whistle for my back rents. I ought to have distrained upon his<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[115]</SPAN></span>
sticks; but I laughed so, when I saw how he bolted, that I
could not do it. But you’ll have to pay an improved rent, my
lad. You can’t have it under five shillings a week, and
cheap enough at that, I can tell you.”</p>
<p>“Why, what do you mean?” I asked. “I don’t want a
house; and if I did, how am I to keep it up? I haven’t got a
sixpence to call my own.”</p>
<p>“Then a pretty fellow you are, to make up to Captain Fairthorn’s
daughter! Where did you intend to put her, I should
like to know? But we’ll make that all right, between you and
me and the bedpost. I have got a little nest-egg of your mother’s
money for you, and a heel-tap of your father’s. Didn’t you
know why I smoked that old rogue out? Why, that this might
be a little home for Kit and Kitty.”</p>
<hr class="chap" /></div>
<h2>CHAPTER XX.<br/> <small>AUNT PARSLOW.</small></h2>
<p class="unindent"><span class="smcap">It</span> is a bad thing for any man to be always beating his own
bounds, and treading the track of his own grounds, and pursuing
the twist of his own affairs—though they be even love
affairs—as a dog spins round to catch his own tail. Under
the hammer of incessant thought, and in the hot pincers of
perpetual yearning, I was getting as flat as a horseshoe twice
removed, when Sam Henderson gave a boy twopence to slip
into our grounds, when my uncle’s back was turned, and put
into my hand an envelope addressed to “Samuel Henderson,
Esquire, The Paddocks, Halliford, Middlesex.” At first I
thought, in my slow way, that his object was to let me see
what deference he had won in racing circles; and I smiled
at the littleness of the man. But the boy, who was shaking
in his ventilated shoes, with dread of Uncle Corny, said—“’Tain’t
that side; turn ’un over.” I obeyed his instructions,
and beheld in pencil—“Come down the lane a bit. I have
news for you, important.”</p>
<p>What mortal, dwelling wholly on his own affairs, would not
have concluded that this concerned him, on his own account,
and unselfishly? I hurried on my coat, which had been thrown
off for a job of winter pruning, and in less than two minutes I
had turned the corner and was face to face with the mighty
Sam.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[116]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“All right, old fellow,” he said as coolly as if I had come to
recover a loan. “You needn’t turn a hair. It is not about
your Kitty, but my skittish little Sally—Sally Chalker. You
know I told you all about her, the daughter of the old bloke
down at Ludred.”</p>
<p>“Oh, I remember now,” I answered, with a sudden chill of
disappointment. “I might have known that it was not for me
you were in such a precious hurry. You were very wise not to
come into our place. My uncle is a man of short measures.”</p>
<p>“A man of uncommonly short measures. He will get fined
some fine day, I’m afraid.” Sam laughed wonderfully at his
own wit. “But I know he don’t want me to see his little
tricks. Don’t bluster, beloved Kit; we all do it, and we respect
one another all the more for it. Free trade has turned John
Bull into Charley Fox. I can feel for you, my boy; for now
there’s a foreign rogue come poaching on my preserves at Ludred.
And he doesn’t know how many legs make a horse.”</p>
<p>Sam tapped his own dapper and well-curved legs with a
light gold-headed riding-whip, and his favourite mare, who was
under the charge of a lad down the lane, gave a whinny to
him. “There’s nothing she don’t know,” said Sam; “and her
name it is Sally.”</p>
<p>I was not sure which of the two fillies—for I knew that he
called his sweetheart one, and her name too was “Sally”—my
friend was thus commending. But I rose to the situation, and
said—“Let us go, and rout the fellow out.”</p>
<p>“I was sure you would stand by a brother Briton,” cried
Sam, shaking hands very heartily; “and you won’t find me
forget it, Kit, when old Crumbly Pot comes back again. I am
keeping a look-out for you there, as I gave you my word to do.
