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<h3>CHAPTER XCVI. Where "The Wild Asses Quench Their Thirst"</h3>
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<br/>We must now go back a little in our story,—about three
weeks,—in order that the reader may be told how affairs were
progressing at the Beargarden. That establishment had
received a terrible blow in the defection of Herr Vossner. It
was not only that he had robbed the club, and robbed every member
of the club who had ventured to have personal dealings with
him. Although a bad feeling in regard to him was no doubt
engendered in the minds of those who had suffered deeply, it was
not that alone which cast an almost funereal gloom over the
club. The sorrow was in this,—that with Herr Vossner all
their comforts had gone. Of course Herr Vossner had been a
thief. That no doubt had been known to them from the
beginning. A man does not consent to be called out of bed at
all hours in the morning to arrange the gambling accounts of young
gentlemen without being a thief. No one concerned with Herr
Vossner had supposed him to be an honest man. But then as a
thief he had been so comfortable that his absence was regretted
with a tenderness almost amounting to love even by those who had
suffered most severely from his rapacity. Dolly Longestaffe
had been robbed more outrageously than any other member of the
club, and yet Dolly Longestaffe had said since the departure of the
purveyor that London was not worth living in now that Herr Vossner
was gone. In a week the Beargarden collapsed,—as Germany
would collapse for a period if Herr Vossner's great compatriot were
suddenly to remove himself from the scene; but as Germany would
strive to live even without Bismarck, so did the club make its new
efforts. But here the parallel must cease. Germany no
doubt would at last succeed, but the Beargarden had received a blow
from which it seemed that there was no recovery. At first it
was proposed that three men should be appointed as
trustees,—trustees for paying Vossner's debts, trustees for
borrowing more money, trustees for the satisfaction of the landlord
who was beginning to be anxious as to his future rent. At a
certain very triumphant general meeting of the club it was
determined that such a plan should be arranged, and the members
assembled were unanimous. It was at first thought that there
might be a little jealousy as to the trusteeship. The club
was so popular and the authority conveyed by the position would be
so great, that A, B, and C might feel aggrieved at seeing so much
power conferred on D, E, and F. When at the meeting above
mentioned one or two names were suggested, the final choice was
postponed, as a matter of detail to be arranged privately, rather
from this consideration than with any idea that there might be a
difficulty in finding adequate persons. But even the leading
members of the Beargarden hesitated when the proposition was
submitted to them with all its honours and all its
responsibilities. Lord Nidderdale declared from the beginning
that he would have nothing to do with it,—pleading his poverty
openly. Beauchamp Beauclerk was of opinion that he himself
did not frequent the club often enough. Mr Lupton professed
his inability as a man of business. Lord Grasslough pleaded
his father. The club from the first had been sure of Dolly
Longestaffe's services;—for were not Dolly's pecuniary affairs now
in process of satisfactory arrangement, and was it not known by all
men that his courage never failed him in regard to money? But
even he declined. "I have spoken to Squercum," he said to the
Committee, "and Squercum won't hear of it. Squercum has made
inquiries and he thinks the club very shaky." When one of the
Committee made a remark as to Mr Squercum which was not
complimentary,—insinuated indeed that Squercum without injustice
might be consigned to the infernal deities,—Dolly took the matter
up warmly. "That's all very well for you, Grasslough; but if
you knew the comfort of having a fellow who could keep you straight
without preaching sermons at you you wouldn't despise
Squercum. I've tried to go alone and I find that does not
answer. Squercum's my coach, and I mean to stick pretty close
to him." Then it came to pass that the triumphant project as
to the trustees fell to the ground, although Squercum himself
advised that the difficulty might be lessened if three gentlemen
could be selected who lived well before the world and yet had
nothing to lose. Whereupon Dolly suggested Miles
Grendall. But the committee shook its heads, not thinking it
possible that the club could be re-established on a basis of three
Miles Grendalls.
<br/>Then dreadful rumours were heard. The Beargarden must
surely be abandoned. "It is such a pity," said Nidderdale,
"because there never has been anything like it."
<br/>"Smoke all over the house!" said Dolly.
<br/>"No horrid nonsense about closing," said Grasslough, "and no
infernal old fogies wearing out the carpets and paying for
nothing."
<br/>"Not a vestige of propriety, or any beastly rules to be
kept! That's what I liked," said Nidderdale.
