CHAPTER XXIX
John Eames Returns to Burton Crescent
John Eames and Crosbie returned to town on
the same day. It will be remembered how Eames had assisted Lord De
Guest in the matter of the bull, and how great had been the earl’s
gratitude on the occasion. The memory of this, and the strong
encouragement which he received from his mother and sister for
having made such a friend by his gallantry, lent some slight
satisfaction to his last hours at home. But his two misfortunes
were too serious to allow of anything like real happiness. He was
leaving Lily behind him, engaged to be married to a man whom he
hated, and he was returning to Burton Crescent, where he would have
to face Amelia Roper—Amelia either in her rage or in her love. The
prospect of Amelia in her rage was very terrible to him; but his
greatest fear was of Amelia in her love. He had in his letter
declined matrimony; but what if she talked down all his objections,
and carried him off to church in spite of himself!
When he reached London and got into a cab
with his portmanteau, he could hardly fetch up courage to bid the
man drive him to Burton Crescent. “I might as well go to an hotel
for the night,” he said to himself, “and then I can learn how
things are going on from Cradell at the office.” Nevertheless, he
did give the direction to Burton Crescent, and when it was once
given felt ashamed to change it. But, as he was driven up to the
well-known door, his heart was so low within him that he might
almost be said to have lost it. When the cabman demanded whether he
should knock, he could not answer; and when the maid-servant at the
door greeted him, he almost ran away.
“Who’s at home?” said he, asking the question
in a very low voice.
“There’s missus,” said the girl, “and Miss
Spruce, and Mrs. Lupex. He’s away somewhere, in his tantrums again;
and there’s Mr. —”
“Is Miss Roper here?” he said, still
whispering.
“Oh, yes! Miss Mealyer’s here,” said the
girl, speaking in a cruelly loud voice. “She was in the dining-room
just now, putting out the table. Miss Mealyer!” And the girl, as
she called out the name, opened the dining-room door. Johnny Eames
felt that his knees were too weak to support him.
But Miss Mealyer was not in the dining-room.
She had perceived the advancing cab of her sworn adorer, and had
thought it expedient to retreat from her domestic duties, and
fortify herself among her brushes and ribbons. Had it been possible
that she should know how very weak and cowardly was the enemy
against whom she was called upon to put herself in action, she
might probably have fought her battle somewhat differently, and
have achieved a speedy victory, at the cost of an energetic shot or
two. But she did not know. She thought it probable that she might
obtain power over him and manage him; but it did not occur to her
that his legs were so weak beneath him that she might almost blow
him over with a breath. None but the worst and most heartless of
women know the extent of their own power over men—as none but the
worst and most heartless of men know the extent of their power over
women. Amelia Roper was not a good specimen of the female sex, but
there were worse women than her.
“She ain’t there, Mr. Eames; but you’ll see
her in the drawen-room,” said the girl. “And it’s she’ll be glad to
see you back again, Mr. Eames.” But he scrupulously passed the door
of the upstairs sitting-room, not even looking within it, and
contrived to get himself into his own chamber without having
encountered anybody. “Here’s yer ‘ot water, Mr. Eames,” said the
girl, coming up to him after an interval of half-an-hour, “and
dinner’ll be on the table in ten minutes. Mr. Cradell is come in,
and so is missus’s son.”
It was still open to him to go out and dine
at some eating-house in the Strand. He could start out, leaving
word that he was engaged, and so postpone the evil hour. He had
almost made up his mind to do so, and certainly would have done it,
had not the sitting-room door opened as he was on the
landing-place. The door opened, and he found himself confronting
the assembled company. First came Cradell, and leaning on his arm,
I regret to say, was Mrs. Lupex—Egyptia
conjux! Then there came Miss Spruce with young Roper; Amelia
and her mother brought up the rear together. There was no longer
question of flight now; and poor Eames, before he knew what he was
doing, was carried down into the dining-room with the rest of the
company. They were all glad to see him, and welcomed him back
warmly, but he was so much beside himself that he could not
ascertain whether Amelia’s voice was joined with the others. He was
already seated at table, and had before him a plate of soup, before
he recognised the fact that he was sitting between Mrs. Roper and
Mrs. Lupex. The latter lady had separated herself from Mr. Cradell
as she entered the room. “Under all the circumstances perhaps it
will be better for us to be apart,” she said. “A lady can’t make
herself too safe; can she, Mrs. Roper? There’s no danger between
you and me, is there, Mr. Eames—specially when Miss Amelia is
opposite?” The last words, however, were intended to be whispered
into his ear.
