Read Can You Forgive Her? Online

Authors: Anthony Trollope

Can You Forgive Her? (22 page)

‘It doesn’t seem to make much difference how you put it down’ said Vavasor. The total is what I look at.’

‘Just so, Mr Vavasor; just so. The total is what I looks at too. And I has to look at it a deuced long time before I gets it. I ain’t a got it yet; have I, Mr Vavasor?’

‘Well; if you ask me
I should say you had’ said George. ‘I know I paid Mr Scruby three hundred pounds on your account’

‘And I got every shilling of it, Mr Vavasor. I’m not a going to deny the money, Mr Vavasor. You’ll never find me doing that I’m as round as your hat, and as square as your elbow, – I am. Mr Scruby knows me; don’t you, Mr Scruby?’

‘Perhaps I know you too well, Grimes.’

‘No you don’t, Mr Scruby;
not a bit too well. Nor I don’t know you too well, either. I respect you, Mr Scruby, because you’re a man as understands your business. But as I was saying, what’s three hundred pounds when a man’s bill is three hundred and ninety-two thirteen and fourpence?’

‘I thought that was all settled, Mr Scruby,’ said Vavasor.

‘Why you see, Mr Vavasor, it’s very hard to settle these things. If you ask
me whether Mr Grimes here can sue you for the balance, I tell you very plainly that he can’t. We were a little short of money when we came to a settlement, as is generally the case at such times, and so we took Mr Grimes’ receipt for three hundred pounds.’

‘Of course you did, Mr Scruby.’

‘Not on account, but in full of all demands.’

‘Now Mr Scruby!’ and the publican as he made this appeal looked
at the attorney with an expression of countenance which was absolutely eloquent. ‘Are you going to put me off with such an excuse as that?’ so the look spoke plainly enough. ‘Are you going to bring up my own signature against me, when you know very well that I shouldn’t have got a shilling at all for the next twelve months if I hadn’t given it? Oh Mr Scruby!’ That’s what Mr Grimes’ look said
and both Mr Scruby and Mr Vavasor understood it perfectly.

‘In full of all demands,’ said Mr Scruby, with a slight tone of triumph in his voice, as though to show that Grimes’ appeal had no effect at all upon his conscience. ‘If you were to go into a court of law, Grimes, you wouldn’t have a leg to stand upon.’

‘A court of law? Who’s a going to law with the governor, I should like to know? not
I; not if he didn’t pay me them ninety-two pounds thirteen and fourpence for the next five years.’

‘Five years or fifteen would make no difference,’ said Scruby. ‘You couldn’t do it.’

‘And I ain’t a going to try. That’s not the ticket I’ve come here about, Mr Vavasor, this blessed Sunday morning. Going to law, indeed! But Mr Scruby, I’ve got a family.’

‘Not in the vale of Taunton
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, I hope,’
said George.

‘They is at the “Handsome Man” in the Brompton Road, Mr Vavasor; and I always feels that I owes my first duty to them. If man don’t work for his family, what do he work for?’

‘Come, come, Grimes,’ said Mr Scruby. ‘What is it you’re at? Out with it, and don’t keep us here all day.’

‘What is it I’m at, Mr Scruby? As if you didn’t know very well what I’m at. There’s my house; – in
all them Chelsea districts it’s the most convenientest of any public as is open for all manner of election purposes. That’s given up to it.

‘And what next?’ said Scruby.

‘The next is, I myself. There isn’t one of the lot of ’em can work them Chelsea fellows down along the river unless it is me. Mr Scruby knows that. Why I’ve been a getting of them up with a view to this very job ever since;
– why ever since they was a talking of the Chelsea districts. When Lord Robert was a coming in for the county on the religious dodge, he couldn’t have worked them fellows anyhow, only for me. Mr Scruby knows that.’

‘Let’s take it all for granted, Mr Grimes,’ said Vavasor. ‘What comes next?’

‘Well; – them Bunratty people; it is they as has come next. They know which side their bread is likely
to be buttered; they do. They’re a bidding for the “Handsome Man” already; they are.’

‘And you’d let your house to the Tory party, Grimes!’ said Mr Scruby, in a tone in which disgust and anger were blended.

‘Who said anything of my letting my house to the Tory party, Mr Scruby? I’m as round as your hat, Mr Scruby, and as square as your elbow; I am. But suppose as all the liberal gents as employs
you, Mr Scruby, was to turn again you and not pay you your little bills, wouldn’t you have your eyes open for customers of another kind? Come now, Mr Scruby?’

‘You won’t make much of that game, Grimes.’

