Happy Pollyooly - BestLightNovel.com
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He frowned for the next hundred yards, or so; then he said irritably:
"I can't see why on earth you want to go in for this dancing and all this stage business at all."
"Oh, but if you can dance--really dance, they pay you ever so well,"
cried Pollyooly.
"I tell you what it is: you're a jolly sight too keen on money--for a child of your age--it's--it's mercenary--yes: mercenary," said the duke severely.
Pollyooly flushed, and looked at him with her eyes bright either with tears, or a sparkle of anger.
"But I _have_ to get money," she said with some heat. "When Mr.
Ruffin's creditors hale him away to the deepest dungeon in Holloway (he's said they will lots of times) you don't suppose I'm going to let the Lump go to the workhouse! And where should I get another place like Mr. Ruffin's? I should only have Mr. Gedge-Tomkins."
"Oh, well--of course--if it's like that," said the duke in a tone of awkward apology.
Pollyooly said nothing for a while; she walked on with knitted brow.
Then she said:
"And anyhow when the Lump gets bigger, I shall want a lot of money.
There'll be his clothes, and his schooling. I don't want him to go to a board school--not in London. Such children go there--Aunt Hannah said so, and so does Mrs. Brown. But there must be schools where they wouldn't charge very much."
"Oh--ah--of course, you'll want money for that," said the duke heavily.
Pollyooly gave a little skip as of one removing an unpleasant matter from her mind, and said cheerfully:
"And anyhow I should have to go on the stage. Ronald and I couldn't get married if I didn't."
"I keep telling you that he's going to marry Marion," said the duke very firmly indeed.
His insistence on this fact did not seem to impair Pollyooly's cheerful serenity, for after a thoughtful pause she skipped again and said:
"Oh, well: if I'm actually on the stage, I expect it would be all right. There must be other heirs of peers."
The duke looked down on her and said bitterly:
"I'm hanged if _I_ know what the world's coming to!"
CHAPTER XXII
THE DUKE WINS
Pollyooly had been at Ricksborough Court rather more than a month when the Honourable John Ruffin arrived, uninvited and without notice, on the Friday evening. He found the duke in the garden with the three children.
"The kicking has begun," he said to the duke briefly, by way of explanation.
The duke seemed taken aback by the suddenness of the news, but soon he recovered and showed himself in very good spirits.
That night after dinner, after Pollyooly and Ronald had been dismissed from dessert to bed, the Honourable John Ruffin said:
"I got a letter from Caroline, pitching into me like one o'clock for being a party to a disgraceful plot to rob Marion of her name and birthright."
"Where is it?" said the duke quickly.
"I didn't bring it with me. The home-truths about me on it were nothing to the home-truths about you. It would sear your soul to read them," said the Honourable John Ruffin in a very grave voice.
"Would it?" said the duke.
"It would. But I thought I would come down, in case she made a descent and you wanted some one to stand by and stiffen you."
"Do you know, I don't think I do," said the duke. "I really believe I can stick it out on my own."
"Good," said the Honourable John Ruffin.
"All the same I'm glad you came. If we get beyond having a tremendous row, we shall very likely want some one to arrange things for us," said the duke.
"I shouldn't think a tremendous row was quite your game," said the Honourable John Ruffin thoughtfully.
"Oh, _I'm_ not going to row. But you know what Caroline is: she can have all the row there is to have, without any help from any one," said the duke. "I'm just going to sit tight as wax and let her wear herself out, if she does start rowing."
"That is undoubtedly the course for a man of sense to pursue," said the Honourable John Ruffin in a tone of approval.
The duke was on tenterhooks the next day, for though he was braced for the struggle with the d.u.c.h.ess, he found the uncertainty when that struggle would begin trying. Then he was taking his afternoon tea with the Honourable John Ruffin on the cedar lawn; Ronald and Pollyooly mindful of the cakes, had sociably joined them; and they were laughing at a story the Honourable John Ruffin was telling them, when he stopped short, staring at the entrance to the lawn. They turned to see the d.u.c.h.ess standing in it, and surveying them with the eyes of an avenging angel.
[Ill.u.s.tration: They turned to see the d.u.c.h.ess]
They all rose; and the Honourable John Ruffin said calmly:
"How are you, Caroline? I suppose you motored down. Charming weather for motoring."
"Very," said the d.u.c.h.ess in a terrible voice. "And a charming gathering I find at the end of it."
"Yes; sit down and have some tea. You must be thirsty," said the Honourable John Ruffin.
"How are you, Caroline? Sit down and have some tea," said the duke, seizing on the opening, in rather uncertain tones.
"Tea!" said the d.u.c.h.ess, in a yet more terrible voice.
"And bread and b.u.t.ter," said the duke hastily.
"Do you think I came here to drink _tea_?" said the d.u.c.h.ess in the tone of one who had come to drink blood.
"A lemon squash then," said the duke hastily.
"I haven't come here to drink tea, or lemon squashes," said the d.u.c.h.ess. "I've come to learn what this means--to put an end to this ridiculous farce?"
"Eh? What? What farce?" said the duke.