of it in his drink. But remember, all this is told you because I gather
from your questions that you mean to be a purchaser. You must keep
faith with me?’
‘Very well––I don’t mind a bottle––to give some friend or other to
try it on her young man.’ She produced
five shillings, the price
asked, and slipped the phial in her capacious bosom. Saying pres-
ently that she was due at an appointment with her husband she
sauntered away towards the refreshment bar, Jude, his companion,
and the child having gone on to the horticultural tent, where
Arabella caught a glimpse of them standing before a group of roses
in bloom.
She waited a few minutes observing them, and then proceeded to
join her spouse with no very amiable sentiments. She found him
seated on a stool by the bar, talking to one of the gaily dressed maids
who had served him with spirits.
‘I should think you had enough of this business at home!’ Arabella
remarked gloomily. ‘Surely you didn’t come
fifty miles from your
own bar to stick in another? Come, take me round the show, as other
men do their wives! Dammy, one would think you were a young
bachelor, with nobody to look after but yourself.’
‘But we agreed to meet here; and what could I do but wait?’
‘Well, now we have met, come along,’ she returned, ready to quar-
rel with the sun for shining on her. And they left the tent together,
this pot-bellied man and
florid woman, in the antipathetic, recrimin-
atory mood of the average husband and wife of Christendom.
In the meantime the more exceptional couple and the boy still
lingered in the pavilion of
flowers––an enchanted palace to their
appreciative taste––Sue’s usually pale cheeks re
flecting the pink of
the tinted roses at which she gazed; for the gay sights, the air, the
music, and the excitement of a day’s outing with Jude, had quick-
ened her blood and made her eyes sparkle with vivacity. She adored
roses, and what Arabella had witnessed was Sue detaining Jude
almost against his will while she learnt the names of this variety and
that, and put her face within an inch of their blooms to smell them.
‘I should like to push my face quite into them––the dears!’ she had
said. ‘But I suppose it is against the rules to touch them, isn’t it,
Jude?’
‘Yes, you baby,’ said he: and then playfully gave her a little push,
so that her nose went among the petals.
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