<h2><SPAN name="chap56"></SPAN>CHAPTER LVI.<br/> In which Fanny engages a new Medical Man</h2>
<p>Could Helen have suspected that, with Pen’s returning strength, his
unhappy partiality for little Fanny would also reawaken? Though she never spoke
a word regarding that young person, after her conversation with the Major, and
though, to all appearances, she utterly ignored Fanny’s existence, yet
Mrs. Pendennis kept a particularly close watch upon all Master Arthur’s
actions; on the plea of ill-health would scarcely let him out of her sight; and
was especially anxious that he should be spared the trouble of all
correspondence for the present at least. Very likely Arthur looked at his own
letters with some tremor; very likely, as he received them at the family table,
feeling his mother’s watch upon him (though the good soul’s eye
seemed fixed upon her teacup or her book), he expected daily to see a little
handwriting, which he would have known, though he had never seen it yet, and
his heart beat as he received the letters to his address. Was he more pleased
or annoyed, that, day after day, his expectations were not realised; and was
his mind relieved, that there came no letter from Fanny? Though, no doubt, in
these matters, when Lovelace is tired of Clarissa (or the contrary) it is best
for both parties to break at once, and each, after the failure of the attempt
at union, to go his own way, and pursue his course through life solitary; yet
our self-love, or our pity, or our sense of decency, does not like that sudden
bankruptcy. Before we announce to the world that our firm of Lovelace and Co.
can’t meet its engagements, we try to make compromises: we have mournful
meetings of partners: we delay the putting up of the shutters, and the dreary
announcement of the failure. It must come: but we pawn our jewels to keep
things going a little longer. On the whole, I dare say, Pen was rather annoyed
that he had no remonstrances from Fanny. What! could she part from him, and
never so much as once look round? could she sink, and never once hold a little
hand out, or cry, “Help, Arthur?” Well, well: they don’t all
go down who venture on that voyage. Some few drown when the vessel founders;
but most are only ducked, and scramble to shore. And the reader’s
experience of A. Pendennis, Esquire, of the Upper Temple, will enable him to
state whether that gentleman belonged to the class of persons who were likely
to sink or to swim.</p>
<p>Though Pen was as yet too weak to walk half a mile; and might not, on account
of his precious health, be trusted to take a drive in a carriage by himself,
and without a nurse in attendance; yet Helen could not keep watch over Mr.
Warrington too, and had no authority to prevent that gentleman from going to
London if business called him thither. Indeed, if he had gone and stayed,
perhaps the widow, from reasons of her own, would have been glad; but she
checked these selfish wishes as soon as she ascertained or owned them; and,
remembering Warrington’s great regard and services, and constant
friendship for her boy, received him as a member of her family almost, with her
usual melancholy kindness and submissive acquiescence. Yet somehow, one morning
when his affairs called him to town, she divined what Warrington’s errand
was, and that he was gone to London to get news about Fanny for Pen.</p>
<p>Indeed, Arthur had had some talk with his friend, and told him more at large
what his adventures had been with Fanny (adventures which the reader knows
already), and what were his feelings respecting her. He was very thankful that
he had escaped the great danger, to which Warrington said Amen heartily: that
he had no great fault wherewith to reproach himself in regard of his behaviour
to her, but that if they parted, as they must, he would be glad to say a God
bless her, and to hope that she would remember him kindly. In his discourse
with Warrington he spoke upon these matters with so much gravity, and so much
emotion, that George, who had pronounced himself most strongly for the
separation too, began to fear that his friend was not so well cured as he
boasted of being; and that, if the two were to come together again, all the
danger and the temptation might have to be fought once more. And with what
result? “It is hard to struggle, Arthur, and it is easy to fall,”
Warrington said: “and the best courage for us poor wretches is to fly
from danger. I would not have been what I am now, had I practised what I
preach.”</p>
<p>“And what did you practise, George?” Pen asked, eagerly. “I
knew there was something. Tell us about it, Warrington.”</p>
<p>“There was something that can’t be mended, and that shattered my
whole fortunes early,” Warrington answered. “I said I would tell
you about it some day, Pen: and will, but not now. Take the moral without the
fable now, Pen, my boy; and if you want to see a man whose whole life has been
wrecked, by an unlucky rock against which he struck as a boy—here he is,
Arthur: and so I warn you.”</p>
<p>We have shown how Mr. Huxter, in writing home to his Clavering friends,
mentioned that there was a fashionable club in London of which he was an
attendant, and that he was there in the habit of meeting an Irish officer of
distinction, who, amongst other news, had given that intelligence regarding
Pendennis, which the young surgeon had transmitted to Clavering. This club was
no other than the Back Kitchen, where the disciple of Saint Bartholomew was
accustomed to meet the General, the peculiarities of whose brogue, appearance,
disposition, and general conversation, greatly diverted many young gentlemen
who used the Back Kitchen as a place of nightly entertainment and refreshment.
