How Mr Ralph Nickleby provided for
his Niece and Sister-in-Law
On the second morning after the departure
of Nicholas for Yorkshire, Kate Nickleby sat in a
very faded chair raised upon a very dusty throne in
Miss La Creevy’s room, giving that lady a sitting
for the portrait upon which she was engaged; and towards
the full perfection of which, Miss La Creevy had had
the street-door case brought upstairs, in order that
she might be the better able to infuse into the counterfeit
countenance of Miss Nickleby, a bright salmon flesh-tint
which she had originally hit upon while executing the
miniature of a young officer therein contained, and
which bright salmon flesh-tint was considered, by
Miss La Creevy’s chief friends and patrons,
to be quite a novelty in art: as indeed it was.
‘I think I have caught it now,’
said Miss La Creevy. ’The very shade!
This will be the sweetest portrait I have ever done,
certainly.’
‘It will be your genius that
makes it so, then, I am sure,’ replied Kate,
smiling.
‘No, no, I won’t allow
that, my dear,’ rejoined Miss La Creevy.
’It’s a very nice subject—a
very nice subject, indeed—though, of course,
something depends upon the mode of treatment.’
‘And not a little,’ observed Kate.
‘Why, my dear, you are right
there,’ said Miss La Creevy, ’in the main
you are right there; though I don’t allow that
it is of such very great importance in the present
case. Ah! The difficulties of Art, my
dear, are great.’
‘They must be, I have no doubt,’
said Kate, humouring her good-natured little friend.
‘They are beyond anything you
can form the faintest conception of,’ replied
Miss La Creevy. ’What with bringing out
eyes with all one’s power, and keeping down
noses with all one’s force, and adding to heads,
and taking away teeth altogether, you have no idea
of the trouble one little miniature is.’
‘The remuneration can scarcely repay you,’
said Kate.
‘Why, it does not, and that’s
the truth,’ answered Miss La Creevy; ’and
then people are so dissatisfied and unreasonable, that,
nine times out of ten, there’s no pleasure in
painting them. Sometimes they say, “Oh,
how very serious you have made me look, Miss La Creevy!”
and at others, “La, Miss La Creevy, how very
smirking!” when the very essence of a good portrait
is, that it must be either serious or smirking, or
it’s no portrait at all.’
‘Indeed!’ said Kate, laughing.
’Certainly, my dear; because
the sitters are always either the one or the other,’
replied Miss La Creevy. ’Look at the Royal
Academy! All those beautiful shiny portraits
of gentlemen in black velvet waistcoats, with their
fists doubled up on round tables, or marble slabs,
are serious, you know; and all the ladies who are playing
with little parasols, or little dogs, or little children—it’s
the same rule in art, only varying the objects—are
smirking. In fact,’ said Miss La Creevy,
sinking her voice to a confidential whisper, ’there
are only two styles of portrait painting; the serious
and the smirk; and we always use the serious for professional
people (except actors sometimes), and the smirk for
private ladies and gentlemen who don’t care
so much about looking clever.’
Kate seemed highly amused by this
information, and Miss La Creevy went on painting and
talking, with immovable complacency.
‘What a number of officers you
seem to paint!’ said Kate, availing herself
of a pause in the discourse, and glancing round the
room.
‘Number of what, child?’
inquired Miss La Creevy, looking up from her work.
’Character portraits, oh yes—they’re
not real military men, you know.’
‘No!’
’Bless your heart, of course
not; only clerks and that, who hire a uniform coat
to be painted in, and send it here in a carpet bag.
Some artists,’ said Miss La Creevy, ’keep
a red coat, and charge seven-and-sixpence extra for
hire and carmine; but I don’t do that myself,
for I don’t consider it legitimate.’
Drawing herself up, as though she
plumed herself greatly upon not resorting to these
lures to catch sitters, Miss La Creevy applied herself,
more intently, to her task: only raising her head
occasionally, to look with unspeakable satisfaction
at some touch she had just put in: and now and
then giving Miss Nickleby to understand what particular
feature she was at work upon, at the moment; ‘not,’
she expressly observed, ’that you should make
it up for painting, my dear, but because it’s
our custom sometimes to tell sitters what part we
are upon, in order that if there’s any particular
expression they want introduced, they may throw it
in, at the time, you know.’