But Johnny made no answer to her; contenting
himself for the moment with wiping the perspiration from his brow.
There was Amelia opposite to him, looking at him—the very Amelia to
whom he had written, declining the honour of marrying her. Of what
her mood towards him might be, he could form no judgment from her
looks. Her face was simply stern and impassive, and she seemed
inclined to eat her dinner in silence. A slight smile of derision
had passed across her face as she heard Mrs. Lupex whisper, and it
might have been discerned that her nose, at the same time, became
somewhat elevated; but she said not a word.
“I hope you’ve enjoyed yourself, Mr. Eames,
among the vernal beauties of the country,” said Mrs. Lupex.
“Very much, thank you,” he replied.
“There’s nothing like the country at this
autumnal season of the year. As for myself, I’ve never been
accustomed to remain in London after the breaking up of the
beau monde. We’ve usually been to
Broadstairs, which is a very charming place, with most elegant
society, but now—” and she shook her head, by which all the company
knew that she intended to allude to the sins of Mr. Lupex.
“I’d never wish to sleep out of London for my
part,” said Mrs. Roper. “When a woman’s got a house over her head,
I don’t think her mind’s ever easy out of it.”
She had not intended any reflection on Mrs.
Lupex for not having a house of her own, but that lady immediately
bristled up. “That’s just what the snails say, Mrs. Roper. And as
for having a house of one’s own, it’s a very good thing, no doubt,
sometimes; but that’s according to circumstances. It has suited me
lately to live in lodgings, but there’s no knowing whether I mayn’t
fall lower than that yet, and have—” but here she stopped herself,
and looking over at Mr. Cradell nodded her head.
“And have to let them,” said Mrs. Roper. “I
hope you’ll be more lucky with your lodgers than I have been with
some of mine. Jemima, hand the potatoes to Miss Spruce. Miss
Spruce, do let me send you a little more gravy? There’s plenty
here, really.” Mrs. Roper was probably thinking of Mr.
Todgers.
“I hope I shall,” said Mrs. Lupex. “But, as I
was saying, Broadstairs is delightful. Were you ever at
Broadstairs, Mr. Cradell?”
“Never, Mrs. Lupex. I generally go abroad in
my leave. One sees more of the world, you know. I was at Dieppe
last June, and found that very delightful—though rather lonely. I
shall go to Ostend this year; only December is so late for Ostend.
It was a deuced shame my getting December, wasn’t it,
Johnny?”
“Yes, it was,” said Eames. “I managed
better.”
“And what have you been doing, Mr. Eames?”
said Mrs. Lupex, with one of her sweetest smiles. “Whatever it may
have been, you’ve not been false to the cause of beauty, I’m sure.”
And she looked over to Amelia with a knowing smile. But Amelia was
engaged upon her plate, and went on with her dinner without turning
her eyes either on Mrs. Lupex or on John Eames.
“I haven’t done anything particular,” said
Eames. “I’ve just been staying with my mother.”
“We’ve been very social here, haven’t we,
Miss Amelia?” continued Mrs. Lupex. “Only now and then a cloud
comes across the heavens, and the lights at the banquet are
darkened.” Then she put her handkerchief up to her eyes, sobbing
deeply, and they all knew that she was again alluding to the sins
of her husband.
As soon as dinner was over the ladies with
young Mr. Roper retired, and Eames and Cradell were left to take
their wine over the dining-room fire—or their glass of gin and
water, as it might be. “Well, Caudle, old fellow,” said one. “Well,
Johnny, my boy,” said the other. “What’s the news at the office?”
said Eames.
“Muggeridge has been playing the very
mischief.” Muggeridge was the second clerk in Cradell’s room.
“We’re going to put him into Coventry and not speak to him except
officially. But to tell you the truth, my hands have been so full
here at home, that I haven’t thought much about the office. What am
I to do about that woman?”
“Do about her? How do about her?”
“Yes; what am I to do about her? How am I to
manage with her? There’s Lupex off again in one of his fits of
jealousy.”
“But it’s not your fault, I suppose?”
“Well; I can’t just say. I am fond of her,
and that’s the long and the short of it; deuced fond of her.”
“But, my dear Caudle, you know she’s that
man’s wife.”
“Oh, yes, I know all about it. I’m not going
to defend myself. It’s wrong, I know—pleasant, but wrong. But
what’s a fellow to do? I suppose in strict morality I ought to
leave the lodgings. But, by George, I don’t see why a man’s to be
turned out in that way. And then I couldn’t make a clean score with
old mother Roper. But I say, old fellow, who gave you the gold
chain?”
“Well; it was an old family friend at
Guestwick; or rather, I should say, a man who said he knew my
father.”
