<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_396" id="Page_396">[396]</SPAN></span></p>
<h2>CHAPTER LXI.<br/> <small>ZINKA.</small></h2>
<p class="unindent"><span class="smcap">Of</span> all those things I had no knowledge, till it came upon me
suddenly; except that I heard from time to time, both through
Mrs. Marker and Mrs. Wilcox, and even Miss Coldpepper, that
Donovan Bulwrag was going on strangely, and no one could
understand him. He was in such a state of mind that even
his mother feared to cross him, and his sisters were afraid to
ask him anything about it. And no one could tell what his
motive was; but all agreed that he was now as anxious to
marry Lady Clara, as he had been careless about it last year.
This—as so often seems to happen—diminished the ardour of
the other side, and the Earl insisted more and more that he
should bring something solid into settlement. The estates of
his grandfather, Lord Roarmore, were evidently encumbered,
and that ancient nobleman himself, now approaching his
ninetieth year, was almost incapable of business.</p>
<p>Though I had been terribly afflicted for a year, without the
satisfaction of deserving it, there was one thing beyond denial,
to wit that I had met with most wonderful kindness from
friends, and neighbours, and the world at large. If any one
says to me henceforth that there is no such thing as good feeling,
or good will, and that everything is selfishness, I shall tell
him that he judges all his neighbours by himself, and I wish
to hear no more of him.</p>
<p>And now when the fatal day came round, which would fill
up the twelvemonth of my misery, no less than six people were
thoughtful enough to give me the offer of being from home,
when it must be a bitter home to me. Uncle Corny, Aunt Parslow,
and Mr. Golightly, Sam Henderson, and Mrs. Wilcox, and Widow
Cutthumb, all entreated me to come to them, if I did nothing
more than hear them talk. Mrs. Marker, if she had lived in
her own house, would have added her invitation; and Mr.
Rasp the baker—though now getting on, almost beyond
recognition—got his wife to write to me, and say that they
would have a little card-party in the evening.</p>
<p>But there were too many young ladies there for me, to be
seen in the shop behind jam-pots, in a style we could never
enter into; and if I had meant to go to any place at all, that
would have been the last of them, because I should have felt<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_397" id="Page_397">[397]</SPAN></span>
what Kitty would be thinking—“Well, he does enjoy himself,
without me!”</p>
<p>“Come to the Derby,” Sam Henderson said, meaning it all
for my good, no doubt; “and see old Chalks win with <i>Nutmeg-grater</i>.
He is at 40 to 1—makes it all the surer—the finest foal
my old <i>Cinnaminta</i> ever threw. Quite a moral, my son; I shall
make four thou. Get on, while you can. Kept him dark as
night. Tony came sniffing, but we gave him snuff. Before the
flag falls, he will be at 4 to 1. Invest, my son, invest, if you
wish to tool your Kitty in a four-in-hand.”</p>
<p>“Sam, you are up, or you would not talk so.” He saw that
he should not have said it, and was dashed.</p>
<p>“Well, old fellow, I beg your pardon. But as sure as a
horse has got four legs, you will have her back again within four
months. Lay you ten to one, in fivers.”</p>
<p>“Do you think I would bet about a thing like that? Sam
you are a good friend; but this is not like you.”</p>
<p>“Only wanted to keep your pecker up. The pluckiest fellow
gets in the dumps sometimes. Never take it crusty, when
a cove means well. Sorry you won’t come to us to-morrow.
Sally gives a rare spread at nine o’clock. But every man knows
his own ways best. I shall look you up, on my way home.
Expect to have some news, but won’t bother you till then.
Good news, fine news for you, Kit.”</p>
<p>He spoke to his glassy little nag, and was off, before I could
ask him what he meant. And I said to myself that it could
only be some nonsense, to keep my spirits up.</p>
<p>The day of my trouble, the 15th of May, happened to be the
Derby day that year, and our quiet little village was disturbed
with joy. Every one who could raise a pair of shafts, or
even of shanks, was agog right early, and I heard their shouts over
my uncle’s wall, while they set forth as merry as Londoners.
I resolved not to leave my work all day, except for a crust of
bread and cheese, that there might be no room and no time for
moping, which sits on our laps when we cross our legs. But
when it grew dark, and I went home alone, I tried in vain to
whistle, and my heart felt very low.</p>
<p>What was the use of keeping up? It was only a sham and
a self-deceit. Ten years were as likely to go by as one, without
bringing any consolation to me. All the prime of my life must
pass in sorrow, empty, mysterious, lonely sorrow. Perhaps when
I grew old and could care for no one, having no one to care for
me, when it mattered very little how my life was to finish, the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_398" id="Page_398">[398]</SPAN></span>
matter might be cleared up, all too late. Even my uncle
Corny’s trouble, heavy, incurable, and life-long as it was, seemed
light in comparison with mine; because all its history was manifest,
and all suspense was over. How much longer must this
misery drag on? If my Kitty were not dead, she must have
come back long ago. Or perhaps she had forgotten me and
married some low villain.</p>
<p>“<i>Nutmeg-grater, Nutmeg-grater, Nutmeg-grater</i>, for ever!”
