<h2 id="id00333" style="margin-top: 4em">IX</h2>
<p id="id00334" style="margin-top: 2em">Nearly everything came down untouched. Eating and drinking had been in
progress almost all day on the course, and Esther had finished washing up
before nine, and had laid the cloth in the servants' hall for supper. But
if little was eaten upstairs, plenty was eaten downstairs; the mutton was
finished in a trice, and Mrs. Latch had to fetch from the larder what
remained of a beefsteak pudding. Even then they were not satisfied, and
fine inroads were made into a new piece of cheese. Beer, according to
orders, was served without limit, and four bottles of port were sent down
so that the health of the horse might be adequately drunk.</p>
<p id="id00335">While assuaging their hunger the men had exchanged many allusive remarks
regarding the Demon's bad ending, how nearly he had thrown the race away;
and the meal being now over, and there being nothing to do but to sit and
talk, Mr. Leopold, encouraged by William, entered on an elaborate and
technical account of the race. The women listened, playing with a rind of
cheese, glancing at the cheese itself, wondering if they could manage
another slice, and the men sipping their port wine, puffing at their
pipes, William listening most avidly of all, enjoying each sporting term,
and ingeniously reminding Mr. Leopold of some detail whenever he seemed
disposed to shorten his narrative. The criticism of the Demon's
horsemanship took a long while, for by a variety of suggestive remarks
William led Mr. Leopold into reminiscences of the skill of certain famous
jockeys in the first half of the century. These digressions wearied Sarah
and Grover, and their thoughts wandered to the dresses that had been worn
that day, and the lady's-maid remembered she would hear all that
interested her that night in the young ladies' rooms. At last, losing all
patience, Sarah declared that she didn't care what Chifney had said when
he just managed to squeeze his horse's head in front in the last dozen
yards, she wanted to know what the Demon had done to so nearly lose the
race—had he mistaken the winning-post and pulled up? William looked at
her contemptuously, and would have answered rudely, but at that moment Mr.
Leopold began to tell the last instructions that the Gaffer had given the
Demon. The orders were that the Demon should go right up to the leaders
before they reached the half-mile, and remain there. Of course, if he
found that he was a stone or more in hand, as the Gaffer expected, he
might come away pretty well as he liked, for the greatest danger was that
the horse might get shut out or might show temper and turn it up.</p>
<p id="id00336">"Well," said Mr. Leopold, "there were two false starts, and Silver Braid
must have galloped a couple of 'undred yards afore the Demon could stop
him. There wasn't twopence-halfpenny worth of strength in him—pulling off
those three or four pounds pretty well finished him. He'll never be able
to ride that weight again…. He said afore starting that he felt weak;
you took him along too smartly from Portslade the last time you went
there."</p>
<p id="id00337">"When he went by himself he'd stop playing marbles with the boys round the<br/>
Southwick public-house."<br/></p>
<p id="id00338">"If there had been another false start I think it would have been all up
with us. The Gaffer was quite pale, and he stood there not taking his
glasses from his eyes. There were over thirty of them, so you can imagine
how hard it was to get them into line. However, at the third attempt they
were got straight and away they came, a black line stretching right across
the course. Presently the black cap and jacket came to the front, and not
very long after a murmur went round, 'Silver Braid wins.' Never saw
anything like it in all my life. He was three lengths a'ead, and the
others were pulling off. 'Damn the boy; he'll win by twenty lengths,' said
the Gaffer, without removing his glasses. But when within a few yards of
the stand——"</p>
<p id="id00339">At that moment the bell rang. Mr. Leopold said, "There, they are wanting
their tea; I must go and get it."</p>
<p id="id00340">"Drat their tea," said Margaret; "they can wait. Finish up; tell us how he
won."</p>
<p id="id00341">Mr. Leopold looked round, and seeing every eye fixed on him he considered
how much remained of the story, and with quickened speech continued,
"Well, approaching the stand, I noticed that Silver Braid was not going
quite so fast, and at the very instant the Demon looked over his shoulder,
and seeing he was losing ground he took up the whip. But the moment he
struck him the horse swerved right across the course, right under the
stand, running like a rat from underneath the whip. The Demon caught him
one across the nose with his left hand, but seeing what was 'appening, the
Tinman, who was on Bullfinch, sat down and began riding. I felt as if
there was a lump of ice down my back," and Mr. Leopold lowered his voice,
and his face became grave as he recalled that perilous moment. "I thought
it was all over," he said, "and the Gaffer thought the same; I never saw a
man go so deadly pale. It was all the work of a moment, but that moment
was more than a year—at least, so it seemed to me. Well, about half-way
up the rails the Tinman got level with the Demon. It was ten to one that
Silver Braid would turn it up, or that the boy wouldn't 'ave the strength
to ride out so close a finish as it was bound to be. I thought then of the
way you used to take him along from Portslade, and I'd have given
something to've put a pound or two of flesh into his thighs and arms. The
Tinman was riding splendid, getting every ounce and something more out of
Bullfinch. The Demon, too weak to do much, was sitting nearly quite still.