It has been kettles to mend, I am told, in the fen-land where
he hails from. I know a Jew fellow who brought him to book,
and was very nearly quodding him. He won’t be back this
side of Christmas, unless my friend is a liar, and then I shall
do you as good a turn as you are going to do me now. Can you
make it fit to come to-morrow? I’ll put my Sally in the spider,
and call for you about ten o’clock. You can tell old Punnets,
that you want to see your Aunt Parslow about important
business—for important it is and no mistake. Think of a dirty
Frenchman nobbling sweet Sally Chalker, and all her cash!”</p>
<p>Old Punnets—as he insolently called my uncle—was glad
enough that I should pay a visit to my aunt, or rather my
mother’s aunt, Miss Parslow, who was said to be worth at least<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[117]</SPAN></span>
10,000<i>l.</i>, as well as a very nice house, and large garden, and
three or four meadows by the river Mole.</p>
<p>“You should never neglect such folk,” he said; “you have
no proper sense of the plainest duty. She has only one relation
as near as you are, and he has got plenty of tin of his own.
You might cut him out easy enough, if you tried, and now is the
nick of time for it. Hannah Parslow is as proud as Punch, I
know; and if you can only put it to her, with a little of the
proper grease, of course, that your mother’s son is considered
unfit to marry a young lady, because he cannot cut a shine,—who
can tell what she might do for you? She doesn’t spend
half of her income, I know. I was thinking of it only the other
night. And she might allow you two hundred a year, without
stinting a pinch of Keating’s powder. You love dogs, and dogs
love you. Half the dogs in the village come to see you home.
Make up to Jupiter, and Juno, and the other bow-wows she has
taken to her bosom, and you’ll never want my thirty shillings
a week, nor yet the little balance of your father and mother’s
money. You go and see her, Kit. Don’t lose a day. You
may accept a lift from that fast Sam Henderson; but throw him
over, as soon as you have got it.”</p>
<p>Now, this little speech was as like as two peas to Uncle
Corny’s nature. He had never said a word about meaning to
give me any one pound ten a week—though Heaven knows that
I was worth it; for let the weather be what it would, there was
I making the best of it. On the contrary, I had very seldom
put into the purse (which I carried more for the husk than
kernel) so much as five shillings on a Sunday morning, which
was my uncle’s particular time for easing his conscience about
me. Of course I had my victuals, and my clothes to a certain
extent, and the power to pay his bills (which made people offer
me something sometimes); also I could talk as if the place
belonged to me; but people knew better for at least three
miles away. So that his talking of thirty shillings proved,
without another word on his part, his high and holy views of
marriage.</p>
<p>And again it was like him, to try to put me up to get
something good out of good Aunt Parslow. Whatever I could
get from her would mean so much relief for the Orchardson
firm—as he often called us in his prouder times; though if I
had asked for a penny of the proceeds, he would have banged
his big desk upon my knuckles. But do not let me seem to
say a word against him; for a better uncle never lived; and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[118]</SPAN></span>
I felt his generosity very deeply, until I began to think of
it.</p>
<p>Few things have been more successful yet, and very few
have been better managed, than that drive of ours to Leatherhead.
