Page:By order of the Czar.djvu/208

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page needs to be proofread.

196 BY ORDER OF THE CZAR.

there was much play at any time in Selwyn's rooms, but his friends liked a hand at whist or poker, and he believed in making them comfortable. He had keys for every- thing his cigar cabinet, his cards, his counters, his spirits; he was business-like not that he did not trust Devereux, who kept in a special cupboard a reserve of spirits, wines and cigars, but Sam liked his bunch of keys ; they were, with their bright chain, a form of personal decoration : the chain represented a sort of male chatelain when he thrust his hands into his pockets on dress occa- sions, and he rattled it and his keys with something of a housekeeper's pride.

There were a few cards stuck in his over-mantel private views of pictures, two or three At Homes, invita- tions to smoking concerts ; and prominent among the society cards, as Sam called them, was Lady Forsyth's Every Wednesday Afternoon in May and June.

" Quite ready, sir," said Devereux, in his ecclesiastical manner.

"Thank you," said Sam, retiring to his bedroom, the very model of a sleeping apartment, with a spacious bath- room beyond.

What could a fellow like Sam Selwyn want with a wife while he possessed all these luxuries and privileges such a servant as Devereux, who had never been known to be in drink or out of temper, and with an improving business, a growing balance at his banker's, and financial prospects generally of the rosiest.

These questions in a vague way presented themselves to Sam as he began to dress for Lady Forsyth's At Home ; they occurred to him probably because the prospect of his having a wife now seemed further off than ever ; as his means had increased just, indeed, as he could afford with a clear conscience to have said to Dolly Norcott, "Be mine" she had drifted further away, nay, right