<br/>"It's an old story," said Mr Lupton, "that if you put a man into
Paradise he'll make it too hot to hold him. That's what
you've done here."
<br/>"What we ought to do," said Dolly, who was pervaded by a sense
of his own good fortune in regard to Squercum, "is to get some
fellow like Vossner, and make him tell us how much he wants to
steal above his regular pay. Then we could subscribe that
among us. I really think that might be done. Squercum
would find a fellow, no doubt." But Mr Lupton was of opinion
that the new Vossner might perhaps not know, when thus consulted,
the extent of his own cupidity.
<br/>One day, before the Whitstable marriage, when it was understood
that the club would actually be closed on the 12th August unless
some new heaven-inspired idea might be forthcoming for its
salvation, Nidderdale, Grasslough, and Dolly were hanging about the
hall and the steps, and drinking sherry and bitters preparatory to
dinner, when Sir Felix Carbury came round the neighbouring corner
and, in a creeping, hesitating fashion, entered the hall
door. He had nearly recovered from his wounds, though he
still wore a bit of court plaster on his upper lip, and had not yet
learned to look or to speak as though he had not had two of his
front teeth knocked out. He had heard little or nothing of
what had been done at the Beargarden since Vossner's defection, It
was now a month since he had been seen at the club. His
thrashing had been the wonder of perhaps half nine days, but
latterly his existence had been almost forgotten. Now, with
difficulty, he had summoned courage to go down to his old haunt, so
completely had he been cowed by the latter circumstances of his
life; but he had determined that he would pluck up his courage, and
talk to his old associates as though no evil thing had befallen
him. He had still money enough to pay for his dinner and to
begin a small rubber of whist. If fortune should go against
him he might glide into I.O.U.'s,—as others had done before, so
much to his cost. "By George, here's Carbury!" said
Dolly. Lord Grasslough whistled, turned his back, and walked
upstairs; but Nidderdale and Dolly consented to have their hands
shaken by the stranger.
<br/>"Thought you were out of town," said Nidderdale, "Haven't seen
you for the last ever so long."
<br/>"I have been out of town," said Felix,—lying; "down in
Suffolk. But I'm back now. How are things going on
here?"
<br/>"They're not going at all;—they're gone," said Dolly.
"Everything is smashed," said Nidderdale.
<br/>"We shall all have to pay, I don't know how much."
<br/>"Wasn't Vossner ever caught?" asked the baronet.
<br/>"Caught!" ejaculated Dolly. "No;—but he has caught
us. I don't know that there has ever been much idea of
catching Vossner. We close altogether next Monday, and the
furniture is to be gone to law for. Flatfleece says it
belongs to him under what he calls a deed of sale. Indeed,
everything that everybody has seems to belong to Flatfleece.
He's always in and out of the club, and has got the key of the
cellar."
<br/>"That don't matter," said Nidderdale, "as Vossner took care that
there shouldn't be any wine."
<br/>"He's got most of the forks and spoons, and only lets us use
what we have as a favour."
<br/>"I suppose one can get a dinner here?"
<br/>"Yes; to-day you can, and perhaps to-morrow,"
<br/>"Isn't there any playing?" asked Felix with dismay.
<br/>"I haven't seen a card this fortnight," said Dolly. "There
hasn't been anybody to play. Everything has gone to the
dogs. There has been the affair of Melmotte, you
know;—though, I suppose, you do know all about that."
<br/>"Of course I know he poisoned himself."
<br/>"Of course that had effect," said Dolly, continuing his
history. "Though why fellows shouldn't play cards because
another fellow like that takes poison, I can't understand.
Last year the only day I managed to get down in February, the
hounds didn't come because some old cove had died. What harm
could our hunting have done him? I call it rot."
<br/>"Melmotte's death was rather awful," said Nidderdale.
<br/>"Not half so awful as having nothing to amuse one. And now
they say the girl is going to be married to Fisker. I don't
know how you and Nidderdale like that. I never went in for
her myself. Squercum never seemed to see it."
<br/>"Poor dear!" said Nidderdale. "She's welcome for me, and I
dare say she couldn't do better with herself. I was very fond
of her;—I'll be shot if I wasn't."
<br/>"And Carbury too, I suppose," said Dolly.
<br/>"No; I wasn't. If I'd really been fond of her I suppose it
would have come off. I should have had her safe enough to
America, if I'd cared about it." This was Sir Felix's view of
the matter.