“And he gave you that because he knew your
governor! Is there a watch to it?”
“Yes, there’s a watch. It wasn’t exactly
that. There was some trouble about a bull. To tell the truth, it
was Lord De Guest; the queerest fellow, Caudle, you ever met in
your life; but such a trump. I’ve got to go and dine with him at
Christmas.” And then the old story of the bull was told.
“I wish I could find a lord in a field with a
bull,” said Cradell. We may, however, be permitted to doubt whether
Mr. Cradell would have earned a watch even if he had had his
wish.
“You see,” continued Cradell, reverting, to
the subject on which he most delighted to talk, “I’m not
responsible for that man’s ill-conduct.”
“Does anybody say you are?”
“No; nobody says so. But people seem to think
so. When he is by I hardly speak to her. She is thoughtless and
giddy as women are, and takes my arm, and that kind of thing, you
know. It makes him mad with rage, but upon my honour I don’t think
she means any harm.”
“I don’t suppose she does,” said Eames.
“Well; she may or she mayn’t. I hope with all
my heart she doesn’t.”
“And where is he now?”
“This is between ourselves, you know; but she
went to find him this afternoon. Unless he gives her money she
can’t stay here, nor, for the matter of that, will she be able to
go away. If I mention something to you, you won’t tell
anyone?”
“Of course I won’t.”
“I wouldn’t have it known to anyone for the
world. I’ve lent her seven pounds ten. It’s that which makes me so
short with mother Roper.”
“Then I think you’re a fool for your
pains.”
“Ah, that’s so like you. I always said you’d
no feeling of real romance. If I cared for a woman I’d give her the
coat off my back.”
“I’d do better than that,” said Johnny. “I’d
give her the heart out of my body. I’d be chopped up alive for a
girl I loved; but it shouldn’t be for another man’s wife.”
“That’s a matter of taste. But she’s been to
Lupex to-day at that house he goes to in Drury Lane. She had a
terrible scene there. He was going to commit suicide in the middle
of the street, and she declares that it all comes from jealousy.
Think what a time I have of it—standing always, as one may say, on
gunpowder. He may turn up here any moment, you know. But, upon my
word, for the life of me I cannot desert her. If I were to turn my
back on her she wouldn’t have a friend in the world. And how’s L.
D.? I’ll tell you what it is—you’ll have some trouble with the
divine Amelia.”
“Shall I?”
“By Jove, you will. But how’s L. D. all this
time?”
“L. D. is engaged to be married to a man
named Adolphus Crosbie,” said poor Johnny, slowly. “If you please,
we will not say any more about her.”
“Whew—w—w! That’s what makes you so down in
the mouth! L. D. going to marry Crosbie! Why, that’s the man who is
to be the new secretary at the General Committee Office. Old Huffle
Scuffle, who was their chair, has come to us, you know. There’s
been a general move at the G.C., and this Crosbie has got to be
secretary. He’s a lucky chap, isn’t he?”
“I don’t know anything about his luck. He’s
one of those fellows that make me hate them the first time I look
at them. I’ve a sort of a feeling that I shall live to kick him
some day.”
“That’s the time, is it? Then I suppose
Amelia will have it all her own way now.”
“I’ll tell you what, Caudle. I’d sooner get
up through the trap-door, and throw myself off the roof into the
area, than marry Amelia Roper.”
“Have you and she had any conversation since
you came back?”
“Not a word.”
“Then I tell you fairly you’ve got trouble
before you. Amelia and Maria—Mrs. Lupex, I mean—are as thick as
thieves just at present, and they have been talking you over.
Maria—that is, Mrs. Lupex—lets it all out to me. You’ll have to
mind where you are, old fellow.”
Eames was not inclined to discuss the matter
any further, so he finished his toddy in silence. Cradell, however,
who felt that there was something in his affairs of which he had
reason to be proud, soon returned to the story of his own very
extraordinary position. “By Jove, I don’t know that a man was ever
so circumstanced,” he said. “She looks to me to protect her, and
yet what can I do?”
At last Cradell got up, and declared that he
must go to the ladies. “She’s so nervous, that unless she has
someone to countenance her she becomes unwell.”
Eames declared his purpose of going to the
divan, or to the theatre, or to take a walk in the streets. The
smiles of beauty had no longer charms for him in Burton
Crescent.
“They’ll expect you to take a cup of tea the
first night,” said Cradell; but Eames declared that they might
expect it.
“I’m in no humour for it,” said he. “I’ll
tell you what, Cradell, I shall leave this place, and take rooms
for myself somewhere. I’ll never go into a lodging-house
again.”