‘And when,’ said Miss
La Creevy, after a long silence, to wit, an interval
of full a minute and a half, ’when do you expect
to see your uncle again?’
‘I scarcely know; I had expected
to have seen him before now,’ replied Kate.
’Soon I hope, for this state of uncertainty
is worse than anything.’
‘I suppose he has money, hasn’t
he?’ inquired Miss La Creevy.
‘He is very rich, I have heard,’
rejoined Kate. ’I don’t know that
he is, but I believe so.’
‘Ah, you may depend upon it
he is, or he wouldn’t be so surly,’ remarked
Miss La Creevy, who was an odd little mixture of shrewdness
and simplicity. ’When a man’s a bear,
he is generally pretty independent.’
‘His manner is rough,’ said Kate.
‘Rough!’ cried Miss La
Creevy, ’a porcupine’s a featherbed to
him! I never met with such a cross-grained old
savage.’
‘It is only his manner, I believe,’
observed Kate, timidly; ’he was disappointed
in early life, I think I have heard, or has had his
temper soured by some calamity. I should be sorry
to think ill of him until I knew he deserved it.’
‘Well; that’s very right
and proper,’ observed the miniature painter,
’and Heaven forbid that I should be the cause
of your doing so! But, now, mightn’t he,
without feeling it himself, make you and your mama
some nice little allowance that would keep you both
comfortable until you were well married, and be a little
fortune to her afterwards? What would a hundred
a year for instance, be to him?’
‘I don’t know what it
would be to him,’ said Kate, with energy, ’but
it would be that to me I would rather die than take.’
‘Heyday!’ cried Miss La Creevy.
‘A dependence upon him,’
said Kate, ’would embitter my whole life.
I should feel begging a far less degradation.’
‘Well!’ exclaimed Miss
La Creevy. ’This of a relation whom you
will not hear an indifferent person speak ill of,
my dear, sounds oddly enough, I confess.’
‘I dare say it does,’
replied Kate, speaking more gently, ’indeed I
am sure it must. I—I—only
mean that with the feelings and recollection of better
times upon me, I could not bear to live on anybody’s
bounty—not his particularly, but anybody’s.’
Miss La Creevy looked slyly at her
companion, as if she doubted whether Ralph himself
were not the subject of dislike, but seeing that her
young friend was distressed, made no remark.
‘I only ask of him,’ continued
Kate, whose tears fell while she spoke, ’that
he will move so little out of his way, in my behalf,
as to enable me by his recommendation—only
by his recommendation—to earn, literally,
my bread and remain with my mother. Whether we
shall ever taste happiness again, depends upon the
fortunes of my dear brother; but if he will do this,
and Nicholas only tells us that he is well and cheerful,
I shall be contented.’
As she ceased to speak, there was
a rustling behind the screen which stood between her
and the door, and some person knocked at the wainscot.’
‘Come in, whoever it is!’ cried Miss La
Creevy.
The person complied, and, coming forward
at once, gave to view the form and features of no
less an individual than Mr Ralph Nickleby himself.
‘Your servant, ladies,’
said Ralph, looking sharply at them by turns.
’You were talking so loud, that I was unable
to make you hear.’
When the man of business had a more
than commonly vicious snarl lurking at his heart,
he had a trick of almost concealing his eyes under
their thick and protruding brows, for an instant, and
then displaying them in their full keenness.
As he did so now, and tried to keep down the smile
which parted his thin compressed lips, and puckered
up the bad lines about his mouth, they both felt certain
that some part, if not the whole, of their recent conversation,
had been overheard.
’I called in, on my way upstairs,
more than half expecting to find you here,’
said Ralph, addressing his niece, and looking contemptuously
at the portrait. ’Is that my niece’s
portrait, ma’am?’
‘Yes it is, Mr Nickleby,’
said Miss La Creevy, with a very sprightly air, ’and
between you and me and the post, sir, it will be a
very nice portrait too, though I say it who am the
painter.’
‘Don’t trouble yourself
to show it to me, ma’am,’ cried Ralph,
moving away, ‘I have no eye for likenesses.
Is it nearly finished?’