Two merry fellows were shouting for their lives, as they
walked in wavering latitudes among the flowering pear-trees.</p>
<p>“Let me tell him.” “No, I’ll tell him.” “What do you
know about it?” “Why you never saw him in your life.”
My heart gave a jump, for I thought it must be some grand
news, by this fuss about it.</p>
<p>“Right you are, Kit. Right you shall be. <i>Nutmeg-grater</i>,
and Kit for ever!” they shouted as they saw me sitting in the
dusk, on a big flower-pot outside my door. “Shake hands, old
fellow; shake hands, here he is. He knows all about it.
Major Monkhouse, let me introduce you. Mr. Kit Orchardson,
Major Monkhouse, the two best fellows in the world together,
and <i>Nutmeg-grater</i> is the third.”</p>
<p>I saw that Sam was a little in advance of his usual state, and
the Major not behind him. They were flourishing their hats,
full of skeleton dolls, and striking attitudes, and spinning
round now and then against each other.</p>
<p>“What are you come to tell me, gentlemen? Is it about the
race?” I asked, trembling to think it must be something more.</p>
<p>“The race be d——d!” cried Major Monkhouse, one of the
most courteous of men, when sober, as I discovered afterwards.
“As between man and man, sir; as between man and man, you
know—”</p>
<p>“The Major’s hat is full of money,” said Sam, as if his own
were empty; “when that is the case, a confounded good
fellow is better than ever, sir—better than ever.”</p>
<p>“Shake hands,” the Major shouted; “Sam, shake hands!”
And he took mine by mistake, but it made no difference.
“You have such a manner of expressing what you call it—equal
honour to his hands and head. This gentleman must not
mistake my meaning. Mr. Archerson, excuse me, you understand
my sentiments. You might ride him, sir, with a daisy-chain.”</p>
<p>“Sit down, gentlemen.” I was trying to be patient, and
thought that the safest position for them.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_399" id="Page_399">[399]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“Not a drop, Kit, not a drop, my good fellow. I am all but
a total abstainer now. And as for the Major, why, his doctor
tells him—”</p>
<p>“No good, sir, no good at all. ‘Dr. Bangs,’ I says, ‘you
may be right; but you don’t catch me taking any of your confounded
stim—shim—shimmulers.’ Sam knows how hard he
tried; but it wouldn’t do, sir.”</p>
<p>“Oh, but you were come to tell me something. I thought
you came out of your way on purpose—something of importance
to me?”</p>
<p>“Right you are, Kit, right as usual. There never was
such a boy to hit the mark. Set you up, Kit, set you on your
legs again—no more poking, no more potting, no more pottering
under a wall, no more shirking the Derby—mind you, a d——d
ungentlemanly thing to do. Why we wouldn’t have known it
but for that!”</p>
<p>“Never should have seen her, without that,” said Major
Monkhouse, solemnly; “put away too secretly among the
lost tribes. Ah, she is a stunning woman!”</p>
<p>“Now will you tell me what you mean?” I felt that I
should like to knock their tipsy heads together; “this may be a
very fine joke to you. But no excitement excuses it.”</p>
<p>“Excitement! Cool as a cucumber, sir;” cried the Major,
with a countenance by no means cool, “I should like to know
what you mean by that insinuation.”</p>
<p>“Leave it to me, Major; leave it all to me. Our friend
Kit is a little hasty,” said Henderson, whispering to me—“Don’t
mind him, a very grand fellow—but has had too much.
Major Monkhouse, it is our place to make every allowance for
married men. They never know very well what they are about.”</p>
<p>“By George, sir, you are right. Mr. Archerson, shake
hands. I honour you for your integrity, sir. Sorry for you,
very sorry, and apologize with candour. Every Englishman
adds to his self-respect by that.”</p>
<p>“How he puts things! It comes of being in the Army.
