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<h3>CHAPTER X.</h3>
<h4>LUKE ROWAN DECLARES HIS PLANS AS TO THE BREWERY.<br/> </h4>
<p>"The truth is, T., there was some joking among the young people about
the wine, and then Rowan went and ordered it." This was Mrs.
Tappitt's explanation about the champagne, made to her husband on the
night of the ball, before she was allowed to go to sleep. But this by
no means satisfied him. He did not choose, as he declared, that any
young man should order whatever he might think necessary for his
house. Then Mrs. Tappitt made it worse. "To tell the truth, T., I
think it was intended as a present to the girls. We are doing a great
deal to make him comfortable, you know, and I fancy he thought it
right to make them this little return." She should have known her
husband better. It was true that he grudged the cost of the wine; but
he would have preferred to endure that to the feeling that his table
had been supplied by another man,—by a young man whom he wished to
regard as subject to himself, but who would not be subject, and at
whom he was beginning to look with very unfavourable eyes. "A present
to the girls? I tell you I won't have such presents. And if it was
so, I think he has been very impertinent,—very impertinent indeed. I
shall tell him so,—and I shall insist on paying for the wine. And I
must say, you ought not to have taken it."</p>
<p>"Oh, dear T., I have been working so hard all night; and I do think
you ought to let me go to sleep now, instead of scolding me."</p>
<p>On the following morning the party was of course discussed in the
Tappitt family under various circumstances. At the breakfast-table
Mrs. Rowan, with her son and daughter, were present; and then a song
of triumph was sung. Everything had gone off with honour and glory,
and the brewery had been immortalized for years to come. Mrs. Butler
Cornbury's praises were spoken,—with some little drawback of a sneer
on them, because "she had made such a fuss with that girl Rachel
Ray;" and then the girls had told of their partners, and Luke had
declared it all to have been superb. But when the Rowans' backs were
turned, and the Tappitts were alone together, others besides old
Tappitt himself had words to say in dispraise of Luke. Mrs. Tappitt
had been much inclined to make little of her husband's objections to
the young man while she hoped that he might possibly become her
son-in-law. He might have been a thorn in the brewery, among the
vats, but he would have been a flourishing young bay-tree in the
outer world of Baslehurst. She had, however, no wish to encourage the
growth of a thorn within her own premises, in order that Rachel Ray,
or such as she, might have the advantage of the bay-tree. Luke Rowan
had behaved very badly at her party. Not only had he failed to
distinguish either of her own girls, but he had, as Mrs. Tappitt
said, made himself so conspicuous with that foolish girl, that all
the world had been remarking it.</p>
<p>"Mrs. Butler Cornbury seemed to think it all right," said Cherry.</p>
<p>"Mrs. Butler Cornbury is not everybody," said Mrs. Tappitt. "I didn't
think it right, I can assure you;—and what's more, your papa didn't
think it right."</p>
<p>"And he was going on all the evening as though he were quite master
in the house," said Augusta. "He was ordering the musicians to do
this and that all the evening."</p>
<p>"He'll find that he's not master. Your papa is going to speak to him
this very day."</p>
<p>"What!—about Rachel?" asked Cherry, in dismay.</p>
<p>"About things in general," said Mrs. Tappitt. Then Mary Rowan
returned to the room, and they all went back upon the glories of the
ball. "I think it was nice," said Mrs. Tappitt, simpering. "I'm sure
there was no trouble spared,—nor yet expense." She knew that she
ought not to have uttered that last word, and she would have
refrained if it had been possible to her;—but it was not possible.
The man who tells you how much his wine costs a dozen, knows that he
is wrong while the words are in his mouth; but they are in his mouth,
and he cannot restrain them.</p>
<p>Mr. Tappitt was not about to lecture Luke Rowan as to his conduct in
regard to Rachel Ray. He found some difficulty in speaking to his
would-be partner, even on matters of business, in a proper tone, and
with becoming authority. As he was so much the senior, and Rowan so
much the junior, some such tone of superiority was, as he thought,
indispensable. But he had great difficulty in assuming it. Rowan had
a way with him that was not exactly a way of submission, and Tappitt
would certainly not have dared to encounter him on any such matter as
his behaviour in a drawing-room. When the time came he had not even
the courage to allude to those champagne bottles; and it may be as
well explained that Rowan paid the little bill at Griggs's, without
further reference to the matter. But the question of the brewery
management was a matter vital to Tappitt. There, among the vats, he
had reigned supreme since Bungall ceased to be king, and for
continual mastery there it was worth his while to make a fight. That
he was under difficulties even in that fight he had already begun to
know. He could not talk Luke Rowan down, and make him go about his
work in an orderly, every-day, business-like fashion. Luke Rowan
would not be talked down, nor would he be orderly,—not according to
Mr. Tappitt's orders. No doubt Mr. Tappitt, under these
circumstances, could decline the partnership; and this he was
disposed to do; but he had been consulting lawyers, consulting
papers, and looking into old accounts, and he had reason to fear,
that under Bungall's will, Luke Rowan would have the power of
exacting from him much more than he was inclined to give.</p>
<p>"You'd better take him into the concern," the lawyer had said. "A
young head is always useful."</p>
<p>"Not when the young head wants to be master," Tappitt had answered.