‘Why, yes,’ replied Miss
La Creevy, considering with the pencil end of her
brush in her mouth. ‘Two sittings more
will—’
‘Have them at once, ma’am,’
said Ralph. ’She’ll have no time
to idle over fooleries after tomorrow. Work,
ma’am, work; we must all work. Have you
let your lodgings, ma’am?’
‘I have not put a bill up yet, sir.’
’Put it up at once, ma’am;
they won’t want the rooms after this week, or
if they do, can’t pay for them. Now, my
dear, if you’re ready, we’ll lose no more
time.’
With an assumption of kindness which
sat worse upon him even than his usual manner, Mr
Ralph Nickleby motioned to the young lady to precede
him, and bowing gravely to Miss La Creevy, closed the
door and followed upstairs, where Mrs Nickleby received
him with many expressions of regard. Stopping
them somewhat abruptly, Ralph waved his hand with
an impatient gesture, and proceeded to the object of
his visit.
‘I have found a situation for
your daughter, ma’am,’ said Ralph.
‘Well,’ replied Mrs Nickleby.
’Now, I will say that that is only just what
I have expected of you. “Depend upon it,”
I said to Kate, only yesterday morning at breakfast,
“that after your uncle has provided, in that
most ready manner, for Nicholas, he will not leave
us until he has done at least the same for you.”
These were my very words, as near as I remember.
Kate, my dear, why don’t you thank your—’
‘Let me proceed, ma’am,
pray,’ said Ralph, interrupting his sister-in-law
in the full torrent of her discourse.
‘Kate, my love, let your uncle
proceed,’ said Mrs Nickleby.
‘I am most anxious that he should,
mama,’ rejoined Kate.
’Well, my dear, if you are anxious
that he should, you had better allow your uncle to
say what he has to say, without interruption,’
observed Mrs Nickleby, with many small nods and frowns.
’Your uncle’s time is very valuable,
my dear; and however desirous you may be—and
naturally desirous, as I am sure any affectionate relations
who have seen so little of your uncle as we have, must
naturally be to protract the pleasure of having him
among us, still, we are bound not to be selfish, but
to take into consideration the important nature of
his occupations in the city.’
‘I am very much obliged to you,
ma’am,’ said Ralph with a scarcely perceptible
sneer. ’An absence of business habits in
this family leads, apparently, to a great waste of
words before business—when it does come
under consideration—is arrived at, at all.’
‘I fear it is so indeed,’
replied Mrs Nickleby with a sigh. ’Your
poor brother—’
‘My poor brother, ma’am,’
interposed Ralph tartly, ’had no idea what business
was—was unacquainted, I verily believe,
with the very meaning of the word.’
‘I fear he was,’ said
Mrs Nickleby, with her handkerchief to her eyes.
’If it hadn’t been for me, I don’t
know what would have become of him.’
What strange creatures we are!
The slight bait so skilfully thrown out by Ralph,
on their first interview, was dangling on the hook
yet. At every small deprivation or discomfort
which presented itself in the course of the four-and-twenty
hours to remind her of her straitened and altered
circumstances, peevish visions of her dower of one
thousand pounds had arisen before Mrs Nickleby’s
mind, until, at last, she had come to persuade herself
that of all her late husband’s creditors she
was the worst used and the most to be pitied.
And yet, she had loved him dearly for many years,
and had no greater share of selfishness than is the
usual lot of mortals. Such is the irritability
of sudden poverty. A decent annuity would have
restored her thoughts to their old train, at once.
‘Repining is of no use, ma’am,’
said Ralph. ’Of all fruitless errands,
sending a tear to look after a day that is gone is
the most fruitless.’
‘So it is,’ sobbed Mrs Nickleby.
‘So it is.’
’As you feel so keenly, in your
own purse and person, the consequences of inattention
to business, ma’am,’ said Ralph, ’I
am sure you will impress upon your children the necessity
of attaching themselves to it early in life.’
‘Of course I must see that,’
rejoined Mrs Nickleby. ’Sad experience,
you know, brother-in-law.—Kate, my dear,
put that down in the next letter to Nicholas, or remind
me to do it if I write.’
