“I’ve forgotten my teeth!”
While the man was gone for them, he swallowed the oysters, methodically touching them one by one with cayenne, Chili vinegar, and lemon. Ummm! Not quite what they used to be at Pimm’s in the best days, but not bad—not bad! Then seeing the little blue bowl lying before him, he looked up and said:
“My compliments to cook on the oysters. Give me the champagne.” And he lifted his trembling teeth. Thank God, he could still put ’em in for himself! The creaming goldenish fluid from the napkined bottle slowly reached the brim of his glass, which had a hollow stem; raising it to his lips, very red between the white hairs above and below, he drank with a gurgling noise, and put the glass down-empty. Nectar! And just cold enough!
“I frapped it the least bit, sir.”
“Quite right. What’s that smell of flowers?”
“It’s from those ’yacinths on the sideboard, sir. They come from Mrs. Larne, this afternoon.”
“Put ’em on the table. Where’s my daughter?”
“She’s had dinner, sir; goin’ to a ball, I think.”
“A ball!”
“Charity ball, I fancy, sir.”
“Ummm! Give me a touch of the old sherry with the soup.”
“Yes, sir. I shall have to open a bottle:”
“Very well, then, do!”
On his way to the cellar the man confided to Molly, who was carrying the soup:
“The Gov’nor’s going it to-night! What he’ll be like tomorrow I dunno.”
The girl answered softly:
“Poor old man, let um have his pleasure.” And, in the hall, with the soup tureen against her bosom, she hummed above the steam, and thought of the ribbons on her new chemises, bought out of the sovereign he had given her.