Part 51 (1/2)

”All right,” said the cabman, as Sybil entered the illumined door. ”Poor young thing! she's wery anxious about summut.”

Sybil at once stepped into a rather capacious room, fitted up in the old-fas.h.i.+oned style of coffee-rooms, with mahogany boxes, in several of which were men drinking coffee and reading newspapers by a painful glare of gas. There was a waiter in the middle of the room who was throwing some fresh sand upon the floor, but who stared immensely when looking up he beheld Sybil.

”Now, Ma'am, if you please,” said the waiter inquiringly.

”Is Mr Gerard here?” said Sybil.

”No. Ma'am; Mr Gerard has not been here to-day, nor yesterday neither”--and he went on throwing the sand.

”I should like to see the master of the house,” said Sybil very humbly.

”Should you, Ma'am?” said the waiter, but he gave no indication of a.s.sisting her in the fulfilment of her wish.

Sybil repeated that wish, and this time the waiter said nothing. This vulgar and insolent neglect to which she was so little accustomed depressed her spirit. She could have encountered tyranny and oppression, and she would have tried to struggle with them; but this insolence of the insignificant made her feel her insignificance; and the absorption all this time of the guests in their newspapers aggravated her nervous sense of her utter helplessness. All her feminine reserve and modesty came over her; alone in this room among men, she felt overpowered, and she was about to make a precipitate retreat when the clock of the coffee-room sounded the half hour. In a paroxysm of nervous excitement she exclaimed, ”Is there not one among you who will a.s.sist me?”

All the newspaper readers put down their journals and stared.

”Hoity-toity,” said the waiter, and he left off throwing the sand.

”Well, what's the matter now?” said one of the guests.

”I wish to see the master of the house on business of urgency,” said Sybil, ”to himself and to one of his friends, and his servant here will not even reply to my inquiries.”

”I say, Saul, why don't you answer the young lady?” said another guest.

”So I did,” said Saul. ”Did you call for coffee, Ma'am?”

”Here's Mr Tanner, if you want him, my dear.” said the first guest, as a lean black-looking individual, with grizzled hair and a red nose, entered the coffee-room from the interior. ”Tanner, here's a lady wants you.”

”And a very pretty girl too,” whispered one to another.

”What's your pleasure?” said Mr Tanner abruptly.

”I wish to speak to you alone,” said Sybil: and advancing towards him she said in a low voice, ”'Tis about Walter Gerard I would speak to you.”

”Well, you can step in here if you like,” said Tanner very discourteously; ”there's only my wife:” and he led the way to the inner room, a small close parlour adorned with portraits of Tom Paine, Cobbett, Thistlewood, and General Jackson; with a fire, though it was a hot July, and a very fat woman affording still more heat, and who was drinking shrub and water and reading the police reports. She stared rudely at Sybil as she entered following Tanner, who himself when the door was closed said, ”Well, now what have you got to say?”

”I wish to see Walter Gerard.”

”Do you indeed!”

”And,” continued Sybil notwithstanding his sneering remark, ”I come here that you may tell me where I may find him.”

”I believe he lives somewhere in Westminster,” said Tanner, ”that's all I know about him; and if this be all you had to say it might have been said in the coffee-room.”

”It is not all that I have to say,” said Sybil; ”and I beseech you, sir, listen to me. I know where Gerard lives: I am his daughter, and the same roof covers our heads. But I wish to know where they meet to-night--you understand me;” and she looked at his wife, who had resumed her police reports; ”'tis urgent.

”I don't know nothing about Gerard,” said Tanner, ”except that he comes here and goes away again.”