Ralph paused for a few moments, and
seeing that he had now made pretty sure of the mother,
in case the daughter objected to his proposition,
went on to say:
’The situation that I have made
interest to procure, ma’am, is with —with
a milliner and dressmaker, in short.’
‘A milliner!’ cried Mrs Nickleby.
‘A milliner and dressmaker,
ma’am,’ replied Ralph. ’Dressmakers
in London, as I need not remind you, ma’am,
who are so well acquainted with all matters in the
ordinary routine of life, make large fortunes, keep
equipages, and become persons of great wealth and
fortune.’
Now, the first idea called up in Mrs
Nickleby’s mind by the words milliner and dressmaker
were connected with certain wicker baskets lined with
black oilskin, which she remembered to have seen carried
to and fro in the streets; but, as Ralph proceeded,
these disappeared, and were replaced by visions of
large houses at the West end, neat private carriages,
and a banker’s book; all of which images succeeded
each other with such rapidity, that he had no sooner
finished speaking, than she nodded her head and said
’Very true,’ with great appearance of
satisfaction.
‘What your uncle says is very
true, Kate, my dear,’ said Mrs Nickleby.
’I recollect when your poor papa and I came
to town after we were married, that a young lady brought
me home a chip cottage-bonnet, with white and green
trimming, and green persian lining, in her own carriage,
which drove up to the door full gallop;—at
least, I am not quite certain whether it was her own
carriage or a hackney chariot, but I remember very
well that the horse dropped down dead as he was turning
round, and that your poor papa said he hadn’t
had any corn for a fortnight.’
This anecdote, so strikingly illustrative
of the opulence of milliners, was not received with
any great demonstration of feeling, inasmuch as Kate
hung down her head while it was relating, and Ralph
manifested very intelligible symptoms of extreme impatience.
‘The lady’s name,’
said Ralph, hastily striking in, ’is Mantalini—
Madame Mantalini. I know her. She lives
near Cavendish Square. If your daughter is disposed
to try after the situation, I’ll take her there
directly.’
‘Have you nothing to say to
your uncle, my love?’ inquired Mrs Nickleby.
‘A great deal,’ replied
Kate; ’but not now. I would rather speak
to him when we are alone;—it will save
his time if I thank him and say what I wish to say
to him, as we walk along.’
With these words, Kate hurried away,
to hide the traces of emotion that were stealing down
her face, and to prepare herself for the walk, while
Mrs Nickleby amused her brother-in-law by giving him,
with many tears, a detailed account of the dimensions
of a rosewood cabinet piano they had possessed in
their days of affluence, together with a minute description
of eight drawing-room chairs, with turned legs and
green chintz squabs to match the curtains, which had
cost two pounds fifteen shillings apiece, and had gone
at the sale for a mere nothing.
These reminiscences were at length
cut short by Kate’s return in her walking dress,
when Ralph, who had been fretting and fuming during
the whole time of her absence, lost no time, and used
very little ceremony, in descending into the street.
‘Now,’ he said, taking
her arm, ’walk as fast as you can, and you’ll
get into the step that you’ll have to walk to
business with, every morning.’ So saying,
he led Kate off, at a good round pace, towards Cavendish
Square.
‘I am very much obliged to you,
uncle,’ said the young lady, after they had
hurried on in silence for some time; ‘very.’
‘I’m glad to hear it,’
said Ralph. ‘I hope you’ll do your
duty.’
‘I will try to please, uncle,’
replied Kate: ‘indeed I—’
‘Don’t begin to cry,’ growled Ralph;
‘I hate crying.’
‘It’s very foolish, I know, uncle,’
began poor Kate.
‘It is,’ replied Ralph,
stopping her short, ’and very affected besides.
Let me see no more of it.’
Perhaps this was not the best way
to dry the tears of a young and sensitive female,
about to make her first entry on an entirely new scene
of life, among cold and uninterested strangers; but
it had its effect notwithstanding. Kate coloured
deeply, breathed quickly for a few moments, and then
walked on with a firmer and more determined step.
