书城公版The Prime Minister
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第174章

'HAS HE ILL-TREATED YOU?'

Lopez relieved his wife from all care as to provision for his guests.'I've been to a shop in Wigmore Street,' he said, 'and everything will be done.They'll send in a cook to make the things hot, and your father won't have to pay even for a crust of bread.'

'Papa doesn't mind paying for anything,' she said in her indignation.

'It is all very pretty for you to say so, but my experience of him goes just the other way.At any rate there will be nothing to be paid for.Stewam and Sugarscraps will send in everything, if you'll only tell the old fogies downstairs not to interfere.'

Then she made a little request.Might she ask Everett who was now in town? 'I've already got Major Pountney and Captain Gunner,' he said.She pleaded that one more would make no difference.'But that's just what one more always does.It destroys everything, and turns a pretty little dinner into an awkward feed.We won't have him this time.Pountney'll take you, and I'll take her ladyship.**** will take Mrs Leslie, and Gunner will have Aunt Harriet.**** will sit opposite to me, and the four ladies will sit at the four corners.We shall be very pleasant, but one more would spoil us.'

She did speak to the 'old fogies' downstairs,--the housekeeper, who had lived with her father since she was a child, and the butler, who had been there still longer, and the cook, who, having been in her place only three years, resigned impetuously within half an hour after the advent of Mr Sugarscaps' head man.

The 'fogies' were indignant.The butler expressed his intention of locking himself up in his own peculiar pantry, and the housekeeper took it upon herself to tell her young mistress that 'Master wouldn't like it'.Since she had known Mr Wharton such a thing as cooked food being sent into the house from a shop had never been so much as heard of.Emily, who had hitherto been regarded in the house as a rather strong-minded young woman, could only break down and weep.Why, oh why, had she consented to bring herself and her misery into her father's house? She could at any rate have prevented that by explaining to her father the unfitness of such an arrangement.

The 'party' came.There was Major Pountney, very fine, rather loud, very intimate with the host, whom on one occasion had called 'Ferdy, my boy', and very full of abuse of the Duke and Duchess of Omnium.'And yet she was a good creature when I knew her', said Lady Eustace.Pountney suggested that the Duchess had not then taken up politics.'I've got out of her way,' said Lady Eustace, 'since she did that.' And there was Captain Gunner, who defended the Duchess, but who acknowledged that the Duke was the 'most consumedly stuck up coxcomb' then existing.'And the most dishonest', said Lopez, who had told his new friends nothing about the repayment of the election expenses.And **** was there.He liked these little parties, in which a good deal of wine could be drunk, and at which ladies were not supposed to be very stiff.The Major and the Captain, and Mrs Leslie and Lady Eustace, were such people as he liked,--all within the pale, but having a piquant relish of fastness and impropriety.**** was wont to declare that he hated the world in buckram.Aunt Harriet was triumphant in a manner which disgusted Emily, and which she thought to be most disrespectful to her father;--but in truth Aunt Harriett did not now care very much for Mr Wharton, preferring the friendship of Mr Wharton's son-in-law.Mrs Leslie came in gorgeous clothes, which, as she was known to be very poor, and to have attached herself lately with almost more than feminine affection to Lady Eustace, were at any rate open to suspicious cavil.In former days Mrs Leslie had taken upon herself to say bitter things about Mr Lopez, which Emily could now have repeated, to that lady's discomfiture, had such a mode of revenge suited her disposition.With Mrs Leslie there was Lady Eustace, pretty as ever, and sharp and witty, with the old passion for some excitement, the old proneness to pretend to trust everybody, and the old capacity for trusting nobody.

Ferdinand Lopez had lately been at her feet, and had fired her imagination with stories of the grand things to be done in trade.

Ladies do it? Yes; why not women as well as men? Anyone might do it who had money in his pocket and experience to tell him or to tell her, what to buy and what to sell.And the experience, luckily, might be vicarious.At the present moment half the jewels worn in London were,--if Ferdinand Lopez knew anything about it,--bought from the proceeds of such commerce.Of course there were misfortunes.But these came from a want of that experience which Ferdinand Lopez possessed, and which he was quite willing to place at the service of one whom he admired so thoroughly as he did Lady Eustace.Lady Eustace had been charmed, had seen her way into a new and most delightful life,--but had not yet put any of her money into the hands of Ferdinand Lopez.