Part 3 (1/2)
CHAPTER III
A SCION OF KINGS
The family at Morristown had been half an hour at table, and in the interval a man of more hasty judgment than Colonel Sullivan might have made up his mind on many points. Whether the young McMurrough was offensive of set purpose, and because an unwelcome guest was present, or whether he merely showed himself as he was--an unlicked cub--such a man might have determined. But the Colonel held his judgment in suspense, though he leaned to the latter view of the case. He knew that even in England a lad brought up among women was apt to develop a quarrelsome uncouthness, a bearishness, intolerable among men of the world. How much more likely, he reflected, was this to be the case when the youth belonged to a proscribed race, and lived, a little chieftain among his peasants, in a district wild and remote, where for a league each way his will was law. The Colonel made allowances, and, where need was, he checked his indignation. If he blamed any one, he let his censure rest on the easy temper of Uncle Ulick. The giant could have shaken the young man, who was not over robust, with a single finger; and at any time in the last ten years might have taught him a lifelong lesson.
At their first sitting down the young man had shown his churlishness.
Beginning by viewing the Colonel in sulky silence, he had answered his kinsman's overtures only by a rude stare or a boorish word. His companions, two squireens of his own age, and much of his own kidney, nudged him from time to time, and then the three would laugh in such a way as to make it plain that the stranger was the b.u.t.t of the jest.
Presently, overcoming the reluctant impression which Colonel John's manners made upon him, the young man found his tongue, and, glancing at his companions to bring them into the joke, ”Much to have where you come from, Colonel?” he asked.
”As in most places,” the Colonel replied mildly, ”by working for it, or earning it after one fas.h.i.+on or another. Indeed, my friend, country and country are more alike, except on the outside, than is thought by those who stay at home.”
”You've seen a wealth of countries, I'm thinking?” the youth asked with a sneer.
”I have crossed Europe more than once.”
”And stayed in none?”
”If you mean----”
”Faith, I mean you've come back!” the young man exclaimed with a loud laugh, in which his companions joined. ”You'll mind the song”--and with a wink he trolled out,
”In such contempt in short I fell, Which was a very hard thing, They devilish badly used me there, For nothing but a farthing.
”You're better than that, Colonel, for the worst we can say of you is, you's come back a penny!”
”If you mean a bad one, come home,” the Colonel rejoined, taking the lad good-humouredly--he was not blind to the flush of indignation which dyed Flavia's cheeks--”I'll take the wit for welcome. To be sure, to die in Ireland is an Irishman's hope, all the world over.”
”True for you, Colonel!” Uncle Ulick said. And ”For shame, James,” he continued, speaking with more sternness than was natural to him.
”Faith, and if you talked abroad as you talk at home, you'd be for having a pistol-ball in your gizzard in the time it takes you to say your prayers--if you ever say them, my lad!”
”What are my prayers to you, I'd like to know?” James retorted offensively.
”Easy, lad, easy!”
The young man glared at him. ”What is it to you,” he cried still more rudely, ”whether I pray or no?”
”James! James!” Flavia pleaded under her breath.
”Do you be keeping your feet to yourself!” he cried, betraying her kindly manoeuvre. ”And let my s.h.i.+ns be! I want none of your guiding!
More by token, miss, don't you be making a sight of yourself as you did this morning, or you'll smart for it. What is it to you if O'Sullivan Og takes our dues for us--and a trifle over? And, sorra one of you doubt it, if Mounseer comes jawing here, it's in the peat-hole he'll find himself! Or the devil the value of a cork he gets out of me; that's flat! Eh, Phelim?”
”True for you, McMurrough!” the youth who sat beside him answered, winking. ”We'll soak him for you.”
”So do you be taking a lesson, Miss Flavvy,” the young Hector continued, ”and don't you go threatening honest folk with your whip, or it'll be about your own shoulders it'll fall! I know what's going on, and when I want your help, I'll ask it.”
The girl's lip trembled. ”But it's robbery, James,” she murmured.