Reginald Cruden by Talbot Baines Reed (8 ebook reader .txt) đ
- Author: Talbot Baines Reed
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Neither Mrs Cruden nor her sons had been able to endure a dayâs delay at Garden Vale after the funeral, but had hurried for shelter to quiet lodgings at the seaside, kept by an old servant, where in an agony of suspense they awaited the final result of Mr Richmondâs investigations.
It came at last, and, bad as it was, it was a comfort to know the worst. The furniture, carriages, and other contents of Garden Vale had sufficed to pay all debts of every description, with a balance of about ÂŁ350 remaining over and above, to represent the entire worldly possessions of the Cruden family, which only a month ago had ranked with the wealthiest in the county.
âSo,â said Mrs Cruden, with a shadow of her old smile, as she folded up the lawyerâs letter and put it back in her pocket, âwe know the worst at last, boys.â
âWhich is,â said Reginald, bitterly, âwe are worth among us the magnificent sum of sixteen pounds per annum. Quite princely!â
âReg, dear,â said his mother, âlet us be thankful that we have anything, and still more that we may start life owing nothing to any one.â
âStart life!â exclaimed Reginald; âI wish we could end it withââ
âOh, hush, hush, my precious boy!â exclaimed the widow; âyou will break my heart if you talk like that! Think how many there are to whom this little sum would seem a fortune. Why, it may keep a roof over our heads, at any rate, or help you into situations.â
âOr bury us!â groaned Reginald.
The mother looked at her eldest son, half in pity, half in reproach, and then burst into tears.
Reginald sprang to her side in an instant.
âWhat a beast I am!â he exclaimed. âOh, mother, do forgive me! I really didnât think what I was saying.â
âNo, dear Reggie, I know you didnât,â said Mrs Cruden, recovering herself with a desperate effort. âYou mustnât mind me, IâI scarcelyâknowâIââ
It was no use trying. The poor mother broke down completely, and on that evening it was impossible to talk more about the future.
Next morning, however, all three were in a calmer mood, and Horace said at breakfast, âWe canât do any good here, mother. Hadnât we better go to London?â
âI think so; and Parker here knows of a small furnished lodging in Dull Street, which she says is cheap. We might try there to begin with. Eh, Reg?â
Reginald winced, and then replied, âOh, certainly; the sooner we get down to our right level the better.â
That evening the three Crudens arrived in London.
Probably no London street ever rejoiced in a more expressive name than Dull Street. It was not a specially dirty street, or a specially disreputable street, or a specially dark street. The neighbourhood might a hundred years ago have been considered âgenteel,â and the houses even fashionable, and some audacious antiquarians went so far as to assert that the street took its name not from its general appearance at all, but from a worthy London alderman, who in the reign of George the First had owned most of the neighbouring property.
Be that as it may, Dull Street wasâand for all I know may still beâone of the dullest streets in London. A universal seediness pervaded its houses from roof to cellar; nothing was as it should be anywhere. The window sashes had to be made air-tight by wedges of wood or paper stuck into the frames; a bell in Dull Street rarely sounded after less than six pulls; there was scarcely a sitting-room but had a crack in its grimy ceiling, or a handle off its ill-hung door, or a strip of wall-paper peeling off its walls. There were more chairs in the furnished apartments of Dull Street with three legs than there were with four, and there was scarcely horsehair enough in the twenty-four sofas of its twenty-four parlours to suffice for an equal quantity of bolsters.
In short, Dull Street was the shabbiest genteel street in the metropolis, and nothing could make it otherwise.
A well-built, tastefully-furnished house in the middle of it would have been as incongruous as a new patch in an old garment, and no one dreamt of disturbing the traditional aspect of the place by any attempt to repair or beautify it.
Indeed, the people who lived in Dull Street were as much a part of its dulness as the houses they inhabited. They were for the most part retired tradesmen, or decayed milliners, or broken-down Government clerks, most of whom tried to eke out their little pensions by letting part of their lodgings to others as decayed and broken-down as themselves.
These interesting colonists, whose one bond of sympathy was a mutual seediness, amused themselves, for the most part, by doing nothing all day long, except perhaps staring out of the window, in the remote hope of catching sight of a distant cab passing the street corner, or watching to see how much milk their opposite neighbour took in, or reading the news of the week before last in a borrowed newspaper, or talking scandal of one neighbour to another.
âJemima, my dear,â said a middle-aged lady, who, with her son and daughter, was the proud occupant of Number 4, Dull StreetââJemima, my dear, I see to-day the bill is hout of the winder of number six.â
âNever!â replied Jemima, a sharp-looking young woman of twenty, who had once in her life spent a month at a ladiesâ boarding-school, and was therefore decidedly genteel. âI wonder whoâs coming.â
âA party of three, so I hear from Miss Mouldenâs maid, which is niece to Mrs Grimley: a widow,ââhere the speaker snuffled slightlyââand two childerâlike me.â
âGo on!â said Jemima. âAny more about them, ma?â
âWell, my dear, I do hear as they âave come down a bit.â
âOh, ah! lag!â put in the speakerâs son, a lawyerâs clerk in the receipt of two pounds a week, to whom this intelligence appeared particularly amusing; âwe know all about thatânever heard that sort of tale before, have we, ma? Oh no!â and the speaker emphasised the question by giving his widowed mother a smart dig in the ribs.