"If I'm to do that the whole thing will go to the dogs." He did not
exactly explain to the lawyer that Rowan had carried his infatuation
so far as to be desirous of brewing good beer, but he did make it
very clear that such a partner would, in his eyes, be anything but
desirable.</p>
<p>"Then, upon my word, I think you'll have to give him the ten thousand
pounds. I don't even know but what the demand is moderate."</p>
<p>This was very bad news to Tappitt. "But suppose I haven't got ten
thousand pounds!" Now it was very well known that the property and
the business were worth money, and the lawyer suggested that Rowan
might take steps to have the whole concern sold. "Probably he might
buy it himself and undertake to pay you so much a year," suggested
the lawyer. But this view of the matter was not at all in accordance
with Mr. Tappitt's ideas. He had been brewer in Baslehurst for nearly
thirty years, and still wished to remain so. Mrs. Tappitt had been of
opinion that all difficulties might be overcome if only Luke would
fall in love with one of her girls. Mrs. Rowan had been invited to
Baslehurst specially with a view to some such arrangement. But Luke
Rowan, as it seemed to them both now, was an obstinate young man,
who, in matters of beer as well as in matters of love, would not be
guided by those who best knew how to guide him. Mrs. Tappitt had
watched him closely at the ball, and had now given him up altogether.
He had danced only once with Augusta, and then had left her the
moment the dance was over. "I should offer him a hundred and fifty
pounds a year out of the concern, and if he didn't like that let him
lump it," said Mrs. Tappitt. "Lump it!" said Mr. Tappitt. "That means
going to a London lawyer." He felt the difficulties of his position
as he prepared to speak his mind to young Rowan on the morning after
the party; but on that occasion his strongest feeling was in favour
of expelling the intruder. Any lot in life would be preferable to
working in the brewery with such a partner as Luke Rowan.</p>
<p>"I suppose your head's hardly cool enough for business," he said, as
Luke came in and took a stool in his office. Tappitt was sitting in
his customary chair, with his arm resting on a large old-fashioned
leather-covered table, which was strewed with his papers, and which
had never been reduced to cleanliness or order within the memory of
any one connected with the establishment. He had turned his chair
round from its accustomed place so as to face Rowan, who had perched
himself on a stool which was commonly occupied by a boy whom Tappitt
employed in his own office.</p>
<p>"My head not cool!" said Rowan. "It's as cool as a cucumber. I wasn't
drinking last night."</p>
<p>"I thought you might be tired with the dancing." Then Tappitt's mind
flew off to the champagne, and he determined that the young man
before him was too disagreeable to be endured.</p>
<p>"Oh, dear, no. Those things never tire me. I was across here with the
men before eight this morning. Do you know, I'm sure we could save a
third of the fuel by altering the flues. I never saw such
contrivances. They must have been put in by the coal-merchants, for
the sake of wasting coal."</p>
<p>"If you please, we won't mind the flues at present."</p>
<p>"I only tell you; it's for your sake much more than my own. If you
won't believe me, do you ask Newman to look at them the first time
you see him in Baslehurst."</p>
<p>"I don't care a straw for Newman."</p>
<p>"He's got the best concerns in Devonshire, and knows what he's about
better than any man in these parts."</p>
<p>"I dare say. But now, if you please, we won't mind him. The concerns,
as I have managed them, have done very well for me for the last
thirty years;—very well I may say also for your uncle, who
understood what he was doing. I'm not very keen for so many changes.
They cost a great deal of money, and as far as I can see don't often
lead to much profit."</p>
<p>"If we don't go on with the world," said Rowan, "the world will leave
us behind. Look at the new machinery they're introducing everywhere.
