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In about twenty minutes Leah and the steak appeared. I could not help looking at her as she placed the tray on the table and settled the dishes. Thin, haggard, untidy, Leah presented a strange contrast to the trim, well-dressed upper servant I had known at White Littleham Rectory. It was Watts who generally waited upon me. When Leah knew beforehand that she would have to wait, she put herself straight.
Today she had not known. My proper sitting-room upstairs was not much used in winter. This one was warm and comfortable, with the large fire kept in it all day, so I generally remained in it. I was not troubled with clients after office hours.
"I wonder you go such a figure, Leah!" I could not help saying so.
"It is cleaning-day, Mr. Charles. And I did not know I should have to come up here. Watts has just gone out."
"It is a strange thing to me that you cannot get a woman in to help you. I have said so before."
"Ah, sir, n.o.body knows where the shoe pinches but he who wears it."
With this remark, unintelligible as apropos to the question, and a deep sigh, Leah withdrew. I had finished dinner, and the tray was taken away before Mr. Brightman returned.
"Now I hope Sir Edmund will be punctual," he cried, as we sat together, talking over a gla.s.s of sherry. "It is half-past six: time he was here."
"And there he is!" I exclaimed, as a ring and a knock that shook the house resounded in our ears. After five o'clock the front door was always closed.
Watts being out, we heard Leah answer the door in her charming costume. But clients pay little attention to the attire of laundresses in chambers.
"Good heavens! Can Sir Edmund have taken too much!" uttered Mr.
Brightman, halting as he was about to enter the other room to receive him. Loud sounds in a man's voice arose from the pa.s.sage; singing, laughing, joking with Leah. "Open the door, Charles."
I had already opened it, and saw, not Sir Edmund Clavering, but the young country client, George Coney, the son of a substantial and respectable yeoman in Gloucesters.h.i.+re. He appeared to be in exalted spirits, and had a little exceeded, but was very far from being intoxicated.
"What, is Mr. Brightman here? I only expected to see you," cried he, shaking hands with both. "Look here!" holding out a small canvas bag, and rattling it. "What does that sound like?"
"It sounds like gold," said Mr. Brightman.
"Right, Mr. Brightman; thirty golden sovereigns: and I am as delighted with them as if they were thirty hundred," said he, opening the bag and displaying its contents. "Last week I got swindled out of a horse down at home. Thirty pounds I sold him for, and he and the purchaser disappeared and forgot to pay. My father went on at me, like our old mill clacking; not so much for the loss of the thirty pounds, as at my being done: and all the farmers round about clacked at me, like so many more mills. Pleasant, that, for a fellow, was it not?"
"Very," said Mr. Brightman, while I laughed.
"I did not care to stand it," went on George Coney. "I obtained a bit of a clue, and the day before yesterday I came up to London--and I have met with luck. This afternoon I dropped across the very chap, where I had waited for him since the morning. He was going into a public-house, and another with him, and I pinned them in the room, with a policeman outside, and he pretty soon sh.e.l.led out the thirty pounds, rather than be taken. That's luck, I hope." He opened the bag as he spoke, and displayed the gold.
"Remarkable luck, to get the money," observed Mr. Brightman.
"I expect they had been in luck themselves," continued young Coney, "for they had more gold with them, and several notes. They were for paying me in notes, but 'No, thank ye,' said I, 'I know good gold when I see it, and I'll take it in that.'"
"I am glad you have been so fortunate," said Mr. Brightman. "When do you return home?"
"I did mean to go to-night, and I called to leave with you this small deed that my father said I might as well bring up with me, as I was coming"--producing a thin folded parchment from his capacious pocketbook. "But I began thinking, as I came along, that I might as well have a bit of a spree now I am here, and go down by Monday night's train," added the young man, tying up the bag again, and slipping it into his pocket. "I shall go to a theatre to-night."
"Not with that bag of gold about you?" said Mr. Brightman.
"Why not?"
"Why not? Because you would have no trace of it left to-morrow morning."
George Coney laughed good-humouredly. "I can take care of myself, sir."
"Perhaps so; but you can't take care of the gold. Come, hand it over to me. Your father will thank me for being determined, and you also, Mr. George, when you have cooled down from the seductions of London."
"I may want to spend some of it," returned George Coney. "Let's see how much I have," cried he, turning the loose money out of his pockets. "Four pounds, seven s.h.i.+llings, and a few halfpence," he concluded, counting it up.
"A great deal too much to squander or lose in one night," remarked Mr.
Brightman. "Here," added he, unlocking a deep drawer in his desk, "put your bag in here, and come for it on Monday."
George Coney drew the bag from his pocket, but not without a few remonstrative shakes of the head, and put it in the drawer. Mr.
Brightman locked it, and restored the bunch of keys to his pocket.
"You are worse than my father is," cried George Coney, half in jest, half vexed at having yielded. "I wouldn't be as close and stingy for anything."
"In telling this story twenty years hence, Mr. George, you will say, What a simpleton I should have made of myself, if that cautious old lawyer Brightman had not been close and stingy!"
George Coney winked at me and laughed. "Perhaps he's right, after all."
"I know I am," said Mr. Brightman. "Will you take a gla.s.s of sherry?"
"Well; no, I think I had better not. I have had almost enough already, and I want to carry clear eyes with me to the play. What time does it begin?"
"About seven, I think; but I am not a theatre-goer myself. Strange can tell you."
"Then I shall be off," said he, shaking hands with us, as only a hearty country yeoman knows how to.
He had scarcely gone when Sir Edmund Clavering's knock was heard. Mr.
Brightman went with him into the front room, and I sat reading the _Times_. Leah, by the way, had made herself presentable, and looked tidy enough in a clean white cap and ap.r.o.n.
Sir Edmund did not stay long: he left about seven. I heard Mr.
Brightman go back after showing him out, and rake the fire out of the grate--he was always timidly cautious about fire--and then he returned to my room.
"No wonder Sir Edmund wanted to see me," cried he. "There's the deuce of a piece of work down at his place. His cousin wants to dispute the will and to turn him out. They have been serving notices on the tenants not to pay the rent."
"What a curious woman she must be!"
Mr. Brightman smiled slightly, but made no answer.
"He did not stay long, sir."
"No, he is going out to dinner."
As Mr. Brightman spoke, he turned up the gas, drew his chair to the desk and sat down, his back then being towards the fire. "I must look over these letters and copies of notices which Sir Edmund brought with him, and has left with me," he remarked. "I don't care to go home directly."
The next minute he was absorbed in the papers. I put down the _Times_, and rose. "You do not want me, I suppose, Mr. Brightman," I said. "I promised Arthur Lake to go to his chambers for an hour."
"I don't want you, Charles. Mind you are not late in coming down to me to-morrow morning."
So I wished him good-night and departed. Arthur Lake, a full-fledged barrister now of the Middle Temple, rented a couple of rooms in one of the courts. His papers were in one room, his bed in the other. He was a steady fellow, as he always had been, working hard and likely to get on. We pa.s.sed many of our evenings together over a quiet chat and a cigar, I going round to him, or he coming in to me. He had grown up a little, dandified sort of man, good-humouredly insolent as ever when the fit took him: but sterling at heart.
Lake was sitting at the fire waiting for me, and began to grumble at my being late. I mentioned what had hindered me.