It has been said that George Vavasor had a little establishment at Roebury,
down in Oxfordshire, and thither he betook himself about the middle of November.
He had been long known in this county, and whether or no men spoke well of him
as a man of business in London, men spoke well of him down there, as one who
knew how to ride to hounds. Not that Vavasor was popular among fellow-sportsmen.
It was quite otherwise. He was not a man that made himself really popular in any
social meetings of men. He did not himself care for the loose little talkings,
half flat and half sharp, of men when they meet together in idleness. He was not
open enough in his nature for such popularity. Some men were afraid of him, and
some suspected him. There were others who made up to him, seeking his intimacy,
but these he usually snubbed, and always kept at a distance. Though he had
indulged in all the ordinary pleasures of young men, he had never been a jovial
man. In his conversations with men he always seemed to think that he should use
his time towards serving some purpose of business. With women he was quite the
reverse. With women he could be happy. With women he could really associate. A
woman he could really love — but I doubt whether for all that he could treat a
woman well.
But he was known in the Oxfordshire country as a man who knew what he was
about, and such men are always welcome. It is the man who does not know how to
ride that is made uncomfortable in the hunting field by cold looks or expressed
censure. And yet it is very rarely that such men do any real harm. Such a one
may now and then get among the hounds or override the hunt, but it is not often
so. Many such complaints are made; but in truth the too forward man, who presses
the dogs, is generally one who can ride, but is too eager or too selfish to keep
in his proper place. The bad rider, like the bad whist player, pays highly for
what he does not enjoy, and should be thanked. But at both games he gets cruelly
snubbed. At both games George Vavasor was great and he never got snubbed.
There were men who lived together at Roebury in a kind of club — four or five
of them, who came thither from London, running backwards and forwards as hunting
arrangements enabled them to do so — a brewer or two and a banker, with a
would-be fast attorney, a sporting literary gentleman, and a young unmarried
Member of Parliament who had no particular home of his own in the country. These
men formed the Roebury Club, and a jolly life they had of it. They had their own
wine closet at the King’s Head — or Roebury Inn as the house had come to be
popularly called — and supplied their own game. The landlord found everything
else; and as they were not very particular about their bills, they were allowed
to do pretty much as they liked in the house. They were rather imperious, very
late in their hours, sometimes, though not often, noisy, and once there had been
a hasty quarrel which had made the landlord in his anger say that the club
should be turned out of his house. But they paid well, chaffed the servants much
oftener than they bullied them, and on the whole were very popular.
To this club Vavasor did not belong, alleging that he could not afford to
live at their pace, and alleging, also, that his stays at Roebury were not long
enough to make him a desirable member. The invitation to him was not repeated
and he lodged elsewhere in the little town. But he occasionally in of an
evening, and would make up with the members a table at whist.
He had come down to Roebury by mail train, ready for hunting the next
morning, and walked into the club-room just at midnight. There he found Maxwell
the banker, Grindley the would-be fast attorney, and Calder Jones the Member of
Parliament, playing dummy. Neither of the brewers were there, nor was the
sporting literary gentleman.
“Here’s Vavasor,” said Maxwell, “and now we won’t play this blackguard game
any longer. Somebody told me, Vavasor, that you were gone away.”
“I don’t know what it was; that something had happened to you since last
season; that you were married, or dead, or gone abroad. By George, I’ve lost the
trick after all! I hate dummy like the devil. I never hold a card in dummy’s
hand. Yes, I know; that’s seven points on each side. Vavasor, come and cut. Upon
my word if any one had asked me, I should have said you were dead.”
“What you probably mean,” said Grindley, “is that Vavasor was not returned
for Chelsea last February; but you’ve seen him since that. Are you going to try
it again, Vavasor?”
“I don’t see what on earth a man gains by going into the house,” said Calder
Jones. “I couldn’t help myself as it happened, but, upon my word it’s a deuce of
a bore. A fellow thinks he can do as he likes about going — but he can’t. It
wouldn’t do for me to give it up, because — ”
“It’s you and me, Grindems,” said Maxwell. “D— parliament, and now let’s have
a rubber.”
They played till three and Mr Calder Jones lost a good deal of money — a good
deal of money in a little way, for they never played above ten-shilling points,
and no bet was made for more than a pound or two. But Vavasor was the winner,
and when he left the room he became the subject of some ill-natured remarks.
“I wonder he likes coming in here,” said Grindley, who had himself been the
man to invite him to belong to the club, and who had at one time indulged the
ambition of an intimacy with George Vavasor.
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