It was a curious contrast to see how
the timid country girl shrunk through the crowd that
hurried up and down the streets, giving way to the
press of people, and clinging closely to Ralph as though
she feared to lose him in the throng; and how the
stern and hard-featured man of business went doggedly
on, elbowing the passengers aside, and now and then
exchanging a gruff salutation with some passing acquaintance,
who turned to look back upon his pretty charge, with
looks expressive of surprise, and seemed to wonder
at the ill-assorted companionship. But, it would
have been a stranger contrast still, to have read
the hearts that were beating side by side; to have
laid bare the gentle innocence of the one, and the
rugged villainy of the other; to have hung upon the
guileless thoughts of the affectionate girl, and been
amazed that, among all the wily plots and calculations
of the old man, there should not be one word or figure
denoting thought of death or of the grave. But
so it was; and stranger still—though this
is a thing of every day— the warm young
heart palpitated with a thousand anxieties and apprehensions,
while that of the old worldly man lay rusting in its
cell, beating only as a piece of cunning mechanism,
and yielding no one throb of hope, or fear, or love,
or care, for any living thing.
‘Uncle,’ said Kate, when
she judged they must be near their destination, ’I
must ask one question of you. I am to live at
home?’
‘At home!’ replied Ralph; ‘where’s
that?’
‘I mean with my mother—the widow,’
said Kate emphatically.
‘You will live, to all intents
and purposes, here,’ rejoined Ralph; ’for
here you will take your meals, and here you will be
from morning till night—occasionally perhaps
till morning again.’
‘But at night, I mean,’
said Kate; ’I cannot leave her, uncle.
I must have some place that I can call a home; it
will be wherever she is, you know, and may be a very
humble one.’
‘May be!’ said Ralph,
walking faster, in the impatience provoked by the
remark; ’must be, you mean. May be a humble
one! Is the girl mad?’
‘The word slipped from my lips,
I did not mean it indeed,’ urged Kate.
‘I hope not,’ said Ralph.
‘But my question, uncle; you have not answered
it.’
‘Why, I anticipated something
of the kind,’ said Ralph; ’and—though
I object very strongly, mind—have provided
against it. I spoke of you as an out-of-door
worker; so you will go to this home that may be humble,
every night.’
There was comfort in this. Kate
poured forth many thanks for her uncle’s consideration,
which Ralph received as if he had deserved them all,
and they arrived without any further conversation at
the dressmaker’s door, which displayed a very
large plate, with Madame Mantalini’s name and
occupation, and was approached by a handsome flight
of steps. There was a shop to the house, but
it was let off to an importer of otto of roses.
Madame Mantalini’s shows-rooms were on the
first-floor: a fact which was notified to the
nobility and gentry by the casual exhibition, near
the handsomely curtained windows, of two or three
elegant bonnets of the newest fashion, and some costly
garments in the most approved taste.
A liveried footman opened the door,
and in reply to Ralph’s inquiry whether Madame
Mantalini was at home, ushered them, through a handsome
hall and up a spacious staircase, into the show saloon,
which comprised two spacious drawing-rooms, and exhibited
an immense variety of superb dresses and materials
for dresses: some arranged on stands, others
laid carelessly on sofas, and others again, scattered
over the carpet, hanging on the cheval-glasses, or
mingling, in some other way, with the rich furniture
of various descriptions, which was profusely displayed.
They waited here a much longer time
than was agreeable to Mr Ralph Nickleby, who eyed
the gaudy frippery about him with very little concern,
and was at length about to pull the bell, when a gentleman
suddenly popped his head into the room, and, seeing
somebody there, as suddenly popped it out again.
‘Here. Hollo!’ cried Ralph.
‘Who’s that?’
At the sound of Ralph’s voice,
the head reappeared, and the mouth, displaying a very
long row of very white teeth, uttered in a mincing
tone the words, ‘Demmit. What, Nickleby!
oh, demmit!’ Having uttered which ejaculations,
the gentleman advanced, and shook hands with Ralph,
with great warmth. He was dressed in a gorgeous
morning gown, with a waistcoat and Turkish trousers
of the same pattern, a pink silk neckerchief, and
bright green slippers, and had a very copious watch-chain
wound round his body. Moreover, he had whiskers
and a moustache, both dyed black and gracefully curled.
‘Demmit, you don’t mean
to say you want me, do you, demmit?’ said this
gentleman, smiting Ralph on the shoulder.
