He went away to bed, telling me to be prudent, and mind the colonel’s counsel until he returned from the North.
CHAPTER XIV
THE VOLTE COUPE
I was of a serious mind to take the advice. To prove this I called for my wrap-rascal and cane, and for a fellow with a flambeau to light me. But just then the party arrived from the assembly. I was tempted, and I sat down again in a corner of the room, resolved to keep a check upon myself, but to stay awhile.
The rector was the first in, humming a song, and spied me.
“Ho!” he cried, “will you drink, Richard? Or do I drink with you?”
He was already purple with wine.
“God save me from you and your kind!” I replied.
“’Sblood! what a devil’s nest of fireworks!” he exclaimed, as he went off down the room, still humming, to where the rest were gathered. And they were soon between bottle and stopper, and quips a-coursing. There was the captain of the Thunderer, Collinson by name, Lord Comyn and two brother officers, Will Fotheringay, my cousin Philip, openly pleased to be found in such a company, and some dozen other toadeaters who had followed my Lord a-chair and a-foot from the ball, and would have tracked him to perdition had he chosen to go; and lastly Tom Swain, leering and hiccoughing at the jokes, in such a beastly state of drunkenness as I had rarely seen him. His Lordship recognized me and smiled, and was pushing his chair back, when something Collinson said seemed to restrain him.
I believe I was the butt of more than one jest for my aloofness, though I could not hear distinctly for the noise they made. I commanded some French cognac, and kept my eye on the rector, and the sight of him was making me dangerous.
I forgot the advice I had received, and remembered only the months he had goaded me. And I was even beginning to speculate how I could best pick a quarrel with him on any issue but politics, when an unexpected incident diverted me. Of a sudden the tall, ungainly form of Percy Singleton filled the doorway, wrapped in a greatcoat. He swept the room at a glance, and then strode rapidly toward the corner where I sat.
“I had thought to find you here,” he said, and dropped into a chair beside me. I offered him wine, but he refused.
“Now,” he went on, “what has Patty done?”
“What have I done that I should be publicly insulted?” I cried.
“Insulted!” says he, “and did she insult you? She said nothing of that.”
“What brings you here, then?” I demanded.
“Not to talk, Richard,” he said quietly, “’tis no time tonight. I came to fetch you home. Patty sent me.”
Patty sent him! Why had Patty sent him? But this I did not ask, for I felt the devil within me.
“We must first finish this bottle,” said I, offhand, “and then I have a little something to be done which I have set my heart upon. After that I will go with you.”