in life?”
said his father, carefully ignoring the question of
food supply. “Besides, you ought to be
particular, sir, for the sake of your sister May,
who has married so well.”
“What, to jerry-sneaky Frank Burnett?
A little humbug.”
“Morton!”
“Well, so he is, father.
I asked him to lend me five shillings the day before
yesterday, and he called me an importunate beggar.”
“You had no business to ask him for money, sir.”
“Who am I to ask, then?
I must have money. You won’t let me go
out to work.”
“No, sir; you are a gentleman’s son, and
must act as a gentleman.”
“I can’t act as a gentleman
without money,” cried the lad, eating away,
for, to hide the look of pain in her face, Claire kept
diligently attending to her brother’s wants
by supplying him with a fair amount of thin tea and
bread and butter, as well as her own share of the bacon.
“My dear son,” said the
Mc with dignity, “everything comes to the
man who will wait. Your sister May has made
a wealthy marriage. Claire will, I have no doubt,
do the same, and I have great hopes of your prospects.”
“Haven’t any prospects,”
said the lad, in an ill-used tone.
“Not from me,” said the
Mc, “for I am compelled to keep up appearances
before the world, and my fees and offerings are not
nearly so much as people imagine.”
“Then why don’t we live
accordingly?” said the lad roughly.
“Allow me, with my experience,
sir, to know best; and I desire that you will not
take that tone towards me. Recollect, sir, that
I am your father.”
“Indeed, dear papa, Morton does
not mean to be disrespectful.”
“Silence, Claire. And you, Morton; I will
be obeyed.”
“All right, father. I’ll
obey fast enough, but it does seem precious hard to
see Ikey down in the kitchen stuffing himself, and
us up in the parlour going short so as to keep up
appearances.”
“My boy,” said the Mc
pathetically, “it is Spartan-like. It is
self-denying and manly. Have courage, and all
will end well. I know it is hard. It is
my misfortune, but I appeal to you both, do I ever
indulge myself at your expense? Do I ever spare
myself in my efforts for you?”
“No, no, no, dear,” cried
Claire, rising with tears in her eyes to throw her
arm round his neck and kiss him.
“Good girl! good
girl!” he said, smiling sadly, and returning
the embrace. “But sit down, sit down now,
and let us discuss these very weighty matters.
Fortune is beginning to smile upon us, my dears.
May is off my hands well married.”
Claire shook her head sadly.
“I say well married, Claire,”
said her father sternly, “and though we have
still that trouble ever facing us, of a member of our
family debauched by drunkenness, and sunk down to
the degradation of a common soldier ”
“Oh! I say, father, leave
poor old Fred alone,” cried Morton. “He
isn’t a bad fellow; only unlucky.”
“Be silent, sir, and do not
mention his name again in my presence. And Claire,
once for all, I forbid his coming to this house.”
“He only came to the back door,” grumbled
Morton.
“A son who is so degraded that
he cannot come to the front door, and must lower himself
to the position of one of our servants, is no companion
for my children. I forbid all further communication
with him.”
“Oh, papa!” cried Claire, with the tears
in her eyes.
“Silence! Morton, my son,
I have hopes that by means of my interest a certain
person will give you a commission in the Light Dragoons,
and For what we have received may the
Lord make us truly thankful.”
“Amen,” said Morton.
“Claire, I want some more bread and butter.”
“Claire,” said the Master
of the Ceremonies, rising from the table as a faint
tinkle was heard, “there is the Countess’s
bell.”
He drew the girl aside and laid a
thin white finger upon her shoulder.
“You must give her a broader
hint this morning, Claire. Six months, and she
has paid nothing whatever. I cannot, I really
cannot go on finding her ladyship in apartments and
board like this. It is so unreasonable.
A woman, too, with her wealth. Pray, speak to
her again, but don’t offend her. You must
be careful. Delicately, my child delicately.
A leader of fashion even now. A woman of exquisite
refinement. Of the highest aristocracy.
Speak delicately. It would never do to cause
her annoyance about such a sordid thing as money a
few unsettled debts of honour. Ah, her bell
again. Don’t keep her waiting.”
“If you please, ma’am,
her ladyship has rung twice,” said Isaac, entering
the room; “and Eliza says shall she go?”
“No, Isaac, your mistress will
visit her ladyship,” said the Mc with dignity.
“You can clear away, Isaac you can
clear away.”
Stuart Denville, Esquire, walked to
the window and took a pinch of snuff. As soon
as his back was turned Isaac grinned and winked at
Morton, making believe to capture and carry off the
bread and butter; while the lad hastily wrote on a
piece of paper:
“Pour me out a cup of tea in
the pantry, Ike, and I’ll come down.”
