There had been busy doings at the
Castle, and Merland village was in an intense state
of excitement. Old Chunt Jonathan
Chunt, who kept the “Black Bull” said
that there was to be some life in the place at last.
He knew, for he had it from Mr Gurdon old
Gurdon’s lad, but Mr Gurdon now, and
an awfully big man in his master’s estimation.
He was butler now, and had come over to superintend
the getting in order of the place, for Sir Murray
was fond of company, and there were to be no end of
gaieties at the Castle. Mr Gurdon was setting
the old servants to rights and no mistake, for he’d
got full power, and they hadn’t had such a waking
up for long enough. Why, what with company’s
servants coming down to the “Bull,” and
post-horses now and then, and one thing and another,
it would be a little fortune to him, Chunt said.
Time there was a change, too: keeping a house
like that shut up for the rats to scamper across the
floors, was injuring the trade of the village, where
there was no one else but the old people at the Rectory,
and them Nortons, who might just as well be a hundred
miles off, shutting themselves up as they did.
Chunt knew, and he imparted his knowledge,
with no end of nods and winks, to his fellow-tradesmen,
as he termed them to wit, Huttoft, the
saddler, who made nothing but harness, and Mouncey,
the baker, when they came in for a glass.
“And if here ain’t Mr
Gurdon himself!” exclaimed Chunt, one evening,
when he had been distilling information to a select
knot of customers. “Take a chair, Mr Gurdon,
sir. Glad to see you this evening. Very
curious coincidence, sir: we were just talking
about you and your people;” which was indeed
most remarkable, considering that nothing else had
been talked of in the village for weeks past.
“What’ll you take, sir? only give it
a name. Quite an honour to have you distinguished
furreners amongst us.”
Mr Gurdon smiled and rubbed his hands;
but, evidently considering that he had mistaken his
position, he frowned the next moment, and nodded condescendingly
to the tradesmen and little yeomen present. Certainly
they had, several of them, known him as a boy; but
then he had risen in the world, and deserved their
respect; besides which, look at the patronage he could
bestow. So Mr Gurdon frowned, coughed, and looked
important; but, finding that room was made for him,
and that incense in abundance was being prepared in
his behalf, he condescended to take a seat, and gave
what he would take the name of sherry, with which he
smoked a cigar, whose aroma whispered strongly of the
box from which it had been taken.
Mr Gurdon’s presence, though,
did not tend to the increase of comfort in the party
assembled, for the gentleman’s gentleman seemed
to have imbibed a considerable portion of his master’s
dignity, sitting there very haughty and reserved,
while, the flow of conversation being stopped, the
rest sat still, smoked, breathed hard, and stared.
But Chunt was satisfied, and he winked
and nodded, and whispered behind his hand most mysteriously
as he took orders from one and another. He expected
that Mr Gurdon would thaw in time with a little management,
and, putting on his diplomatic cap, he set to work
by asking his advice.
“That sherry’s not much
account, Mr Gurdon, sir,” he said, in a whisper;
“but it’s the best I’ve got to offer
you. The long and short of it is, sir, we can’t
order enough, in a little house like this, to make
a wine-merchant care about sending it good; but I’ve
got a few gallons of brandy down now that I should
just like you to try, and give me your opinion.
You see, it isn’t every day as one has a gent
in as understands such things; but you, being used
to your cellar, and having good stuff in your bins,
yours is an opinion one would like to have. There,
sir, now just taste that,” said Chunt, filling
a liqueur-glass from a big stone bottle; “that’s,
between ourselves, just as it comes untouched,
you know. I’ll mix you a glass hot; but
just give me your opinion on it as it is.”
Mr Gurdon was touched in a weak place,
for, though his cellar knowledge was almost nil, it
was not worth while to say so. Incense was nice
almost as nice as brandy, so accepting Chunt’s
glass, and confidential wink, he tasted the brandy tasted
it again, and then agreed that it wasn’t bad,
only it wanted age.
“The very words as my spirit-merchant
says to me, sir,” said Chunt. “If
that brandy had age, sir, it wouldn’t be surpassed
anywhere.”