<br/>"Come into the smoking-room, Dolly," said Nidderdale. "I
can stand most things, and I try to stand everything; but, by
George, that fellow is such a cad that I cannot stand him.
You and I are bad enough,—but I don't think we're so heartless as
Carbury."
<br/>"I don't think I'm heartless at all," said Dolly. "I'm
good-natured to everybody that is good-natured to me,—and to a
great many people who ain't. I'm going all the way down to
Caversham next week to see my sister married, though I hate the
place and hate marriages, and if I was to be hung for it I couldn't
say a word to the fellow who is going to be my
brother-in-law. But I do agree about Carbury. It's very
hard to be good-natured to him."
<br/>But, in the teeth of these adverse opinions Sir Felix managed to
get his dinner-table close to theirs and to tell them at dinner
something of his future prospects. He was going to travel and
see the world. He had, according to his own account,
completely run through London life and found that it was all
barren.
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"In life I've rung all changes through,<br/>
Run every pleasure down,<br/>
'Midst each excess of folly too,<br/>
And lived with half the town."<br/>
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<br/>Sir Felix did not exactly quote the old song, probably having
never heard the words. But that was the burden of his present
story. It was his determination to seek new scenes, and in
search of them to travel over the greater part of the known world.
<br/>"How jolly for you!" said Dolly.
<br/>"It will be a change, you know."
<br/>"No end of a change. Is any one going with you?"
<br/>"Well;—yes. I've got a travelling companion;—a very
pleasant fellow, who knows a lot, and will be able to coach me up
in things. There's a deal to be learned by going abroad, you
know."
<br/>"A sort of a tutor," said Nidderdale.
<br/>"A parson, I suppose," said Dolly.
<br/>"Well;—he is a clergyman. Who told you?"
<br/>"It's only my inventive genius. Well;—yes; I should say
that would be nice,—travelling about Europe with a
clergyman. I shouldn't get enough advantage out of it to make
it pay, but I fancy it will just suit you."
<br/>"It's an expensive sort of thing;—isn't it?" asked Nidderdale.
<br/>"Well;—it does cost something. But I've got so sick of
this kind of life;—and then that railway Board coming to an end,
and the club smashing up, and—"
<br/>"Marie Melmotte marrying Fisker," suggested Dolly.
<br/>"That too, if you will. But I want a change, and a change
I mean to have. I've seen this side of things, and now I'll
have a look at the other."
<br/>"Didn't you have a row in the street with some one the other
day?" This question was asked very abruptly by Lord
Grasslough, who, though he was sitting near them, had not yet
joined in the conversation, and who had not before addressed a word
to Sir Felix. "We heard something about it, but we never got
the right story." Nidderdale glanced across the table at
Dolly, and Dolly whistled. Grasslough looked at the man he
addressed as one does look when one expects an answer. Mr
Lupton, with whom Grasslough was dining, also sat expectant.
Dolly and Nidderdale were both silent.
<br/>It was the fear of this that had kept Sir Felix away from the
club. Grasslough, as he had told himself, was just the fellow
to ask such a question,—ill-natured, insolent, and
obtrusive. But the question demanded an answer of some
kind. "Yes," said he; "a fellow attacked me in the street,
coming behind me when I had a girl with me. He didn't get
much the best of it though."
<br/>"Oh;—didn't he?" said Grasslough. "I think, upon the
whole, you know, you're right about going abroad."
<br/>"What business is it of yours?" asked the baronet.
<br/>"Well;—as the club is being broken up, I don't know that it is
very much the business of any of us."
<br/>"I was speaking to my friends, Lord Nidderdale and Mr
Longestaffe, and not to you."
<br/>"I quite appreciate the advantage of the distinction," said Lord
Grasslough, "and am sorry for Lord Nidderdale and Mr Longestaffe."
<br/>"What do you mean by that?" said Sir Felix, rising from his
chair. His present opponent was not horrible to him as had
been John Crumb, as men in clubs do not now often knock each
others' heads or draw swords one upon another.
<br/>"Don't let's have a quarrel here," said Mr Lupton. "I
shall leave the room if you do."
<br/>"If we must break up, let us break up in peace and quietness,"
said Nidderdale.
<br/>"Of course, if there is to be a fight, I'm good to go out with
anybody," said Dolly. "When there's any beastly thing to be
done, I've always got to do it. But don't you think that kind
of thing is a little slow?"
