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<h4>CHAPTER III.</h4>
<h3>THE MASTERS FAMILY.<br/> </h3>
<p>At six o'clock one November evening, Mr. Masters, the attorney, was
sitting at home with his family in the large parlour of his house,
his office being on the other side of the passage which cut the house
in two and was formally called the hall. Upstairs, over the parlour,
was a drawing-room; but this chamber, which was supposed to be
elegantly furnished, was very rarely used. Mr. and Mrs. Masters did
not see much company, and for family purposes the elegance of the
drawing-room made it unfit. It added, however, not a little to the
glory of Mrs. Masters' life. The house itself was a low brick
building in the High Street, at the corner where the High Street runs
into the market-place, and therefore, nearly opposite to the Bush. It
had none of the elaborate grandeur of the inn nor of the simple
stateliness of Hoppet Hall, but, nevertheless, it maintained the
character of the town and was old, substantial, respectable, and
dark.</p>
<p>"I think it a very spirited thing of him to do, then," said Mrs.
Masters.</p>
<p>"I don't know, my dear. Perhaps it is only revenge."</p>
<p>"What have you to do with that? What can it matter to a lawyer
whether it's revenge or anything else? He's got the means, I
suppose?"</p>
<p>"I don't know, my dear."</p>
<p>"What does Nickem say?"</p>
<p>"I suppose he has the means," said Mr. Masters, who was aware that if
he told his wife a fib on the matter, she would learn the truth from
his senior clerk, Mr. Samuel Nickem. Among the professional gifts
which Mr. Masters possessed, had not been that great gift of being
able to keep his office and his family distinct from each other. His
wife always knew what was going on, and was very free with her
advice; generally tendering it on that side on which money was to be
made, and doing so with much feminine darkness as to right or wrong.
His clerk, Nickem, who was afflicted with no such darkness, but who
ridiculed the idea of scruple in an attorney, often took part against
him. It was the wish of his heart to get rid of Nickem; but Nickem
would have carried business with him and gone over to some enemy, or,
perhaps have set up in some irregular manner on his own bottom; and
his wife would have given him no peace had he done so, for she
regarded Nickem as the mainstay of the house.</p>
<p>"What is Lord Rufford to you?" asked Mrs. Masters.</p>
<p>"He has always been very friendly."</p>
<p>"I don't see it at all. You have never had any of his money. I don't
know that you are a pound richer by him."</p>
<p>"I have always gone with the gentry of the county."</p>
<p>"Fiddlesticks! Gentry! Gentry are very well as long as you can make a
living out of them. You could afford to stick up for gentry till you
lost the Bragton property." This was a subject that was always sore
between Mr. Masters and his wife. The former Mrs. Masters had been a
lady—the daughter of a neighbouring clergyman; and had been much
considered by the family at Bragton. The present Mrs. Masters was the
daughter of an ironmonger at Norrington, who had brought a thousand
pounds with her, which had been very useful. No doubt Mr. Masters'
practice had been considerably affected by the lowliness of his
second marriage. People who used to know the first Mrs. Masters, such
as Mrs. Mainwaring, and the doctor's wife, and old Mrs. Cooper, the
wife of the vicar of Mallingham, would not call on the second Mrs.