It looked as if it was all up with us, but somehow Silver Braid took to
galloping of his own accord, and 'aving such a mighty lot in 'and he won
on the post by a 'ead—a short 'ead…. I never felt that queer in my life
and the Gaffer was no better; but I said to him, just afore the numbers
went up, 'It is all right, sir, he's just done it,' and when the right
number went up I thought everything was on the dance, going for swim like.
By golly, it was a near thing!" At the end of a long silence Mr. Leopold
said, shaking himself out of his thoughts, "Now I must go and get their
tea."</p>
<p id="id00342">Esther sat at the end of the table; her cheek leaned on her hand. By
turning her eyes she could see William. Sarah noticed one of these
stealthy backward glances and a look of anger crossed her face, and
calling to William she asked him when the sweepstakes money would be
divided. The question startled William from a reverie of small bets, and
he answered that there was no reason why the sweepstakes money should not
be divided at once.</p>
<p id="id00343">"There was twelve. That's right, isn't it?—Sarah, Margaret, Esther, Miss
Grover, Mr. Leopold, myself, the four boys, and Swindles and Wall….
Well, it was agreed that seven should go to the first, three to the
second, and two to the third. No one got the third 'orse, so I suppose the
two shillings that would have gone to him 'ad better be given to the
first."</p>
<p id="id00344">"Given to the first! Why, that's Esther! Why should she get it?… What do
you mean? No third! Wasn't Soap-bubble third?"</p>
<p id="id00345">"Yes, Soap-bubble was third right enough, but he wasn't in the sweep."</p>
<p id="id00346">"And why wasn't he?"</p>
<p id="id00347">"Because he wasn't among the eleven first favourites. We took them as they
were quoted in the betting list published in the <i>Sportsman</i>."</p>
<p id="id00348">"How was it, then, that you put in Silver Braid?"</p>
<p id="id00349">"Yer needn't get so angry, Sarah, no one's cheating; it is all above
board. If you don't believe us, you'd better accuse us straight out."</p>
<p id="id00350">"What I want to know is, why Silver Braid was included?—he wasn't among
the eleven first favourites."</p>
<p id="id00351">"Oh, don't be so stupid, Sarah; you know that we agreed to make an
exception in favour of our own 'orse—a nice sweep it would 'ave been if
we 'adn't included Silver Braid."</p>
<p id="id00352">"And suppose," she exclaimed, tightening her brows, "that Soap-bubble had
won, what would have become of our money?"</p>
<p id="id00353">"It would have been returned—everyone would have got his shilling back."</p>
<p id="id00354">"And now I am to get three shillings, and that little Methodist or
Plymouth Brethren there, whatever you like to call her, is to get nine!"