<br/>"Who began it?" said Sir Felix, sitting down again.
Whereupon Lord Grasslough, who had finished his dinner, walked out
of the room. "That fellow is always wanting to quarrel."
<br/>"There's one comfort, you know," said Dolly. "It wants two
men to make a quarrel."
<br/>"Yes; it does," said Sir Felix, taking this as a friendly
observation; "and I'm not going to be fool enough to be one of
them."
<br/>"Oh, yes, I meant it fast enough," said Grasslough afterwards up
in the card-room. The other men who had been together had
quickly followed him, leaving Sir Felix alone, and they had
collected themselves there not with the hope of play, but thinking
that they would be less interrupted than in the smoking-room.
"I don't suppose we shall ever any of us be here again, and as he
did come in I thought I would tell him my mind."
<br/>"What's the use of taking such a lot of trouble?" said
Dolly. "Of course he's a bad fellow. Most fellows are
bad fellows in one way or another."
<br/>"But he's bad all round," said the bitter enemy.
<br/>"And so this is to be the end of the Beargarden," said Lord
Nidderdale with a peculiar melancholy. "Dear old place!
I always felt it was too good to last. I fancy it doesn't do
to make things too easy;—one has to pay so uncommon dear for
them. And then, you know, when you've got things easy, then
they get rowdy;—and, by George, before you know where you are, you
find yourself among a lot of blackguards. If one wants to
keep one's self straight, one has to work hard at it, one way or
the other. I suppose it all comes from the fall of Adam."
<br/>"If Solomon, Solon, and the Archbishop of Canterbury were rolled
into one, they couldn't have spoken with more wisdom," said Mr
Lupton.
<br/>"Live and learn," continued the young lord. "I don't think
anybody has liked the Beargarden so much as I have, but I shall
never try this kind of thing again. I shall begin reading
blue books to-morrow, and shall dine at the Carlton. Next
session I shan't miss a day in the House, and I'll bet anybody a
flyer that I make a speech before Easter. I shall take to
claret at 20s. a dozen, and shall go about London on the top of an
omnibus."
<br/>"How about getting married?" asked Dolly.
<br/>"Oh;—that must be as it comes. That's the governor's
affair. None of you fellows will believe me, but, upon my
word, I liked that girl; and I'd've stuck to her at last,—only
there are some things a fellow can't do. He was such a
thundering scoundrel!"
<br/>After a while Sir Felix followed them upstairs, and entered the
room as though nothing unpleasant had happened below. "We can
make up a rubber can't we?" said he.
<br/>"I should say not," said Nidderdale.
<br/>"I shall not play," said Mr Lupton.
<br/>"There isn't a pack of cards in the house," said Dolly.
Lord Grasslough didn't condescend to say a word. Sir Felix
sat down with his cigar in his mouth, and the others continued to
smoke in silence.
<br/>"I wonder what has become of Miles Grendall," asked Sir
Felix. But no one made any answer, and they smoked on in
silence. "He hasn't paid me a shilling yet of the money he
owes me." Still there was not a word. "And I don't
suppose he ever will." There was another pause. "He is
the biggest scoundrel I ever met," said Sir Felix.
<br/>"I know one as big," said Lord Grasslough,—"or, at any rate,
as little."
<br/>There was another pause of a minute, and then Sir Felix left the
room muttering something as to the stupidity of having no
cards;—and so brought to an end his connection with his associates
of the Beargarden. From that time forth he was never more
seen by them,—or, if seen, was never known.
<br/>The other men remained there till well on into the night,
although there was not the excitement of any special amusement to
attract them. It was felt by them all that this was the end
of the Beargarden, and, with a melancholy seriousness befitting the
occasion, they whispered sad things in low voices, consoling
themselves simply with tobacco. "I never felt so much like
crying in my life," said Dolly, as he asked for a glass of
brandy-and-water at about midnight. "Good-night, old fellows;
good-bye. I'm going down to Caversham, and I shouldn't wonder
if I didn't drown myself."
<br/>How Mr Flatfleece went to law, and tried to sell the furniture,
and threatened everybody, and at last singled out poor Dolly
Longestaffe as his special victim; and how Dolly Longestaffe, by
the aid of Mr Squercum, utterly confounded Mr Flatfleece, and
brought that ingenious but unfortunate man, with his wife and small
family, to absolute ruin, the reader will hardly expect to have
told to him in detail in this chronicle.
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