In the Square Called Russell.
There’s plenty of room in Russell Square for a walk, without the promenaders being seen by those without, either in the houses or on the pavement.
Russell Square had grown very attractive to Frank Pratt of late, and he used to smoke cigars there at all sorts of hours. He had been seen by the milk there at 6:15, railway time; Z 17 had glanced suspiciously at him at one a.m.; while the crossing-sweeper said she “knowed that there little stumpy gent by heart.”
It was one afternoon about three, though, that Pratt was sauntering along one side of the square, when he saw Vanleigh and Sir Felix go slowly up to Sir Hampton’s house; and a pang shot through the little fellow, as envy, hatred, malice, and all uncharitableness took possession of his heart.
“Lucky beggars!” he groaned.
He felt better, though, the next minute, for the servant who answered the door had evidently said “Not at home!” card-cases had been withdrawn, and then the visitors had languidly descended the steps and continued their way.
“Lucky beggars!” said Pratt again. “Heigho! what a donkey I am to wander about here. Poor Dick, though, it’s to do him a good turn.”
He crossed the road to the railings of the garden, and as he walked there he cast a very languishing look up at the great, grim house, almost fancying he heard “Er-rum!” proceed from an open window; and if he had not said his presence there was on account of his friend, any looker-on would have vowed it was in his own interests.
He walked slowly on, thinking about Cornwall, and another visit he had projected there; of Fin Rea; about Richard and his disappointments; about his pretty neighbour; and lastly of a case he had in hand, when a little toy dog rushed amongst the shrubs inside the railings, and began snapping and barking at him with all the virulence of an old acquaintance.
“Get out, you little wretch!” thought Pratt, and then he fancied he recognised the dog.
“Why, it’s Pepine!” he mentally exclaimed.
And if any doubt remained it was solved by a voice crying—
“Naughty Pepine, come here directly!”
Then through the trees he caught a glimpse of a lavender dress gracefully draping an iron seat.
It was not the dog that made Frank Pratt flee with rapid strides, till a thought made him check his steps.
“Suppose some one else was walking there!”
In the hope that it might be possible, Pratt went slowly on, taking advantage of every break in the trees to peer anxiously through the railings, seeing, however, nothing but nursemaids in charge of naughty children, whom it was necessary to correct by screwing their arms at the sockets—a beneficial practice, no doubt, but whose good was not apparent at the time. There was a perambulator being propelled by a nursemaid reading the Family Herald, while the two children it contained were fast asleep—one hanging forward, sustained by a strap, and looking like a fat Punch in a state of congestion; the other leaning over the side, and having a red place ground in its ear by the perambulator wheel. Farther on there were more children, playing alone at throwing dirt, their protectress being engaged in a flirtation with a butcher in blue with a round, bullet head, whose well-oiled hair shone in the afternoon sun.
Pratt walked on, getting hopeless as he progressed, for soon he would come within range of Pepine, and perhaps be discovered when—What was that?
A sharp, short little cough that could be no other than Fin’s; and there, through the trees, were she and her sister, Tiny resting on Fin’s arm, and walking very slowly.
There was an opening in the shrubs farther on; and hurrying to this, though it was dangerously near Pepine and Aunt Matty, Pratt waited the coming of the sisters.
Alas, for human hopes!—they had turned back, and he had to hurry after them for some distance before he could find an opening sufficiently clear to display his figure, when he hazarded a cough; and on Fin looking sharply round, he followed it up with a “How d’ye do, Miss Rea?”
“It’s Mr Pratt!” he heard Fin whisper. And then came back a quiet response.
“Do you always walk like this—within prison bars?” said Pratt, walking on parallel with them.
“It can’t be prison when one holds the keys, Mr Pratt,” said Fin, sharply.
“You’ll let me shake hands?” he said, after a pause. “I never see you now.”
“How can you?” said Fin, sharply, “when you never call.”
