“And Claud, too, I suppose.” “Claud?” “Ugh! You stupid old woman! Isn’t she young and pretty? And artful, too, I’ll be bound; poor Doctor’s young sisters always are.” “Are they, dear?” “Of course they are; and before she’d been here five minutes she’d be making eyes at that boy, and you know he’s just like gunpowder.” “James, dear, you shouldn’t.” “I was just as bad at his age—worse perhaps;” and Mr James Wilton, the stern, sage Squire of Northwood Manor, J.P., chairman of the Quarter Sessions, and several local institutions connected with the morals of the poor, chuckled softly, and very nearly laughed. “James, dear, I’m surprised at you.” “Humph! Well, boys will be boys. You know what he is.” “But do you really think—” “Yes, I do really think, and I wish you would too. Kate does not take to our boy half so well as I should like to see, and nothing must occur to set her against him. It would be madness.” “Well, it would be very disappointing if she married anyone else.” “Disappointing? It would be ruin. So be careful.” “Oh, yes, dear, I will indeed. I have tried to talk to her a little about what a dear good boy Claud is, and—why, Claud, dear, how long have you been standing there?” “Just come. Time to hear you say what a dear good boy I am. Won’t father believe it?” Chapter Six. Claud Wilton, aged twenty, with his thin pimply face, long narrow jaw, and closely-cropped hair, which was very suggestive of brain fever or imprisonment, stood leering at his father, his appearance in no wise supporting his mother’s high encomiums as he indulged in a feeble smile, one which he smoothed off directly with his thin right hand, which lingered about his lips to pat tenderly the remains of certain decapitated pimples which redly resented the passage over them that morning of an unnecessary razor, which laid no stubble