13. CHAPTER THE TWENTY-FIRST.
KIT turned away and very soon forgot the pony, and the chaise, and
the little old lady, and the little old gentleman, and the little
young gentleman to boot, in thinking what could have become of his
late master and his lovely grandchild, who were the fountain-head
of all his meditations. Still casting about for some plausible
means of accounting for their non-appearance, and of persuading
himself that they must soon return, he bent his steps
towards home, intending to finish the task which the sudden
recollection of his contract had interrupted, and then to sally
forth once more to seek his fortune for the day.
When he came to the corner of the court in which he lived, lo and
behold there was the pony again! Yes, there he was, looking more
obstinate than ever; and alone in the chaise, keeping a steady
watch upon his every wink, sat Mr. Abel, who, lifting up his eyes by
chance and seeing Kit pass by, nodded to him as though he would
have nodded his head off.
Kit wondered to see the pony again, so near his own home too, but
it never occurred to him for what purpose the pony might have come
there, or where the old lady and the old gentleman had gone, until
he lifted the latch of the door, and walking in, found them seated
in the room in conversation with his mother, at which unexpected
sight he pulled off his hat and made his best bow in some
confusion.
“We are here before you, you see, Christopher,” said Mr.
Garland smiling.
“Yes, sir,” said Kit; and as he said it, he looked
towards his mother for an explanation of the visit.
“The gentleman's been kind enough, my dear,” said she, in
reply to this mute interrogation, “to ask me whether you were in a good
place, or in any place at all, and when I told him no, you were not
in any, he was so good as to say that—”
“—That we wanted a good lad in our house,” said the old
gentleman and the old lady both together, “and that perhaps we
might think of it, if we found everything as we would wish it to be.”
As this thinking of it, plainly meant the thinking of engaging Kit,
he immediately partook of his mother's anxiety and fell into a
great flutter; for the little old couple were very methodical and
cautious, and asked so many questions that he began to be afraid
there was no chance of his success.
“You see, my good woman,” said Mrs. Garland to Kit's
mother, “that it's necessary to be very careful and particular in
such a matter as this, for we're only three in family, and are very
quiet regular folks, and it would be a sad thing if we made any kind of
mistake, and found things different from what we hoped and
expected.”
To this, Kit's mother replied, that certainly it was quite true,
and quite right, and quite proper, and Heaven forbid that she
should shrink, or have cause to shrink, from any inquiry into her
character or that of her son, who was a very good son though she
was his mother, in which respect, she was bold to say, he took
after his father, who was not only a good son to HIS mother, but
the best of husbands and the best of fathers besides, which Kit
could and would corroborate she knew, and so would little Jacob and
the baby likewise if they were old enough, which unfortunately they
were not, though as they didn't know what a loss they had had,
perhaps it was a great deal better that they should be as young as
they were; and so Kit's mother wound up a long story by wiping her
eyes with her apron, and patting little Jacob's head, who was
rocking the cradle and staring with all his might at the strange
lady and gentleman.
When Kit's mother had done speaking, the old lady struck in again,
and said that she was quite sure she was a very honest and very
respectable person or she never would have expressed herself in
that manner, and that certainly the appearance of the children and
the cleanliness of the house deserved great praise and did her the
utmost credit, whereat Kit's mother dropped a curtsey and became
consoled. Then the good woman entered in a long and minute account
of Kit's life and history from the earliest period down to that
time, not omitting to make mention of his miraculous fall out of a
back-parlour window when an infant of tender years, or his uncommon
sufferings in a state of measles, which were illustrated by correct
imitations of the plaintive manner in which he called for toast and
water, day and night, and said, “don't cry, mother, I shall soon be
better;” for proof of which statements reference was made to Mrs
Green, lodger, at the cheesemonger's round the corner, and divers
other ladies and gentlemen in various parts of England and Wales
(and one Mr. Brown who was supposed to be then a corporal in the
East Indies, and who could of course be found with very little
trouble), within whose personal knowledge the circumstances had
occurred. This narration
ended, Mr. Garland put some questions to
Kit respecting his qualifications and general acquirements, while
Mrs. Garland noticed the children, and hearing from Kit's mother
certain remarkable circumstances which had attended the birth of
each, related certain other remarkable circumstances which had
attended the birth of her own son, Mr. Abel, from which it appeared
that both Kit's mother and herself had been, above and beyond all
other women of what condition or age soever, peculiarly hemmed in
with perils and dangers. Lastly, inquiry was made into the nature
and extent of Kit's wardrobe, and a small advance being made to
improve the same, he was formally hired at an annual income of Six
Pounds, over and above his board and lodging, by Mr. and Mrs
Garland, of Abel Cottage, Finchley.
