The Castle Inn - Page 526/559

All that day the messenger from the slums was expected but did not come;

and between the two men who sat downstairs, strange relations prevailed.

Sir George did not venture to let the other out of his sight; yet there

were times when they came to the verge of blows, and nothing but the

knowledge of Sir George's swordsmanship kept Mr. Dunborough's temper

within bounds. At dinner, at which Sir George insisted that the attorney

should sit down with them, Dunborough drank his two bottles of wine, and

in his cups fell into a strain peculiarly provoking.

'Lord! you make me sick,' he said. 'All this pother about a girl that a

month ago your high mightiness would not have looked at in the street.

You are vastly virtuous now, and sneer at me; but, damme! which of us

loves the girl best? Take away her money, and will you marry her? I'd 'a

done it, without a rag to her back. But take away her money, and will

you do the same, Mr. Virtuous?' Sir George listening darkly, and putting a great restraint on himself,

did not answer. Mr. Fishwick waited a moment, then got up suddenly, and

hurried from the room--with a movement so abrupt that he left his

wine-glass in fragments on the floor.