The Way We Live Now Anthony Trollope (classic books for 11 year olds .txt) đ
- Author: Anthony Trollope
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Sir Felix changed colour, thinking of Marie Melmotte, thinking that perhaps some emissary from Marie Melmotte had been there; perhaps Didon herself. He was amusing himself during these last evenings of his in London; but the business of his life was about to take him to New York. That project was still being elaborated. He had had an interview with Didon, and nothing was wanting but the money. Didon had heard of the funds which had been entrusted by him to Melmotte, and had been very urgent with him to recover them. Therefore, though his body was not unfrequently present, late in the night, at the City Road Music-Hall, his mind was ever in Grosvenor Square. âWho was it, Ruby?â
âA friend of the Squireâs, a Mr. Montague. I used to see him about in Bungay and Beccles.â
âPaul Montague!â
âDo you know him, Felix?â
âWell;â ârather. Heâs a member of our club, and I see him constantly in the cityâ âand I know him at home.â
âIs he nice?â
âWell;â âthat depends on what you call nice. Heâs a prig of a fellow.â
âHeâs got a lady friend where I live.â
âThe devil he has!â Sir Felix of course had heard of Roger Carburyâs suit to his sister, and of the opposition to this suit on the part of Hetta, which was supposed to have been occasioned by her preference for Paul Montague. âWho is she, Ruby?â
âWell;â âsheâs a Mrs. Hurtle. Such a stunning woman! Aunt says sheâs an American. Sheâs got lots of money.â
âIs Montague going to marry her?â
âOh dear yes. Itâs all arranged. Mr. Montague comes quite regular to see her;â ânot so regular as he ought, though. When gentlemen are fixed as theyâre to be married, they never are regular afterwards. I wonder whether itâll be the same with you?â
âWasnât John Crumb regular, Ruby?â
âBother John Crumb! That wasnât none of my doings. Oh, heâd been regular enough, if Iâd let him; heâd been like clockworkâ âonly the slowest clock out. But Mr. Montague has been and told the Squire as he saw me. He told me so himself. The Squireâs coming about John Crumb. I know that. What am I to tell him, Felix?â
âTell him to mind his own business. He canât do anything to you.â
âNo;â âhe canât do nothing. I ainât done nothing wrong, and he canât send for the police to have me took back to Sheepâs Acre. But he can talkâ âand he can look. I ainât one of those, Felix, as donât mind about their charactersâ âso donât you think it. Shall I tell him as Iâm with you?â
âGracious goodness, no! What would you say that for?â
âI didnât know. I must say something.â
âTell him youâre nothing to him.â
âBut aunt will be letting on about my being out late oânights; I know she will. And who am I with? Heâll be asking that.â
âYour aunt does not know?â
âNo;â âIâve told nobody yet. But it wonât do to go on like that, you knowâ âwill it? You donât want it to go on always like that;â âdo you?â
âItâs very jolly, I think.â
âIt ainât jolly for me. Of course, Felix, I like to be with you. Thatâs jolly. But I have to mind them brats all the day, and to be doing the bedrooms. And thatâs not the worst of it.â
âWhat is the worst of it?â
âIâm pretty nigh ashamed of myself. Yes, I am.â And now Ruby burst out into tears. âBecause I wouldnât have John Crumb, I didnât mean to be a bad girl. Nor yet I wonât. But whatâll I do, if everybody turns again me? Aunt wonât go on forever in this way. She said last night thatâ ââ
âBother what she says!â Felix was not at all anxious to hear what aunt Pipkin might have to say upon such an occasion.
âSheâs right too. Of course she knows thereâs somebody. She ainât such a fool as to think that Iâm out at these hours to sing psalms with a lot of young women. She says that whoever it is ought to speak out his mind. There;â âthatâs what she says. And sheâs right. A girl has to mind herself, though sheâs ever so fond of a young man.â
Sir Felix sucked his cigar and then took a long drink of brandy and water. Having emptied the beaker before him, he rapped for the waiter and called for another. He intended to avoid the necessity of making any direct reply to Rubyâs importunities. He was going to New York very shortly, and looked on his journey thither as an horizon in his future beyond which it was unnecessary to speculate as to any farther distance. He had not troubled himself to think how it might be with Ruby when he was gone. He had not even considered whether he would or would not tell her that he was going, before he started. It was not his fault that she had come up to London. She was an âawfully jolly girl,â and he liked the feeling of the intrigue better perhaps than the girl herself. But he assured himself that he wasnât going to give himself any
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