Rebecca had her revenge now upon these insolent enemies. If became

known in the hotel that Captain Crawley's horses had been left behind,

and when the panic began, Lady Bareacres condescended to send her maid

to the Captain's wife with her Ladyship's compliments, and a desire to

know the price of Mrs. Crawley's horses. Mrs. Crawley returned a note

with her compliments, and an intimation that it was not her custom to

transact bargains with ladies' maids.

This curt reply brought the Earl in person to Becky's apartment; but he

could get no more success than the first ambassador. "Send a lady's

maid to ME!" Mrs. Crawley cried in great anger; "why didn't my Lady

Bareacres tell me to go and saddle the horses! Is it her Ladyship that

wants to escape, or her Ladyship's femme de chambre?" And this was all

the answer that the Earl bore back to his Countess.

What will not necessity do? The Countess herself actually came to wait

upon Mrs. Crawley on the failure of her second envoy. She entreated

her to name her own price; she even offered to invite Becky to

Bareacres House, if the latter would but give her the means of

returning to that residence. Mrs. Crawley sneered at her.

"I don't want to be waited on by bailiffs in livery," she said; "you

will never get back though most probably--at least not you and your

diamonds together. The French will have those They will be here in two

hours, and I shall be half way to Ghent by that time. I would not sell

you my horses, no, not for the two largest diamonds that your Ladyship

wore at the ball." Lady Bareacres trembled with rage and terror. The

diamonds were sewed into her habit, and secreted in my Lord's padding

and boots. "Woman, the diamonds are at the banker's, and I WILL have

the horses," she said. Rebecca laughed in her face. The infuriate

Countess went below, and sate in her carriage; her maid, her courier,

and her husband were sent once more through the town, each to look for

cattle; and woe betide those who came last! Her Ladyship was resolved

on departing the very instant the horses arrived from any quarter--with

her husband or without him.

Rebecca had the pleasure of seeing her Ladyship in the horseless

carriage, and keeping her eyes fixed upon her, and bewailing, in the

loudest tone of voice, the Countess's perplexities. "Not to be able to

get horses!" she said, "and to have all those diamonds sewed into the

carriage cushions! What a prize it will be for the French when they

come!--the carriage and the diamonds, I mean; not the lady!" She gave

this information to the landlord, to the servants, to the guests, and

the innumerable stragglers about the courtyard. Lady Bareacres could

have shot her from the carriage window.




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