It would be difficult to say which party appeared most pleased with
this arrangement, the conclusion of which was hailed with nothing
but pleasant looks and cheerful smiles on both sides. It was
settled that Kit should repair to his new abode on the next day but
one, in the morning; and finally, the little old couple, after
bestowing a bright half-crown on little Jacob and another on the
baby, took their leaves; being escorted as far as the street by
their new attendant, who held the obdurate pony by the bridle while
they took their seats, and saw them drive away with a lightened
heart.
“Well, mother,” said Kit, hurrying back into the house,
“I think my fortune's about made now.”
“I should think it was indeed, Kit,” rejoined his mother.
“Six pound a year! Only think!”
“Ah!” said Kit, trying to maintain the gravity which the
consideration of such a sum demanded, but grinning with delight in
spite of himself. “There's a property!”
Kit drew a long breath when he had said this, and putting his hands
deep into his pockets as if there were one year's wages at least in
each, looked at his mother, as though he saw through her, and down
an immense perspective of sovereigns beyond.
“Please God we'll make such a lady of you for Sundays, mother! such
a scholar of Jacob, such a child of the baby, such a room of the
one up stairs! Six pound a year!”
“Hem!” croaked a strange voice. “What's that about
six pound a year? What about six pound a year?” And as the voice
made this inquiry, Daniel Quilp walked in with Richard Swiveller at his
heels.
“Who said he was to have six pound a year?” said Quilp,
looking sharply round. “Did the old man say it, or did little
Nell say it?d And what's he to have it for, and where are they,
eh!” The good woman was so much alarmed by the sudden apparition
of this unknown piece of ugliness, that she hastily caught the baby from
its cradle and retreated into the furthest corner of the room; while
little Jacob, sitting upon his stool with his hands on his knees, looked
full at him in a species of fascination, roaring lustily all the time.
Richard Swiveller took an easy observation of the family over Mr.
Quilp's head, and Quilp himself, with his hands in his pockets, smiled
in an exquisite enjoyment of the commotion he occasioned.
“Don't be frightened, mistress,” said Quilp, after a
pause. “Your son knows me; I don't eat babies; I don't like 'em.
It will be as well to stop that young screamer though, in case I should
be tempted to do him a mischief. Holloa, sir! Will you be
quiet?”
Little Jacob stemmed the course of two tears which he was squeezing
out of his eyes, and instantly subsided into a silent horror.
“Mind you don't break out again, you villain,” said
Quilp, looking sternly at him, “or I'll make faces at you and
throw you into fits, I will. Now you sir, why haven't you been to me as
you promised?”
“What should I come for?” retorted Kit. “I hadn't
any business with you, no more than you had with me.”
“Here, mistress,” said Quilp, turning quickly away, and
appealing from Kit to his mother. “When did his old master come
or send here last? Is he here now? If not, where's he gone?”
“He has not been here at all,” she replied. “I
wish we knew where they have gone, for it would make my son a good deal
easier in his mind, and me too. If you're the gentleman named Mr.
Quilp, I should have thought you'd have known, and so I told him only
this very day.”
“Humph!” muttered Quilp, evidently disappointed to
believe that this was true. “That's what you tell this gentleman
too, is it?”
“If the gentleman comes to ask the same question, I can't tell him
anything else, sir; and I only wish I could, for our own sakes,”
was the reply.
Quilp glanced at Richard Swiveller, and observed that having met
him on the threshold, he assumed that he had come in search of some
intelligence of the fugitives. He supposed he was right?
“Yes,” said Dick, “that was the object of the
present expedition. I fancied it possible—
but let us go ring fancy's knell. I'll begin it.”
“You seem disappointed,” observed Quilp.
“A baffler, Sir, a baffler, that's all,” returned Dick.
“I have entered upon a speculation which has proved a baffler; and
a Being of brightness and beauty will be offered up a sacrifice at
Cheggs's altar. That's all, sir.”
