“’Tis private business, Mr. Cobley,” she said, making to pass on; but he heard by the flutter in her speech she’d been weeping, and in his slow way held her back while he thought it out. He was got to know her tolerable well by now, so he commanded her to bide and listen.
“You don’t pass, Milly,” he said, “till you tell me why for you be going.”
“To have tea along with Mrs. Bewes,” she answered.
He didn’t believe that, however.
“’Tis too late for tea,” he said. “You’ll be going up to tell Bewes you’ll take his son if he’ll let your aunt bide.”
She didn’t answer.
“So you can just turn round again and march home,” went on Jack, “because the case is altered. ’Twas a very fine thought and worthy of you in a manner of speaking, Milly; but you can console yourself with your good intentions now; because, in a word, the house is sold, and it don’t belong to farmer no more.”
She stared and shook, and he touched her elbow and turned her back to the village.
“Go home and tell Mrs. Pedlar the house be sold,” ordered Jack. “And you tell her also I’ve heard of the man that’s bought it. She won’t be called to do nought but stop there rent-free as before; and the man’s pleased with his property and will work up the garden for his own purposes and mend the leaks and put on some fresh paint come spring.”
Milly was too staggered to grasp it all at once, and by the time she began to see the blessed thing that was happening, Jack had gone.
So she went home light-foot with her sorrows beginning to fade and her heart beating happy again. And Mrs. Pedlar praised her God far into the night, though ’twas a full week before she could grasp the truth and wake care-free of a morning.
But she heard nought of the purchaser, and the mystery grew, because Mrs. Cobley heard nought either; and then there come a nice open sort of morning with just a promise of another spring in the air, and when Milly looked out of her chicket window, who should she see in their ruinous cabbage patch but Jack with his tools going leisurely to work to clean the dirty ground.
She told her aunt, and they talked a bit and come to a conclusion afore they asked him in to have a bite of breakfast.
“’Tis clear he’s jobbing for the owner,” said Jane Pedlar. “No doubt he’ll very soon put a different face on the ground, such an orderly man as him, and such a lover of the soil; but I’m sorry in a way.”
“Why for?” asked her niece. “A nicer man than Mr. Cobley don’t walk.”
“A very nice man indeed if it wasn’t for his face,” admitted the old woman, “and I’ve got to like even his face, because of his gentle and doggy eyes; but I’m sorry, because this shows only too clear the general opinion touching Mr. Cobley is the right one.”
“And what’s the general opinion?” inquired Milly.
“That he’s come home so poor as he went off,” answered Jane Pedlar. “Because if he’d saved a little money he wouldn’t be doing rough work for another man.”