As he so spoke, he was standing at the
dining-room door; but he was not allowed to escape in this easy
way. Jemima, as he went out into the passage, was there with a
three-cornered note in her hand. “From Miss Mealyer,” she said.
“Miss Mealyer is in the back parlour all by herself.”
Poor Johnny took the note, and read it by the
lamp over the front door.
“Are you not going to speak to me on the day
of your return? It cannot be that you will leave the house without
seeing me for a moment. I am in the back parlour.”
When he had read these words, he paused in
the passage, with his hat on. Jemima, who could not understand why
any young man should hesitate as to seeing his lady-love in the
back parlour alone, whispered to him again, in her audible way,
“Miss Mealyer is there, sir; and all the rest on ‘em’s upstairs!”
So compelled, Eames put down his hat, and walked with slow steps
into the back parlour.
How was it to be with the enemy? Was he to
encounter Amelia in anger, or Amelia in love? She had seemed to be
stern and defiant when he had ventured to steal a look at her
across the dining-table, and now he expected that she would turn
upon him with loud threatenings and protestations as to her wrongs.
But it was not so. When he entered the room she was standing with
her back to him, leaning on the mantel-piece, and at the first
moment she did not essay to peak. He walked into the middle of the
room and stood there, waiting for her to begin.
“Shut the door!” she said, looking over her
shoulder. “I suppose you don’t want the girl to hear all you’ve got
to say to me!”
Then he shut the door; but still Amelia stood
with her back to him, leaning upon the mantel-piece.
It did not seem that he had much to say, for
he remained perfectly silent.
“Well!” said Amelia, after a long pause, and
she then again looked over her shoulder. “Well, Mr. Eames!”
“Jemima gave me your note, and so I’ve come,”
said he.
“And is this the way we meet!” she exclaimed,
turning suddenly upon him, and throwing her long black hair back
over her shoulders. There certainly was some beauty about her. Her
eyes were large and bright, and her shoulders were well turned. She
might have done as an artist’s model for a Judith, but I doubt
whether any man, looking well into her face, could think that she
would do well as a wife. “Oh, John, is it to be thus, after love
such as ours?” And she clasped her hands together, and stood before
him.
“I don’t know what you mean,” said
Eames.
“If you are engaged to marry L. D., tell me
so at once. Be a man, and speak out, sir.”
“No,” said Eames; “I am not engaged to marry
the lady to whom you allude.”
“On your honour?”
“I won’t have her spoken about. I’m not going
to marry her, and that’s enough.”
“Do you think that I wish to speak of her?
What can L. D. be to me as long as she is nothing to you? Oh,
Johnny, why did you write me that heartless letter?” Then she
leaned upon his shoulder—or attempted to do so.
I cannot say that Eames shook her off, seeing
that he lacked the courage to do so; but he shuffled his shoulder
about so that the support was uneasy to her, and she was driven to
stand erect again. “Why did you write that cruel letter?” she said
again.
“Because I thought it best, Amelia. What’s a
man to do with ninety pounds a year, you know?”
“But your mother allows you twenty.”
“And what’s a man to do with a hundred and
ten?”
“Rising five pounds every year,” said the
well-informed Amelia. “Of course we should live here, with mamma,
and you would just go on paying her as you do now. If your heart
was right, Johnny, you wouldn’t think so much about money. If you
loved me—as you said you did—” Then a little sob came, and the
words were stopped. The words were stopped, but she was again upon
his shoulder. What was he to do? In truth, his only wish was to
escape, and yet his arm, quite in opposition to his own desires,
found its way round her waist. In such a combat a woman has so many
points in her favour! “Oh, Johnny,” she said again, as soon as she
felt the pressure of his arm. “Gracious, what a beautiful watch
you’ve got,” and she took the trinket out of his pocket. “Did you
buy that?”
“No; it was given to me.”
“John Eames, did L. D. give it you?”
“No, no, no,” he shouted, stamping on the
floor as he spoke.
“Oh, I beg your pardon,” said Amelia, quelled
for the moment by his energy. “Perhaps it was your mother.”
“No; it was a man. Never mind about the watch
now.”
“I wouldn’t mind anything, Johnny, if you
would tell me that you loved me again. Perhaps I oughtn’t to ask
you, and it isn’t becoming in a lady; but how can I help it, when
you know you’ve got my heart. Come upstairs and have tea with us
now, won’t you?”
What was he to do? He said that he would go
up and have tea; and as he led her to the door he put down his face
and kissed her. Oh, Johnny Eames! But then a woman in such a
contest has so many points in her favour.