Huxter, who had a fine natural genius for mimicking everything, whether it was
a favourite tragic or comic actor, or a cock on a dunghill, a corkscrew going
into a bottle and a cork issuing thence, or an Irish officer of genteel
connexions who offered himself as an object of imitation with only too much
readiness, talked his talk, and twanged his poor old long bow whenever drink, a
hearer, and an opportunity occurred, studied our friend the General with
peculiar gusto, and drew the honest fellow out many a night. A bait, consisting
of sixpennyworth of brandy-and-water, the worthy old man was sure to swallow:
and under the influence of this liquor, who was more happy than he to tell his
stories of his daughter’s triumphs and his own, in love, war, drink, and
polite society? Thus Huxter was enabled to present to his friends many pictures
of Costigan: of Costigan fighting a jewel in the Phaynix—of Costigan and
his interview with the Juke of York—of Costigan at his sonunlaw’s
teeble, surrounded by the nobilitee of his countree—of Costigan, when
crying drunk, at which time he was in the habit of confidentially lamenting his
daughter’s ingratichewd, and stating that his grey hairs were hastening
to a praymachure greeve. And thus our friend was the means of bringing a number
of young fellows to the Back Kitchen, who consumed the landlord’s liquors
whilst they relished the General’s peculiarities, so that mine host
pardoned many of the latter’s foibles, in consideration of the good which
they brought to his house. Not the highest position in life was
this—certainly, or one which, if we had a reverence for an old man, we
would be anxious that he should occupy: but of this aged buffoon it may be
mentioned that he had no particular idea that his condition of life was not a
high one, and that in his whiskied blood there was not a black drop, nor in his
muddled brains a bitter feeling, against any mortal being. Even his child, his
cruel Emily, he would have taken to his heart and forgiven with tears; and what
more can one say of the Christian charity of a man than that he is actually
ready to forgive those who have done him every kindness, and with whom he is
wrong in a dispute!</p>
<p>There was some idea amongst the young men who frequented the Back Kitchen, and
made themselves merry with the society of Captain Costigan, that the Captain
made a mystery regarding his lodgings for fear of duns, or from a desire of
privacy, and lived in some wonderful place. Nor would the landlord of the
premises, when questioned upon this subject, answer any inquiries; his maxim
being that he only knew gentlemen who frequented that room, in that room; that
when they quitted that room, having paid their scores as gentlemen, and behaved
as gentlemen, his communication with them ceased; and that, as a gentleman
himself, he thought it was only impertinent curiosity to ask where any other
gentleman lived. Costigan, in his most intoxicated and confidential moments,
also evaded any replies to questions or hints addressed to him on this subject:
there was no particular secret about it, as we have seen, who have had more
than once the honour of entering his apartments, but in the vicissitudes of a
long life he had been pretty often in the habit of residing in houses where
privacy was necessary to his comfort, and where the appearance of some visitors
would have brought him anything but pleasure. Hence all sorts of legends were
formed by wags or credulous persons respecting his place of abode. It was
stated that he slept habitually in a watch-box in the city: in a cab at a mews,
where a cab-proprietor gave him a shelter: in the Duke of York’s Column
etc, the wildest of these theories being put abroad by the facetious and
imaginative Huxter. For Huxey, when not silenced by the company of
“swells,” and when in the society of his own friends, was a very
different fellow to the youth whom we have seen cowed by Pen’s
impertinent airs, and, adored by his family at home, was the life and soul of
the circle whom he met, either round the festive board or the dissecting table.
