Part 24 (1/2)
'And pray by whose orders was it in the library?'
'I couldn't say, sir. Chesterton----'
'Don't put it on to Chesterton.'
'I was thinking,' said Lizzie, who was more stout-hearted than the parlourmaid and didn't take cover quite so frequently in dumbness, 'I was thinking p'raps Chesterton knew. I don't do the tea, sir.'
'Send Chesterton,' said Wemyss.
Lizzie disappeared with the quickness of relief. Lucy, with a nervous little movement, stooped and picked up _Wuthering Heights_, which was still lying face downward on the floor.
'Yes,' said Wemyss. 'I like the way you treat books.'
She put it back on its shelf. 'I went to sleep, and it fell down,' she said. 'Everard,' she went on quickly, 'I must go and get a handkerchief.
I'll join you in the library.'
'I'm not going into the library. I'm going to have tea here. Why should I have tea in the library?'
'I only thought as it was there----'
'I suppose I can have tea where I like in my own house?'
'But of course. Well, then, I'll go and get a handkerchief and come back here.'
'You can do that some other time. Don't be so restless.'
'But I--I _want_ a handkerchief this minute,' said Lucy.
'Nonsense; here, have mine,' said Wemyss; and anyhow it was too late to escape, for there in the door stood Chesterton.
She was the parlourmaid. Her name has not till now been mentioned. It was Chesterton.
'Why is tea in the library?' Wemyss asked.
'I understood, sir, tea was always to be in the library,' said Chesterton.
'That was while I was by myself. I suppose it wouldn't have occurred to you to inquire whether I still wished it there now that I am not by myself.'
This floored Chesterton. Her ignorance of the right answer was complete.
She therefore said nothing, and merely stood.
But he didn't let her off. 'Would it?' he asked suddenly.
'No sir,' she said, dimly feeling that 'Yes sir' would land her in difficulties.
'No. Quite so. It wouldn't. Well, you will now go and fetch that tea and bring it up here. Stop a minute, stop a minute--don't be in such a hurry, please. How long has it been made?'
'Since half-past four, sir.'
'Then you will make fresh tea, and you will make fresh toast, and you will cut fresh bread and b.u.t.ter.'