Masters. As Mrs. Masters was too high-spirited to run after people
who did not want her, she took to hating gentry instead.</p>
<p>"We have always been on the other side," said the old attorney,—"I
and my father and grandfather before me."</p>
<p>"They lived on it and you can't. If you are going to say that you
won't have any client that isn't a gentleman, you might as well put
up your shutters at once."</p>
<p>"I haven't said so. Isn't Runciman my client?"</p>
<p>"He always goes with the gentry. He a'most thinks he's one of them
himself."</p>
<p>"And old Nobbs, the greengrocer. But it's all nonsense. Any man is my
client, or any woman, who can come and pay me for business that is
fit for me to do."</p>
<p>"Why isn't this fit to be done? If the man's been damaged, why
shouldn't he be paid?"</p>
<p>"He's had money offered him."</p>
<p>"If he thinks it ain't enough, who's to say that it is,—unless a
jury?" said Mrs. Masters, becoming quite eloquent. "And how's a poor
man to get a jury to say that, unless he comes to a lawyer? Of
course, if you won't have it, he'll go to Bearside. Bearside won't
turn him away." Bearside was another attorney, an interloper of about
ten years' standing, whose name was odious to Mr. Masters.</p>
<p>"You don't know anything about it, my dear," said he, aroused at last
to anger.</p>
<p>"I know you're letting anybody who likes take the bread out of the
children's mouths." The children, so called, were sitting round the
table and could not but take an interest in the matter. The eldest
was that Mary Masters, the daughter of the former wife, whom Lady
Ushant had befriended, a tall girl, with dark brown hair, so dark as
almost to be black, and large, soft, thoughtful grey eyes. We shall
have much to say of Mary Masters, and can hardly stop to give an
adequate description of her here. The others were Dolly and Kate, two
girls aged sixteen and fifteen. The two younger "children" were
eating bread and butter and jam in a very healthy manner, but still
had their ears wide open to the conversation that was being held. The
two younger girls sympathised strongly with their mother. Mary, who
had known much about the Mortons, and was old enough to understand
the position which her grandfather had held in reference to the
family, of course leaned in her heart to her father's side. But she
was wiser than her father, and knew that in such discussions her
mother often showed a worldly wisdom which, in their present
circumstances, they could hardly afford to disregard, unpalatable
though it might be.</p>
<p>Mr. Masters disliked these discussions altogether, but he disliked
them most of all in presence of his children. He looked round upon
them in a deprecatory manner, making a slight motion with his hand
and bringing his head down on one side, and then he gave a long sigh.
If it was his intention to convey some subtle warning to his wife,
some caution that she alone should understand, he was deceived. The
"children" all knew what he meant quite as well as did their mother.</p>
<p>"Shall we go out, mamma?" asked Dolly.</p>
<p>"Finish your teas, my dears," said Mr. Masters, who wished to stop
the discussion rather than to carry it on before a more select
audience.</p>
<p>"You've got to make up your mind to-night," said Mrs. Masters, "and
you'll be going over to the Bush at eight."</p>
<p>"No, I needn't. He is to come on Monday. I told Nickem I wouldn't see
him to-night; nor, of course, to-morrow."</p>
<p>"Then he'll go to Bearside."</p>
<p>"He may go to Bearside and be ——! Oh, Lord!
I do wish you'd let me
drop the business for a few minutes when I am in here. You don't know
anything about it. How should you?"</p>
<p>"I know that if I didn't speak you'd let everything slip through your
fingers. There's Mr. Twentyman. Kate, open the door."</p>
<p>Kate, who was fond of Mr. Twentyman, rushed up and opened the front
door at once. In saying so much of Kate, I do not mean it to be
understood that any precocious ideas of love were troubling that
young lady's bosom. Kate Masters was a jolly bouncing schoolgirl of
fifteen, who was not too proud to eat toffy, and thought herself
still a child. But she was very fond of Lawrence Twentyman, who had a
pony that she could ride, and who was always good-natured to her. All
the family liked Mr. Twentyman,—unless it might be Mary, who was the
one that he specially liked himself. And Mary was not altogether
averse to him, knowing him to be good-natured, manly, and
straightforward. But Mr. Twentyman had proposed to her, and she
had—certainly not accepted him. This, however, had broken none of
the family friendship. Every one in the house, unless it might be
Mary herself, hoped that Mr. Twentyman might prevail at last. The man
was worth six or seven hundred a year, and had a good house, and owed
no one a shilling. He was handsome, and about the best-tempered
fellow known. Of course they all desired that he should prevail with
Mary. "I wish that I were old enough, Larry, that's all!" Kate had
said to him once, laughing. "I wouldn't have you, if you were ever so
old," Larry had replied; "you'd want to be out hunting every day."
That will show the sort of terms that Larry was on with his friend
Kate. He called at the house every Saturday with the declared object
of going over to the club that was held that evening in the parlour
at the Bush, whither Mr. Masters also always went. It was understood
at home that Mr. Masters should attend this club every Saturday from
eight till eleven, but that he was not at any other time to give way
to the fascinations of the Bush. On this occasion, and we may say on
almost every Saturday night, Mr. Twentyman arrived a full hour before
the appointed time. The reason of his doing so was of course well
understood, and was quite approved by Mrs. Masters. She was not, at
any rate as yet, a cruel stepmother; but still, if the girl could be
transferred to so eligible a home as that which Mr. Twentyman could
give her, it would be well for all parties.</p>
<p>When he took his seat he did not address himself specially to the
lady of his love. I don't know how a gentleman is to do so in the
presence of her father, and mother, and sisters. Saturday after
Saturday he probably thought that some occasion would arise; but, if
his words could have been counted, it would have been found that he
addressed fewer to her than to any one in the room.</p>
<p>"Larry," said his special friend Kate, "am I to have the pony at the
Bridge meet?"</p>
<p>"How very free you are, Miss!" said her mother.</p>
<p>"I don't know about that," said Larry. "When is there to be a meet at
the Bridge? I haven't heard."</p>
<p>"But I have. Tony Tuppett told me that they would be there this day
fortnight." Tony Tuppett was the huntsman of the U. R. U.</p>
<p>"That's more than Tony can know. He may have guessed it."</p>
<p>"Shall I have the pony if he has guessed right?"</p>
<p>Then the pony was promised; and Kate, trusting in Tony Tuppett's
sagacity, was happy.</p>
<p>"Have you heard of all this about Dillsborough Wood?" asked Mrs.