On one brilliant September morning, as Huxter was regaling himself with a cup
of coffee at a stall in Covent Garden, having spent a delicious night dancing
at Vauxhall, he spied the General reeling down Henrietta Street, with a crowd
of hooting blackguard boys at his heels, who had left their beds under the
arches of the river betimes, and were prowling about already for breakfast, and
the strange livelihood of the day. The poor old General was not in that
condition when the sneers and jokes of these young beggars had much effect upon
him: the cabmen and watermen at the cabstand knew him and passed their comments
upon him: the policemen gazed after him and warned the boys off him, with looks
of scorn and pity; what did the scorn and pity of men, the jokes of ribald
children, matter to the General? He reeled along the street with glazed eyes,
having just sense enough to know whither he was bound, and to pursue his
accustomed beat homewards. He went to bed not knowing how he had reached it, as
often as any man in London. He woke and found himself there, and asked no
questions, and he was tacking about on this daily though perilous voyage, when,
from his station at the coffee-stall, Huxter spied him. To note his friend, to
pay his twopence (indeed, he had but eightpence left, or he would have had a
cab from Vauxhall to take him home), was with the eager Huxter the work of an
instant—Costigan dived down the alleys by Drury Lane Theatre, where
gin-shops, oyster-shops, and theatrical wardrobes abound, the proprietors of
which were now asleep behind their shutters, as the pink morning lighted up
their chimneys; and through these courts Huxter followed the General, until he
reached Oldcastle Street, in which is the gate of Shepherd’s Inn.</p>
<p>Here, just as he was within sight of home, a luckless slice of orange-peel came
between the General’s heel and the pavement, and caused the poor old
fellow to fall backwards.</p>
<p>Huxter ran up to him instantly, and after a pause, during which the veteran,
giddy with his fall and his previous whisky, gathered, as he best might, his
dizzy brains together, the young surgeon lifted up the limping General, and
very kindly and good-naturedly offered to conduct him to his home. For some
time, and in reply to the queries which the student of medicine put to him, the
muzzy General refused to say where his lodgings were and declared that they
were hard by, and that he could reach them without difficulty; and he
disengaged himself from Huxter’s arm, and made a rush as if to get to his
own home unattended: but he reeled and lurched so, that the young surgeon
insisted upon accompanying him, and, with many soothing expressions and
cheering and consolatory phrases, succeeded in getting the General’s
dirty old hand under what he called his own fin, and led the old fellow,
moaning piteously, across the street. He stopped when he came to the ancient
gate, ornamented with the armorial bearings of the venerable Shepherd.
“Here ’tis,” said he, drawing up at the portal, and he made a
successful pull at the gate bell, which presently brought out old Mr. Bolton,
the porter, scowling fiercely, and grumbling as he was used to do every morning
when it became his turn to let in that early bird.</p>
<p>Costigan tried to hold Bolton for a moment in genteel conversation, but the
other surlily would not. “Don’t bother me,” said he;
“go to your hown bed Capting, and don’t keep honest men out of
theirs.” So the Captain tacked across the square and reached his own
staircase, up which he stumbled with the worthy Huxter at his heels. Costigan
had a key of his own, which Huxter inserted into the keyhole for him, so that
there was no need to call up little Mr. Bows from the sleep into which the old
musician had not long since fallen, and Huxter having aided to disrobe his
tipsy patient, and ascertained that no bones were broken, helped him to bed and
applied compresses and water to one of his knees and shins, which, with the
pair of trousers which encased them, Costigan had severely torn in his fall. At
the General’s age, and with his habit of body, such wounds as he had
inflicted on himself are slow to heal: a good deal of inflammation ensued, and
the old fellow lay ill for some days, suffering both pain and fever.</p>
<p>Mr. Huxter undertook the case of his interesting patient with great confidence
and alacrity, and conducted it with becoming skill. He visited his friend day
after day, and consoled him with lively rattle and conversation for the absence
of the society which Costigan needed, and of which he was an ornament; and he
gave special instructions to the invalid’s nurse about the quantity of
whisky which the patient was to take—instructions which, as the poor old
fellow could not for many days get out of his bed or sofa himself, he could not
by any means infringe. Bows, Mrs. Bolton, and our little friend Fanny, when
able to do so, officiated at the General’s bedside, and the old warrior
was made as comfortable as possible under his calamity.</p>
<p>Thus Huxter, whose affable manners and social turn made him quickly intimate
with persons in whose society he fell, and whose over-refinement did not lead
them to repulse the familiarities of this young gentleman, became pretty soon
intimate in Shepherd’s Inn, both with our acquaintances in the garrets
and those in the porter’s lodge. He thought he had seen Fanny somewhere:
he felt certain that he had: but it is no wonder that he should not accurately
remember her, for the poor little thing never chose to tell him where she had
met him: he himself had seen her at a period, when his own views both of
persons and of right and wrong were clouded by the excitement of drinking and
dancing, and also little Fanny was very much changed and worn by the fever and
agitation, and passion and despair, which the past three weeks had poured upon
the head of that little victim. Borne down was the head now, and very pale and
wan the face; and many and many a time the sad eyes had looked into the
postman’s, as he came to the Inn, and the sickened heart had sunk as he
passed away. When Mr. Costigan’s accident occurred, Fanny was rather glad
to have an opportunity of being useful and doing something kind—something
that would make her forget her own little sorrows perhaps: she felt she bore
them better whilst she did her duty, though I dare say many a tear dropped into
the old Irishman’s gruel. Ah, me! stir the gruel well, and have courage,
little Fanny! If everybody who has suffered from your complaint were to die of
it straightway, what a fine year the undertakers would have!</p>
<p>Whether from compassion for his only patient, or delight in his society, Mr.
