Austin Rady my father Uncle Algernon who has come down
to us again and your friend in prosperity and adversity
R.D.F. My father said he would go down to old
Blaize and give him the word of a gentleman we had
not tampered with his witnesses and when he was gone
we were all talking and Rady says he must not see
the farmer. I am as certain as I live that it
was Rady bribed the Bantam. Well I ran and caught
up my father and told him not to go in to old Blaize
but I would and eat my words and tell him the truth.
He waited for me in the lane. Never mind what
passed between me and old Blaize. He made me
beg and pray of him not to press it against Tom and
then to complete it he brought in a little girl a niece
of his and says to me, she’s your best friend
after all and told me to thank her. A little
girl twelve years of age. What business had she
to mix herself up in my matters. Depend upon
it Ripton, wherever there is mischief there are girls
I think. She had the insolence to notice my face,
and ask me not to be unhappy. I was polite of
course but I would not look at her. Well the
morning came and Tom was had up before Sir Miles Papworth.
It was Sir Miles gout gave us the time or Tom would
have been had up before we could do anything.
Adrian did not want me to go but my father said I
should accompany him and held my hand all the time.
I shall be careful about getting into these scrapes
again. When you have done anything honourable
you do not mind but getting among policemen and magistrates
makes you ashamed of yourself. Sir Miles was very
attentive to my father and me and dead against Tom.
We sat beside him and Tom was brought in, Sir Miles
told my father that if there was one thing that showed
a low villain it was rick-burning. What do you
think of that. I looked him straight in the face
and he said to me he was doing me a service in getting
Tom committed and clearing the country of such fellows
and Rady began laughing. I hate Rady. My
father said his son was not in haste to inherit and
have estates of his own to watch and Sir Miles laughed
too. I thought we were discovered at first.
Then they began the examination of Tom. The Tinker
was the first witness and he proved that Tom had spoken
against old Blaize and said something about burning
his rick. I wished I had stood in the lane to
Bursley with him alone. Our country lawyer we
engaged for Tom cross-questioned him and then he said
he was not ready to swear to the exact words that had
passed between him and Tom. I should think not.
Then came another who swore he had seen Tom lurking
about the farmer’s grounds that night. Then
came the Bantam and I saw him look at Rady. I
was tremendously excited and my father kept pressing
my hand. Just fancy my being brought to feel that
a word from that fellow would make me miserable for
life and he must perjure himself to help me.
That comes of giving way to passion. My father
says when we do that we are calling in the devil as
doctor. Well the Bantam was told to state what