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"Potts! That doesn't sound like one of your old county names."
"I should think not, Sir. Potts! Why, Sir, he's generally believed in this here community to be a villain, Sir," said the little tailor, mysteriously, and with the look of a man who would like very well to be questioned further.
Brandon humored him. "How is that?"
"It's a long story, Sir."
"Oh, well--tell it. I have a great curiosity to hear any old stories current in your English villages. I'm an American, and English life is new to me."
"I'll bet you never heard any thing like this in all your born days."
"Tell it then, by all means."
The tailor jumped down from his seat, went mysteriously to the door, looked cautiously out, and then returned.
"It's just as well to be a little careful," said he, "for if that man knew that I was talking about him he'd take it out of me quick enough, I tell you."
"You seem to be afraid of him."
"We're all afraid of him in the village, and hate him; but I hope to G.o.d he'll catch it yet!"
"How can you be afraid of him? You all say that this is a free country."
"No man, Sir, in any country, is free, except he's rich. Poor people can be oppressed in many ways; and most of us are in one way or other dependent on him. We hate him all the worse, though. But I'll tell you about him."
"Yes, go on."
"Well, Sir, old Mr. Brandon, about twenty years ago, was one of the richest men in the county. About fifteen years ago the man Potts turned up, and however the old man took a fancy to him I never could see, but he did take a fancy to him, put all his money in some tin mines that Potts had started, and the end of it was Potts turned out a scoundrel, as every one said he would, swindled the old man out of every penny, and ruined him completely. Brandon had to sell his estate, and Potts bought it with the very money out of which he had cheated the old man."
"Oh! impossible!" said Brandon. "Isn't that some village gossip?"
"I wish it was, Sir--but it ain't. Go ask any man here, and he'll tell you the same."
"And what became of the family?" asked Brandon, calmly.
"Ah, Sir! that is the worst part of it."
"Why?"
"I'll tell you, Sir. He was ruined. He gave up all. He hadn't a penny left. He went out of the Hall and lived for a short time in a small house at the other end of the village. At last he spent what little money he had left, and they all got sick. You wouldn't believe what happened after that."
"What was it?"
"They were all taken to the alms-house."
A burst of thunder seemed to sound in Brandon's ears as he heard this, which he had never even remotely imagined. The tailor was occupied with his own thoughts, and did not notice the wildness that for an instant appeared in Brandon's eyes. The latter for a moment felt paralyzed and struck down into nothingness by the shock of that tremendous intelligence.
"The people felt dreadfully about it," continued the tailor, "but they couldn't do any thing. It was Potts who had the family taken to the alms-house. n.o.body dared to interfere."
"Did none of the county families do anything?" said Brandon, who at last, by a violent effort, had regained his composure.
"No. They had all been insulted by the old man, so now they let him suffer."
"Had he no old friends, or even acquaintances?"
"Well, that's what we all asked ourselves, Sir; but at any rate, whether he had or not, they didn't turn up--that is, not in time. There was a young man here when it was too late."
"A young man?"
"Yes, Sir."
"Was he a relative?"
"Oh no, Sir, only a lawyer's clerk; wanted to see about business I dare say. Perhaps to collect a bill. Let me see; the lawyer who sent him was named Thornton."
"Thornton!" said Brandon, as the name sank into his soul.
"Yes; he lived at Holby."
Brandon drew a long breath.
"No, Sir; no friends came, whether he had any or not. They were all sick at the alms-house for weeks."
"And I suppose they all died there?" said Brandon, in a strange, sweet voice.
"No, Sir. They were not so happy."
"What suffering could be greater?"
"They do talk dreadfully in this town, Sir; and I dare say it's not true, but if it is it's enough to make a man's blood ran cold."
"You excite my curiosity. Remember I am an American, and these things seem odd to me. I always thought your British aristocrats could not be ruined."
"Here was one, Sir, that was, anyhow."
"Go on."
"Well, Sir, the old man died in the alms-house. The others got well. As soon as they were well enough they went away."
"How did they get away?"
"Potts helped them," replied the tailor, in a peculiar tone. "They went away from the village."
"Where did they go?"
"People say to Liverpool. I only tell what I know. I heard young Bill Potts, the old fellow's son, boasting one night at the inn where he was half drunk, how they had served the Brandons. He said they wanted to leave the village, so his father helped them away to America."
"To America?"