Possibly Sam was a luckier fellow than myself; and I
think it likely, because he was less deserving. Not that there
was much harm about him, except a kind of laxity in talk, and
a strained desire to be accounted sharp, and a strong ambition
to rise in the world, without cleaning the steps ere he mounted
them. But he showed a fine heart by his words just now—although
he was much ashamed of it—and the pace we were
going at brought it out, for a brisk air stirs up the best part of
us.</p>
<p>“Ain’t she a stepper?” he said, as we crossed Walton
bridge, and dashed through the flood-water, for the high-road
was not made up then; “wet or dry is all alike to Sally. That’s
the way to go through the world, my boy. Julius Cæsar
crossed the river here; and I have got a yearling named after
him. What makes it all the kinder on my part is that he
hasn’t got Latin in his family. How proud the old chap would
have been for me to go out of the custom so! It will set a
whole lot of the Emperors going, if the colt cuts the shine I
expect of him.”</p>
<p>Knowing nothing about the turf, and caring very little, I
let him rattle on about pedigrees, and strains of double blood,
and Waxy, and Whalebone, and I know not what, as bad as
the Multiplication table; and I wondered that such stuff
should form his discourse, when he should have been full of
young ladies. Even the beauty of the country, which was
more than enough to delight the eyes and hold the mind still
with pleasure, seemed nothing to Sam beyond—“Yes, very
pretty. Nice bit of training-ground up there. That’s the sort
of grass that suits milk teeth.”</p>
<p>At last, as we came within a mile of our mark, and followed
the fair valley of the river, I brought him to the business of
the day, having heard enough of Spider-wheels, and flyers, and
so forth; and requiring to know what he expected of me.
We had gone at such a pace, up hill and down, scarcely ever
varying from one long stride, which left every other “trap”
far in the lurch, that but for my boyish remembrance of the
place, I could scarcely have believed that we were almost in
the village.</p>
<p>“Fifteen or five,” he said, “that’s her pace; there’s no halfway<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[119]</SPAN></span>
house for Sally. She walks a good five. Walk is the
word, old gal. Well, all you have got to do, Kit, is just
this. I put up at the ‘Dolphin,’ and you make a
call, with your best gloves on, and your hat brushed up, at
Valley-view House, where your good aunt lives. You have
not seen her for years. So much the better. Tell her that a
distinguished friend of yours, especially esteemed by your
uncle, and well known in the best London circles, has important
business in the town; and that you took occasion to pay
your respects, where they have been due so long. Admire her
dogs, and all that sort of thing; and when she insists on your
staying to lunch, regret very deeply that you cannot leave
your distinguished friend, etc. Then if she is any good,
she will say—‘Do you think he would waive formality?’ and
so on. And you say—‘If he is not engaged at Lord Nethersole’s,
I will endeavour to fetch him.’ I shall happen to be
lounging up the hill, and shall pull out my watch and be
doubtful. But the attractions of the spot are too many for me.
I throw over his lordship, and get over the old lady.”</p>
<p>I promised to do my best towards this, but without any fictions
concerning him; for his best chance lay, as I told him, in
moderation and simplicity. For my aunt, according to my
remembrance, was rather a shrewd old lady; and Sam had
shown some little sense of this, in the choice of what he called
his toggery. All rich adornments, and gorgeous hues, had been
for once discarded; his clothes were all of a quiet gray, and his
tone had subsided from the solar to the lunar rainbow. In
short, he looked more like a gentleman than I had ever known
him look before; and seeing what a fine young man he was, I
felt heartily glad that he had fixed his affections where they
could not imperil mine.</p>
<p>When I entered the gate of Valley-view, nine or ten small
dogs came scampering out, all giving tongue, and all making
believe to be born for one end, namely my end. There
were pugs, and Skye-terriers, and Blenheim-spaniels, and
wiry-coated terriers, and Italian greyhounds, and little ridiculous
toy-dogs fit for a child’s Noah’s ark, and I know not
what else, but no dog of the name of “Silence.” “What a
pack of curs!” I said rather gruffly, and with a gesture of
contempt, for I never did hear such a medley of barks. As dogs
are the most humorous creatures in the world, they immediately
looked at one another and laughed, each applying my
remark to his neighbours. If they had been curs, they would<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[120]</SPAN></span>
have felt it more; being all of fine breeding, they took it
lightly, as I said it, for I had no real meaning to offend them.
