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<h3>CHAPTER XXVIII. Dolly Longestaffe Goes into the City</h3>
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<br/>It has been told how the gambling at the Beargarden went on one
Sunday night. On the following Monday Sir Felix did not go to
the club. He had watched Miles Grendall at play, and was sure
that on more than one or two occasions the man had cheated. Sir
Felix did not quite know what in such circumstances it would be best
for him to do. Reprobate as he was himself, this work of
villainy was new to him and seemed to be very terrible. What
steps ought he to take? He was quite sure of his facts, and yet
he feared that Nidderdale and Grasslough and Longestaffe would not
believe him. He would have told Montague, but Montague had, he
thought, hardly enough authority at the club to be of any use to
him. On the Tuesday again he did not go to the club. He
felt severely the loss of the excitement to which he had been
accustomed, but the thing was too important to him to be slurred
over. He did not dare to sit down and play with the man who had
cheated him without saying anything about it. On the Wednesday
afternoon life was becoming unbearable to him and he sauntered into
the building at about five in the afternoon. There, as a matter
of course, he found Dolly Longestaffe drinking sherry and
bitters. "Where the blessed angels have you been?" said
Dolly. Dolly was at that moment alert with the sense of a duty
performed. He had just called on his sister and written a sharp
letter to his father, and felt himself to be almost a man of business.
<br/>"I've had fish of my own to fry," said Felix, who had passed the
last two days in unendurable idleness. Then he referred again to
the money which Dolly owed him, not making any complaint, not indeed
asking for immediate payment, but explaining with an air of importance
that if a commercial arrangement could be made, it might, at this
moment, be very serviceable to him. "I'm particularly anxious to
take up those shares," said Felix.
<br/>"Of course you ought to have your money."
<br/>"I don't say that at all, old fellow. I know very well that
you're all right. You're not like that fellow, Miles Grendall."
<br/>"Well; no. Poor Miles has got nothing to bless himself
with. I suppose I could get it, and so I ought to pay."
<br/>"That's no excuse for Grendall," said Sir Felix, shaking his head.
<br/>"A chap can't pay if he hasn't got it, Carbury. A chap ought
to pay of course. I've had a letter from our lawyer within the
last half hour—here it is." And Dolly pulled a letter out of
his pocket which he had opened and read indeed the last hour, but
which had been duly delivered at his lodgings early in the
morning. "My governor wants to sell Pickering, and Melmotte
wants to buy the place. My governor can't sell without me, and
I've asked for half the plunder. I know what's what. My
interest in the property is greater than his. It isn't much of a
place, and they are talking of £50,000, over and above the debt upon
it. £25,000 would pay off what I owe on my own property, and
make me very square. From what this fellow says I suppose
they're going to give in to my terms."
<br/>"By George, that'll be a grand thing for you, Dolly."
<br/>"Oh yes. Of course I want it. But I don't like the
place going. I'm not much of a fellow, I know. I'm awfully
lazy and can't get myself to go in for things as I ought to do; but
I've a sort of feeling that I don't like the family property going to
pieces. A fellow oughtn't to let his family property go to
pieces."
<br/>"You never lived at Pickering."
<br/>"No;—and I don't know that it is any good. It gives us 3 per
cent. on the money it's worth, while the governor is paying 6 per
cent., and I'm paying 25, for the money we've borrowed. I know
more about it than you'd think. It ought to be sold, and now I
suppose it will be sold. Old Melmotte knows all about it, and if
you like I'll go with you to the city to-morrow and make it straight
about what I owe you. He'll advance me £1,000, and then you can
get the shares. Are you going to dine here?"
<br/>Sir Felix said that he would dine at the club, but declared, with
considerable mystery in his manner, that he could not stay and play
whist afterwards. He acceded willingly to Dolly's plans of
visiting Abchurch Lane on the following day, but had some difficulty
in inducing his friend to consent to fix on an hour early enough for
city purposes. Dolly suggested that they should meet at the club
at 4 p.m. Sir Felix had named noon, and promised to call at Dolly's
lodgings. They split the difference at last and agreed to start
at two. They then dined together, Miles Grendall dining alone at
the next table to them. Dolly and Grendall spoke to each other
frequently, but in that conversation the young baronet would not
join. Nor did Grendall ever address himself to Sir Felix.
"Is there anything up between you and Miles?" said Dolly, when they
had adjourned to the smoking-room.
<br/>"I can't bear him."
<br/>"There never was any love between you two, I know. But you
used to speak, and you've played with him all through."
<br/>"Played with him! I should think I have. Though he did
get such a haul last Sunday he owes me more than you do now."
<br/>"Is that the reason you haven't played the last two nights?"
<br/>Sir Felix paused a moment. "No;—that is not the
reason. I'll tell you all about it in the cab to-morrow."
Then he left the club, declaring that he would go up to Grosvenor
Square and see Marie Melmotte. He did go up to the Square, and
when he came to the house he would not go in. What was the
good? He could do nothing further till he got old Melmotte's
consent, and in no way could he so probably do that as by showing that
he had got money wherewith to buy shares in the railway. What he
did with himself during the remainder of the evening the reader need
not know, but on his return home at some comparatively early hour, he
found this note from Marie.
