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CHAPTER X
HOW YOUNG TOM FOUND HIS MATCH
The news spread quickly.
Tom Hamon heard it as he sat brooding over his wrongs and cursing the chicken-heartedness and fear of consequences which had robbed him of his revenge.
He started up with an incredulous curse and tore across the Coupee to the mines to make sure.
But there was no doubt about it. Old Tom was dead: the six weeks were still two days short of their fulfilment; the property was his; his day had come.
He walked straight to La Closerie, and stalked grimly into the kitchen, where, as it happened, they were sitting over a doleful and long-delayed meal.
Mrs. Hamon had been too overwhelmed by the unexpected blow to consider all its bearings. Grannie, looking beyond, had foreseen consequences and trouble with Tom, and had sent for Stephen Gard and given him some elementary instruction relative to the laws of succession in Sark.
Tom stalked in upon them with malevolent triumph. They had tried their best to oust him from his inheritance and the act of G.o.d had spoiled them. He felt almost virtuous.
But his natural truculence, and his not altogether unnatural exultation at the frustration of these plans for his own upsetting, overcame all else. Of regret for their personal loss and his own he had none.
"Oh--ho! Mighty fine, aren't we, feasting on the best," he began. "Let me tell you all this is mine now, spite of all your dirty tricks, and you can get out, all of you, and the sooner the better. Eating my best b.u.t.ter, too! Ma fe, fat is good enough for the likes of you," and he stretched a long arm and lifted the dish of golden b.u.t.ter from the board--b.u.t.ter, too, which Nance and her mother had made themselves after also milking the cows.
"Put that down!" said Gard, in a voice like the taps of a hammer.
"You get out--bravache! Bretteur! I'm master here."
"In six weeks--if you live that long. Until things are properly divided you'll keep out of this, if you're well advised."
"I will, will I? We'll see about that, Mister Bully. I know what you're up to, trying to fool our Nance with your foreign ways, and I won't have it. She's not for the likes of you or any other man that's got a wife and children over in England--"
This was the suddenly-thought-of burden of a discussion over the cups one night at the canteen, soon after Gard's arrival, when the possibility of his being a married man had been mooted and had remained in Tom's turgid brain as a fact.
"By the Lord!" cried Gard, starting up in black fury, "if you can't behave yourself I'll break every bone in your body."
And Nance's face, which had unconsciously stiffened at Tom's words, glowed again at Gard's revelation of the natural man in him, and her eyes shone with various emotions--doubts, hopes, fears, and a keen interest in what would follow.
The first thing that followed was the dish of b.u.t.ter, which hurtled past Gard's head and crashed into the face of the clock, and then fell with a flop to the earthen floor.
The next was Tom's lowered head and c.u.mbrous body, as he charged like a bull into Gard and both rolled to the ground, the table escaping catastrophe by a hair's-breadth.
Mrs. Hamon had sprung up with clasped hands and piteous face. Nance and Bernel had sprung up also, with distress in their faces but still more of interest. They had come to a certain reliance on Gard's powers, and how many and many a time had they longed to be able to give Tom a well-deserved thras.h.i.+ng!
Through the open door of her room came Grannie's hard little voice, "Now then! Now then! What are you about there?" but no one had time to tell her.
Gard was up in a moment, panting hard, for Tom's bull-head had caught him in the wind.
"If you want ... to fight ... come outside!" he jerked.
"---- you!" shouted Tom, as he struggled to his knees and then to his feet. "I'll smash you!" and he lowered his head and made another blind rush.
But this time Gard was ready for him, and a stout buffet on the ear as he pa.s.sed sent him cras.h.i.+ng in a heap into the bowels of the clock, which had witnessed no such doings since Tom's great-grandfather brought it home and stood it in its place, and it testified to its amazement at them by standing with hands uplifted at ten minutes to two until it was repaired many months afterwards.
Tom got up rather dazedly, and Gard took him by the shoulders and ran him outside before he had time to pull himself together.
"Now," said Gard, shaking him as a bull-dog might a calf. "See here!