Then, a great deal more quickly than we settle matters, they
referred the whole question to a grand old pug, with his face
pulled up short, like a plaited blind, by the cords of disgust
at the tricks of mankind, and lots of little pimples, like a
turbot’s moles, upon it. As a chairman of committee he came
up to me, reserving his stump in a very strict line, till my
character passed through the test of his nose. Then he gave
a little doubtful trepidation to his tail, and after another sniff,
a very hearty wag; and with one accord all the doggies set off
to the house to announce that an honest dog was coming.</p>
<p>Miss Parslow was inclined, as appeared thereafter, to
attach more importance to the verdict of her dogs, even as a
Roman admiral should have consulted his holy chickens.
When the dogs came to say that they believed me to be safe,
their mistress put them all into their own room and came out
to the porch to meet me. She knew me at once, though I
might have forgotten her, except for a great event in my life,
when she gave me the first sovereign I ever possessed. Being
a small and slim lady, she rested her head upon the upper
pocket of my waistcoat, which seemed to be an excellent omen.</p>
<p>“Oh, how you do take after your dear mother!” she
exclaimed, with a genial tear or two; “you are not like an
Orchardson, my dear boy, but a Parslow, a Parslow all over!
Why have you kept away from Valley-view till now?”</p>
<p>This was a difficult question to answer, and therefore I
naturally asked another. “How are you getting on, my dear
aunt? And will it put you out that I should come like this?
I wrote last night, but it may have been too late.”</p>
<p>“Oh, the posts are always wrong. Come and sit here by
the fire. We shall have a sharp winter; I am sure of that.
<i>Jupiter</i> knows the weather as well as if he made it. Now
come and tell me all about your own affairs.”</p>
<p>At first I was not at all inclined to do that, preferring to
talk about hers, and desiring some knowledge of her character
and opinions before I began to spread forth my own. But
she took the lead of me, and contrived to get out of me all
about Uncle Corny, and everybody else I had to do with, and
even the whole of my hopes and fears concerning the main
object of my life. For the old can always pump the young,
when they know the right way to hold the handle.</p>
<p>“I cannot see where the presumption is,” she said as she<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[121]</SPAN></span>
took my hand and placed it in one of hers and patted it;
“your mother was Annie Parslow, as sweet a young lady as
any Miss Fairthorn. Her father would have been Lord Mayor
of London if he had only lived long enough. The Parslows
were in the tea line, which is equal to almost any. It is true
that she dropped several grades in life by marrying George
Orchardson—”</p>
<p>“And Miss Fairthorn’s friends, if she ever does it, will
say that she dropped several grades in life by marrying Kit
Orchardson.” I felt that I had her there; but she would not
see it.</p>
<p>“Don’t talk nonsense, Kit. The case is wholly different.
You may be counted as half a Parslow, while nobody knows
what she is. And you must not consider what her friends
will say, but your own, who are sensible people. You have
acted very wisely in coming over to tell me all about this
affair. I am sorry that the girl is so poor through her father’s
stupid carelessness. You know that I like your Uncle Cornelius,
although he is such a queer character. One of the
most obstinate men on earth, and nearly all men are obstinate.
But he is apt to put things off. He is always waiting for
something else to be ready. I shall pay him a visit as soon as
Mr. Parker’s fly has got its new cushions in, and his bay horse
recovered from his lameness. Then we will settle something
about you. I never let the grass grow below my feet. I
shall make your Uncle Corny come to book. I am quite convinced
in my own mind that he has been keeping all these
years a nice little lump of your father’s money, as well as
your dear mother’s property. No Parslow was ever a beggar
yet. There was none of them but had a silver teapot, as was
only decent in the business. And most of them could fill it
with bank-notes, though I’m not saying that your mother
could. Dear me, what a dreadful to-do there was when she
ran away with George Orchardson! My dear brother vowed
he would never forgive her, although she was his favourite child;
so upright, and fair, and so ladylike, and cheeks like damask
roses! You never see such a sweet face now. All their
education is to learn to stare, and all their polish is like a
brass knocker’s. What they all want is a good stepmother,
to starve and to slap their ears out of them. That may have
made your Kitty nicer than you can expect to find them now.
If I were a young man I wouldn’t marry any girl who had
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />