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"It's not him I'm thinking of," said Mary Ellen, "but it's Mr. Doyle."
Dr. O'Grady took no notice of this remark. He did not believe that Mary Ellen was very much afraid of Mr. Doyle. He followed Mrs. Gregg into the dining-room. Mary Ellen sat down.
"She really is rather a pretty girl," said Mrs. Gregg.
"Then you'll undertake the job," said Dr. O'Grady. "You won't have to pay for anything, you know. We'll charge whatever you like to buy against the statue fund."
Mrs. Gregg did not appear to be listening. She was thinking deeply.
"I have an old silk slip," she said, "which might be made down."
"Capital! A silk slip will be the very thing."
Dr. O'Grady had no idea what a silk slip might be. But his enthusiastic welcome of the suggestion pa.s.sed unnoticed. Mrs. Gregg was still thinking.
"I could get a white muslin," she said, "with an embroidered yoke and a wide collar. It wouldn't cost very much."
"We'd like the thing done well," said Dr. O'Grady, "not extravagantly, of course, but well."
"Sh.e.l.l look quite sweet," said Mrs. Gregg; "but what will Mrs. Ford say?"
"She'll have to be kept in a good temper."
"Kept!" said Mrs. Gregg, giggling delightedly.
She was very much afraid of Mrs. Ford, but she found a fearful joy in entering into a conspiracy against her with Dr. O'Grady for ally.
"Kept!" she repeated, "but she never is."
"My idea," said Dr. O'Grady, "is that you should dress Mary Ellen yourself, according to your own ideas, and at the same time consult with Mrs. Ford, giving her the impression that she's doing the whole thing herself. I should think you ought to be able to manage that."
This did not seem to Mrs. Gregg a very easy thing to do. She hesitated.
"I'm afraid I couldn't," she said at last. "I don't see how I could."
"All that's required," said Dr. O'Grady, "is a little tact. You are always good at tact, Mrs. Gregg. I'm perfectly certain that you'll be able to manage. You must suggest each garment you intend to put on the girl in such a way that Mrs. Ford will think that she suggested it.
That ought to be easy enough." Everybody likes being credited with the possession of tact. This is curious, because hardly anyone likes being called a liar; and yet tact is simply a delicate form of lying. So, of course, is politeness of every kind, and n.o.body considers it wrong to aim at being polite. Mrs. Gregg, who would certainly have resented an accusation of habitual untruthfulness, felt flattered when Dr. O'Grady said she was tactful. She even believed him and allowed herself to be persuaded to undertake the management of Mrs. Ford.
"Good," said Dr. O'Grady. "Then I'll leave the whole business in your hands. I have to be off. But you've no time to lose. You'll have to set about your work at once. I'll send Mary Ellen to you as I go through the hall. You can measure her, and then take her over to see Mrs. Ford.
After that you'd better order the new dress. If there's any hitch in the proceedings you can send for me, but I don't see why there should be."
He shook hands with Mrs. Gregg and hurried from the room, without giving her the chance of making any kind of protest or asking any more questions.
He found Mary Ellen seated on an uncomfortable oak chair in the hall.
"Mary Ellen," he said, "would you like a new dress?"
"I would."
"Then go into the dining-room?the room I've just come out of. You'll find Mrs. Gregg there. Do exactly what she tells you without making any objections or asking questions. If she insists on your was.h.i.+ng your face, wash it, without grumbling. If Moriarty is waiting for you anywhere between this and the town?? Is Moriarty waiting for you?"
"He might."
"Well, if he is, I'll clear him out of the way. You'll be going into the town in a few minutes with Mrs. Ford and Mrs. Gregg. It wouldn't do at all to have him making eyes at you from the side of the road when you're walking with those two ladies. Mrs. Gregg mightn't mind; but Mrs. Ford would be certain to object. She's not the kind of lady who likes to see other people enjoying themselves."
"He wouldn't do the like," said Mary Ellen.
"I wouldn't trust him," said Dr. O'Grady.
Moriarty was, in fact, waiting for Mary Ellen about a hundred yards from the gate of the Greggs' house. Dr. O'Grady rebuked him sharply. Moriarty a.s.serted that he was engaged in patrolling that particular road in simple obedience to the call of duty.
"That may possibly be true," said Dr. O'Grady, "though it doesn't sound likely."
"It was the sergeant gave me my orders," said Moriarty.
"Patrol some other road, then," said Dr. O'Grady. "You're not wanted here."
"What the sergeant said was that it would be better for me to patrol along between Mr. Gregg's house and Mr. Ford's, so that if either the one or the other of them was to see me he'd know that I was patrolling.
I wouldn't say a word against Mr. Gregg, who's a nice gentleman enough, and easy pleased. But it's hard to pacify Mr. Ford, and the sergeant thought??"
"I can tell you this," said Dr. O'Grady, "that if Mrs. Ford catches you lying in wait for Mary Ellen on the road outside her house, it will be a jolly sight harder to pacify Mr. Ford than it was before. Surely you can understand that."
Moriarty understood it thoroughly. He was not very well pleased, but he was a young man of considerable prudence, and was filled with a sincere desire to rise in his profession. He spent the rest of the afternoon in patrolling a road at the other end of Ballymoy.
Dr. O'Grady hurried on. His next stop was at the door of Kerrigan's shop. The elder Kerrigan was leaning against the wooden slab on which he was accustomed to cut up joints. He was smoking a pipe.
"Where's your son?" said Dr. O'Grady.
"He's within in the back yard," said Kerrigan.
"Tell him I want to see him."
"I'm not sure can he come to you; for he's taking the skin off a sheep that he's just after slaughtering."
"Let him wash his hands," said Dr. O'Grady. "The sheep can wait."
"I'm not sure will he come," said Kerrigan. "He's not overly much pleased with you this minute, doctor, and that's the truth."
"What's the matter with him?"
"It's on account of your saying that he was thinking of getting married to Mary Ellen."
"It was Gallagher said that. I'd nothing to do with it one way or the other."
"I wouldn't be minding myself what you said," said Kerrigan, "knowing well that you wouldn't be meaning any harm, whatever it was; though the girl's no match for him, and I wouldn't care for him to be carrying on with her, when it's a girl with a fortune he ought to get, and what's more, can get, whenever I choose to ask for her. But I wouldn't pay any attention to what was put out about him and Mary Ellen. I'm only telling you so as you'd know why it is that the boy's mind is riz against you."
"What nonsense! Everybody in the place knows that it's Constable Moriarty who's after the girl."
"It's just that that's troubling the boy. On account of Constable Moriarty being a comrade of his; so that he wouldn't like him to be thinking?? But sure, I'll fetch him for you, if you like."