“What is to do?” said a grave manly voice.
It was Eli; he had come in from the shop.
“Here is a ruffian been a-scolding of your women folk and making them cry,” explained Denys.
“Little Kate, what is't? for ruffians do not use to call themselves ruffians,” said Eli the sensible.
Ere she could explain, “Hold your tongue, girl,” said Catherine; “Muriel bade him sat down, and I knew not that, and wyted on him; and he was going and leaving his malison on us, root and branch. I was never so becursed in all my days, oh! oh! oh!”
“You were both somewhat to blame; both you and he,” said Eli calmly. “However, what the servant says the master should still stand to. We keep not open house, but yet we are not poor enough to grudge a seat at our hearth in a cold day to a wayfarer with an honest face, and, as I think, a wounded man. So, end all malice, and sit ye down!”
“Wounded?” cried mother and daughter in a breath.
“Think you a soldier slings his arm for sport?”
“Nay, 'tis but an arrow,” said Denys cheerfully.
“But an arrow?” said Kate, with concentrated horror. “Where were our eyes, mother?”