He was holding out his hand to Mrs. Wesley when the door opened behind him, and Sally appeared.
“If you please,” she announced, “there’s a gentleman without, wishes to see the company. He calls himself Mr. Wesley.”
“It cannot be Charles?” Mrs. Wesley turned towards her son Sam. “But Charles must be at Westminster and in bed these two hours!”
“Surely,” said he.
“’Tis not young Master Charles, ma’am, nor anyone like him: but a badger-faced old gentleman who snaps up a word before ’tis out of your mouth.”
“Show him in,” commanded Matthew: and the words were scarcely out before the visitor stood in the doorway. Mrs. Wesley recognised him at once as the old gentleman who had stood beside her that morning and watched the fight.
“Good evening, ma’am. I learned your address at Westminster: or, to be precise, at the Reverend Samuel Wesley’s. You are he, I suppose?”—here he swung round upon Sam—“Your amiable wife told me I should find you here: and so much the better, my visit being on family business. Eh? What? I hope I’m not turning out this gentleman?”—indicating Captain Bewes—“No? Well, if you were leaving, sir, I won’t detain you: since, as I say, mine is family business. Mr. Matthew Wesley, I presume?”—with a quick turn towards his host as Captain Bewes slipped away—“And brother of this lady’s husband? Quite so. No, I thank you, I do not smoke; but will take snuff, if the company allows. I have heard reports of your skill, sir. My name is Wesley also: Garrett Wesley, of Dangan, County Meath, in Ireland: I sit for my county in Parliament and pass in this world for a respectable person. You’ll excuse these details, ma’am; but when a man breaks in upon a family party at this hour of the night, he ought to give some account of himself.”
Mrs. Wesley rose from her chair and dropped him a stately curtsey. “The name suffices for us, sir. I make my compliments to one of my husband’s family.”
“I’m obliged to you, ma’am, and pleased to hear the kinship acknowledged. A good family, as families go, though I say it. We have held on to Dangan since Harry Fifth’s time; and to our name since Guy of Welswe was made a thane by Athelstan. We have a knack, ma’am, of staying the course: small in the build but sound in the wind. It did me good, to-day, to see that son of yours step out for the last round.”
“Excuse me—” put in Samuel, pushing a candle aside and craning forward (he was short-sighted) for a better look at the visitor.
“Ha? You have not heard? Well, well—oughtn’t to tell tales out of school, and certainly not to the Usher: but your mother and I, sir, had the fortune, this morning, to witness a bout of fisticuffs—Whig against Tory—and perhaps it will not altogether distress you to learn that the Whig took a whipping. I like that boy of yours, ma’am: he has breed. I do not forget”—with another bow—“his mother’s descent from the Annesleys of Anglesea and Valentia: but she will forgive me that, while watching him, I thought rather of his blood derived from my own great-great-grandfather Robert, and of our common ancestors—Walter, the king’s standard-bearer, Edward, who carried the heart of the Bruce to Palestine—but I weary Mr. Matthew perhaps?”