Mr Gurdon felt better, and agreed
with one of the visitors present that they wanted
rain. Then, after finishing the neat brandy,
he commenced the stiff tumbler of hot grog placed
before him by Chunt, toyed with the end of his cigar;
and, finding a general disposition to pay him respect,
and to call him “sir,” he gradually unbent more
swiftly, perhaps, than he would have done under
the influence of the brandy and water, for which he
had a decided weakness, the potent spirit unlocking,
or, as Chunt told his wife, oiling the butlers tongue,
so that he gratified the curiosity of the Merlandites
that evening to a considerable extent. And there
was no lack of brandy and water that night: every
one drank it, doing as Mr Gurdon did; and there was
quite a struggle amongst the little traders for the
honour of “standing” Mr Gurdon’s
next glass, the most eager of them, so as not to be
outdone, requesting Chunt to fill it again, while
it was yet but half empty.
“And do you like furren parts,
Mr Gurdon, sir?” said Chunt, setting the ball
rolling.
“Pretty well pretty
well,” said Gurdon. “On the whole,
perhaps, better than England. Society’s
higher there more titles.”
“I suppose Mr Gurdon ain’t
brought home a Hightalian wife,” said Huttoft.
Mr Gurdon did not quite approve of
this; and Huttoft had to suffer the frowns of the
whole company.
“And so, after all these years,
Mr Gurdon, sir,” said Mouncey, who was in high
spirits with the prospect of bread supplying, “you
haven’t brought us home a heir to the Castle.”
“No,” said Mr Gurdon;
“and it’s my opinion as there’ll
never be one.”
“Turned out a happy match, and
all that sort of thing, though, I suppose?”
said Mouncey.
“Happy! yes, I should think
so. Sir Murray worships her, and she’s
never happy unless he’s along with her, or else
going hunting weeds and grass and moss in the hills.
Lor’ bless you! it’s wonderful what a
happy pair they are. Awfully jealous man, though,
Sir Murray nearly had a duel with a foreign
Count, who wanted to be too attentive to my lady;
but when my gentleman found as master meant fight,
he cooled down, and made an apology.”
“Ladyship changed much?” said Chunt.
“Well, no; not much,”
said Gurdon. “We all look older at the
end of five years. She always was pale, and
perhaps she is a bit thinner than when she went away.
But there, you’ll see her safe enough before
long; they’ll be home to-morrow, and she’ll
be always out, either riding or walking.”
“I used to fancy that things
wouldn’t turn out happily after that set-out
at the church door,” said Huttoft, venturing
another remark. “Of course you know as
Mr Norton’s settled down at the Hall? married
Miss Lee, you know. Good customer of mine, too.”
“Ah, yes; we know all about
that,” said Gurdon, sarcastically. “Her
ladyship was frightened, of course; and enough to frighten
any lady, to see a mad-brain fellow rush at her like
that. Boy and girl love affair, that’s
what that was. Them sort of things never come
to nought; and look how soon he got over it and married.
Her ladyship was upset about it, though, when she
got the news. She was fond of her cousin, you
know, Miss Lee, and you may say what you like here,
but we got the right tale over abroad about that Captain
Norton shooting her; while, when her ladyship heard
that her cousin had been foolish enough to marry him,
she had a brain fever, and was bad for weeks.
No wonder, neither. He must be half-cracked
with sunstroke or drink. They do say them Indy
officers drink hard. Well, just one more, gents,
and this must be the last.”
Mr Mouncey could not help siding with
the butler, for he happened to know that Captain Norton
was a bit queer at times, as the servants had told
him more than once, going rushing off to all parts
without saying a word to anybody, not even to Mrs
Norton; and he couldn’t quite see through it,
unless it was, as Mr Gurdon said, the Captain was,
after all, a bit touched.
“By the way, though,”
said Chunt, “isn’t he taking up with that
Iron Company?”
“Iron!” said Gurdon, thickly. “No
iron about here.”
“Oh yes,” said Huttoft;
“they’ve found a bed, and there’s
some talk of trying to work it, bringing coal by canal,
but I can’t see as it will answer.”
Soon after this the conversation became
general upon the future of the iron, the company being
divided, some declaring for riches to those who took
shares in the company, others prognosticating that
the shareholders would find the iron too hot to hold,
and would burn their fingers in a way not to be forgotten.
But, at last, remembrances of frowning wives sitting
up for absent lords brought the hour into serious consideration,
and, after glasses round, the enthusiastic party insisted
upon seeing Mr Gurdon home, which they did to the
lodge gates, parting from him most affectionately,
though it might have been better had they continued
their escort until he reached his normal bed, the one
he chose, when left to himself, being a bed of verbenas,
where he was found, covered with dew, at early morning,
by Alexander McCray, one of the under-gardeners, who
did not fail to treasure up the circumstance against
the next time he might be snubbed.