‘Perhaps not; perhaps not. There’s a risk in all these things; isn’t there, Mr Vavasor? I should like to see you a Parliament gent; I
should indeed. You’d be a credit to the districts; I really
think you would.’

‘I’m much obliged by your good opinion, Mr Grimes,’ said George.

‘When I sees a gent coming forward I knows whether he’s fit for Parliament or whether he ain’t. I says you are fit. But Lord love you, Mr Vavasor; it’s a thing a gentleman always has to pay for.’

‘That’s true enough; a deal more than it’s worth, generally.’

‘A thing’s worth what it fetches. I’m worth what I’ll
fetch; that’s the long and the short of it. I want to have my balance, that’s the truth. It’s the odd money in a man’s bill as always carries the profit. You ask Mr Scruby else; – only with a lawyer it’s all profit I believe.’

‘That’s what you know about it,’ said Scruby.

‘If you cut off a man’s odd money,’ continued the publican, ‘you break his heart. He’d almost sooner have that and leave
the other standing. He’d call the hundreds capital, and if he lost them at last, why he’d put it down as being in the way of trade. But the odd money; – he looks at that, Mr Vavasor, as in a manner the very sweat of his brow, the work of his own hand; that’s what goes to his family, and keeps the pot a boiling downstairs. Never stop a man’s odd money, Mr Vavasor; that is, unless he comes it very strong
indeed.’

‘And what is it you want now?’ said Scruby.

‘I wants ninety-two pounds thirteen and fourpence, Mr Scruby, and then we’ll go to work for the new fight with contented hearts. If we’re to begin at all, it’s quite time; it is indeed, Mr Vavasor.’

‘And what you mean us to understand is, that you won’t begin at all without, your money,’ said the lawyer.

‘That’s about it, Mr Scruby.’

‘Take
a fifty-pound note, Grimes’ said the lawyer.

‘Fifty-pound notes are not so ready,’ said George.

‘Oh, he’ll be only too happy to have your acceptance; won’t you, Grimes.’

‘Not for fifty pounds, Mr Scruby. It’s the odd money that I wants. I don’t mind the thirteen and four, because that’s neither
here nor there among friends, but if I didn’t get all them ninety-two pounds I should be a broken-hearted
man; I should indeed, Mr Vavasor. I couldn’t go about your work for next year so as to do you justice among the electors. I couldn’t indeed.’

‘You’d better give him a bill for ninety pounds at three months, Mr Vavasor. I have no doubt he has got a stamp in his pocket’

‘That I have, Mr Scruby; there ain’t no mistake about that. A bill stamp is a thing that often turns up convenient with gents
as mean business like Mr Vavasor and you. But you must make it ninety-two; you must indeed, Mr Vavasor. And do make it two months if you can, Mr Vavasor; they do charge so unconscionable on ninety days at them branch banks; they do indeed.’

George Vavasor and Mr Scruby, between them, yielded at last, so far as to allow the bill to be drawn for ninety-two pounds, but they were stanch as to the
time. ‘If it must be, it must,’ said the publican, with a deep sigh, as he folded up the paper and put it into the pocket of a huge case which he carried. ‘And now, gents, I’ll tell you what it is. We’ll make safe work of this here next election. We know what’s to be our little game in time, and if we don’t go in and win, my name ain’t Jacob Grimes, and I ain’t the landlord of the “Handsome Man”.
As you gents has perhaps got something to say among yourselves, I’ll make so bold as to wish you good morning.’ So, with that, Mr Grimes lifted his hat from the floor, and bowed himself out of the room.

‘You couldn’t have done it cheaper; you couldn’t, indeed,’ said the lawyer, as soon as the sound of the closing front door had been heard.

‘Perhaps not; but what a thief the man is! I remember
your telling me that the bill was about the most preposterous you had ever seen.’

‘So it was, and if we hadn’t wanted him again of course we shouldn’t have paid him. But we’ll have it all off his next account, Mr Vavasor, – every shilling of it. It’s only lent; that’s all; – it’s only lent.’

‘But one doesn’t want to lend such a man money, if one could help it.’

‘That’s true. If you look at
it in that light, it’s quite true. But you see we cannot do without him. If he hadn’t got your bill, he’d have gone over to the other fellows before the week was over; and the worst of it would have been that he knows our hand. Looking at it all round you’ve got him cheap, Mr Vavasor; – you have, indeed.’

‘Looking at it all round is just what I don’t like, Mr Scruby. But if a man will have a
whistle, he must pay for it.’

