And during all this time Lopez was still resident in Mr. Wharton’s house. “Papa,” she said to him one day, “this is the cruellest thing of all. Why don’t you tell him that he must go?”
“Because he would take you with him.”
“It would be better so. I could come to see you.”
“I did tell him to go—in my passion. I repented of it instantly, because I should have lost you. But what did my telling matter to him? He was very indignant, and yet he is still here.”
“You told him to go?”
“Yes;—but I am glad that he did not obey me. There must be an end to this soon, I suppose.”
“I do not know, papa.”
“Do you think that he will not go?”
“I feel that I know nothing, papa. You must not let him stay here always, you know.”
“And what will become of you when he goes?”
“I must go with him. Why should you be sacrificed also? I will tell him that he must leave the house. I am not afraid of him, papa.”
“Not yet, my dear;—not yet. We will see.”
At this time Lopez declared his purpose one day of dining at the Progress, and Mr. Wharton took advantage of the occasion to remain at home with his daughter. Everett was now expected, and there was a probability that he might come on this evening. Mr. Wharton therefore returned from his chambers early; but when he reached the house he was told that there was a woman in the dining-room with Mrs. Lopez. The servant did not know what woman. She had asked to see Mrs. Lopez, and Mrs. Lopez had gone down to her.
The woman in the dining-room was Mrs. Parker. She had called at the house at about half-past five, and Emily had at once come down when summoned by tidings that a “lady” wanted to see her. Servants have a way of announcing a woman as a lady, which clearly expresses their own opinion that the person in question is not a lady. So it had been on the present occasion, but Mrs. Lopez had at once gone to her visitor. “Oh, Mrs. Parker, I am so glad to see you. I hope you are well.”
“Indeed, then, Mrs. Lopez, I am very far from well. No poor woman, who is the mother of five children, was ever farther from being well than I am.”
“Is anything wrong?”
“Wrong, ma’am! Everything is wrong. When is Mr. Lopez going to pay my husband all the money he has took from him?”
“Has he taken money?”
“Taken! he has taken everything. He has shorn my husband as bare as a board. We’re ruined, Mrs. Lopez, and it’s your husband has done it. When we were at Dovercourt, I told you how it was going to be. His business has left him, and now there is nothing. What are we to do?” The woman was seated on a chair, leaning forward with her two hands on her knees. The day was wet, the streets were half mud and half snow, and the poor woman, who had made her way through the slush, was soiled and wet. “I look to you to tell me what me and my children is to do. He’s your husband, Mrs. Lopez.”
“Yes, Mrs. Parker; he is my husband.”
“Why couldn’t he let Sexty alone? Why should the like of him be taking the bread out of my children’s mouths? What had we ever done to him? You’re rich.”
“Indeed I am not, Mrs. Parker.”
“Yes, you are. You’re living here in a grand house, and your father’s made of money. You’ll know nothing of want, let the worst come to the worst. What are we to do, Mrs. Lopez? I’m the wife of that poor creature, and you’re the wife of the man that has ruined him. What are we to do, Mrs. Lopez?”
“I do not understand my husband’s business, Mrs. Parker.”
“You’re one with him, ain’t you? If anybody had ever come to me and said my husband had robbed him, I’d never have stopped till I knew the truth of it. If any woman had ever said to me that Parker had taken the bread out of her children’s mouths, do you think that I’d sit as you are sitting?