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"I can give you a list if you like," said Reginald.
"I daresay you know by name the Bishop of S--, our chairman?"
"To be sure, and--dear me, what a very good list of names! Thank you, if I may take one of these, I should like to show it to my friends.
Well, then, I will call on Mr Smith in London, and meanwhile I am very much obliged to you, Mr Reginald, for your courtesy. Very glad to have made your acquaintance. Good afternoon."
And he shook hands cordially with the secretary, and departed, leaving Reginald considerably soothed in spirit, as he reflected that he had really done a stroke of work for the Corporation that day on his own account.
It was well for his peace of mind that he did not know that the clergyman, on turning the corner of Shy Street, rubbed his hands merrily together, and said to himself, in tones of self-satisfaction,--
"Well, if that wasn't the neatest bit of work I've done since I came on the beat. The innocent! He'd sit up, I guess, if he knew the nice pleasant-spoken parson he's been blabbing to was Sniff of the detective office. My eye--it's all so easy, there's not much credit about the business after all. But it's pounds, s.h.i.+llings and pence to Sniff, and that's better!"
CHAPTER SEVENTEEN.
SAMUEL SHUCKLEFORD FINDS HIMSELF BUSY.
"Jemima, my dear," said Mrs Shuckleford one day, as the little family in Number 4, Dull Street, sat round their evening meal, "I don't like the looks of Mrs Cruden. It's my opinion she don't get enough to eat."
"Really, ma, how you talk!" replied the daughter. "The butcher's boy left there this very afternoon. I saw him."
"I'm afraid, my dear, he didn't leave anything more filling than a bill.
In fact, I 'eard myself that the butcher told Mrs Marks he thought Number 6 'ad gone far enough for 'im."
"Oh, ma! you don't mean to say they're in debt?" said Jemima, who, by the way, had been somewhat more pensive and addicted to sitting by herself since Reginald had gone north.
"Well, if it was only the butcher I heard it from I wouldn't take much account of it, but Parker the baker 'as 'is doubts of them; so I 'eard the Grinsons' maid tell Ford when I was in 'is shop this very day. And I'm sure you've only to look at 'Orace's coat and 'at to see they must be in debt: the poor boy looks a reg'lar scarecrow. It all comes, my dear, of Reginald's going off and leaving them. Oh, 'ow I pity them that 'as a wild son."
"Don't talk nonsense, ma," said Miss Jemima, firing up. "He's no more wild than Sam here."
"You seem to know more about Reginald than most people, my dear," said her mother significantly.
To the surprise of the mother and brother, Jemima replied to this insinuation by bursting into tears and walking out of the room.
"Did you ever see the like of that? She always takes on if any one mentions that boy's name; and she's old enough to be his aunt, too!"
"The sooner she cures herself of that craze the better," said Sam, pouring himself out some more tea. "She don't know quite so much about him as I do!"
"Why, what do you know about 'im, then?" inquired Mrs Shuckleford, in tones of curiosity.
"Never you mind; we don't talk business out of the office. All I can tell you is, he's a bad lot."
"Poor Mrs Cruden! no wonder she takes on. What an infliction a wicked son is to a mother, Sam!"
"That'll do," said the dutiful Sam. "What do you know about it? I tell you what, ma, you're thick enough with Number 6. You'd better draw off a bit."
"Oh, Sam, why so?"
"Because I give you the tip, that's all. The old lady may not be in it, but I don't fancy the connection."
"But, Sam, she's starving herself, and 'Orace is in rags."
"Send her in a rump-steak and a suit of my old togs by the housemaid,"
said Sam; "or else do as you like, and don't blame me if you're sorry for it."
Mrs Shuckleford knew it was no use trying to extract any more lucid information from her legal offspring, and did not try, but she made another effort to soften his heart with regard to the Widow Cruden and her son.
"After all they're gentlefolk in trouble, as we might be," said she, "and they do behave very nice at the short-'and cla.s.s to Jemima."
"Gentlefolk or not," said Sam decisively, spreading a slice of toast with jam, "I tell you you'd better draw off, ma--and Jim must chuck up the cla.s.s. I'm not going to have her mixing with them."
"But the child's 'eart would break, Sam, if--"
"Let it break. She cares no more about shorthand than she does about county courts. It's all part of her craze to tack herself on that lot.
She's setting her cap at _him_ while she's making up to his ma; any flat might see that; but she's got to jack up the whole boiling now--there.
We needn't say any more about it."
And, having finished his tea, Mr Samuel Shuckleford went down to his "club" to take part in a debate on "Cruelty to Animals."
Now the worthy captain's widow, Mrs Shuckleford, had lived long enough in this world to find that human nature is a more powerful law even than parental obedience; she therefore took to heart just so much of her son's discourse as fitted with the one, and overlooked just so much as exacted the latter. In other words, she was ready to believe that Reginald Cruden was a "bad lot," but she was not able to bring herself on that account to desert her neighbour at the time of her trouble.
Accordingly that same evening, while Samuel was pleading eloquently on behalf of our dumb fellow-creatures, and Jemima, having recovered from her tears, was sitting abstractedly over a shorthand exercise in her own bedroom, Mrs Shuckleford took upon herself to pay a friendly call at Number 6.
It happened to be one of Horace's late evenings, so that Mrs Cruden was alone. She was lying wearily on the uncomfortable sofa, with her eyes shaded from the light, dividing her time between knitting and musing, the latter occupation receiving a very decided preference.
"Pray don't get up," said Mrs Shuckleford, the moment she entered. "I only looked in to see 'ow you was. You're looking bad, Mrs Cruden."
"Thank you, I am quite well," said Mrs Cruden, "only a little tired."
"And down in your spirits, too; and well you may be, poor dear," said the visitor soothingly.
"No, Mrs Shuckleford," said Mrs Cruden brightly. "Indeed, I ought not to be in bad spirits to-day. We've had quite a little family triumph to-day. Horace has had an article published in the _Rocket_, and we are so proud."
"Ah, yes; he's the steady one," said Mrs Shuckleford. "There's no rolling stone about 'Orace."
"No," said the mother warmly.
"If they was only both alike," said the visitor, approaching her subject delicately.
"Ah! but it often happens two brothers may be very different in temper and mind. It's not always a misfortune."
"Certainly not, Mrs Cruden; but when one's good and the other's wicked--"
"Oh, then, of course, it is very sad," said Mrs Cruden.
"Sad's no name for it," replied the visitor, with emotion. "Oh, Mrs Cruden, 'ow sorry I am for you."