The Emigrants Of Ahadarra eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 502 pages of information about The Emigrants Of Ahadarra.

The Emigrants Of Ahadarra eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 502 pages of information about The Emigrants Of Ahadarra.

Whether Clinton Was sure that the step urged upon him by his nephew was the result of a generous regard for M’Mahon, or that the former was made a mere tool for ultimate purposes, in the hands of the Ahadarra man, as he called him it is not easy to determine.  Be this as it may, when the hour of eleven came the next morning, he was prepared to set his nephew’s generosity aside, and act upon Fethertonge’s theory of doing everything in his power to get the whole connection out of the country, “Ha,” he exclaimed, “I now understand what Harry meant with respect to their emigration—­’It is that fact which presses upon him most.’  Oh ho! is it so, indeed!  Very good, Mr. M’Mahon—­we shall act accordingly.”

Gerald Cavanaugh had been made acquainted by his wife on the day before with the partial revival of his daughter’s affection for Bryan M’Mahon, as well as with the enthusiastic defense of him made by Finigan, two circumstances which gave him much concern and anxiety.  On his return, however, from Clinton’s, his family observed that there was something of a satisfactory expression mingled up with a good deal of grave thought in his face.  The truth is, if the worthy man thought for a moment that the ultimate loss of M’Mahon would have seriously injured her peace of mind, he would have bitterly regretted it, and perhaps encourage a reconciliation.  This was a result, however, that he could scarcely comprehend.  That she might fret and pine for a few months or so was the worst he could calculate upon, and of course he took it for granted, that the moment her affection for one was effaced, another might step in, without any great risk of disappointment.

“Well, Gerald,” said his wife, “what did Ganger Clinton want with you?”

Gerald looked at his two daughters and sighed unconsciously.  “It’s not good news,” he proceeded, “in one sense, but it is in another; it’s good news to all my family but that girl sittin’ there,” pointing to Kathleen.

Unfortunately no evil intelligence could have rendered the unhappy girl’s cheek paler than it was; so that, so far as appearances went, it was impossible to say what effect this startling communication had upon her.

“I was down wid Misther Clinton,” he proceeded; “he hard a report that there was about to be a makin’ up of the differences between Kathleen there and Bryan, and he sent for me to say, that, for the girl’s sake—­who he said was, as he had heard from all quarthers, a respectable, genteel girl—­he couldn’t suffer a young man so full of thraichery and desate, as he had good raisons to know Bryan M’Mahon was, to impose himself upon her or her family.  He cautioned me,” he proceeded, “and all of us against him; and said that if I allowed a marriage to take place between him and my daughter, he’d soon bring disgrace upon her and us, as well as himself.  ’You may take my word for it, Mr. Cavanagh,’ says he, ’that is not a thrifle ’ud make me send for you in sich a business; but, as I happen to know the stuff he is made of, I couldn’t bear to see him take a decent family in so distastefully.  To my own knowledge, Cavanagh,’ said he, ’he’d desave a saint, much less your innocent and unsuspectin’ daughter.’”

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The Emigrants Of Ahadarra from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.