e you're pretty much like your relations in the way of behaving
to people, though you do wear better clothes, and--I s'pose--call
yourself a gentleman. I won't come again, and you shall just hear what
I've got to say.
She closed the door violently, and stood in an attitude of robust
defiance.
'What's all this about?' asked the enraged author, overcoming an impulse
to take Mrs Goby by the shoulders and throw her out--though he might
have found some difficulty in achieving this feat. 'Who are you? And why
do you come here with your brawling?'
'I'm the respectable wife of a respectable man--that's who I am, Mr
Yule, if you want to know. And I always thought Mrs Yule was the same,
from the dealings we've had with her at the shop, though not knowing any
more of her, it's true, except that she lived in St Paul's Crezzent.
And so she may be respectable, though I can't say as her husband behaves
himself very much like what he pretends to be. But I can't say as much
for her relations in Perker Street, 'Olloway, which I s'pose they're
your relations as well, at least by marriage. And if they think they're
going to insult me, and use their blackguard tongues--'
'What are you talking about?' shouted Yule, who was driven to frenzy by
the mention of his wife's humble family. 'What have I to do with these
people?'
'What have you to do with them? I s'pose they're your relations, ain't
they? And I s'pose the girl Annie Rudd is your niece, ain't she? At
least, she's your wife's niece, and that comes to the same thing, I've
always understood, though I dare say a gentleman as has so many books
about him can correct me if I've made a mistake.'
She looked scornfully, though also with some surprise, round the volumed
walls.
'And what of this girl? Will you have the goodness to say what your
business is?'
'Yes, I will have the goodness! I s'pose you know very well that I took
your niece Annie Rudd as a domestic servant'--she repeated this precise
definition--'as a domestic servant, because Mrs Yule 'appened to 'arst
me if I knew of a place for a girl of that kind, as hadn't been out
before, but could be trusted to do her best to give satisfaction to a
good mistress? I s'pose you know that?'
'I know nothing of the kind. What have I to do with servants?'
'Well, whether you've much to do with them or little, that's how it
was. And nicely she's paid me out, has your niece, Miss Rudd. Of all the
trouble I ever had with a girl
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