“To try to induce the squire to give us more time.”

“I don't think he will do that.”

“Nor I. In that case we must come to his terms; but it's a pity to sacrifice the property, mother.”

“Yes, Herbert; I shall be sorry to leave the old place,” she sighed. “You were born here, and your father was always very much attached to it. But poor folks can't have everything they wish, and it might be worse.”

“Yes, it might be worse, and if the squire was not so bent in getting the place into his hands, it might be better.”

“I suppose we ought not to blame him for looking out for his own interest.”

“Yes, we ought; when it seems that he is ready to injure his poorer neighbors.”

Mrs. Carter did not reply. She did not wish further to incense her son against the squire, yet in her heart she could not help agreeing with him.

The next day Herbert did not go to work as usual. He did not feel like it, while matters were in such uncertainty. He knew the squire would be at the cottage a little before twelve o'clock, and he wanted to be with his mother at that time, for he felt that, if the place must be sold, he would be more likely to get good terms for it than his mother, who was of an easy and yielding disposition.

He took a little walk in the course of the forenoon, not with any particular object in view, but in order to pass the time. As he was passing the hotel—for there was a small hotel in the village—he heard his name called. Turning round, he found that it was the landlord who had called him.