<br/>
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<br/>
<blockquote>
<i>
Wednesday Afternoon.<br/>
<br/>
DEAREST FELIX,<br/>
<br/>
Why don't we see you? Mamma would
say nothing if you came. Papa is never in the
drawing-room. Miss Longestaffe is here of course, and people
always come in in the evening. We are just going to dine out at
the Duchess of Stevenage's. Papa, and mamma and I. Mamma
told me that Lord Nidderdale is to be there, but you need not be a bit
afraid. I don't like Lord Nidderdale, and I will never take any
one but the man I love. You know who that is. Miss
Longestaffe is so angry because she can't go with us. What do
you think of her telling me that she did not understand being left
alone? We are to go afterwards to a musical party at Lady
Gamut's. Miss Longestaffe is going with us, but she says she
hates music. She is such a set-up thing! I wonder why papa
has her here. We don't go anywhere to-morrow evening, so pray
come.<br/>
<br/>
And why haven't you written me something
and sent it to Didon? She won't betray us. And if she did,
what matters? I mean to be true. If papa were to beat me
into a mummy I would stick to you. He told me once to take Lord
Nidderdale, and then he told me to refuse him. And now he wants
me to take him again. But I won't. I'll take no one but my
own darling.<br/>
<br/>
Yours for ever and ever,<br/>
<br/>
MARIE<br/>
</i>
</blockquote>
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<br/>Now that the young lady had begun to have an interest of her own in
life, she was determined to make the most of it. All this was
delightful to her, but to Sir Felix it was simply "a bother."
Sir Felix was quite willing to marry the girl to-morrow,—on condition
of course that the money was properly arranged; but he was not willing
to go through much work in the way of love-making with Marie
Melmotte. In such business he preferred Ruby Ruggles as a
companion.
<br/>On the following day Felix was with his friend at the appointed
time, and was only kept an hour waiting while Dolly ate his breakfast
and struggled into his coat and boots. On their way to the city
Felix told his dreadful story about Miles Grendall. "By George!"
said Dolly. "And you think you saw him do it!"
<br/>"It's not thinking at all. I'm sure I saw him do it three
times. I believe he always had an ace somewhere about
him." Dolly sat quite silent thinking of it. "What had I
better do?" asked Sir Felix.
<br/>"By George;—I don't know."
<br/>"What should you do?"
<br/>"Nothing at all. I shouldn't believe my own eyes. Or
if I did, should take care not to look at him."
<br/>"You wouldn't go on playing with him?"
<br/>"Yes I should. It'd be such a bore breaking up."
<br/>"But Dolly,—if you think of it!"
<br/>"That's all very fine, my dear fellow, but I shouldn't think of it."
<br/>"And you won't give me your advice."
<br/>"Well—no; I think I'd rather not. I wish you hadn't told
me. Why did you pick me out to tell me? Why didn't you
tell Nidderdale?"
<br/>"He might have said, why didn't you tell Longestaffe?"
<br/>"No, he wouldn't. Nobody would suppose that anybody would
pick me out for this kind of thing. If I'd known that you were
going to tell me such a story as this I wouldn't have come with you."
<br/>"That's nonsense, Dolly."
<br/>"Very well. I can't bear these kind of things. I feel
all in a twitter already."
<br/>"You mean to go on playing just the same?"
<br/>"Of course I do. If he won anything very heavy I should begin
to think about it, I suppose. Oh; this is Abchurch Lane, is
it? Now for the man of money."
<br/>The man of money received them much more graciously than Felix had
expected. Of course nothing was said about Marie and no further
allusion was made to the painful subject of the baronet's
"property." Both Dolly and Sir Felix were astonished by the
quick way in which the great financier understood their views and the
readiness with which he undertook to comply with them. No
disagreeable questions were asked as to the nature of the debt between
the young men. Dolly was called upon to sign a couple of
documents, and Sir Felix to sign one,—and then they were assured that
the thing was done. Mr Adolphus Longestaffe had paid Sir Felix
Carbury a thousand pounds, and Sir Felix Carbury's commission had been
accepted by Mr Melmotte for the purchase of railway stock to that
amount. Sir Felix attempted to say a word. He endeavoured
to explain that his object in this commercial transaction was to make
money immediately by reselling the shares,—and to go on continually
making money by buying at a low price and selling at a high
price. He no doubt did believe that, being a Director, if he
could once raise the means of beginning this game, he could go on with
it for an unlimited period;—buy and sell, buy and sell;—so that he
would have an almost regular income. This, as far as he could
understand, was what Paul Montague was allowed to do,—simply because
he had become a Director with a little money. Mr Melmotte was
cordiality itself, but he could not be got to go into
particulars. It was all right. "You will wish to sell
again, of course,—of course. I'll watch the market for
you." When the young men left the room all they knew, or thought
that they knew, was, that Dolly Longestaffe had authorized Melmotte to
pay a thousand pounds on his behalf to Sir Felix, and that Sir Felix
had instructed the same great man to buy shares with the amount.
"But why didn't he give you the scrip?" said Dolly on his way
westwards.
<br/>"I suppose it's all right with him," said Sir Felix.
<br/>"Oh yes;—it's all right. Thousands of pounds to him are only
like half-crowns to us fellows. I should say it's all
right. All the same, he's the biggest rogue out, you
know." Sir Felix already began to be unhappy about his thousand
pounds.
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