The dwarf eyed Richard with a sarcastic smile, but Richard, who had
been taking a rather strong lunch with a friend, observed him not,
and continued to deplore his fate with mournful and despondent
looks. Quilp plainly discerned that there was some secret reason
for this visit and his uncommon disappointment, and, in the hope
that there might be means of mischief lurking beneath it, resolved
to worm it out. He had no sooner adopted this resolution, than he
conveyed as much honesty into his face as it was capable of
expressing, and sympathised with Mr. Swiveller exceedingly.
“I am disappointed myself,” said Quilp, “out of
mere friendly feeling for them; but you have real reasons, privated
reasons I have no doubt, for your disappointment, and therefore it comes
heavier than mine.”
“Why, of course it does,” Dick observed, testily.
“Upon my word, I'm very sorry, very sorry. I'm rather cast down
myself. As we are companions in adversity, shall we be companions
in the surest way of forgetting it? If you had no particular
business, now, to lead you in another direction,” urged Quilp,
plucking him by the sleeve and looking slyly up into his face out
of the corners of his eyes, “there is a house by the water-side
where they have some of the noblest Schiedam—reputed to be
smuggled, but that's between ourselves—that can be got in all the
world. The landlord knows me. There's a little summer-house
overlooking the river, where we might take a glass of this
delicious liquor with a whiff of the best tobacco—it's in this
case, and of the rarest quality, to my certain knowledge—and be
perfectly snug and happy, could we possibly contrive it; or is
there any very particular engagement that peremptorily takes you
another way, Mr. Swiveller, eh?”
As the dwarf spoke, Dick's face relaxed into a compliant smile, and
his brows slowly unbent. By the time he had finished, Dick was
looking down at Quilp in the same sly manner as Quilp was looking
up at him, and there remained nothing more to be done but to set
out for the house in question. This they did, straightway. The
moment their backs were turned, little Jacob thawed, and resumed
his crying from the point where Quilp had frozen him.
The summer-house of which Mr. Quilp had spoken was a rugged wooden
box, rotten and bare to see, which overhung the river's mud, and
threatened to slide down into it. The tavern to which it belonged
was a crazy building, sapped and undermined by the rats, and only
upheld by great bars of wood which were reared against its walls,
and had propped it up so long that even they were decaying and
yielding with their load, and of a windy night might be heard to
creak and crack as if the whole fabric were about to come toppling
down. The house stood—if anything so old and feeble could be said
to stand—on a piece of waste ground, blighted with the unwholesome
smoke of factory chimneys, and echoing the clank of iron wheels and
rush of troubled water. Its internal accommodations amply fulfilled
the promise of the outside. The rooms were low and damp, the clammy
walls were pierced with chinks and holes, the rotten floors had sunk
from their level, the very beams started from their places and warned
the timid stranger from their neighbourhood.
To this inviting spot, entreating him to observe its beauties as
they passed along, Mr. Quilp led Richard Swiveller, and on the table
of the summer-house, scored deep with many a gallows and initial
letter, there soon appeared a wooden keg, full of the vaunted
liquor. Drawing it off into the glasses with the skill of a
practised hand, and mixing it with about a third part of water, Mr
Quilp assigned to Richard Swiveller his portion, and lighting his
pipe from an end of a candle in a very old and battered lantern,
drew himself together upon a seat and puffed away.
“Is it good?” said Quilp, as Richard Swiveller smacked
his lips, “is it strong and fiery? Does it make you wink, and
choke, and your eyes water, and your breath come short—does it?”
“Does it?” cried Dick, throwing away part of the contents
of his glass, and filling it up with water, “why, man, you don't
mean to tell me that you drink such fire as this?”
“No!” rejoined Quilp, “Not drink it! Look here. And here. And here
again. Not drink it!”
As he spoke, Daniel Quilp drew off and drank three small glassfuls
of the raw spirit, and then with a horrible grimace took a great
many pulls at his pipe, and swallowing the smoke, discharged it in
a heavy cloud from his nose. This feat accomplished he drew himself
together in
his former position, and laughed excessively.
“Give us a toast!” cried Quilp, rattling on the table in a
dexterous manner with his fist and elbow alternately, in a kind of
tune, “a woman, a beauty. Let's have a beauty for our toast and
empty our glasses to the last drop. Her name, come!”
“If you want a name,” said Dick, “here's Sophy
Wackles.”