“What was the use of my calling, when your servant could only speak me one speech?” said Pratt.
“And pray, what was that?” said Fin, with her nose in the air. “Not at home.”
Fin gave her foot a little stamp on the gravel, and whispered to her sister. By this time they had reached the gate, just as a nursemaid unlocked it to pass through with her charge.
“Thanks,” said Pratt, quietly. And, walking in, he was the next moment with Fin and her sister; the former looking defiant, and half drawing back her hand, the latter so pale and ill that, forgetting Fin, Pratt took both her hands affectionately, as, with a husky voice, he exclaimed—
“My dear Miss Rea, I didn’t know you had been so ill.”
Tiny answered with a gentle smile; and Fin, who had been setting up all the thorns about her, ready to tear and lacerate this intruder, now looked quite humid of eye, and shook hands warmly.
“I—I didn’t know you’d be so glad to see me,” said Pratt, flushing with pleasure.
“I didn’t say I was,” said Fin, archly.
“You looked so,” it was on Pratt’s lips to say; but he checked it, and they strolled on—away from Aunt Matty, after Fin had mischievously proposed that Pratt should go and see her—till Tiny complained of fatigue and sat down.
Here was an opportunity not to be lost; and, after a little solicitation, Fin consented to leave her sister and walk on, conditionally that they kept in sight.
Pratt, on the strength of his prosperity, had determined to sound his little companion; but before they had gone a dozen yards, he found that his own affairs were to be of no account.
“What’s become of that wretch of a friend of yours?” said Fin, sharply.
“Do you mean Sir Felix Landells?” said Pratt, borrowing a shaft from her own quiver.
“No, I don’t,” said Fin, flushing scarlet, “nor any such silly donkey, I mean—”
Pratt would have gone down on his knees in the gravel, only there was a nursemaid close by, and a big, fat child was sucking its thumb, and staring at them; but he burst out, in a husky voice—
“Oh, Miss Rea—Finetta—pray, pray say that again.”
“Indeed, I shall do no such thing,” said Fin, sharply, and becoming more red—“why should I?”
“Because it makes me so happy,” said Pratt. “I thought it was to be he.”
“Then you ought to be ashamed of yourself,” said Fin. “A nice feeling of respect you must have for me, to couple me with that scented dandy.”
“Finetta, don’t be hard upon me,” gasped Pratt—“I can’t talk now. If I had you in a witness-box I could go ahead, but I feel now as if I were going to lose my case.”
“What stuff are you talking?” said Fin, whose breast was panting.
“I was trying to tell you that I loved you with my whole heart,” said Pratt, earnestly; “even as I learned to love you down in Cornwall, when I was such a poor, miserable beggar that I wouldn’t have told you for the world.”
“And now you’re in Jumbles versus Hankey, and the great cotton case.”
“Why, how did you know?” cried Pratt.
“I always read the law reports in the Times” said Fin, demurely.
Pratt choked; he felt blind; then the railings seemed to be dancing with the trees, and the little children to be transformed into cherubs, attended by angels, with triumphant perambulating cars. He felt as if he wanted to do something frantic; and it was a minute before he came to himself, and could see that the tears were running down Fin’s cheeks.
“Thank you,” he said at last. “Finetta—Fin—may I call you Fin?—dearest Fin, say I may.”
“No, no, no,” jerked out Fin, hysterically—“you mustn’t do anything of the kind. Pa wouldn’t approve, and Aunt Matty hates you, and—and—and I’m nearly sure I do.”
“Go on hating me like this, then,” cried Pratt, rapturously. “Oh, darling, you’ve made me so happy!”
“I haven’t,” protested Fin, “and I can’t, and I won’t. How can I, when poor darling Tiny has been so treated by that odious wretch?”
“What—Vanleigh?”
“No, you know what I mean; but he’s an odious wretch, too. It’s abominable. Mr Trevor ought to be hung.”
“Why?” said Pratt.