You're not wanted here at present, and if you make any more trouble you'll suffer for it," and he gave him a final whirl away from the house and went in and closed the door.
Tom stood gazing at it in dull fury, thought of smas.h.i.+ng the window, picked up a stone, remembered just in time that it would be his window, so flung the stone and a curse against the door and departed.
"I'm sorry," said Gard, looking deprecatingly at Nance. "I'm afraid I lost my temper."
"It was all his fault," said Nance. "Did he hurt you?"
"Only my feelings. He had no right to say such things or do what he did."
"It's always good to see him licked," said Bernel with gusto. "Nance and I used to try, but he was too big for us."
Mrs. Hamon had gone in with a white face to explain things to Grannie.
She came back presently and said briefly to Gard, "She wants you," and he went in to the old lady.
"You did well, Stephen Gard," she chirped. "Stand by them, for they'll need it. He's a bad lot is Tom, and he'll make things uncomfortable when he comes here to live. When Nancy takes her third of what's left of the house, that'll be only two rooms, so you'll have to look out for another, and maybe you'll not find it easy to get one in Little Sark. If you take my advice you'll try Charles Guille at Clos Bourel, or Thomas Carre at the Plaisance Cottages by the Coupee, they're kindly folk both. I've told Nancy to get Philip Tanquerel of Val Creux to help her portion the lots, and it'll be no easy job, for Tom will choose the best and get all he can."
They were agreeably surprised to hear no more of Tom, but learned before long that, on the strength of his unexpected good fortune, he had gone over to Guernsey to pa.s.s, in ways that most appealed to him, the six weeks allowed by the law for the settlement of his father's affairs.
Within that six weeks Philip Tanquerel of Val Creux had, on Mrs. Hamon's behalf, to allot all old Tom's estate, house, fields, cattle, implements, furniture, into three as equal portions as he could contrive with his most careful balancing of pros and cons. For, with Solomon-like wisdom, Sark law entails upon the widow the apportionment of the three lots into which everything is divided, but allows the heir first choice of any two of them, the remaining lot becoming the widow's dower.
No light undertaking, therefore, the apportionment of those lots, or the widow may be left with only bedrooms to live in, and an ill proportion of grazing ground for her cattle and herself to live upon. For, be sure that when it comes to the picking of these lots, even the best of sons will pick the plums, and when such an one as Tom Hamon is in question it is as well to mingle the plums and the sloes with an exact.i.tude of proportionment that will allow of no advantage either way.
CHAPTER XI
HOW GARD DREW NEARER TO HIS HEART'S DESIRE
Gard's isolation was brought home to him when he endeavoured to find another lodging in Little Sark.
Accommodation was, of course, limited. Many of the miners had to tramp in each day from Sark. There was still, in spite of all his tact and efforts, somewhat of a feeling against him as a new-comer, an innovator, a tightener of loose cords, and no one offered to change quarters to oblige him. And so, in the end, he took Grannie's advice and found a room in one of the thatch-roofed cottages which offered their white-washed shoulders to the road just where it rose out of the further side of the Coupee into Sark.
They were quiet, farmer-fisher folk who lived there, having nothing to do with the mines and little beyond a general interest in them.
When not at work, he was thrown much upon himself, and if in his rambles he chanced upon Bernel Hamon it was a treat, and if, as happened all too seldom, upon Nance as well, an enjoyment beyond words.
But Nance was a busy maid, with hens and chickens, and cows and calves, and pigs and piglets claiming her constant attention, and it was only now and again that she could so arrange her duties as to allow of a flight with Bernel--a flight which always took the way to the sea and developed presently into a bathing revel wherein she flung cares and clothes to the winds, or into a fis.h.i.+ng excursion, in which pleasure and profit and somewhat of pain were evenly mixed.
For, though she loved the sea and ate fresh-caught fish with as much gusto as any, she hated seeing them caught--almost as much as she hated having her fowls or piglets slaughtered for eating purposes, and never would touch them--a delicacy of feeling at which Bernel openly scoffed but could not laugh her out of.