The landlady of the Dolphin accepted this new idea with much enlightenment, but ruefully declared that she was afraid to go against his precise instructions. Mrs. Mel then folded her hands, and sat in quiet reserve. She was one of those numerous women who always know themselves to be right. She was also one of those very few whom Providence favours by confounding dissentients. She was positive the chops would be ill-cooked: but what could she do? She was not in command here; so she waited serenely for the certain disasters to enthrone her. Not that the matter of the chops occupied her mind particularly: nor could she dream that the pair in question were destined to form a part of her history, and divert the channel of her fortunes. Her thoughts were about her own immediate work; and when the landlady rushed in with the chops under a cover, and said: “Look at ’em, dear Mrs. Harrington!” she had forgotten that she was again to be proved right by the turn of events.
“Oh, the chops!” she responded. “Send them while they are hot.”
“Send ’em! Why you don’t think I’d have risked their cooling? I have sent ’em; and what do he do but send ’em travelling back, and here they be; and what objections his is I might study till I was blind, and I shouldn’t see ’em.”
“No; I suppose not,” said Mrs. Mel. “He won’t eat ’em?”
“Won’t eat anything: but his bed-room candle immediately. And whether his sheets are aired. And Mary says he sniffed at the chops; and that gal really did expect he’d fling them at her. I told you what he was. Oh, dear!”
The bell was heard ringing in the midst of the landlady’s lamentations.
“Go to him yourself,” said Mrs. Mel. “No Christian man should go to sleep without his supper.”
“Ah! but he ain’t a common Christian,” returned Mrs. Hawkshaw.
The old gentleman was in a hurry to know when his bed-room candle was coming up, or whether they intended to give him one at all that night; if not, let them say so, as he liked plain-speaking. The moment Mrs. Hawkshaw touched upon the chops, he stopped her mouth.
“Go about your business, ma’am. You can’t cook ’em. I never expected you could: I was a fool to try you. It requires at least ten years’ instruction before a man can get a woman to cook his chop as he likes it.”