at all came to Bridyeen," he murmured to himself. "She
was as pretty as a picture,--like a little rose she was, and so modest
in all her ways. Even my grandfather used to say there was nothing
against Bridyeen. I wouldn't have thought it of Mr. Terence either
that he'd be tryin' to turn the little girl's head and he the
Mistress's cousin an' they as good as promised. I only hope Master
Terence had time to repent, if the stories were true itself that the
people told. Sure maybe there was nothin' in it."
He had perhaps dozed off. He came awake suddenly to Judy's snarling.
Judy never gave the alarm for nothing. A man had come into the
stable-yard, quite obviously a tramp. Behind him came a woman and a
child of the same fraternity. The woman stood humbly in the wake of
the man, and the boy kept close to her. The man was a bad-looking
fellow, Patsy said to himself. Half-consciously he noticed the man's
hands, wicked-looking hands, covered with hair, the nails stubby and
broken. The long arms were like the arms of a monkey. His tattered
coat was velveteen. Patsy remembered to have seen the material on the
game-keepers of a big estate in the next county.
"'Ullo, matey," said this uninviting person, with an attempt at
jocularity. "'Ave you anythink to give a poor man out of a job?"
The truculent voice, with its attempt at oiliness, the small red eyes
under the shock of hair, the thick purple lips, had an extraordinary
effect on Patsy. He hated the tramp, yet he felt a queer sick fear of
him. Once, when Sir Shawn had taken him to England for a big race, he
had seen a dog destroy an adder, with the same mixture of
half-terrified rage and loathing he was feeling now.
"There's nothing for you here," he said gruffly. "You don't look as if
you had much taste for work."
Then he looked beyond the tramp to the woman and child. She was
decent, the poor creature, he thought. Her poor rags were clean and
mended. She had a shrinking, suffering air. The boy, who was about
nine years old, seemed to cling to her as though in terror of the burly
ruffian. He was pale and thin and even on this beautiful June day he
looked cold.
Patsy was suddenly gentle. He saw the glare in the tramp's eyes.
"Here's a shillin' for you," he said. "I've no job you'd care about.
But the woman and the child might like a cup of tay."
"All right," said the tramp, placated. "Tea's not in my way. I'll be
back in 'arf a mo'. D
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