Part 44 (2/2)
Before dinner she caught Kenealy, drew him aside, and put on a long face. ”I am afraid I must lose you to-day at dinner. Mr. Dodd is quite a stranger, and they all tell me I must put him at his ease.
”Yaas.”
”Well, then, you had better get next Lucy, as you can't have me.”
”Yaas.”
”And, Captain Kenealy, you are my aid-de-camp. It is a delightful post, you know, and rather a troublesome one.”
”Yaas.”
”You must help me be kind to this sailor.”
”Yaas. He is a good fellaa. Carried the baeg for the little caed.”
”Oh, did he?”
”And didn't maind been laughed at.”
”Now, that shows how intelligent you must be,” said the wily one; ”the others could not comprehend the trait. Well, you and I must patronize him. Merit is always so dreadfully modest.”
”Yaas.”
This arrangement was admirable, but human; consequently, not without a flaw. Uncle Fountain was left to chance, like the flying atoms of Epicurus, and chance put him at Bazalgette's right hand save one. From this point his inquisitive eye commanded David Dodd and Mrs.
Bazalgette, and raked Lucy and her neighbors, who were on the opposite side of the table. People who look, bent on seeing everything, generally see something; item, it is not always what they would like to see.
As they retired to rest for the night, Mr. Fountain invited his friend to his room.
”We shall not have to go home. I have got the key to our antagonist.
Young Dodd is _her_ lover.” Talboys shook his head with cool contempt. ”What I mean is that she has invited him for her own amus.e.m.e.nt, not her niece's. I never saw a woman throw herself at any man's head as she did at that sailor's all dinner. Her very husband saw it. He is a cool hand, that Bazalgette; he only grinned, and took wine with the sailor. He has seen a good many go the same road--soldiers, sailors, tinkers, tai--”
Talboys interrupted him. ”I really must call you to order. You are prejudiced against poor Mrs. Bazalgette, and prejudice blinds everybody. Politeness required that she should show some attention to her neighbor, but her princ.i.p.al attention was certainly not bestowed on Mr. Dodd.”
Fountain was surprised. ”On whom, then?”
”Well, to tell the truth, on your humble servant.”
Fountain stared. ”I observed she did not neglect you; but when she turned to Dodd her face puckered itself into smiles like a bag.”
”I did not see it, and I was nearer her than you,” said Talboys coldly.
”But I was in front of her.”
”Yes, a mile off.” There being no jurisconsult present to explain to these two magistrates that if fifty people don't see a woman pucker her face like a bag, and one does see her p. h. f. l. a. b., the affirmative evidence preponderates, they were very near coming to a quarrel on this grave point. It was Fountain who made peace. He suddenly remembered that his friend had never been known to change an opinion. ”Well,” said he, ”let us leave that; we shall have other opportunities of watching Dodd and her; meantime I am sorry I cannot convince you of my good news, for I have some bad to balance it. You have a rival, and he did not sit next Mrs. Bazalgette.”
”Pray may I ask whom he did sit next?” sneered Talboys.
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