standing leaning over Miss Wade's chair with his left arm
round her neck. Owen recollected afterwards that her dress was
disarranged. She retired hastily to the far end of the room as Rushton
jumped away from her, and stared in amazement and confusion at the
intruder--he was too astonished and embarrassed to speak. Owen stood
panting and quivering in the middle of the office and pointed a
trembling finger at his employer:
'I've come--here--to tell--you--that--if I find young--Bert
White--working--down in that shop--without a fire--I'll have you
prosecuted. The place is not good enough for a stable--if you owned a
valuable dog--you wouldn't keep it there--I give you fair warning--I
know--enough--about you--to put you--where you deserve to be--if you
don't treat him better I'll have you punished I'll show you up.'
Rushton continued to stare at him in mingled confusion, fear and
perplexity; he did not yet comprehend exactly what it was all about; he
was guiltily conscious of so many things which he might reasonably fear
to be shown up or prosecuted for if they were known, and the fact of
being caught under such circumstances with Miss Wade helped to reduce
him to a condition approaching terror.
'If the boy has been there without a fire, I 'aven't known anything
about it,' he stammered at last. 'Mr 'Unter has charge of all those
matters.'
'You--yourself--forbade him--to make a fire last winter--and
anyhow--you know about it now. You obtained money from his mother
under the pretence--that you were going--to teach him a trade--but for
the last twelve months--you have been using him--as if he were--a beast
of burden. I advise you to see to it--or I shall--find--means--to make
you--wish you had done so.'
With this Owen turned and went out, leaving the door open, and Rushton
in a state of mind compounded of fear, amazement and anger.
As he walked homewards through the snow-storm, Owen began to realize
that the consequence of what he had done would be that Rushton would
not give him any more work, and as he reflected on all that this would
mean to those at home, for a moment he doubted whether he had done
right. But when he told Nora what had happened she said there were
plenty of other firms in the town who would employ him--when they had
the work. He had done without Rushton before and could do so again;
for her part--whatever the consequences might be--she was glad that he
had acted as he did.
'We'll
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