People don't do it because they like to spend their money. It's
competition; and there's competition in beer as well as in other
things."</p>
<p>For a minute or two Mr. Tappitt sat in silence collecting his
thoughts, and then he began his speech. "I'll tell you what it is,
Rowan, I don't like these new-fangled ways. They're very well for
you, I dare say. You are young, and perhaps you may see your way. I'm
old, and I don't see mine among all these changes. It's clear to me
that you and I could not go on together as partners in the same
concern. I should expect to have my own way,—first because I've a
deal of experience, and next because my share in the concern would be
so much the greatest."</p>
<p>"Stop a moment, Mr. Tappitt; I'm not quite sure that it would be much
the greatest. I don't want to say anything about that now; only if I
were to let your remark pass without notice it would seem that I had
assented."</p>
<p>"Ah; very well. I can only say that I hope you'll find yourself
mistaken. I've been over thirty years in the concern, and it would be
odd if I with my large family were to find myself only equal to you,
who have never been in the business at all, and ain't even married
yet."</p>
<p>"I don't see what being married has to do with it."</p>
<p>"Don't you? You'll find that's the way we look at these things down
in these parts. You're not in London here, Mr. Rowan."</p>
<p>"Certainly not; but I suppose the laws are the same. This is an
affair of capital."</p>
<p>"Capital!" said Mr. Tappitt. "I don't know that you've brought in any
capital."</p>
<p>"Bungall did, and I'm here as his representative. But you'd better
let that pass by just at present. If we can agree as to the
management of the business, you won't find me a hard man to deal with
as to our relative shares." Hereupon Tappitt scratched his head, and
tried to think. "But I don't see how we are to agree about the
management," he continued. "You won't be led by anybody."</p>
<p>"I don't know about that. I certainly want to improve the concern."</p>
<p>"Ah, yes; and so ruin it. Whereas I've been making money out of it
these thirty years. You and I won't do together; that's the long of
it and the short of it."</p>
<p>"It would be a putting of new wine into old bottles, you think?"
suggested Rowan.</p>
<p>"I'm not saying anything about wine; but I do think that I ought to
know something about beer."</p>
<p>"And I'm to understand," said Rowan, "that you have definitively
determined not to carry on the old concern in conjunction with me as
your partner."</p>
<p>"Yes; I think I have."</p>
<p>"But it will be as well to be sure. One can't allow one's self to
depend upon thinking."</p>
<p>"Well, I am sure; I've made up my mind. I've no doubt you're a very
clever young man, but I am quite sure we should not do together; and
to tell you the truth, Rowan, I don't think you'll ever make your
fortune by brewing."</p>
<p>"You think not?"</p>
<p>"No; never."</p>
<p>"I'm sorry for that."</p>
<p>"I don't know that you need be sorry. You'll have a nice income for a
single man to begin the world with, and there's other businesses
besides brewing,—and a deal better."</p>
<p>"Ah! But I've made up my mind to be a brewer. I like it. There's
opportunity for chemical experiments, and room for philosophical
inquiry, which gives the trade a charm in my eyes. I dare say it
seems odd to you, but I like being a brewer."</p>
<p>Tappitt only scratched his head, and stared at him. "I do indeed,"
continued Rowan. "Now a man can't do anything to improve his own
trade as a lawyer. A great deal will be done; but I've made up my
mind that all that must come from the outside. All trades want
improving; but I like a trade in which I can do the improvements
myself,—from the inside. Do you understand me, Mr. Tappitt?" Mr.
Tappitt did not understand him,—was very far indeed from
understanding him.</p>
<p>"With such ideas as those I don't think Baslehurst is the ground for
you," said Mr. Tappitt.</p>
<p>"The very ground!" said Rowan. "That's just it;—it's the very place
I want. Brewing, as I take it, is at a lower ebb here than in any
other part of England,"—this at any rate was not complimentary to
the brewer of thirty years' standing—"than in any other part of
England. The people swill themselves with the nasty juice of the
apple because sound malt and hops have never been brought within
their reach. I think Devonshire is the very county for a man who
means to work hard, and who wishes to do good; and in all Devonshire
I don't think there's a more fitting town than Baslehurst."</p>
<p>Mr. Tappitt was dumbfounded. Did this young man mean him to
understand that it was his intention to open a rival establishment
under his nose; to set up with Bungall's money another brewery in
opposition to Bungall's brewery? Could such ingratitude as that be in
the mind of any one? "Oh," said Tappitt; "I don't quite understand,
but I don't doubt but what you say is all very fine."</p>
<p>"I don't think that it's fine at all, Mr. Tappitt, but I believe that
it's true. I represent Mr. Bungall's interest here in Baslehurst, and
I intend to carry on Mr. Bungall's business in the town in which he
established it."</p>
<p>"This is Mr. Bungall's business;—this here, where I'm sitting, and
it is in my hands."</p>
<p>"The use of these premises depends on you certainly."</p>
<p>"Yes; and the name of the firm, and
the—the—<span class="nowrap">the—.</span> In point of
fact, this is the old establishment. I never heard of such a thing in
all my life."</p>
<p>"Quite true; it is the old establishment; and if I should set up
another brewery here, as I think it probable I may, I shall not make