‘Not yet,’ said Ralph, sarcastically.
‘Ha! ha! demmit,’ cried
the gentleman; when, wheeling round to laugh with
greater elegance, he encountered Kate Nickleby, who
was standing near.
‘My niece,’ said Ralph.
‘I remember,’ said the
gentleman, striking his nose with the knuckle of his
forefinger as a chastening for his forgetfulness.
’Demmit, I remember what you come for.
Step this way, Nickleby; my dear, will you follow
me? Ha! ha! They all follow me, Nickleby;
always did, demmit, always.’
Giving loose to the playfulness of
his imagination, after this fashion, the gentleman
led the way to a private sitting-room on the second
floor, scarcely less elegantly furnished than the apartment
below, where the presence of a silver coffee-pot, an
egg-shell, and sloppy china for one, seemed to show
that he had just breakfasted.
‘Sit down, my dear,’ said
the gentleman: first staring Miss Nickleby out
of countenance, and then grinning in delight at the
achievement. ’This cursed high room takes
one’s breath away. These infernal sky
parlours—I’m afraid I must move, Nickleby.’
‘I would, by all means,’
replied Ralph, looking bitterly round.
‘What a demd rum fellow you
are, Nickleby,’ said the gentleman, ’the
demdest, longest-headed, queerest-tempered old coiner
of gold and silver ever was—demmit.’
Having complimented Ralph to this
effect, the gentleman rang the bell, and stared at
Miss Nickleby until it was answered, when he left
off to bid the man desire his mistress to come directly;
after which, he began again, and left off no more
until Madame Mantalini appeared.
The dressmaker was a buxom person,
handsomely dressed and rather good-looking, but much
older than the gentleman in the Turkish trousers,
whom she had wedded some six months before. His
name was originally Muntle; but it had been converted,
by an easy transition, into Mantalini: the lady
rightly considering that an English appellation would
be of serious injury to the business. He had
married on his whiskers; upon which property he had
previously subsisted, in a genteel manner, for some
years; and which he had recently improved, after patient
cultivation by the addition of a moustache, which
promised to secure him an easy independence: his
share in the labours of the business being at present
confined to spending the money, and occasionally,
when that ran short, driving to Mr Ralph Nickleby
to procure discount—at a percentage—for
the customers’ bills.
‘My life,’ said Mr Mantalini,
’what a demd devil of a time you have been!’
‘I didn’t even know Mr
Nickleby was here, my love,’ said Madame Mantalini.
’Then what a doubly demd infernal
rascal that footman must be, my soul,’ remonstrated
Mr Mantalini.
‘My dear,’ said Madame, ‘that is
entirely your fault.’
‘My fault, my heart’s joy?’
‘Certainly,’ returned
the lady; ’what can you expect, dearest, if
you will not correct the man?’
‘Correct the man, my soul’s delight!’
‘Yes; I am sure he wants speaking
to, badly enough,’ said Madame, pouting.
‘Then do not vex itself,’
said Mr Mantalini; ’he shall be horse-whipped
till he cries out demnebly.’ With this
promise Mr Mantalini kissed Madame Mantalini, and,
after that performance, Madame Mantalini pulled Mr
Mantalini playfully by the ear: which done, they
descended to business.
‘Now, ma’am,’ said
Ralph, who had looked on, at all this, with such scorn
as few men can express in looks, ‘this is my
niece.’
‘Just so, Mr Nickleby,’
replied Madame Mantalini, surveying Kate from head
to foot, and back again. ‘Can you speak
French, child?’
‘Yes, ma’am,’ replied
Kate, not daring to look up; for she felt that the
eyes of the odious man in the dressing-gown were directed
towards her.
‘Like a demd native?’ asked the husband.
Miss Nickleby offered no reply to
this inquiry, but turned her back upon the questioner,
as if addressing herself to make answer to what his
wife might demand.
’We keep twenty young women
constantly employed in the establishment,’ said
Madame.
‘Indeed, ma’am!’ replied Kate, timidly.
’Yes; and some of ’em demd handsome, too,’
said the master.
‘Mantalini!’ exclaimed his wife, in an
awful voice.
‘My senses’ idol!’ said Mantalini.
‘Do you wish to break my heart?’