‘You can’t do it cheap for any of these metropolitan seats
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; you can’t, indeed, Mr Vavasor. That is, a new man can’t When you’ve been in four or five times, like old Duncombe, why then, of course, you may snap your fingers at such men as Grimes. But the Chelsea districts ain’t dear. I don’t call them by any means dear. Now Marylebone is dear, – and so is Southwark.
If s dear, and nasty; that’s what the borough is. Only that I never tell tales, I could tell you a tale, Mr Vavasor, that’d make your hair stand on end; I could indeed.’

‘Ah! the game is hardly worth the candle, I believe.’

‘That depends on what way you choose to look at it. A seat in Parliament is a great thing to a man who wants to make his way; – a very great thing; – specially when a man’s
young, like you, Mr Vavasor.’

‘Young!’ said George. ‘Sometimes it seems to me as though I’ve been living for a hundred years. But I won’t trouble you with that, Mr Scruby, and I believe I needn’t keep you any longer.’ With that he got up and bowed the attorney out of the room, with just a little more ceremony than he had shown to the publican.

‘Young!’ said Vavasor to himself, when he was left
alone. ‘There’s my uncle, or the old squire, – they’re both younger men than I am. One cares for his dinner, and the other for his bullocks and his trees. But what is there that I care for, unless it is not getting among the sheriff’s officers for debt?’ Then he took out a little memorandum-book from his breast-pocket, and having made in it an entry as to the amount and date of that bill which
he had just accepted on the publican’s behalf, he conned over the particulars of its pages. ‘Very blue; very blue, indeed,’ he said to
himself when he had completed the study. ‘But nobody shall say I hadn’t the courage to play the game out, and that old fellow must die some day, one supposes. If I were not a fool, I should make it up with him before he went; but I am a fool, and shall remain so
to the last.’ Soon after that he dressed himself slowly, reading a little every now and then as he did so. When his toilet was completed, and his Sunday newspapers sufficiently perused, he took up his hat and umbrella and sauntered out.

CHAPTER 14
Alice Vavasor becomes troubled

K
ATE
V
AVASOR
had sent to her brother only the first half of her cousin’s letter, that half in which Alice had attempted to describe what had taken place between her and Mr Grey. In doing this, Kate had been a wicked traitor, – a traitor to that feminine faith against which treason on the part of one woman is always unpardonable in the eyes of other women.
But her treason would have been of a deeper die had she sent the latter portion, for in that Alice had spoken of George Vavasor himself. But even of this treason, Kate would, I think, have been guilty, had the words which Alice wrote been of a nature to serve her own purpose if read by her brother. But they had not been of this nature. They had spoken of George as a man with whom any closer connection
than that which existed at present was impossible, and had been written with the view of begging Kate to desist from making futile attempts in that direction. ‘I feel myself driven,’ Alice had said, ‘to write all this, as otherwise, – if I were simply to tell you that I have resolved to part from Mr Grey, – you would think that the other thing might follow. The other thing cannot follow.
I should think myself untrue in my friendship to you if I did not tell you about Mr Grey; and you will be untrue in your friendship to me if you take advantage of my confidence by saying more about your brother.’ This part of Alice’s letter Kate had not sent to George Vavasor; – ‘But the other thing shall follow’ Kate had
said, as she read the words for the second time, and then put the papers
into her desk, ‘It shall follow,’

To give Kate Vavasor her due, she was, at any rate, unselfish in her intrigues. She was obstinately persistent and she was moreover unscrupulous, but she was not selfish. Many years ago she had made up her mind that George and Alice should be man and wife, feeling that such a marriage would be good at any rate for her brother. It had been almost brought about,
and had then been hindered altogether through a fault on her brother’s part. But she had forgiven him this sin as she had forgiven many others, and she was now at work in his behalf again, determined that they two should be married, even though neither of them might be now anxious that it should be so. The intrigue itself was dear to her, and success in it was necessary to her self-respect.

She answered Alice’s letter with a pleasant; gossiping epistle, which shall be recorded, as it will tell us something of Mrs Greenow’s proceedings at Yarmouth. Kate had promised to stay at Yarmouth for a month, but she had already been there six weeks, and was still under her aunt’s wing.

Yarmouth, October, 186–.

D
EAREST
A
LICE,

Of course! am delighted. It is no good saying that I am not. I know
how difficult it is to deal with you, and therefore I set down to answer your letter with fear and trembling, lest I should say a word too much, and thereby drive you back, or not say quite enough and thereby fail to encourage you on. Of course I am glad. I have long thought that Mr Grey could not make you happy, and as I have thought so, how can I not be glad? It is no use saying that he is good
and noble, and all that sort of thing. I have never denied it But be was not suited to you, and his life would have made you wretched. Ergo, I rejoice. And as you are the dearest friend I have, of course I rejoice mightily.

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