“Sophy Wackles,” screamed the dwarf, “Miss Sophy
Wackles that is—Mrs. Richard Swiveller that shall be—that shall be—ha
ha ha!”
“Ah!” said Dick, “you might have said that a few
weeks ago, but it won't do now, my buck. Immolating herself upon the
shrine of Cheggs—”
“Poison Cheggs, cut Cheggs's ears off,” rejoined Quilp.
“I won't hear of Cheggs. Her name is Swiveller or nothing. I'll
drink her health again, and her father's, and her mother's; and to all
her sisters and brothers—the glorious family of the Wackleses—all the
Wackleses in one glass—down with it to the dregs!”
“Well,” said Richard Swiveller, stopping short in the act of
raising the glass to his lips and looking at the dwarf in a species
of stupor as he flourished his arms and legs about: “you're a jolly
fellow, but of all the jolly fellows I ever saw or heard of, you
have the queerest and most extraordinary way with you, upon my life
you have.”
This candid declaration tended rather to increase than restrain Mr
Quilp's eccentricities, and Richard Swiveller, astonished to see
him in such a roystering vein, and drinking not a little himself,
for company—began imperceptibly to become more companionable and
confiding, so that, being judiciously led on by Mr. Quilp, he grew
at last very confiding indeed. Having once got him into this mood,
and knowing now the key-note to strike whenever he was at a loss,
Daniel Quilp's task was comparatively an easy one, and he was
soon in possession of the whole details of the scheme contrived
between the easy Dick and his more designing friend.
“Stop!” said Quilp. “That's the thing, that's the
thing. It can be brought about, it shall be brought about. There's my
hand upon it; I am your friend from this minute.”
“What! do you think there's still a chance?” inquired
Dick, in surprise at this encouragement.
“A chance!” echoed the dwarf, “a certainty! Sophy
Wackles may become a Cheggs or anything else she likes, but not a
Swiveller. Oh you lucky dog! He's richer than any Jew alive; you're a
made man. I see in you now nothing but Nelly's husband, rolling in gold
and silver. I'll help you. It shall be done. Mind my words, it shall
be done.”
“But how?” said Dick.
“There's plenty of time,” rejoined the dwarf, “and
it shall be done. We'll sit down and talk it over again all the way
through. Fill your glass while I'm gone. I shall be back directly—
directly.” With these hasty words, Daniel Quilp withdrew into a
dismantled skittle-ground behind the public-house, and, throwing himself
upon the ground actually screamed and rolled about in uncontrollable
delight.
“Here's sport!” he cried, “sport ready to my hand,
all invented and arranged, and only to be enjoyed. It was this
shallow-pated fellow who made my bones ache t'other day, was it? It was
his friend and fellow-plotter, Mr. Trent, that once made eyes at Mrs.
Quilp, and leered and looked, was it? After labouring for two or three
years in their precious scheme, to find that they've got a beggar at
last, and one of them tied for life. Ha ha ha! He shall marry Nell. He
shall have her, and I'll be the first man, when the knot's tied hard and
fast, to tell 'em what they've gained and what I've helped 'em to. Here
will be a clearing of old scores, here will be a time to remind 'em what
a capital friend I was, and how I helped them to the heiress. Ha ha
ha!”
In the height of his ecstasy, Mr. Quilp had like to have met with a
disagreeable check, for rolling very near a broken dog-kennel,
there leapt forth a large fierce dog, who, but that his chain was
of the shortest, would have given him a disagreeable salute. As it
was, the dwarf remained upon his back in perfect safety, taunting
the dog with hideous faces, and triumphing over him in his
inability to advance another inch, though there were not a couple
of feet between them.
“Why don't you come and bite me, why don't you come and tear me to
pieces, you coward?” said Quilp, hissing and worrying the animal
till he was nearly mad. “You're afraid, you bully, you're afraid,
you know you are.”
The dog tore and strained at his chain with starting eyes and
furious bark, but there the dwarf lay, snapping his fingers with
gestures of defiance and contempt. When he had sufficiently
recovered from his delight, he rose, and with his arms a-kimbo,
achieved a kind of demon-dance round the kennel, just without
the limits of the chain, driving the dog quite wild. Having by this
means composed his spirits
and put himself in a pleasant train, he
returned to his unsuspicious companion, whom he found looking at
the tide with exceeding gravity, and thinking of that same gold and
silver which Mr. Quilp had mentioned.