"Would you settle this case if they offered you something?" he

said.

"I'll do whatever you say," said Peggy, rising. "'Tis for you to

say what I ought to do. 'Tis not for the like of me, that is no

scholar."

"Leave it to me," said Blake. "I'll do what is best for you. Send

Martin Doyle in to see me, Martin that was the witness. And about

this copy of the certificate, tell Mick to bring it in here. Now

you go home, and don't you say to one living soul one word of what

has passed in here. Tell them you are going on with the case, but

don't say any more, or you may land yourself in gaol. Do you hear

me?"

And the cowed and flustered Peggy hurried away to join her brother,

who was far too wise to ask questions.

"Least said soonest mended," he said, when told that Blake required

silence.

After his clients had gone, Gavan Blake sat for half an hour almost

dazed. If Peggy's story was true, then Mary Grant was an outcast

instead of a great heiress. And while he had become genuinely fond

of her (which he never was of Ellen Harriott), he had no idea of

asking her to share his debts with him. He puzzled over the affair

for a long time, and at last his clear brain saw a way out of all

difficulties. He would go over to the old station, put the whole

case before Mary Grant, and induce her for peace' sake to give

Peggy money to withdraw her claim. Out of this money he himself

would keep enough to pay all his pressing debts. He would be that

much to the good whatever happened, and afterwards would have an

added claim on Mary Grant's sympathies for having relieved her of

a vast lawsuit in which her fortune, and even her very name, were

involved.

This plan seemed to him the best for all parties--for himself

especially, which was the most important thing. If he could get a

large sum to settle the case, he could make Peggy give him a big

share for his trouble, and then at last be free from the haunting

fear of exposure and ruin. He felt sure that he was doing quite

right in advising Mary Grant to pay.

Again and again he ran over Peggy's case in his mind, and could

see no flaw in it. In the old days haphazard marriages were rather

the rule than the exception, and such things as registers were

never heard of in far-out parts. His trained mind, going through

the various questions that a cross-examiner would ask, and supplying

the requisite answers, decided that, though it might seem a trifle

improbable, there was nothing contradictory about Peggy's story.

A jury would sympathise with her, and the decisions of the Courts

all leaned towards presuming marriage where certain circumstances

existed. By settling the case he would do Mary Grant a real

kindness. And afterwards--well, she would probably be as grateful

as when he had saved her life. He saw himself the hero of the hour:

ever prompt to decide, he saddled a horse, and at once rode off to

Kuryong to put the matter before her.




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