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The Doctor's Wife (Romance Classic). Mary Elizabeth BraddonЧитать онлайн книгу.

The Doctor's Wife (Romance Classic) - Mary Elizabeth  Braddon


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by dust and dirt. It was not a pleasant house to look at, however agreeable it might be as a habitation; and George compared it unfavourably with the trim white-walled villas he had seen on his way,—those neat little mansions at five-and-thirty pounds a year; those cosy little cottages, with shining windows that winked and blinked in the sunshine by reason of their cleanliness; those dazzling brass plates, which shone like brazen shields upon the vivid green of newly-painted front doors. If Mr. Sleaford’s house had ever been painted within Mr Sleaford’s memory, the barrister must have been one of the oldest inhabitants of that sterile region on the outskirts of Camberwell; if Mr. Sleaford held the house upon a repairing lease, he must have anticipated a prodigious claim for dilapidations at the expiration of his tenancy. Whatever could be broken in Mr. Sleaford’s house was broken; whatever could fall out of repair had so fallen. The bricks held together, and the house stood; and that was about all that could be said for the barrister’s habitation.

      The bell was broken, and the handle rattled loosely in a kind of basin of tarnished brass, so it was no use attempting to ring; but Sigismund was used to this. He stooped down, put his lips to a hole broken in the wood-work above the lock of the garden-door, and gave a shrill whistle.

      “They understand that,” he said; “the bell’s been broken ever since I’ve lived here, but they never have anything mended.”

      “Why not?”

      “Because they’re thinking of leaving. I’ve been with them two years and a half, and they’ve been thinking of leaving all the time. Sleaford has got the house cheap, and the landlord won’t do anything; so between them they let it go. Sleaford talks about going to Australia some of these days.”

      The garden-door was opened while Mr. Smith was talking, and the two young men went in. The person who had admitted them was a boy who had just arrived at that period of life when boys are most obnoxious. He had ceased to be a boy pure and simple, and had not yet presumed to call himself a young man. Rejected on one side by his juniors, who found him arrogant and despotic, mooting strange and unorthodox theories with regard to marbles, and evincing supreme contempt for boys who were not familiar with the latest vaticinations of the sporting prophets in “Bell’s Life” and the “Sunday Times;” and flouted on the other hand by his seniors, who offered him halfpence for the purchase of hardbake, and taunted him with base insinuations when he was seized with a sudden fancy for going to look at the weather in the middle of a strong cheroot,—the hobbledehoy sought vainly for a standing-place upon the social scale, and finding none, became a misanthrope, and wrapped himself in scorn as in a mantle. For Sigismund Smith the gloomy youth cherished a peculiar hatred. The young author was master of that proud position to obtain which the boy struggled in vain. He was a man! He could smoke a cigar to the very stump, and not grow ashy pale, or stagger dizzily once during the operation; but how little he made of his advantages! He could stay out late of nights, and there was no one to reprove him, He could go into a popular tavern, and call for gin-and-bitters, and drink the mixture without so much as a wry face, and slap his money upon the pewter counter, and call the barmaid “Mary;” and there was no chance of his mother happening to be passing at that moment, and catching a glimpse of his familiar back-view through the half-open swinging door, and rushing in, red and angry, to lead him off by the collar of his jacket, amid the laughter of heartless bystanders. No; Sigismund Smith was a MAN. He might have got tipsy if he had liked, and walked about London half the night, ringing surgeons’ bells, and pulling off knockers, and being taken to the station-house early in the morning, to be bailed out by a friend by-and-by, and to have his name in the Sunday papers, with a sensational heading, “Another tipsy swell,” or “A modern spring-heeled Jack.”

