‘Hit me,’ he said, ‘without hitting the boy and you are welcome.’

Major de Blacquaire scored the wet gravel with the crutch, looking frowningly down upon the ground, and Jervase scored the earth on his side with the neat brass ferrule.

‘I don’t quite see what I am to do with you,’ said the Major. ‘It isn’t the boy’s fault that he has a rotter for a father, is it?’

‘Now you look here,’ said John Jervase, heavily and solidly, ‘I’ve had pretty nearly two years to think this thing over in. I’ve done wrong, and I own up to it There’s my boy, Polly, as is recommended for the Victoria Cross by Sir Colin Campbell, and fetched you out of the fire under the Malakoff, so I’m told, as if you’d been his very born brother. I’ve been sitting by his bed for more than a month past, and if I’m not a Dutchman he hates you like poison. He’d only got to leave you there and everything would have been at an end betwixt us; and what on earth he fetched you out for, I don’t know. If you think, Major, that I’m appealing for myself, you’re the most mistaken man in the whole wide world. If you can find a way of hitting old Jack Jervase without hitting the boy, find it and do it. But ever since I’ve heard about you, folks have told me that you pride yourself on being a gentleman; and if a gentleman is going to take it out of a chap who has nearly died for him, when he had every right to leave him alone, and when it was the biggest kind of blunder to rescue him, I’m no judge of what a gentleman ought to be.’ Major de Blacquaire moved the point of the crutch to and fro on the moist gravel, and made his hieroglyphics in the soil without response for a minute or two. But at last he said, in his Cambridge drawl:

‘You’re an illimitable old bounder, but you’re rather a clever old bounder, when all is said and done, and I suppose I shall have to let you go.’

‘Major de Blacquaire,’ said Jervase, ‘if ever there was a man mistaken in this world, you’re a mistaken man. I don’t want your ticket, and I don’t want your pardon. I’ve had two years to think this over in. I’ve been without my lad all the time, and I’ve come out here to find him broke and wandering in his mind. I’ve sat down between your bed and his, and I’ve heard him in his wanderings say how he hated you, and I’ve heard you say how you’ve hated him. And now I tell you, fair and square, find a way of hitting me that won’t hit the lad, and I’ll take anything that you can do to me.’

‘There isn’t any way,’ said De Blacquaire, ‘worse luck! I’m told that there’s a doctrine of heredity, and we’ve got to believe that men are like their fathers. Personally, I’m not going to believe it And I shall be obliged to you if you will go and send back a lad who’s about as much like you as you’re like the Apostle Paul. Now—vanish! and behave like an honest fellow for once in your life for the sake of an honest son.’

John Jervase rose. ‘It’s all very well,’ he said, ‘for you to talk. You’ve never been poor and ambitious and hard run, and you don’t know what temptation can amount to. You’ve got your money back again to the last penny. It’s in Stubbs’ hands, and I’ve stood the racket. And if the father did you a bad turn the son has done you a good one.’

‘Will you kindly go away, Mr. Jervase?’ said the Major.

‘Yes,’ said Jervase, ‘I’ll go away. But since I’m here, I’m going to ask you one question. Are you going to hit the boy through me?’