Part 47 (1/2)

”Yes.”

”Has he a forge?”

”Yes; and bellows, and quant.i.ties of molds, and strips of steel. He is working on a large scale.”

”It shall be looked into, sir, by the proper persons. Indeed, the sooner they are informed, the better.”

”Yes, but mind, no violence. You are strong enough to drive him out of the country without that.”

”I should hope so.”

Coventry then rose, and left the place; but he had no sooner got into the street, than a sort of horror fell on him; horror of himself, distrust and dread of the consequences, to his rival but benefactor.

Almost at the door he was met by Mr. Ransome, who stopped him and gave him Little's address; he had obtained it without difficulty from Bayne.

”I am glad you reminded me, sir,” said he; ”I shall call on him myself, one of these days.”

These words rang in Coventry's ears, and put him in a cold perspiration.

”Fool!” thought he, ”to go and ask a public officer, a man who hears every body in turn.”

What he had done disinclined him to return to Cairnhope. He made a call or two first, and loitered about, and then at last back to Raby, gnawed with misgivings and incipient remorse.

Mr. Grotait sent immediately for Mr. Parkin, Mr. Jobson, and Mr. Potter, and told them the secret information he had just received.

They could hardly believe it at first; Jobson, especially, was incredulous. He said he had kept his eye on Little, and a.s.sured them the man had gone into woodcarving, and was to be seen in the town all day.

”Ay,” said Parkin, ”but this is at night; and, now I think of it, I met him t'other day, about dusk, galloping east, as hard as he could go.”

”My information is from a sure source,” said Grotait, stiffly.

Parkin.--”What is to be done?”

Jobson.--”Is he worth another strike?”

Potter.--”The time is unfavorable: here's a slap of dull trade.”

The three then put their heads together, and various plans were suggested and discussed, and, as the parties were not now before the public, that horror of gunpowder, vitriol, and life-preservers, which figured in their notices and resolutions, did not appear in their conversation. Grotait alone was silent and doubtful. This Grotait was the greatest fanatic of the four, and, like all fanatics, capable of vast cruelty: but his cruelty lay in his head, rather than in his heart.

Out of Trade questions, the man, though vain and arrogant, was of a genial and rather a kindly nature; and, even in Trade questions, being more intelligent than his fellows, he was sometimes infested with a gleam of humanity.

His bigotry was, at this moment, disturbed by a visitation of that kind.

”I'm perplexed,” said he: ”I don't often hesitate on a Trade question neither. But the men we have done were always low-lived blackguards, who would have destroyed us, if we had not disabled them. Now this Little is a decent young chap. He struck at the root of our Trades, so long as he wrought openly. But on the sly, and n.o.body knowing but ourselves, mightn't it be as well to shut our eyes a bit? My informant is not in trade.”

The other three took a more personal view of the matter. Little was outwitting, and resisting them. They saw nothing for it but to stop him, by hook or by crook.

While they sat debating his case in whispers, and with their heads so close you might have covered them all with a tea-tray, a clear musical voice was heard to speak to the barmaid, and, by her direction, in walked into the council-chamber--Mr. Henry Little.

This visit greatly surprised Messrs. Parkin, Jobson, and Potter, and made them stare, and look at one another uneasily. But it did not surprise Grotait so much, and it came about in the simplest way. That morning, at about eleven o'clock, Dr. Amboyne had called on Mrs. Little, and had asked Henry, rather stiffly, whether he was quite forgetting Life, Labor and Capital. Now the young man could not but feel that, for some time past, he had used the good doctor ill; had neglected and almost forgotten his benevolent hobby; so the doctor's gentle reproach went to his heart, and he said, ”Give me a day or two, sir, and I'll show you how ashamed I am of my selfish behavior.” True to his pledge, he collected all his notes together, and prepared a report, to be ill.u.s.trated with drawings. He then went to Cheetham's, more as a matter of form than any thing, to see if the condemned grindstone had been changed. To his infinite surprise he found it had not, and Bayne told him the reason. Henry was angry, and went direct to Grotait about it.

But as soon as he saw Jobson, and Parkin, and Potter, he started, and they started. ”Oh!” said he, ”I didn't expect to find so much good company. Why, here's the whole quorum.”