Upon the elegant house, and its fashionably dressed inmates, in Minerva Street, of which Phillip had heard many strange rumours, Mr. Redgill never bestowed a single thought, although he had more than crude suspicions of who the much-talked-of “Madame Fannie St. Claire” might be.
Old Sir Andrew had never thought of asking Phillip anything regarding his daughter.
She had separated from her husband he full well knew, but as Phillip never broached the subject, Sir Andrew, for purposes of avarice and greed, refrained from doing so.
“She has made her own nest,” he would sometimes say to his old and asthmatic wife, propped up in her arm-chair beside the fire, “therefore let her lie in it.
“I don’t know nor care where she is. Don’t bother me with your questions and nonsense, woman. I have something else to think about.
“I don’t care what has become of her—there. Don’t sit there snivelling, you old fool, or I’ll leave the place altogether.
“In a few weeks, I hope, I shall be doing business in the City, and not in this miserable hole, with a crabbed old woman coughing all day and night.
“What’ll folks think then of old Sir Andy, as they call me, when I appear on ’Change again, and with a large banker’s account at my back?
“What’ll they say then to the old president of the Phœnix Insurance Company, whom they refuse to speak to, or even recognise now, eh?
“I’ll show ’em all what money can do. I’m just as honest as any of ’em; it’s all speculation in this world; so long as you’ve got the cash you needn’t care a snap of your finger for any of ’em.