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"I expected you to say nothing else. All the kindness of years is forgotten because of one denial. How often have I let you off your rent entirely during these twenty years we have been landlord and tenant together! There, go! I have other business to attend to. But on Monday, remember."
"Ye won't see me that day or any other," says the fellow, insolently, sticking his hat on his head with a defiant gesture.
"Very good. That is your own lookout. You know the consequences of your non-arrival. Denis," to the footman, "show this man out, and send Donovan here."
"Yes, sir."
"Well, Donovan, what is it?" says Desmond, a few minutes later, as the library door again opens to admit the other malcontent. He is a stout, thick-set man, with fierce eyes and a lowering brow, and altogether a very "villanous countenance." He has mercifully escaped, however, the hypocritical meanness of the face that has just gone. There is a boldness, a reckless, determined daring about this man, that stamps him as a leading spirit among men of evil minds.
"I've come here to spake to ye to-night, Misther Desmond, as man to man," he says, with a somewhat swaggering air.
"With all my heart," says The Desmond; "but be as fair to me as I have ever been to you and yours, and we shall come to amicable terms soon enough."
"As to fairness," says the man, "I don't see how any landlord in Ireland can spake of it without a blush."
Strange to say, the aggressive insolence of this man fails to rouse in Mr. Desmond's breast the anger that the servile humility of the last comer had brought into active being.
"Look here, Donovan," he says, "I've been a good landlord to you; and I expect you, therefore, to be a good tenant to me. You hint that I, along with the rest, have dealt unfairly with my people; but can you prove it?
You can lay to my charge no tales of harshness. In famine times, and when potatoes failed, in times of misfortune and sickness, I have always stood your friend, and the friend of every man, woman, and child on my estate; yet now what harvest do I reap, save grossest ingrat.i.tude? yet what more can I hope for in this most unhappy time, when blood is unrighteously poured upon the land, and the laws of G.o.d and my queen are set at naught?"
There is a touch of pa.s.sionate old-world grandeur in the squire's face and manner that works a sense of admiration in Donovan's breast. But it quickly gives way to the carefully-cultivated sense of injury that has been growing within him for months.
"Ye can talk, there's no doubt," he mutters; "but words go for little; and the fact is, I've got no rent to pay ye."
His tone conveys the idea that he _has_ the rent, but deliberately refuses to pay it.
"You will bring it on Monday, or I shall evict you," says the Squire quietly. "You hear?"
"I hear," says the man, with an evil frown. "But ye can't have it all yer own way now, Misther Desmond. There's others have a voice in the matther."
"I don't care for innuendoes of that sort, or for any insolence whatever; I only mean you to fully know that I must live as well as you, and that therefore I must have my rents."
"I know well enough what ye mane," says the man, with increasing insolence. "But I'd have you know this, that maybe before long ye'll whistle another tune. There's them I could mention, as has their eye upon ye, an' will keep it there till justice is done."
"Meaning, until I give up Coole itself to the mob," says the squire, with a sneer.
"Ay, _even_ that, it may be," says the man, with unswerving defiance.
"You dare to threaten me?" says The Desmond, throwing up his head haughtily, and drawing some steps nearer to his tenant.
"I only say what is likely to prove truth before long," returns the man, st.u.r.dily, and giving in an inch. "That we'll have no more tyranny, but will have a blow for our rights, if we swing for it."
"You can shoot me when and where you like," says Desmond, with a shrug.
"But I am afraid it will do you no good."
"It will be a lesson to the others," says the man between his teeth.
"To _you_ others,--yes; because it will make my heir somewhat harder on you than I am. The Desmonds never forgive. However, that is more your lookout than mine. A last word, though: if you were not the consummate idiots this last revolt has proved you, you would see how you are being led astray by a few demagogues (a butcher's boy, perchance, or an attorney's clerk pushed by you from absolute obscurity into a Parliament ashamed to acknowledge them), who will save their skins at the expense of yours at the last, and who meanwhile thrive royally upon the moneys you subscribe!"
"That's a d.a.m.ned lie for ye," says Donovan losing his temper altogether.
At this outbreak The Desmond rises slowly, and, ringing the bell, calmly pares his nails until a servant comes in answer to his summons.
"Ask Mr. Brian to come here for a moment," he says, calmly, not lifting his eyes from the fourth finger of his left hand, upon the nail of which he is just now employed.
Brian lounging in, in a few moments, his uncle pockets his penknife, and, waving his hand lightly in Donovan's direction, says, gravely,--
"This man, Donovan, will be one of your tenants, some time, Brian,"--plainly, he has forgotten all about his determination to marry again, and so dispossess his nephew of Coole and other things, or else one glance at Monica's portrait (in which she had appeared so _unlike_ her mother) has done wonders: "it is therefore as well you should learn his sentiments towards his landlord, especially as he is apparently the mouthpiece of all the others. Oblige me, Donovan, by repeating to Mr.
Brian all you have just said to me."
But the man is far too clever a lawyer to commit himself before a third party.
"I have nothing to say," he answers, sullenly, "but this, that times are hard an' money scarce, an'----"
"We will pa.s.s over all that. It is an old story now; and, as you decline to speak, I will just tell you again, I intend to have my rent on Monday, and if I don't I shall evict you."
"Ay! as you evicted Ned Barry last month, throwing him on the open road, with his wife beside him, an' a baby not a month old."
"Nonsense! the child was six months old, and Barry was better able to pay than any tenant I have, and more willing, too, until this precious Land League tampered with him. He has proved he had the money since, by paying a sum to Sullivan yonder for board and lodging that would have kept him in his own house for twice the length of time he has been there. I know all about it: I have made it my business to find it out."
"Ye're mighty well informed entirely," says Donovan with a wicked sneer.
"If you can't keep a civil tongue in your head, you had better leave this room," says Brian, flus.h.i.+ng darkly and making a step towards him.
"Who are _you_, to order me about?" says the man, with a fierce glance.
"Ye're not my master yet, I can tell ye, an' maybe _ye never will be_."
"Leave the room," says Brian, white with rage, pointing imperiously to the door.
"Curse ye!" says the man; yet, warned by the expression on Brian's face, he moves in a rebellious manner to the door, and so disappears.
"They are the most unpleasant peasantry in the world," says the squire, some hours later,--the words coming like a dreary sigh through the clouds of tobacco-smoke that curl upwards from his favorite meershaum.
He and Brian and Owen Kelly are all sitting in the library, the scene of the late encounter, and have been meditating silently upon many matters, in which perhaps Love has the largest share, considering his votaries are two to one, when the squire most unexpectedly gives way to the speech aforesaid.
"The women are very handsome," says Mr. Kelly.
"Handsome is as handsome does," says the squire with a grunt.
"Don't the Protestant tenants pay?" asks Owen, presently, who is in a blissful state of ignorance about the tenant-right affair generally.
"They're just the worst of the lot," says old Desmond, testily: "they come whimpering here, saying they would gladly pay, but that they are afraid of the others, and won't I let them off? and so forth."
"I wonder," says Brian, dreamily,--it is very late, and he is in a gently, kindly, somnolent state, born of the arm-chair and his pipe,--"I wonder if one was to give in to them entirely, would they be generous enough to----"
"If you can't talk sense," interrupted his uncle, angrily, "don't talk at all. I am surprised at you, Brian! Have you seen or noticed nothing all these years, have you been blind to the state of the country, that you give sound to such utter trash? Pshaw! the weakly sentiment of the day sickens me."