“You are a fool!” cried Madam, angrily; “you say those things only to provoke me. I wish you had some right feeling and some conversation. You are as dull as ditch water. You care for nothing. I don’t believe it would rouse you to hear that the plague was in the next street!”
“Well, we shall see,” answered Gertrude, with a calmness that was at least a little provoking, “for people say it is spreading very fast, and may soon be here.”
“What!” cried Madam, in a sudden panic; “who says that? What do you mean, girl?”
“It was Reuben who told me,” answered Gertrude, with a little blush which she tried to conceal by turning her face towards the window.
But her ruse was in vain. Madam’s hawk eye had caught the rising colour, and her brow contracted sharply.
“Reuben! what Reuben? Have I not told you a hundred times that I would have none of that sort of talk any more? Reuben, indeed! as though you were boy and girl together! Pray tell me this, you forward minx, does he dare to address you as Gertrude when he has the insolence to speak to you in the streets, where alone I presume he can do so?”
Gertrude’s face was burning with indignation. She had to clasp her hands tightly together to restrain the hot words which rose to her lips.
“We have been children together—and friends,” she said, “the Harmers and I. How should we forget that so quickly—even though you have forgotten! My father does not mind.”
Madam’s face was as red as her daughter’s. She was about to make some violent retort, when the sound of a footstep on the stairs checked the words upon her lips.
“There is Frederick!” she said.
CHAPTER II. LONDON’S YOUNG CITIZENS.
The door of the room where mother and daughter sat was flung wide open with scant ceremony, and to the accompaniment of a boisterous laugh. Into the room swaggered a tall, fine-looking young man of some three-and-twenty summers, dressed in all the extravagance of a lavish and extravagant age. Upon his head he wore an immense peruke of ringlets, such as had been introduced at Court the previous year, and which was almost universal now with the nobles and gentry, but by no means so amongst the citizens. The periwig was surmounted by a high-crowned hat adorned with feathers and ribbons, and ribbons floated from his person in such abundance that to unaccustomed eyes the effect was little short of grotesque. Even the absurd high-heeled shoes were tied with immense bows of ribbon, whilst knees, wrists, throat, and even elbows displayed their bows and streamers. The young dandy wore the full “petticoat breeches” of the period, with a short doublet, a jaunty cloak hung from the shoulders, and an abundance of costly lace ruffles adorned the neck and wrists of the doublet, he wore at his side a short rapier, and had a trick of laying his hand upon the hilt, as though it would take very little provocation to make him draw it forth upon an adversary.