Now go to sleep, Major, it will do you a lot of good, while I
tell friend Kit all we have been doing for him.”</p>
<p>By this time my hopes were reduced to proper level, and I
had ceased to glance through the trees behind them, in search
of somebody who might never come again. For these two men
had come in with such a flourish, that the wildest ideas ran
through me.</p>
<p>“A drop of ice-cold water from your pump,” said Sam,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_400" id="Page_400">[400]</SPAN></span>
“and then I’ll tell you something that will please you. My
coppers are hot, because I have taken next to nothing; and the
dust—you should have seen it! You have heard of the
celebrated Zinka, haven’t you, the most wonderful creature that
was ever born? Well, my dear friend there, the very finest
fellow that ever stepped this earth, sir—don’t deny it, Major,
but go to by-by—I met him at the corner on Monday, Kit;
and old Pots was there, and that made me talk of you. ‘Tell
you what,’ he says, ‘let us see the great Zinka. She can’t
help being there on Wednesday. It is the only day in the
year you can catch her; but the stars always bring her to the
Derby. If he won’t come, you bring something of his, something
he has worn, or had about him. If it is bad news, why we need
not tell him, and if it is good, why it will be new life to him.”</p>
<p>“Of course I jumped at it, and it shows what a fool I am
that it had never occurred to me. Zinka is the queen of all the
gipsies, although she is only five and twenty, the most beautiful
woman on the face of the earth. Don’t tell Sally that I said
so. Why she is Cinnaminta’s daughter, that my old mare is
named from. So you may suppose that she knows everything.
If we could only get her to spot the winners for us—but she
won’t, she wouldn’t for a hundred thousand pounds.</p>
<p>“Well, I prigged your handkerchief yesterday, my boy. No
professional could have done it neater; and a queer thing it
was that it should be your wife’s with her maiden name done in
her own hair. Nothing could be luckier, and we had a rare
laugh at it. Zinka was on the downs, not like a common
gipsy, but half a mile away towards Preston, in a beautiful
tent of her own, for she never mixes with the common ruck.
It takes an introduction, I can tell you, and a good one too, to
get a word from her. But the Major managed that, for he
knows something of her people. There is no flummery about
her. You cross her hand with a five pound note, and a crown-piece
in it, and you tell her what you want, and whatever you
give her to hold she keeps.”</p>
<p>“You don’t mean to say that a dirty Gipsy woman has got
one of my Kitty’s pocket-handkerchiefs?”</p>
<p>“Dirty Gipsy woman! She’s as clean as any queen; and
for majesty and breed—oh, I wish you could have seen her. A
thoroughbred filly three years old is more graceful than any
woman that ever stepped. You can’t expect two legs to go as
well as four, you know. But Zinka—well, to see Sally walk
after that! And Sally ain’t clumsy in her paces, neither. But<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_401" id="Page_401">[401]</SPAN></span>
what do you think she said? When we had told her all about
it, she shut her great eyes for a minute, and her lashes came
down to the brown roses on her cheeks, and then she whispered—</p>
<p>“‘I can see a great ship coming over the sea, no smoke to
it, only white white sails. And in the front of it I can see a
beautiful young woman, looking towards England with tears in
her eyes. The ship is sailing fast, but her heart is flying faster;
and she never looks back, and answers no one, only to ask how
much longer it will be.’</p>
<p>“‘And how much longer will it be?’ we both asked her,
because it was the very thing that you would want to know.</p>
<p>“‘I cannot say, perhaps three, four weeks. The sun is very
hot, and there is a black cloud before them. Perhaps it will
swallow them up; I cannot tell. No there is a great bird with
long white wings; it will take them through the cloud, and
they will be safe. There, it is all sliding from me, like a mist!
But I can see her eyes still, and they are full of tears and smiles.’</p>
<p>“Not another word could we get out of her, Kit. There
were tears on her own cheeks, when she opened her eyes, and
she did not know a single word she had been saying.”</p>
<p>“I wish you had asked her where the ship was to land,
and what was the name of it, and how she came there, and
whether it would be any good for me to go to meet it, and who
it was the lady was thinking of all the while, and how long the
storm that was before them was to last, and whether the people
on board—”</p>
<p>“Come, Kit, that is all the thanks we get. Major, do you
hear him? No, the chap is fast asleep. Between you and me,
Kit, he has had a drop too much. But a man in a small way
doesn’t win five hundred, every day of his life, you know. By-the-way,
I heard that Downy was hard hit again. But Pots
took my tip, and has pocketed a thousand. Why, you never
congratulated me, my boy. I shall throw up the book now, and
invest it in my place. But we must be off, or Sally will blow
up. Such a spread! You had better come. <i>Cinny</i> walks into
the dining-room, and drinks a bottle of champagne, and there
will be some rattling good chaps there.”</p>
<p>“There may be a thousand, Sam; but none better than
yourself. I congratulate and thank you, Sam, with all my
heart. Few fellows would have thought of a friend at such a
time. But excuse me; I can’t come to-night, indeed I can’t.
I want to think of this all by myself. You say that this
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