Five minutes later the room was cleared,
and the Mc turned from the window to catch angrily
from the table some half-dozen letters which the footman
had placed ready for him to see.
“Bills, bills, bills,”
he said, in a low, angry voice, thrusting them unread
into the drawer of a cabinet; “what am I to do?
How am I to pay?”
He sat down gracefully, as if it were
part of his daily life, and his brow wrinkled, and
an old look came into his face as he thought of the
six months’ arrears of the lady who occupied
his first floor, and his hands began to tremble strangely
as he seemed to see open before him an old-fashioned
casket, in which lay, glittering upon faded velvet,
necklet, tiara, brooch, earrings and bracelets large
diamonds of price; a few of which, if sold, would
be sufficient to pay his debts, and enable him to
keep up appearances, and struggle on, till Claire was
well married, and his son well placed.
Money money always
struggling on for money in this life of beggarly gentility;
while only on the next floor that old woman on the
very brink of the grave had trinkets, any one of which
He made a hasty gesture, as if he
were thrusting back some temptation, and took up a
newspaper, but let it fall upon his knees as his eyes
lit upon a list of bankrupts.
Was it come to that? He was
heavily in debt to many of the tradespeople.
The epidemic in the place last year had kept so many
people away, and his fees had been less than ever.
Things still looked bad. Then there was the
rent, and Barclay had said he would not wait, and
there were the bills that Barclay held his
acceptances for money borrowed at a heavy rate to
keep up appearances when his daughter May
his idol the pretty little sunbeam of his
house became Mrs Frank Burnett.
“Barclay is hard, very hard,”
said the Master of the Ceremonies to himself.
“Barclay said ”
He again made that gesture, a gracefully
made gesture of repelling something with his thin,
white hands, but the thought came back.
“Barclay said that half the
ladies of fashion when short of money, through play,
took their diamonds to their jeweller, sold some of
the best, and had them replaced with paste.
It took a connoisseur to tell the difference by candlelight.”
Stuart Denville, poverty-stricken
gentleman, the poorest of men, suffering as he did
the misery of one struggling to keep up appearances,
rose to his feet with a red spot in each of his cheeks,
and a curious look in his eyes.
“No, no,” he ejaculated
excitedly as he walked up and down, “a gentleman,
sir a gentleman, if poor. Better one’s
razors or a pistol. They would say it was all
that I could do. Not the first gentleman who
has gone to his grave like that.”
He shuddered and stood gazing out
of the window at the sea, which glittered in the sunshine
like yes, like diamonds.
Barclay said he had often changed
diamonds for paste, and no one but a judge could tell
what had been done. Half a dozen of the stones
from a bracelet replaced with paste, and he would
be able to hold up his head for a year, and by that
time how changed everything might be.
Curse the diamonds! Was he mad?
Why did the sea dance and sparkle, and keep on flashing
like brilliants? Was it the work of some devil
to tempt him with such thoughts? Or was he going
mad?
He took pinch after pinch of snuff,
and walked up and down with studied dancing-master
strides as if he were being observed, instead of alone
in that shabby room, and as he walked he could hear
the dull buzz of voices and a light tread overhead.
He walked to the window again with
a shudder, and the sea still seemed to be all diamonds.
He could not bear it, but turned to
his seat, into which he sank heavily, and covered
his face with his hands.
Diamonds again glistening
diamonds, half a dozen of which, taken why
not borrowed for a time from the old woman who owed
him so much, and would not pay? Just borrowed
for the time, and paste substituted till fate smiled
upon him, and his plans were carried out. How
easy it would be. And she, old, helpless, would
never know the difference and it was to
benefit his children.
“I cannot bear it,” he
moaned; and then, “Barclay would do it for me.
He is secret as the tomb. He never speaks.
If he did, what reputations he could blast.”
So easy; the old woman took her opiate
every night, and slept till morning. She would
not miss the cross yes, that would be the
one no, a bracelet better. She never
wore that broad bracelet, Claire said, now she had
realised that her arms were nothing but bone.
“Am I mad?” cried the
old man, starting up again. “Yes, what
is it?”
“Messenger from Mr Barclay,
sir, to say he will call to-morrow at twelve, and
he hopes you will be in.”
“Yes, yes, Isaac; say yes, I
will be in,” said the wretched man, sinking
back in his chair with the perspiration starting out
all over his brow. And then, as he was left alone,
“How am I to meet him? What am I to say?”
he whispered. “Oh, it is too horrible to
bear!”
Once more he started to his feet and
walked to the window and looked out upon the sea.
Diamonds glittering diamonds
as far as eye could reach, and the Master of the Ceremonies,
realising more and more the meaning of the word temptation,
staggered away from the window with a groan.