said Sarah, with a light of inspiration flashing through her beer-clouded
mind. "Why should the two shillings that would have gone to Soap-bubble,
if anyone 'ad drawn 'im, go to the first 'orse rather than to the second?"</p>
<p id="id00355">William hesitated, unable for the moment to give a good reason why the
extra two shillings should be given to Silver Braid; and Sarah, perceiving
her advantage, deliberately accused him of wishing to favour Esther.</p>
<p id="id00356">"Don't we know that you went out to walk with her, and that you remained
out till nearly eleven at night. That's why you want all the money to go
to her. You don't take us for a lot of fools, do you? Never in any place I
ever was in before would such a thing be allowed—the footman going out
with the kitchen-maid, and one of the Dissenting lot."</p>
<p id="id00357">"I am not going to have my religion insulted! How dare you?" And Esther
started up from her place; but William was too quick for her. He grasped
her arm.</p>
<p id="id00358">"Never mind what Sarah says."</p>
<p id="id00359">"Never mind what I says! …A thing like that, who never was in a
situation before; no doubt taken out of some 'ouse. Rescue work, I think
they call it——"</p>
<p id="id00360">"She shan't insult me—no, she shan't!" said Esther, tremulous with
passion.</p>
<p id="id00361">"A nice sort of person to insult!" said Sarah, her arms akimbo.</p>
<p id="id00362">"Now look you here, Sarah Tucker," said Mrs. Latch, starting from her
seat, "I'm not going to see that girl aggravated, so that she may do what
she shouldn't do, and give you an opportunity of going to the missis with
tales about her. Come away, Esther, come with me. Let them go on betting
if they will; I never saw no good come of it."</p>
<p id="id00363">"That's all very fine, mother; but it must be settled, and we have to
divide the money."</p>
<p id="id00364">"I don't want your money," said Esther, sullenly; "I wouldn't take it."</p>
<p id="id00365">"What blooming nonsense! You must take your money. Ah, here's Mr. Leopold!
he'll decide it."</p>
<p id="id00366">Mr. Leopold said at once that the money that under other circumstances
would have gone to the third horse must be divided between the first and
second; but Sarah refused to accept this decision. Finally, it was
proposed that the matter should be referred to the editor of the
<i>Sportsman</i>; and as Sarah still remained deaf to argument, William offered
her choice between the <i>Sportsman</i> and the <i>Sporting Life</i>.</p>
<p id="id00367">"Look here," said William, getting between the women; "this evening isn't
one for fighting; we have all won our little bit, and ought to be
thankful. The only difference between you is two shillings, that were to
have gone to the third horse if anyone had drawn him. Mr. Leopold says it
ought to be divided; you, Sarah, won't accept his decision. We have
offered to write to the <i>Sportsman</i>, and Esther has offered to give up her
claim. Now, in the name of God, tell us what do you want?"</p>
<p id="id00368">She raised some wholly irrelevant issue, and after a protracted argument
with William, largely composed of insulting remarks, she declared that she
wasn't going to take the two shillings, nor yet one of them; let them give
her the three she had won—that was all she wanted. William looked at her,
shrugged his shoulders, and, after declaring that it was his conviction
that women wasn't intended to have nothing to do with horse-racing, he
took up his pipe and tobacco-pouch.</p>
<p id="id00369">"Good-night, ladies, I have had enough of you for to-night; I am going to
finish my smoke in the pantry. Don't scratch all your 'air out; leave
enough for me to put into a locket."</p>
<p id="id00370">When the pantry door was shut, and the men had smoked some moments in
silence, William said—</p>
<p id="id00371">"Do you think he has any chance of winning the Chesterfield Cup?"</p>
<p id="id00372">"He'll win in a canter if he'll only run straight. If I was the Gaffer I
think I'd put up a bigger boy. He'll 'ave to carry a seven-pound penalty,
and Johnnie Scott could ride that weight."</p>
<p id="id00373">The likelihood that a horse will bolt with one jockey and run straight
with another was argued passionately, and illustrated with interesting
reminiscences drawn from that remote past when Mr. Leopold was the
Gaffer's private servant—before either of them had married—when life was
composed entirely of horse-racing and prize-fighting. But cutting short
his tale of how he had met one day the Birmingham Chicken in a booth, and,
not knowing who he was, had offered to fight him, Mr. Leopold confessed he
did not know how to act—he had a bet of fifty pounds to ten shillings for
the double event; should he stand it out or lay some of it off? William
thrilled with admiration. What a 'ead, and who'd think it? that little
'ead, hardly bigger than a cocoanut! What a brain there was inside! Fifty
pounds to ten shillings; should he stand it out or hedge some of it? Who
could tell better than Mr. Leopold? It would, of course, be a pity to
break into the fifty. What did ten shillings matter? Mr. Leopold was a big
enough man to stand the racket of it even if it didn't come back. William
felt very proud of being consulted, for Mr. Leopold had never before been
known to let anyone know what he had on a race.</p>
<p id="id00374">Next day they walked into Shoreham together. The bar of the "Red Lion" was
full of people. Above the thronging crowd the voice of the barman and the
customers were heard calling, "Two glasses of Burton, glass of bitter,
three of whiskey cold." There were railway porters, sailors, boatmen,
shop-boys, and market gardeners. They had all won something, and had come
for their winnings.</p>
<p id="id00375">Old Watkins, an elderly man with white whiskers and a curving stomach, had
just run in to wet his whistle. He walked back to his office with Mr.
