"How good you are, George! If it only might be! I'll speak to Diana."
She turned to Miss Diana Trevlyn and George saw Rupert talking with Mr. Peterby. At that moment, some one took possession of George.
It was Mr. Wall, the linen-draper. He had been in court all the time, his sympathies entirely with the prisoner, in spite of his early friendship with the master of Trevlyn Hold. Ever since that one month passed at Mr. Wall's house, which George at the time thought the blackest month that could have fallen to the lot of mortal, Mr. Wall and George had been great friends.
"This has been a nasty business," he said in an undertone. "Where is Jim Sanders?"
George disclaimed, and with truth, all knowledge on the point. Mr. Wall resumed.
"I guess how it was; an outbreak of the Trevlyn temper. Chattaway was a fool to provoke it. Cruel, too. He had no more right to take a whip to Rupert Trevlyn than I have to take one to my head-shopman. Were the ricks insured?"
"No. There's the smart. Chattaway never would insure his ricks; never has insured them. It is said that Miss Diana has often told him he deserved to have his ricks burnt down for being penny wise and pound foolish."
"How many were burnt?"
"Two: and another damaged by water. It is a sharp loss."
"Ay. One he won't relish. Rupert is not secure, you know," continued Mr. Wall in a spirit of friendly warning. "He can be taken up again."