The Castle Inn - Page 304/559

The tutor stood in no little awe of his host. He had tremors down his

back when he thought of his violence; nor was this dogged persistence in

a design, as cruel as it was cunning, calculated to lessen the feeling.

But he had five thousand pounds at stake, a fortune on which he had been

pluming himself since noon; it was no time for hesitation. They were

dining in the hall at the table at which they had played cards the night

before, Jarvey and Lord Almeric's servant attending them. Between the

table and the staircase was a screen. The next time Lord Almeric's glass

was filled, the tutor, in reaching something, upset the glass and its

contents over his own breeches, and amid the laughter of the other two

retired behind the screen to be wiped. There he slipped a crown into the

servant's hand, and whispered him to keep his master sober and he should

have another.

Mr. Pomeroy saw nothing and heard nothing, and for a time suspected

nothing. The servant was a crafty fellow, a London rascal, deft at

whipping away full bottles. He was an age finding a clean glass, and

slow in drawing the next cork. He filled the host's bumper, and Mr.

Thomasson's, and had but half a glass for his master. The next bottle he

impudently pronounced corked, and when Pomeroy cursed him for a liar,

brought him some in an unwashed glass that had been used for Bordeaux.

The wine was condemned, and went out; and though Pomeroy, with

unflagging spirits, roared to Jarvey to open the other bottles, the

butler had got the office, and was slow to bring them. The cheese came

and went, and left Lord Almeric cooler than it found him. The tutor was

overjoyed at the success of his tactics.

But when the board was cleared, and the bottles were set on, and the men

withdrawn, Bully Pomeroy began to push what remained of the Brooks and

Hellier after a fashion that boded an early defeat to the tutor's

precautions. It was in vain Thomasson clung to the bottle and sometimes

returned it Hertfordshire fashion. The only result was that Mr. Pomeroy

smelt a rat, gave Lord Almeric a back-hander, and sent the bottle on

again, with a grin that told the tutor he was understood.

After that Mr. Thomasson had the choice between sitting still and taking

his own part. It was neck or nothing. Lord Almeric was already

hiccoughing and would soon be talking thickly. The next time the bottle

came round, the tutor retained it, and when Lord Almeric reached, for

it, 'No, my lord,' he said, laughing; 'Venus first and Bacchus

afterwards. Your lordship has to wait on the lady. When you come down,

with Mr. Pomeroy's leave, we'll crack another bottle.' My lord withdrew his hand more readily than the other had hoped. 'Right,

Tommy,' he said. 'I'll wait till I come down. What's that song, "Rich

the treasure, sweet the pleasure, sweet is pleasure after pain"? Oh, no,

damme! I don't mean that,' he continued. 'No. How does it go?' Mr. Pomeroy thrust the bottle into his hands, looking daggers the while

at the tutor. 'Take another glass,' he cried boisterously. ''Swounds,

the girl will like you the better for it.' 'D'ye think so, Pom? Honest?' 'Sure of it. 'Twill give you spirit, my lord.' 'So it will.' 'At her and kiss her! Are you going to be governed all your life by that

whey-faced old Methodist? Or be your own man? Tell me that.' 'My lord, there's fifty thousand pounds upon it,' Thomasson said, his

face red. And he pushed back the bottle. The setting sun, peeping a

moment through the rain clouds and the low-browed lattice windows, flung

an angry yellow light on the board and the three flushed faces round it.

'Fifty thousand pounds,' repeated Mr. Thomasson firmly.