Leopold and William, a little corner shelved out of some out-houses, into
which you could walk from the street.</p>
<p id="id00376">"Talk of favourites!" he said; "I'd sooner pay over the three first
favourites than this one—thirty, twenty to one starting price, and the
whole town onto him; it's enough to break any man…. Now, my men, what is
it?" he said, turning to the railway porters.</p>
<p id="id00377">"Just the trifle me and my mates 'av won over that 'ere 'orse."</p>
<p id="id00378">"What was it?"</p>
<p id="id00379">"A shilling at five and twenty to one."</p>
<p id="id00380">"Look it out, Joey. Is it all right?"</p>
<p id="id00381">"Yes, sir; yes, sir," said the clerk.</p>
<p id="id00382">And old Watkins slid his hand into his breeches pocket, and it came forth
filled with gold and silver.</p>
<p id="id00383">"Come, come, mates, we are bound to 'ave a bet on him for the<br/>
Chesterfield—we can afford it now; what say yer, a shilling each?"<br/></p>
<p id="id00384">"Done for a shilling each," said the under-porter; "finest 'orse in
training…. What price, Musser Watkins?"</p>
<p id="id00385">"Ten to one."</p>
<p id="id00386">"Right, 'ere's my bob."</p>
<p id="id00387">The other porters gave their shillings; Watkins slid them back into his
pocket, and called to Joey to book the bet.</p>
<p id="id00388">"And, now, what is yours, Mr. Latch?"</p>
<p id="id00389">William stated the various items. He had had a bet of ten shillings to one
on one race and had lost; he had had half-a-crown on another and had lost;
in a word, three-and-sixpence had to be subtracted from his winnings on
Silver Braid. These amounted to more than five pounds. William's face
flushed with pleasure, and the world seemed to be his when he slipped four
sovereigns and a handful of silver into his waistcoat pocket. Should he
put a sovereign of his winnings on Silver Braid for the Chesterfield?
Half-a-sovereign was enough! …The danger of risking a sovereign—a whole
sovereign—frightened him.</p>
<p id="id00390">"Now, Mr. Latch," said old Watkins, "if you want to back anything, make up
your mind; there are a good many besides yourself who have business with
me."</p>
<p id="id00391">William hesitated, and then said he'd take ten half-sovereigns to one
against Silver Braid.</p>
<p id="id00392">"Ten half-sovereigns to one?" said old Watkins.</p>
<p id="id00393">William murmured "Yes," and Joey booked the bet.</p>
<p id="id00394">Mr. Leopold's business demanded more consideration. The fat betting man
and the scarecrow little butler walked aside and talked, both apparently
indifferent to the impatience of a number of small customers; sometimes
Joey called in his shrill cracked voice if he might lay ten half-crowns to
one, or five shillings to one, as the case might be. Watkins would then
raise his eyes from Mr. Leopold's face and nod or shake his head, or
perhaps would sign with his fingers what odds he was prepared to lay. With
no one else would Watkins talk so lengthily, showing so much deference.