“Why?” echoed Fin. “Hasn’t he jilted my poor darling, and behaved cruelly to her, after winning her heart, just as all men do?”
“No,” said Pratt, stoutly.
“What!” cried Fin, “didn’t I see him out with her himself, and hasn’t somebody been at our house dropping hints about it—unwillingly, of course—and made pa delighted, and Aunt Matty malicious? while poor mamma has done nothing but cry, because she liked and believed in your nice friend. As to poor Tiny, she was dangerously ill for a time.”
“I don’t care,” said Pratt, vehemently; and he arranged an imaginary wig, and waved some non-existent papers in the air. “Matters may be against my client—I mean Dick; but I’ll stake my life on his honour. I say Richard Trevor—Lloyd, as he calls himself now—is a true man of honour. Look how he gave up the estate! See how he yielded his pretensions to Miss Rea’s hand! And do you dare to tell me that this is a man who would stoop to a flirtation, or worse, when he owns to being cut up by the loss he has sustained? I say it’s impossible, and that the person who would dare to charge my cli—friend, Richard Trevor, alias Lloyd, with such duplicity is—”
“What?” said Fin, sharply. That one little word went through Frank Pratt. He cooled on the instant, the flush of excitement passed away, and, in a crestfallen manner, he groaned—
“That’s just like me. What a fool I am! Now you’ll be cross with me.”
“No, I shan’t,” said Fin, demurely. “I like it. It’s nice of you to stand up for your friend. I like a man to be a trump.”
Fin’s face was like scarlet as soon as she made this admission; and to qualify it, she hurriedly exclaimed—
“You may like him if you please; but till I see him cleared I shall hate him bitterly; and—and—and—I don’t know how he ought to be punished. He’ll be punished enough, though, by losing my sweet sister. Why didn’t you like her, instead of some one else?” she said, archly.
“Don’t ask me,” said Pratt. “I’m so happy, I shall do something foolish.”
“You haven’t anything to be happy about,” said Fin; “for I’m going to devote myself to Tiny, and if they force her into this hateful marriage, I mean to be a nun.”
“What marriage?” said Pratt.
“Why, with that Bluebeard of a captain.”
“And are they pushing that on?”
“Yes,” said Fin, “and it’s abominable. It will kill her.”
“No, it won’t!” said Pratt, coolly.
“Then you’re a wretch!” said Fin, with flashing eyes. “I say it will.”
“And I say it won’t,” said Pratt; “because it must never come off.”
Fin stared at him.
“I’ll see to that,” said Pratt, confidently. “I have a friend busy about Master Captain Vanleigh. But, oh!” he exclaimed, as the recollection of one Barnard, solicitor, brought up a gentleman of the name of Mervyn—“but, oh! I say, tell me this, Fin—Mr Mervyn—you know—there wasn’t ever—anything—eh?”
“Oh, you goose!” cried Fin, stamping her foot. “Mr Mervyn—dear Mr Mervyn, of all people in the world!—who used to treat us like as if we were his little girls. Oh, Mr Pratt, I did think you had some sense in your head.”
“Oh no,” said Pratt, solemnly; “never—not a morsel.”
Then they looked at one another, and laughed; but only for Fin to turn preternaturally serious.
“I must go back to Tiny now,” she said.
“But when shall I see you again?” urged Pratt.
“Perhaps never,” said Fin—“unless you can come about once a week, on a Friday afternoon, here in the square, and tell me some news that will do poor Tiny good.”
“I may come and say good-bye to her, then?” said Pratt, getting hold for a moment of the little half-withdrawn hand.
“Yes, if you like. No—here’s Aunt Matty.”
In fact her herald approached in the shape of Pepine, who no sooner caught sight of the retreating form of Pratt, than he made a dash at him, chasing him ignominiously to the gate, where he stood barking long after his quarry had gone. But Pepine was no gainer in the end, for during the next week Fin never neglected an opportunity of administering to him a furtive thump.