Masters. The attorney shrank at the question, and shook himself
uneasily in his chair.</p>
<p>"Yes; I've heard about it," said Larry.</p>
<p>"And what do you think about it? I don't see why Lord Rufford is to
ride over everybody because he's a lord." Mr. Twentyman scratched his
head. Though a keen sportsman himself, he did not specially like Lord
Rufford,—a fact which had been very well known to Mrs. Masters. But,
nevertheless, this threatened action against the nobleman was
distasteful to him. It was not a hunting affair, or Mr. Twentyman
could not have doubted for a moment. It was a shooting difficulty,
and as Mr. Twentyman had never been asked to fire a gun on the
Rufford preserves, it was no great sorrow to him that there should be
such a difficulty. But the thing threatened was an attack upon the
country gentry and their amusements, and Mr. Twentyman was a country
gentleman who followed sport. Upon the whole his sympathies were with
Lord Rufford.</p>
<p>"The man is an utter blackguard, you know," said Larry. "Last year he
threatened to shoot the foxes in Dillsborough Wood."</p>
<p>"No!" said Kate, quite horrified.</p>
<p>"I'm afraid he's a bad sort of fellow all round," said the attorney.</p>
<p>"I don't see why he shouldn't claim what he thinks due to him," said
Mrs. Masters.</p>
<p>"I'm told that his lordship offered him seven-and-six an acre for the
whole of the two fields," said the gentleman-farmer.</p>
<p>"Goarly declares," said Mrs. Masters, "that the pheasants didn't
leave him four bushels of wheat to the acre."</p>
<p>Goarly was the man who had proposed himself as a client to Mr.
Masters, and who was desirous of claiming damages to the amount of
forty shillings an acre for injury done to the crops on two fields
belonging to himself which lay adjacent to Dillsborough Wood, a
covert belonging to Lord Rufford, about four miles from the town, in
which both pheasants and foxes were preserved with great care.</p>
<p>"Has Goarly been to you?" asked Twentyman.</p>
<p>Mr. Masters nodded his head. "That's just it," said Mrs. Masters. "I
don't see why a man isn't to go to law if he pleases—that is, if he
can afford to pay for it. I have nothing to say against gentlemen's
sport; but I do say that they should run the same chance as others.
And I say it's a shame if they're to band themselves together and
make the county too hot to hold any one as doesn't like to have his
things ridden over, and his crops devoured, and his fences knocked to
Jericho. I think there's a deal of selfishness in sport and a deal of
tyranny."</p>
<p>"Oh, Mrs. Masters!" exclaimed Larry.</p>
<p>"Well, I do. And if a poor man,—or a man whether he's poor or no,"
added Mrs. Masters, correcting herself, as she thought of the money
which this man ought to have in order that he might pay for his
lawsuit,—"thinks hisself injured, it's nonsense to tell me that
nobody should take up his case. It's just as though the butcher
wouldn't sell a man a leg of mutton because Lord Rufford had a spite
against him. Who's Lord Rufford?"</p>
<p>"Everybody knows that I care very little for his lordship," said Mr.
Twentyman.</p>
<p>"Nor I; and I don't see why Gregory should. If Goarly isn't entitled
to what he wants he won't get it; that's all. But let it be tried
fairly."</p>
<p>Hereupon Mr. Masters took up his hat and left the room, and Mr.
Twentyman followed him, not having yet expressed any positive opinion
on the delicate matter submitted to his judgment. Of course, Goarly
was a brute. Had he not threatened to shoot foxes? But, then, an
attorney must live by lawsuits, and it seemed to Mr. Twentyman that
an attorney should not stop to inquire whether a new client is a
brute or not.</p>
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