Huxter found now occasion to visit Costigan two or three times in the day at
least, and if any of the members of the porter’s lodge family were not in
attendance on the General, the young doctor was sure to have some particular
directions to address to those at their own place of habitation. He was a kind
fellow; he made or purchased toys for the children; he brought them apples and
brandy-balls; he brought a mask and frightened them with it, and caused a smile
upon the face of pale Fanny. He called Mrs. Bolton Mrs. B., and was very
intimate, familiar, and facetious with that lady, quite different from that
“aughty, artless beast,” as Mrs. Bolton now denominated a certain
young gentleman of our acquaintance, and whom she now vowed she never could
abear.</p>
<p>It was from this lady, who was very free in her conversation, that Huxter
presently learnt what was the illness which was evidently preying upon little
Fan, and what had been Pen’s behaviour regarding her. Mrs. Bolton’s
account of the transaction was not, it may be imagined, entirely an impartial
narrative. One would have thought from her story that the young gentleman had
employed a course of the most persevering and flagitious artifices to win the
girl’s heart, had broken the most solemn promises made to her and was a
wretch to be hated and chastised by every champion of woman. Huxter, in his
present frame of mind respecting Arthur, and suffering under the latter’s
contumely, was ready, of course, to take all for granted that was said in the
disfavour of this unfortunate convalescent. But why did he not write home to
Clavering, as he had done previously, giving an account of Pen’s
misconduct, and of the particulars regarding it, which had now come to his
knowledge? He soon, in a letter to his brother-in-law, announced that that nice
young man, Mr. Pendennis, had escaped narrowly from a fever, and that no doubt
all Clavering, where he was so popular, would be pleased at his recovery; and
he mentioned that he had an interesting case of compound fracture, an officer
of distinction, which kept him in town; but as for Fanny Bolton, he made no
more mention of her in his letters—no more than Pen himself had made
mention of her. O you mothers at home, how much do you think you know about
your lads? How much do you think you know?</p>
<p>But with Bows, there was no reason why Huxter should not speak his mind, and
so, a very short time after his conversation with Mrs. Bolton, Mr. Sam talked
to the musician about his early acquaintance with Pendennis; described him as a
confounded conceited blackguard, and expressed a determination to punch his
impudent head as soon as ever he should be well enough to stand up like a man.</p>
<p>Then it was that Bows on his part spoke and told his version of the story,
whereof Arthur and little Fan were the hero and heroine; how they had met by no
contrivance of the former, but by a blunder of the old Irishman, now in bed
with a broken shin—how Pen had acted with manliness and self-control in
the business—how Mrs Bolton was an idiot; and he related the conversation
which he, Bows, had had with Pen, and the sentiments uttered by the young man.
Perhaps Bow’s story caused some twinges of conscience in the breast of
Pen’s accuser, and that gentleman frankly owned that he had been wrong
with regard to Arthur, and withdrew his project for punching Mr.
Pendennis’s head.</p>
<p>But the cessation of his hostility for Pen did not diminish Huxter’s
attentions to Fanny, which unlucky Mr Bows marked with his usual jealousy and
bitterness of spirit, “I have but to like anybody” the old fellow
thought, “and somebody is sure to come and be preferred to me. It has
been the same ill-luck with me since I was a lad, until now that I am sixty
years old. What can such a man as I am expect better than to be laughed at? It
is for the young to succeed, and to be happy, and not for old fools like me.
