Sweet Mace - Sweet Mace Part 43
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Sweet Mace Part 43

"To be sure," said the founder; "and that you will make. You tell his Majesty that I am the last man in the kingdom to do him harm."

"Why should I tell him this, Master Cobbe?"

"Why? Why tell him?" said the blunt founder. "Why? Because it is the truth."

Sir Mark smiled, and stood apparently thinking for a while before he spoke again.

"Master Cobbe, I have the power to place in thy hands," he said at last, "the supplying of as many pieces of ordnance, and as much good, strong powder, as thou could'st make, for the use of his Majesty's forces, in an expedition to be sent to Holland. What say you; will you supply the guns?"

"Price, my lad, price? Will his Highness pay me well?"

"I will undertake to say that he will, Master Cobbe; and, what is more, I can see that it is done. Make your own fair, honest charge for the pieces and their food, and there will be no demur."

"Look here, Sir Mark," replied the founder, looking the speaker full in the face; "you turned angry when I talked of giving you a recompense for this order, and called it bribery. What does it all mean? Thou would'st not do all this for naught."

"Is there no such thing as gratitude in the world, Master Cobbe?"

"Plenty, sir; but court gallants don't come spreading it out like beaten gold over a rough country work-master, unless they want to get something back."

"You are witty at the expense of court gallants, as you call them, Master Cobbe," said Sir Mark, laughing. "Tut, man, be not so dense. Is it a surprise to you that I should have spent my time in London working hard on thy behalf? Here was an order for ordnance going a-begging.

What more natural for me to say than--Here is honest Jeremiah Cobbe, who can make better pieces than his Majesty will get elsewhere, and it will force him back into the King's esteem, instead of his lying under the stigma of being a traitor? What more likely for me to do than to get him the order?"

"Then, thou hast gotten me the order, eh, Sir Mark?"

"Nay, I have obtained for myself the power to give thee that order, Master Cobbe."

"And at what price?"

"Tush, man, speak not of price," cried the other, eagerly. "What are prices to us? Can you not see that our interests are one, and that I am working for myself as well as thee?"

"Nay," said the founder, bluntly; "I see it not."

"You will not see it, Master Cobbe," said Sir Mark, smiling. "Why, man, I have but one thought--for thy welfare."

"Indeed," said the founder, bluntly; "and why?"

"Why?" cried Sir Mark. "You ask me why, when you know so well that I would do aught for the father of the woman I love."

"Ah," said the founder, drily; "now we have got to it at last. So that mad wish of thine is not dead yet."

"Mad wish! Why, Master Cobbe, for what do you take me?"

"A very good hand at a bargain, Sir Mark. Nay, nay, stop you, and let me speak, for you have had a goodly say. You come to me then, now, scorning all kinds of commission for the great order you have to bestow, but you say to me all the same--Here is the order, give me thy daughter in return."

"Master Cobbe!"

"Sir Mark Leslie! Now, sir, what manner of man do you take me to be, that you offer me goodly orders in exchange for my own poor flesh and blood?"

"No, no, Master Cobbe; you do not speak me fair."

"I think I do, sir," replied the founder. "Go, take thy great order elsewhere, I'll have none of it. My child weds some day a man of her own station, who is a suitable mate. I shall not take a bribe to give her to the first who tries to tempt me."

"Come, come, Master Cobbe, you are too hard. You know I love her."

"Yes; you say so, sir."

"Be not so hard, then. Give me access to her."

"Access to her, man? You speak as if I locked her in her room. My child is free enough, and she will tell thee readily that she is no mate for Sir Mark Leslie."

"Nay, nay, Master Cobbe!"

"Nay, nay, Sir Mark. There, sir, you are welcome to what my house affords while it pleases thee to stay, for I will not quarrel with thee; but let us have no more converse about such matters as these."

"And the order, Master Cobbe, one that would bring thee thousands?"

"Take it elsewhere, sir; take it elsewhere. You are a very good, generous kind of devil, no doubt, but thy temptations will not succeed at so great a price."

"Bah!" ejaculated Sir Mark. "Devil, forsooth! One would think, man, I asked for thy soul."

"And what else dost ask for?" cried the founder, angrily, "but for the pure, sweet girl who is to me my very life and soul. There, I'll speak no more on it. I get angered, and I've had repentance enough for quarrelling with you once before, good guest. There, sir, as I said before, the house is open to you and to your men. Take its hospitality; as to that order, make of it what you can."

Evidently growing hot and angry, the founder turned away to go and cool himself--so it seemed--in his hottest furnace, while Sir Mark stood watching him till he disappeared, with a smile upon his lips.

"The old fellow is tougher than I thought," he said. "I expected the prospect of the money would have won his consent. Well, it makes me feel a kind of respect for him after all, rough as he is. But stop a bit, Master Cobbe, you'll execute the King's order and make money by it.

You'll give me sweet Mace's hand, and sooner or later I'll have thy savings to the last penny to clear off my little debts, and enable my beautiful rustic wife to keep up such style as shall make the sneering dames at court think twice before they slight one who has beauty, power, and position."

As he spoke, he glanced at an open window, where Mace, trembling and excited, had been an unseen spectator of the meeting, standing far back in the room, and giving a sigh of relief as she saw her father stride angrily away.

Volume 2, Chapter XI.

HOW GIL INTERRUPTED A DISCUSSION.

There must be something very fascinating in the herb called tobacco, or else the reverend gentlemen, who had commenced taking it with distaste, would never have grown to be steady smokers; and, in spite of Mistress Hilberry's sour looks, met evening by evening to enjoy their pipes with the regularity of a clock.

But so it was, and it grew to be quite a custom for Master Peasegood to welcome Father Brisdone daily, and lay his pipe ready to his hand when he seated himself at the table.

"Yes," said Master Peasegood, as they sat together; "our gay spark has come back, and he has had a long talk with Jeremiah Cobbe. He wants to have our little maiden's hand."

"But he must not," cried Father Brisdone, excitedly. "Better that she should enter some holy walls as the bride of Christ."

"Humph!" ejaculated Master Peasegood; "I don't quite agree with you there, brother; but we will not argue. I am with you that he should not marry our little maiden. By the way, he let drop to friend Cobbe something about you."

"How know you this?" said the father. "Why Cobbe told me, to be sure."

"Under the seal of confession?"

"Seal of stuff!" cried Master Peasegood, testily. "I don't confess. He told me, and asked my advice, and I tell my most intimate friend. Look here, brother. It seems they won't let thee alone."