Читать книгу Sawn Off: A Tale of a Family Tree - Fenn George Manville - Страница 6
Volume One – Chapter Six.
Sawn Off
ОглавлениеLord Pinemount was seated in his library, biting his nails mentally, as he lay back in his easy chair glaring at his steward, who stood before him wishing he could get another post, where his master would not be a tyrant, and thinking that, if it had not been for the fact that he had a large wife and a small family at home, he would resign at once.
“And you are sure?”
“Oh yes, my lord – quite.”
“Went straight there?”
“Yes, my lord; and I hope your lordship considers I have done my duty in telling you according to your orders.”
“I consider, sir, that you have behaved like a miserable, contemptible sneak.”
“But your lordship told me to – ”
“Don’t talk to me, sir. Leave the room.”
The steward left the room, and as he closed the door he turned round, showing his teeth, and shook his fist.
“Old beast!” he said aloud: “I’ll serve you out for this some day.”
Then his countenance changed, his jaw dropped, and he drew to one side to allow Lady Pinemount to pass, fully conscious that she must have heard his words and seen the expression on his face.
“It’s all over,” he groaned, as her ladyship passed into the library. “I’m a ruined man. She’ll tell him, and – oh dear, oh dear! The workhouse stares us all in the face.”
But Lady Pinemount did not tell her husband, for she knew that the unfortunate steward must have been smarting from one of the injuries his lordship knew so well how to inflict. In fact, if she had felt so disposed she would not have had the opportunity, for the moment she had closed the door she was addressed.
“Ah, here you are!” cried her lord. “I hope you are satisfied.”
“Satisfied, dear?”
“Dear? Bah! You’ve encouraged and sided with that scoundrel of a boy, till he is in open rebellion against me; and then you call me dear.”
“I have not encouraged him,” said Lady Pinemount. “I have always tried to set you two at one. What is the matter now?”
“Why, I’ve found out this morning that Denis himself cut down and burned that hoarding.”
“Over whose destruction you insulted Doctor Salado.”
“I made a mistake,” said his lordship. “I daresay even angels make mistakes sometimes.”
“I don’t know,” said her ladyship quietly. “Of course you will apologise to the Doctor?”
“The Doctor? The quack! No, madam, I am not going to stoop to that.”
Lady Pinemount sighed.
“And that’s not the worst of it. I forbade the young scoundrel to go near those people again. Did I, or did I not?”
“You did, dear, emphatically. But if Denis really cares for Miss Salado – ”
“He sha’n’t have her – there! I forbade him to go there; and, not content with insulting me by grubbing down and burning the hoarding I erected to keep off obnoxious people, he has gone there again and again, encouraged by the adventurer of a father.”
“I am very sorry, dear.”
“Sorry? What good does that do? And he’s there now.”
“No, my dear,” said Lady Pinemount; “he is just coming across the park.”
“Ah! is he?” cried Lord Pinemount, leaping up and running to the window. “Here, – hi! Denis! Come here!”
The young man came calmly enough up to the window.
“Ah, mamma!” he said. “You want me, sir?”
“Yes. Where the devil have you been?”
“Over to Sandleighs, sir. And have the goodness to remember, in addressing me, that I am not one of the grooms.”
“Denis!”
“All right, mamma. I am not a child now, and if his lordship addresses me in that tone I shall resent it.”
“Ah, indeed!” said the father sarcastically. “May I respectfully inquire, then, why you have been over to Sandleighs?”
“To apologise to Doctor Salado for causing him so much annoyance.”
“Say Don Salado, my dear son,” cried his lordship: “and may I ask how you have annoyed him? By making eyes at the adventurer’s daughter – bah! wench!”
The young man’s eyes flashed, but he spoke quite calmly.
“I apologised for causing him to be suspected of destroying that hoarding which I cut down and burned.”
“Yes, I know you did, sir.”
“I am not surprised, father. I thought one of your spies would be watching me.”
“Oh, Denis, Denis!” cried Lady Pinemount appealingly. “Right, mother dear. I’ll speak and act quite calmly; but I will not be treated as a schoolboy.”
“Then you have apologised to Doctor Salado, the Spanish-American adventurer, and you are going to espouse his daughter, I presume?”
“Yes, father. I love her very dearly, and – ”
“That will do, thank you,” said his lordship quietly, though he was pale with suppressed fury. “I have no time to listen to silly sentiment. Good morning: there is the door.”
Lady Pinemount ran to her son’s side.
“Don’t quarrel, Denis, for my sake,” she whispered; and he pressed her hand.
“Did you hear me, Mr Rolleston? Have the goodness to go. Of course you will get the title when I die, and the estate. But not a penny do you have from me beside; and the estate will nearly ruin you, without money to keep it up. You say you are a man: act like one, and go.”
“You wish me to leave your house finally, sir?”
“Wish? I order you to go; and until you come over humbly and ask leave to pay your addresses to the Lady Jenny, never darken my doors again.”
“Very well, sir. I will see you again, mother, before I go.”
“Denis! Husband, pray, pray do not let this trouble come upon us.”
“Mr Rolleston, being angry makes me ill. I wish to behave politely and calmly to you. Please to go.”
Denis caught his mother to his breast, and then hurried out of the room, to go and order the valet to pack up his portmanteau and send it across to the station; and then he went off across the park, to see the Salados and say good-bye.