      Yes; Horace Sleaford hated his mother’s partial boarder; but his hatred was tempered by disdain. What did Mr. Smith make of all his lofty privileges? Nothing; absolutely nothing. The glory of manhood was thrown away upon a mean-spirited cur, who, possessed of liberty to go where he pleased, had never seen a fight for the championship of England, or the last grand rush for the blue riband of the turf; and who, at four-and-twenty years of age, ate bread and marmalade openly in the face of contemptuous mankind. Master Sleaford shut the door with a bang, and locked it. There was one exception to the rule of no repairs in Mr. Sleaford’s establishment, the locks were all kept in excellent order. The disdainful boy took the key from the lock, and carried it indoors on his little finger. He had warts upon his hands, and warts are the stigmata of boyhood; and the sleeves of his jacket were white and shiny at the elbows, and left him cruelly exposed about the wrists. The knowledge of his youth, and that shabby frouziness of raiment peculiar to middle-class hobbledehoyhood, gave him a sulky fierceness of aspect, which harmonized well with a pair of big black eyes and a tumbled shock of blue-black hair. He suspected everybody of despising him, and was perpetually trying to look-down the scorn of others with still deeper scorn. He stared at George Gilbert, as the young man came into the garden, but did not deign to speak. George was six feet high, and that was in itself enough to make him hateful.

      “Well, Horace!” Mr. Smith said, good-naturedly.

      “Well, young ’un,” the boy answered, disdainfully, “how do you find yourself?”

      Horace Sleaford led the way into the house. They went up a flight of steps leading to a half-glass door. It might have been pretty once upon a time, when the glass was bright, and the latticed porch sheltered by clustering roses and clematis; but the clematis had withered, and the straggling roses were choked with wild convolvulus tendrils, that wound about the branches like weedy serpents, and stifled buds and blossoms in their weedy embrace.

      The boy banged open the door of the house, as he had banged-to the door of the garden. He made a point of doing every thing with a bang; it was one way of evincing his contempt for his species.

      “Mother’s in the kitchen,” he said; “the boys are on the common flying a kite, and Izzie’s in the garden.”

      “Is your father at home?” Sigismund asked.

      “No, he isn’t, Clever; you might have known that without asking. Whenever is he at home at this time of day?”

      “Is tea ready?”

      “No, nor won’t be for this half-hour,” answered the boy, triumphantly; “so, if you and your friend are hungry, you’d better have some bread and marmalade. There’s a pot in your drawer up-stairs. I haven’t taken any, and I shouldn’t have seen it if I hadn’t gone to look for a steel pen; so, if you’ve made a mark upon the label, and think the marmalade’s gone down lower, it isn’t me. Tea won’t be ready for half-an-hour; for the kitchen-fire’s been smokin’, and the chops can’t be done till that’s clear; and the kettle ain’t on either; and the girl’s gone to fetch a fancy loaf,—so you’ll have to wait.”

      “Oh, never mind that,” Sigismund said; “come into the garden, George; I’ll introduce you to Miss Sleaford.”

      “Then I shan’t go with you,” said the boy; “I don’t care for girls’ talk. I say, Mr. Gilbert, you’re a Midlandshire man, and you ought to know something. What odds will you give me against Mr. Tomlinson’s brown colt, Vinegar Cruet, for the Conventford steeple-chase?”

      Unfortunately Mr. Gilbert was lamentably ignorant of the merits or demerits of Vinegar Cruet.

      “I’ll tell you what I’ll do with you, then,” the boy said; “I’ll take fifteen to two against him in fourpenny-bits, and that’s one less than the last Manchester quotation.”

      George shook his head. “Horse-racing is worse than Greek to me, Master Sleaford,” he said.

      The “Master” goaded the boy to retaliate.

      “Your friend don’t seem to have seen much life,” he said to Sigismund. “I think we shall be able to show him a thing or two before he goes back to Midlandshire, eh, Samuel?”

      Horace Sleaford had discovered that fatal name, Samuel, in an old prayer-book belonging to Mr. Smith; and he kept it in reserve, as a kind of poisoned dart, always ready to be hurled at his foe.

      “We’ll teach him a little life, eh,


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