Mr. Leopold had the knack of investing all he did with an air of mystery,
and the deepest interest was evinced in this conversation. At last, as if
dismissing matters of first importance, the two men approached William,
and he heard Watkins pressing Mr. Leopold to lay off some of that fifty
pounds.</p>
<p id="id00395">"I'll take twelve to one—twenty-four pounds to two. Shall I book it?"</p>
<p id="id00396">Mr. Leopold shook his head, and, smiling enigmatically, said he must be
getting back. William was much impressed, and congratulated himself on his
courage in taking the ten half-sovereigns to one. Mr. Leopold knew a thing
or two; he had been talking to the Gaffer that morning, and if it hadn't
been all right he would have laid off some of the money.</p>
<p id="id00397">Next day one of the Gaffer's two-year-olds won a race, and the day after<br/>
Silver Braid won the Chesterfield Cup.<br/></p>
<p id="id00398">The second victory of Silver Braid nearly ruined old Watkins. He declared
that he had never been so hard hit; but as he did not ask for time and
continued to draw notes and gold and silver in handfuls from his capacious
pockets, his lamentations only served to stimulate the happiness of the
fortunate backers, and, listening to the sweet note of self ringing in
their hearts, they returned to the public-house to drink the health of the
horse.</p>
<p id="id00399">So the flood of gold continued to roll into the little town, decrepit and
colourless by its high shingle beach and long reaches of muddy river. The
dear gold jingled merrily in the pockets, quickening the steps, lightening
the heart, curling lips with smiles, opening lips with laughter. The dear
gold came falling softly, sweetly as rain, soothing the hard lives of
working folk. Lives pressed with toil lifted up and began to dream again.
The dear gold was like an opiate; it wiped away memories of hardship and
sorrow, it showed life in a lighter and merrier guise, and the folk
laughed at their fears for the morrow and wondered how they could have
thought life so hard and relentless. The dear gold was pleasing as a bird
on the branch, as a flower on the stem; the tune it sang was sweet, the
colour it flaunted was bright.</p>
<p id="id00400">The trade of former days had never brought the excitement and the fortune
that this horse's hoofs had done. The dust they had thrown up had fallen a
happy, golden shower upon Shoreham. In every corner and crevice of life
the glitter appeared. That fine red dress on the builder's wife, and the
feathers that the girls flaunt at their sweethearts, the loud trousers on
the young man's legs, the cigar in his mouth—all is Goodwood gold. It
glitters in that girl's ears and on this girl's finger.</p>
<p id="id00401">It was said that the town of Shoreham had won two thousand pounds on the
race; it was said that Mr. Leopold had won two hundred; it was said that
William Latch had won fifty; it was said that Wall, the coachman, had won
five-and-twenty; it was said that the Gaffer had won forty thousand
pounds. For ten miles around nothing was talked of but the wealth of the
Barfields, and, drawn like moths to a candle, the county came to call;
even the most distant and reserved left cards, others walked up and down
the lawn with the Gaffer, listening to his slightest word. A golden
prosperity shone upon the yellow Italian house. Carriages passed under its
elm-trees at every hour and swept round the evergreen oaks. Rumour said
that large alterations were going to be made, so that larger and grander
entertainments might be given; an Italian garden was spoken of,
balustrades and terraces, stables were in course of construction, many
more race-horses were bought; they arrived daily, and the slender
creatures, their dark eyes glancing out of the sight holes in their cloth
hoods, walked up from the station followed by an admiring and commenting
crowd. Drink and expensive living, dancing and singing upstairs and
downstairs, and the jollifications culminated in a servants' ball given at
the Shoreham Gardens. All the Woodview servants, excepting Mrs. Latch,
were there; likewise all the servants from Mr. Northcote's, and those from
Sir George Preston's—two leading county families. A great number of
servants had come from West Brighton, and Lancing, and Worthing
—altogether between two and three hundred. "Evening dress is
indispensable" was printed on the cards. The butlers, footmen, cooks,
ladies' maids, housemaids, and housekeepers hoped by this notification to
keep the ball select. But the restriction seemed to condemn Esther to play
again the part of Cinderella.</p>
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