<h2>CHAPTER X</h2>
<p>“They’re the most awful wretches, I assure you—the
lot all about there.”</p>
<p>“Then why do you want to stay among them?”</p>
<p>“My dear man, just because they <i>are</i>. It makes
me hate them so.”</p>
<p>“Hate them? I thought you liked them.”</p>
<p>“Don’t be stupid. What I ‘like’ is
just to loathe them. You wouldn’t believe what passes before
my eyes.”</p>
<p>“Then why have you never told me? You didn’t mention
anything before I left.”</p>
<p>“Oh I hadn’t got round to it then. It’s the
sort of thing you don’t believe at first; you have to look round
you a bit and then you understand. You work into it more and more.
Besides,” the girl went on, “this is the time of the year
when the worst lot come up. They’re simply packed together
in those smart streets. Talk of the numbers of the poor!
What <i>I</i> can vouch for is the numbers of the rich! There
are new ones every day, and they seem to get richer and richer.
Oh, they do come up!” she cried, imitating for her private recreation—she
was sure it wouldn’t reach Mr. Mudge—the low intonation
of the counter-clerk.</p>
<p>“And where do they come from?” her companion candidly
enquired.</p>
<p>She had to think a moment; then she found something. “From
the ‘spring meetings.’ They bet tremendously.”</p>
<p>“Well, they bet enough at Chalk Farm, if that’s all.”</p>
<p>“It <i>isn’t</i> all. It isn’t a millionth
part!” she replied with some sharpness. “It’s
immense fun”—she <i>had</i> to tantalise him. Then
as she had heard Mrs. Jordan say, and as the ladies at Cocker’s
even sometimes wired, “It’s quite too dreadful!”
She could fully feel how it was Mr. Mudge’s propriety, which was
extreme—he had a horror of coarseness and attended a Wesleyan
chapel—that prevented his asking for details. But she gave
him some of the more innocuous in spite of himself, especially putting
before him how, at Simpkin’s and Ladle’s, they all made
the money fly. That was indeed what he liked to hear: the connexion
was not direct, but one was somehow more in the right place where the
money was flying than where it was simply and meagrely nesting.
The air felt that stir, he had to acknowledge, much less at Chalk Farm
than in the district in which his beloved so oddly enjoyed her footing.
She gave him, she could see, a restless sense that these might be familiarities
not to be sacrificed; germs, possibilities, faint foreshowings—heaven
knew what—of the initiation it would prove profitable to have
arrived at when in the fulness of time he should have his own shop in
some such paradise. What really touched him—that was discernible—was
that she could feed him with so much mere vividness of reminder, keep
before him, as by the play of a fan, the very wind of the swift bank-notes
and the charm of the existence of a class that Providence had raised
up to be the blessing of grocers. He liked to think that the class
was there, that it was always there, and that she contributed in her
slight but appreciable degree to keep it up to the mark. He couldn’t
have formulated his theory of the matter, but the exuberance of the
aristocracy was the advantage of trade, and everything was knit together
in a richness of pattern that it was good to follow with one’s
finger-tips. It was a comfort to him to be thus assured that there
were no symptoms of a drop. What did the sounder, as she called
it, nimbly worked, do but keep the ball going?</p>
<p>What it came to therefore for Mr. Mudge was that all enjoyments were,
as might be said, inter-related, and that the more people had the more
they wanted to have. The more flirtations, as he might roughly
express it, the more cheese and pickles. He had even in his own
small way been dimly struck with the linkèd sweetness connecting
the tender passion with cheap champagne, or perhaps the other way round.
What he would have liked to say had he been able to work out his thought
to the end was: “I see, I see. Lash them up then, lead them
on, keep them going: some of it can’t help, some time, coming
<i>our</i> way.” Yet he was troubled by the suspicion of
subtleties on his companion’s part that spoiled the straight view.
He couldn’t understand people’s hating what they liked or
liking what they hated; above all it hurt him somewhere—for he
had his private delicacies—to see anything <i>but</i> money made
out of his betters. To be too enquiring, or in any other way too
free, at the expense of the gentry was vaguely wrong; the only thing
that was distinctly right was to be prosperous at any price. Wasn’t
it just because they were up there aloft that they were lucrative?
He concluded at any rate by saying to his young friend: “If it’s
improper for you to remain at Cocker’s, then that falls in exactly
with the other reasons I’ve put before you for your removal.”</p>
<p>“Improper?”—her smile became a prolonged boldness.
“My dear boy, there’s no one like you!”</p>
<p>“I dare say,” he laughed; “but that doesn’t
help the question.”</p>
<p>“Well,” she returned, “I can’t give up my
friends. I’m making even more than Mrs. Jordan.”</p>
<p>Mr. Mudge considered. “How much is <i>she</i> making?”</p>
<p>“Oh you dear donkey!”—and, regardless of all the
Regent’s Park, she patted his cheek. This was the sort of
moment at which she was absolutely tempted to tell him that she liked
to be near Park Chambers. There was a fascination in the idea
of seeing if, on a mention of Captain Everard, he wouldn’t do
what she thought he might; wouldn’t weigh against the obvious
objection the still more obvious advantage. The advantage of course
could only strike him at the best as rather fantastic; but it was always
to the good to keep hold when you <i>had</i> hold, and such an attitude
would also after all involve a high tribute to her fidelity. Of
one thing she absolutely never doubted: Mr. Mudge believed in her with
a belief—! She believed in herself too, for that matter:
if there was a thing in the world no one could charge her with it was
being the kind of low barmaid person who rinsed tumblers and bandied
slang. But she forbore as yet to speak; she had not spoken even
to Mrs. Jordan; and the hush that on her lips surrounded the Captain’s
name maintained itself as a kind of symbol of the success that, up to
this time, had attended something or other—she couldn’t
have said what—that she humoured herself with calling, without
words, her relation with him.</p>
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