At last she made up her mind that she would ask her father. He was always at his office-desk for half an hour in the morning, before the clerks had come, and on the following day, a minute or two after he had taken his seat, she knocked at the door. He was busy reading a letter from Lord Rufford’s man of business, asking him certain questions about Goarly and almost employing him to get up the case on Lord Rufford’s behalf. There was a certain triumph to him in this. It was not by his means that tidings had reached Lord Rufford of his refusal to undertake Goarly’s case. But Runciman, who was often allowed by his lordship to say a few words to him in the hunting-field, had mentioned the circumstance. “A man like Mr. Masters is better without such a blackguard as that,” the Lord had said. Then Runciman had replied, “No doubt, my Lord; no doubt. But Dillsborough is a poor place, and business is business, my Lord.” Then Lord Rufford had remembered it, and the letter which the attorney was somewhat triumphantly reading had been the consequence.
“Is that you, Mary? What can I do for you, my love?”
“Papa, I want you to read this.” Then Mr. Masters read the letter. “I should so like to go.”
“Should you, my dear?”
“Oh yes! Lady Ushant has been so kind to me—all my life! And I do so love her!”
“What does mamma say?”
“I haven’t asked mamma.”
“Is there any reason why you shouldn’t go?”
Of that one reason—as to Larry Twentyman—of course she would say nothing. She must leave him to discuss that with her mother. “I should want some clothes, papa; a dress, and some boots, and a new hat, and there would be money for the journey and a few other things.” The attorney winced, but at the same time remembered that something was due to his eldest child in the way of garments and relaxation. “I never like to be an expense, papa.”
“You are very good about that, my dear. I don’t see why you shouldn’t go. It’s very kind of Lady Ushant. I’ll talk to mamma.” Then Mary went away to get the breakfast, fearing that before long there would be black looks in the house.
Mr. Masters at once went up to his wife—having given himself a minute or two to calculate that he would let Mary have twenty pounds for the occasion—and made his proposition. “I never heard of such nonsense in my life,” said Mrs. Masters.
“Nonsense—my dear! Why should it be nonsense?”
“Cocking her up with Lady Ushant! What good will Lady Ushant do her? She’s not going to live with ladies of quality all her life.”
“Why shouldn’t she live with ladies?”
“You know what I mean, Gregory. The Mortons have dropped you, for any use they were to you, long ago, and you may as well make up your mind to drop them. You’ll go on hankering after gentlefolks till you’ve about ruined yourself.”
When he remembered that he had that very morning received a commission from Lord Rufford he thought that this was a little too bad. But he was