I’ve played a second fiddle through life,” he said, with a bitter
laugh; “how can I suppose the luck is to change after it has gone against
me so long?” This was the selfish way in which Bows looked at the state
of affairs: though few persons would have thought there was any cause for his
jealousy, who looked at the pale and grief-stricken countenance of the hapless
little girl, its object. Fanny received Huxter’s good-natured efforts at
consolation and kind attentions kindly. She laughed now and again at his jokes
and games with her little sisters, but relapsed quickly into a dejection which
ought to have satisfied Mr. Bows that the new-comer had no place in her heart
as yet, had jealous Mr. Bows been enabled to see with clear eyes.</p>
<p>But Bows did not. Fanny attributed Pen’s silence somehow to Bows’s
interference. Fanny hated him. Fanny treated Bows with constant cruelty and
injustice. She turned from him when he spoke—she loathed his attempts at
consolation. A hard life had Mr. Bows, and a cruel return for his regard.</p>
<p>When Warrington came to Shepherd’s Inn as Pen’s ambassador, it was
for Mr. Bows’s apartments he inquired (no doubt upon a previous agreement
with the principal for whom he acted in this delicate negotiation), and he did
not so much as catch a glimpse of Miss Fanny when he stopped at the Inn-gate
and made his inquiry. Warrington was, of course, directed to the
musician’s chambers, and found him tending the patient there, from whose
chamber he came out to wait upon his guest. We have said that they had been
previously known to one another, and the pair shook hands with sufficient
cordiality. After a little preliminary talk, Warrington said that he had come
from his friend Arthur Pendennis, and from his family, to thank Bows for his
attention at the commencement of Pen’s illness, and for his kindness in
hastening into the country to fetch the Major.</p>
<p>Bows replied that it was but his duty: he had never thought to have seen the
young gentleman alive again when he went in search of Pen’s relatives,
and he was very glad of Mr. Pendennis’s recovery, and that he had his
friends with him. “Lucky are they who have friends, Mr.
Warrington,” said the musician. “I might be up in this garret and
nobody would care for me, or mind whether I was alive or dead.”</p>
<p>“What! not the General, Mr. Bows?” Warrington asked.</p>
<p>“The General likes his whisky-bottle more than anything in life,”
the other answered; “we live together from habit and convenience; and he
cares for me no more than you do. What is it you want to ask me, Mr.
Warrington? You ain’t come to visit me, I know very well. Nobody comes to
visit me. It is about Fanny, the porter’s daughter, you are come—I
see that—very well. Is Mr. Pendennis, now he has got well, anxious to see
her again? Does his lordship the Sultan propose to throw his ’andkerchief
to her? She has been very ill, sir, ever since the day when Mrs. Pendennis
turned her out of doors—kind of a lady, wasn’t it? The poor girl
and myself found the young gentleman raving in a fever, knowing nobody, with
nobody to tend him but his drunken laundress—she watched day and night by
him. I set off to fetch his uncle. Mamma comes and turns Fanny to the
right-about. Uncle comes and leaves me to pay the cab. Carry my compliments to
the ladies and gentleman, and say we are both very thankful, very. Why, a
countess couldn’t have behaved better, and for an apothecary’s
lady, as I’m given to understand Mrs. Pendennis was—I’m sure
her behaviour is most uncommon aristocratic and genteel. She ought to have a
double-gilt pestle and mortar to her coach.”</p>
<p>It was from Mr. Huxter that Bows had learned Pen’s parentage, no doubt,
and if he took Pen’s part against the young surgeon, and Fanny’s
against Mr. Pendennis, it was because the old gentleman was in so savage a
mood, that his humour was to contradict everybody.</p>
<p>Warrington was curious, and not ill pleased at the musician’s taunts and
irascibility. “I never heard of these transactions,” he said,
“or got but a very imperfect account of them from Major Pendennis. What
was a lady to do? I think (I have never spoken with her on the subject) she had
some notion that the young woman and my friend Pen were on—on terms
of—of an intimacy which Mrs. Pendennis could not, of course,
recognise——”</p>
<p>“Oh, of course not, sir. Speak out, sir; say what you mean at once, that
