"
"That's no answer, Monsieur Grandois--none at all. It tells nothing,"
remarked Carnac cheerily.
"You got left out of his will, m'sieu', you talk as if he was all
right--that's blither."
"My father had a conscience. He gave me chance to become a partner in the
business, and I wouldn't, and he threw me over--what else was there to
do? I could have owned the business to-day, if I'd played the game as he
thought it ought to be played. I didn't, and he left me out--that's all."
"Makin' your own way, ain't you?" said the English labourer. "That's hit
you where you're tender, Grandois. What you got to say to that?"
The intense black eyes of the habitant sparkled wickedly, his jaws set
with passion, and his sturdy frame seemed to fasten to the ground. His
gnarled hands now shot out fiercely.
"What I got to say! Only this: John Grier played the devil's part. He
turned me and my family out into the streets in winter-time, and the law
upheld him, old beast that he was--sacre diable!"
"Beast-devil! Grandois, those are hard words about a man in his son's
presence, and they're not true. You think you can say such things because
I'm standing for Parliament. Beast, devil, eh? You've got a free tongue,
Grandois; you forgot to say that my father paid the doctor's bill for
your whole family when they were taken down with smallpox; and he kept
them for weeks afterwards.
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