âFor shame, Sam! donât be vulgar!â cried the worthy lady; âhow many times have I told you?â
âAll right, ma,â replied the legal young gentleman; âbut it is rather a wonner, you know. What were they before they came down?â
âGentlefolk, so Iâm told,â replied the lady, drawing herself up at the very mention of the name; âand I hintend, and I âope my children will do the same, to treat them as fellow-creatures with hevery consideration.â
âAnd how old is the babies, ma?â inquired Miss Jemima, whose gentility sometimes had the advantage of her grammar.
âThe babies!â said the mother; âwhy, theyâre young gentlemen, both of âemâold enough to be your sweethearts!â
Sam laughed profusely.
âThen what did you say they was babies for?â demanded Jemima, pettishly.
âI never!â
âYou did, ma, I heard you! Didnât she, Sam?â
âSo you did, ma. Come now, no crackers!â said Sam.
âI never; I said âchilder,ââ pleaded the mother.
âAnd ainât babies childer?â thundered Miss Jemima.
ââAd âer there, Jim!â chuckled the dutiful Samuel, this time favouring his sister with a sympathetic nudge. âBetter give in, and own you told a cracker, ma!â
âShanât!â said the lady, beginning to whimper. âOh, I wish my poor âOward was here to protect me! He was a gentleman, and Iâm glad he didnât live to see what a pair of vulgar brats heâd left behind him, that I am!â
âThere you go!â said Sam; âtaking on at nothing, as per usual! No one was saying anything to hurt you, old girl. Simmer down, and youâll be all the better for it. There now, dry your eyes; itâs all that Jim, sheâs got such a tongue! Next time I catch you using language to ma, Jim, Iâll turn you out of the house! Come, cheer up, ma.â
âYes, cheer up, ma,â chimed in Jemima; âno one supposes you meant to tell fibs; you couldnât help it.â
Amid consolations such as these the poor flurried lady subsided, and regained her former tranquillity of spirit.
The Shucklefordsâsuch was the name of this amiable familyâwere comparatively recent sojourners in Dull Street. They had come there six years previously, on the death of Mr Shuckleford, a respectable wharfinger, who had saved up money enough to leave his wife a small annuity. Shortly before his death he had been promoted to the command of one of the Thames steamboats plying between Chelsea and London Bridge, in virtue of which office he had taken to himselfâor rather his wife had claimed for himâthe title of âcaptain,â and with this patent of gentility had held up her head ever since. Her children, following her good example, were not slow to hold up their heads too, and were fully convinced of their own gentility. Samuel Shuckleford had, as his mother termed it, been âentered for the lawâ shortly after his fatherâs death, and Miss Jemima Shuckleford, after the monthâs sojourn at a ladiesâ boarding-school already referred to, had settled down to assist her mother in the housework and maintain the dignity of the family by living on her income.
Such were the new next-door neighbours of the Crudens when at last they arrived, sadly, and with the new world before them, at Number 6, Dull Street.
Mr Richmond, who, with all his unfortunate manner, had acted a friendâs part all along, had undertaken the task of clearing up affairs at Garden Vale, superintending the payment of Mr Crudenâs debts, the sale of his furniture, and the removal to Dull Street of what little remained to the family to remind them of their former comforts.
It might have been better if in this last respect the boys and their mother had acted for themselves, for Mr Richmond appeared to have hazy notions as to what the family would most value. The first sight which met the boysâ eyes as they arrived was their tennis-racquets in a corner of the room. A very small case of trinkets was on Mrs Crudenâs dressing-table, and not one of the twenty or thirty books arranged on the top of the sideboard was one which any member of the small household cared anything about.
But Mr Richmond had done his best, and being left entirely to his own devices, was not to be blamed for the few mistakes he had made. He was there to receive Mrs Cruden when she arrived, and after conducting the little party hurriedly through the three rooms destined for their accommodation, considerately retired.
Until the moment when they were left to themselves in the shabby little Dull Street parlour, not one of the Crudens had understood the change which had come over their lot. All had been so sudden, so exciting, so unlooked-for during the last few weeks, that all three of them had seemed to go through it as through a dream. But the awakening came now, and a rude and cruel one it was.
The little room, dignified by the name of a parlour, was a dingy, stuffy apartment of the true Dull Street type. The paper was faded and torn, the ceiling was discoloured, the furniture was decrepit, the carpet was threadbare, and the cheap engraving on the wall, with its title, âAs Happy as a King,â seemed to brood over the scene like some mocking spirit.
They passed into Mrs Crudenâs bedroom, and the thought of the delightful snug little boudoir at Garden Vale sent a
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