"Don't you know, at all, how the money has gone?" asked Molly.

"No! not at all. That's the sting. There are tailors' bills,

and bills for book-binding and wine and pictures--those come

to four or five hundred; and though this expenditure is

extraordinary--inexplicable to such simple folk as we are--yet it

may be only the luxury of the present day. But the money for which

he will give no account,--of which, indeed, we only heard through

the Squire's London agents, who found out that certain disreputable

attorneys were making inquiries as to the entail of the estate;--oh!

Molly, worse than all--I don't know how to bring myself to tell

you--as to the age and health of the Squire, his dear father"--(she

began to sob almost hysterically; yet she would go on talking, in

spite of Molly's efforts to stop her)--"who held him in his arms, and

blessed him, even before I had kissed him; and thought always so much

of him as his heir and first-born darling. How he has loved him! How

I have loved him! I sometimes have thought of late that we've almost

done that good Roger injustice."

"No! I'm sure you've not: only look at the way he loves you. Why, you

are his first thought: he may not speak about it, but any one may see

it. And dear, dear Mrs. Hamley," said Molly, determined to say out

all that was in her mind now that she had once got the word, "don't

you think that it would be better not to misjudge Mr. Osborne Hamley?

We don't know what he has done with the money: he is so good (is he

not?) that he may have wanted it to relieve some poor person--some

tradesman, for instance, pressed by creditors--some--"

"You forget, dear," said Mrs. Hamley, smiling a little at the girl's

impetuous romance, but sighing the next instant, "that all the other

bills come from tradesmen, who complain piteously of being kept out

of their money."

Molly was nonplussed for the moment; but then she said,--

"I daresay they imposed upon him. I'm sure I've heard stories of

young men being made regular victims of by the shopkeepers in great

towns."

"You're a great darling, child," said Mrs. Hamley, comforted by

Molly's strong partisanship, unreasonable and ignorant though it was.

"And, besides," continued Molly, "some one must be acting wrongly in

Osborne's--Mr. Osborne Hamley's, I mean--I can't help saying Osborne

sometimes, but, indeed, I always think of him as Mr. Osborne--"

"Never mind, Molly, what you call him; only go on talking. It

seems to do me good to hear the hopeful side taken. The Squire has

been so hurt and displeased: strange-looking men coming into the

neighbourhood, too, questioning the tenants, and grumbling about the

last fall of timber, as if they were calculating on the Squire's

death."




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