Taffy looked up. “Thank you, I will.”
He could now and with a clear conscience. In those quiet moments he had taken the great resolution. The debt should be paid back, and with interest; not at five per cent., but at a rate beyond the creditor’s power of reckoning. For the interest to be guarded for her should be her continued belief in the man she loved. Yes, but if George were innocent? Why, then the sacrifice would be idle; that was all.
He swallowed the wine, and stood up.
“Must you be going? I wanted a chat with you about Oxford,” grumbled Sir Harry; but noting the lad’s face, how white and drawn it was, he relented, and put a hand on his shoulder. “Don’t take it too seriously, my boy. It’ll blow over—it’ll blow over. Honoria likes you, I know. We’ll see what the trollop says: and if I get a chance of putting in a good word, you may depend on me.”
He walked with Taffy to the door—good, easy man—and waved a hand from the porch. On the whole, he was rather glad than not to see his young friend’s back.
From his smithy window Mendarva spied Taffy coming along the road, and stepped out on the green to shake hands with him.
“Pleased to see your face, my son! You’ll excuse my not asking ’ee inside; but the fact is”—he jerked his thumb towards the smithy—” we’ve a-got our troubles in there.”
It came on our youth with something of a shock that the world had room for any trouble beside his own.
“‘Tis the Dane. He went over to Truro yesterday to the wrastlin’, an’ got thrawed. I tell’n there’s no call to be shamed. ’Twas Luke the Wendron fella did it—in the treble play—inside lock backward, and as pretty a chip as ever I see.” Mendarva began to illustrate it with foot and ankle, but checked himself, and glanced nervously over his shoulder. “Isn’ lookin’, I hope? He’s in a terrible pore about it. Won’t trust hissel’ to spake, and don’t want to see nobody. But, as I tell’n, there’s no call to be shamed; the fella took the belt in the las’ round, and turned his man over like a tab. He’s a proper angletwitch, that Wendron fella. Stank ’pon en both ends, and he’ll rise up in the middle and look at ’ee. There was no one a patch on en but the Dane; and I’ll back the Dane next time they clinch. ’Tis a nuisance, though, to have’n like this—with a big job coming on, too, over to the light-house.”
Taffy looked steadily at the smith. “What’s doing at the light-house?”
“Ha’n’t ’ee heerd?” Mendarva began a long tale, the sum of which was that the light-house had begun of late to show signs of age, to rock at times in an ominous manner. The Trinity House surveyor had been down and reported, and Mendarva had the contract for some immediate repairs. “But ’tis patching an old kettle, my son. The foundations be clamped down to the rock, and the clamps have worked loose. The whole thing’ll have to come down in the end; you mark my words.”