the young gentleman of the Temple had made a victim of the girl of
Shepherd’s Inn, eh? And so she was turned to be out of doors—or
brayed alive in the double-gilt pestle and mortar, by Jove! No, Mr. Warrington,
there was no such thing: there was no victimising, or if there was, Mr. Arthur
was the victim, not the girl. He is an honest fellow, he is, though he is
conceited, and a puppy sometimes. He can feel like a man, and run away from
temptation like a man. I own it, though I suffer by it, I own it. He has a
heart, he has: but the girl hasn’t, sir. That girl will do anything to
win a man, and fling him away without a pang, sir. If she’s flung away
herself, sir, she’ll feel it and cry. She had a fever when Mrs. Pendennis
turned her out of doors; and she made love to the Doctor, Doctor Goodenough,
who came to cure her. Now she has taken on with another chap—another
sawbones, ha, ha! d—— it, sir, she likes the pestle and mortar, and
hangs round the pill-boxes, she’s so fond of ’em, and she has got a
fellow from Saint Bartholomew’s, who grins through a horse-collar for her
sisters, and charms away her melancholy. Go and see, sir: very likely
he’s in the lodge now. If you want news about Miss Fanny, you must ask at
the Doctor’s shop, sir, not of an old fiddler like me—Good-bye,
sir. There’s my patient calling.”</p>
<p>And a voice was heard from the Captain’s bedroom, a well-known voice,
which said, “I’d loike a dthrop of dthrink, Bows, I’m
thirstee.” And not sorry, perhaps, to hear that such was the state of
things, and that Pen’s forsaken was consoling herself, Warrington took
his leave of the irascible musician.</p>
<p>As luck would have it, he passed the lodge door just as Mr. Huxter was in the
act of frightening the children with the mask whereof we have spoken, and Fanny
was smiling languidly at his farces. Warrington laughed bitterly. “Are
all women like that?” he thought. “I think there’s one
that’s not,” he added, with a sigh.</p>
<p>At Piccadilly, waiting for the Richmond omnibus, George fell in with Major
Pendennis, bound in the same direction, and he told the old gentleman of what
he had seen and heard respecting Fanny.</p>
<p>Major Pendennis was highly delighted: and as might be expected of such a
philosopher, made precisely the same observation as that which had escaped from
Warrington. “All women are the same,” he said. “La petite se
console. Daymy, when I used to read ‘Telemaque’ at school, Calypso
ne pouvait se consoler,—you know the rest, Warrington,—I used to
say it was absard. Absard, by Gad, and so it is. And so she’s got a new
soupirant, has she, the little porteress? Dayvlish nice little girl. How mad
Pen will be—eh, Warrington? But we must break it to him gently, or
he’ll be in such a rage that he will be going after her again. We must
menager the young fellow.”</p>
<p>“I think Mrs. Pendennis ought to know that Pen acted very well in the
business. She evidently thinks him guilty, and according to Mr. Bows, Arthur
behaved like a good fellow,” Warrington said.</p>
<p>“My dear Warrington,” said the Major, with a look of some alarm,
“in Mrs. Pendennis’s agitated state of health and that sort of
thing, the best way, I think, is not to say a single word about the
subject—or, stay, leave it to me: and I’ll talk to her—break
it to her gently, you know, and that sort of thing. I give you my word I will.
And so Calypso’s consoled, is she,” And he sniggered over this
gratifying truth, happy in the corner of the omnibus during the rest of the
journey.</p>
<p>Pen was very anxious to hear from his envoy what had been the result of the
latter’s mission; and as soon as the two young men could be alone, the
ambassador spoke in reply to Arthur’s eager queries.</p>
<p>“You remember your poem, Pen, of Ariadne in Naxos,” Warrington
said; “devilish bad poetry it was, to be sure.”</p>
<p>“Apres?” asked Pen, in a great state of excitement.</p>
<p>“When Theseus left Ariadne, do you remember what happened to her, young
fellow?”</p>
<p>“It’s a lie, it’s a lie! You don’t mean that!”
cried out Pen, starting up, his face turning red.</p>
<p>“Sit down, stoopid,” Warrington said, and with two fingers pushed
Pen back into his seat again. “It’s better for you as it is, young
one,” he said sadly, in reply to the savage flush in Arthur’s face.</p>
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