’Not for twenty thousand hemispheres
populated with—with—with little
ballet-dancers,’ replied Mantalini in a poetical
strain.
‘Then you will, if you persevere
in that mode of speaking,’ said his wife.
‘What can Mr Nickleby think when he hears you?’
‘Oh! Nothing, ma’am,
nothing,’ replied Ralph. ’I know
his amiable nature, and yours,—mere little
remarks that give a zest to your daily intercourse—lovers’
quarrels that add sweetness to those domestic joys
which promise to last so long—that’s
all; that’s all.’
If an iron door could be supposed
to quarrel with its hinges, and to make a firm resolution
to open with slow obstinacy, and grind them to powder
in the process, it would emit a pleasanter sound in
so doing, than did these words in the rough and bitter
voice in which they were uttered by Ralph. Even
Mr Mantalini felt their influence, and turning affrighted
round, exclaimed: ’What a demd horrid croaking!’
’You will pay no attention,
if you please, to what Mr Mantalini says,’ observed
his wife, addressing Miss Nickleby.
‘I do not, ma’am,’ said Kate, with
quiet contempt.
‘Mr Mantalini knows nothing
whatever about any of the young women,’ continued
Madame, looking at her husband, and speaking to Kate.
’If he has seen any of them, he must have seen
them in the street, going to, or returning from, their
work, and not here. He was never even in the
room. I do not allow it. What hours of
work have you been accustomed to?’
‘I have never yet been accustomed
to work at all, ma’am,’ replied Kate,
in a low voice.
‘For which reason she’ll
work all the better now,’ said Ralph, putting
in a word, lest this confession should injure the
negotiation.
‘I hope so,’ returned
Madame Mantalini; ’our hours are from nine to
nine, with extra work when we’re very full of
business, for which I allow payment as overtime.’
Kate bowed her head, to intimate that
she heard, and was satisfied.
‘Your meals,’ continued
Madame Mantalini, ’that is, dinner and tea,
you will take here. I should think your wages
would average from five to seven shillings a week;
but I can’t give you any certain information
on that point, until I see what you can do.’
Kate bowed her head again.
‘If you’re ready to come,’
said Madame Mantalini, ’you had better begin
on Monday morning at nine exactly, and Miss Knag the
forewoman shall then have directions to try you with
some easy work at first. Is there anything more,
Mr Nickleby?’
‘Nothing more, ma’am,’ replied Ralph,
rising.
‘Then I believe that’s
all,’ said the lady. Having arrived at
this natural conclusion, she looked at the door, as
if she wished to be gone, but hesitated notwithstanding,
as though unwilling to leave to Mr Mantalini the sole
honour of showing them downstairs. Ralph relieved
her from her perplexity by taking his departure without
delay: Madame Mantalini making many gracious inquiries
why he never came to see them; and Mr Mantalini anathematising
the stairs with great volubility as he followed them
down, in the hope of inducing Kate to look round,—a
hope, however, which was destined to remain ungratified.
‘There!’ said Ralph when
they got into the street; ’now you’re
provided for.’
Kate was about to thank him again, but he stopped
her.
‘I had some idea,’ he
said, ’of providing for your mother in a pleasant
part of the country—(he had a presentation
to some almshouses on the borders of Cornwall, which
had occurred to him more than once)—but
as you want to be together, I must do something else
for her. She has a little money?’
‘A very little,’ replied Kate.
‘A little will go a long way
if it’s used sparingly,’ said Ralph.
’She must see how long she can make it last,
living rent free. You leave your lodgings on
Saturday?’
‘You told us to do so, uncle.’
’Yes; there is a house empty
that belongs to me, which I can put you into till
it is let, and then, if nothing else turns up, perhaps
I shall have another. You must live there.’
‘Is it far from here, sir?’ inquired Kate.
‘Pretty well,’ said Ralph;
’in another quarter of the town—at
the East end; but I’ll send my clerk down to
you, at five o’clock on Saturday, to take you
there. Goodbye. You know your way?
Straight on.’
Coldly shaking his niece’s hand,
Ralph left her at the top of Regent Street, and turned
down a by-thoroughfare, intent on schemes of money-getting.
Kate walked sadly back to their lodgings in the Strand.