use of Bungall's name. In the first place it would hardly be fair;
and in the next place, by all accounts, he brewed such very bad beer
that it would not be a credit to me. If you'll tell me what your plan
is, then I'll tell you mine. You'll find that everything shall be
above-board, Mr. Tappitt."</p>
<p>"My plan? I've got no plan. I mean to go on here as I've always
done."</p>
<p>"But I suppose you intend to come to some arrangement with me. My
claims are these: I will either come into this establishment on an
equal footing with yourself, as regards share and management, or else
I shall look to you to give me the sum of money to which my lawyers
tell me I am entitled. In fact, you must either take me in or buy me
out."</p>
<p>"I was thinking of a settled income."</p>
<p>"No; it wouldn't suit me. I have told you what are my intentions, and
to carry them out I must either have a concern of my own, or a share
in a concern. A settled income would do me no good."</p>
<p>"Two hundred a-year," suggested Tappitt.</p>
<p>"Psha! Three per cent. would give me three hundred."</p>
<p>"Ten thousand pounds is out of the question, you know."</p>
<p>"Very well, Mr. Tappitt. I can't say anything fairer than I have
done. It will suit my own views much the best to start alone, but I
do not wish to oppose you if I can help it. Start alone I certainly
will, if I cannot come in here on my own terms."</p>
<p>After that there was nothing more said. Tappitt turned round,
pretending to read his letters, and Rowan descending from his seat
walked out into the yard of the brewery. His intention had been, ever
since he had looked around him in Baslehurst, to be master of that
place, or if not of that, to be master of some other. "It would break
my heart to be sending out such stuff as that all my life," he said
to himself, as he watched the muddy stream run out of the shallow
coolers. He had resolved that he would brew good beer. As to that
ambition of putting down the consumption of cider, I myself am
inclined to think that the habits of the country would be too strong
for him. At the present moment he lighted a cigar and sauntered about
the yard. He had now, for the first time, spoken openly of his
purpose to Mr. Tappitt; but, having done so, he resolved that there
should be no more delay. "I'll give him till Saturday for an answer,"
he said. "If he isn't ready with one by that time I'll manage it
through the lawyers." After that he turned his mind to Rachel Ray and
the events of the past evening. He had told Rachel that he would go
out to Bragg's End if she did not come into town, and he was quite
resolved that he would do so. He knew well that she would not come
in, understanding exactly those feelings of hers which would prevent
it. Therefore his walk to Bragg's End on that afternoon was a settled
thing with him. They were to dine at the brewery at three, and he
would go almost immediately after dinner. But what would he say to
her when he got there, and what would he say to her mother? He had
not even yet made up his mind that he would positively ask her on
that day to be his wife, and yet he felt that if he found her at home
he would undoubtedly do so. "I'll arrange it all," said he, "as I'm
walking over." Then he threw away the end of his cigar, and wandered
about for the next half-hour among the vats and tubs and furnaces.</p>
<p>Mr. Tappitt took himself into the house as soon as he found himself
able to do so without being seen by young Rowan. He took himself into
the house in order that he might consult with his wife as to this
unexpected revelation that had been made to him; or rather that he
might have an opportunity of saying to some one all the hard things
which were now crowding themselves upon his mind with reference to
this outrageous young man. Had anything ever been known, or heard, or
told, equal in enormity to this wickedness! He was to be called upon
to find capital for the establishment of a rival in his own town, or
else he was to bind himself in a partnership with a youth who knew
nothing of his business, but was nevertheless resolved to constitute
himself the chief manager of it! He who had been so true to Bungall
in his young days was now to be sacrificed in his old age to
Bungall's audacious representative! In the first glow of his anger he
declared to his wife that he would pay no money and admit of no
partnership. If Rowan did not choose to take his income as old Mrs.
Bungall had taken hers he might seek what redress the law would give
him. It was in vain that Mrs. Tappitt suggested that they would all
be ruined. "Then we will be ruined," said Tappitt, hot with
indignation; "but all Baslehurst,—all Devonshire shall know why."
Pernicious young man! He could not explain,—he could not even quite
understand in what the atrocity of Rowan's proposed scheme consisted,
but he was possessed by a full conviction that it was atrocious. He
had admitted this man into his house; he was even now entertaining as
his guests the man's mother and sister; he had allowed him to have
the run of the brewery, so that he had seen both the nakedness and
the fat of the land; and this was to be his reward! "If I were to
tell it at the reading-room," said Tappitt, "he would never be able
to show himself again in the High Street."</p>
<p>Mrs. Tappitt, who was anxious but not enraged, did not see the matter
quite in the same light, but she was not able to oppose her husband
in his indignation. When she suggested that it might be well for them
to raise money and pay off their enemy's claim, merely stipulating
that a rival brewery should not be established in Baslehurst, he
swore an oath that he would raise no money for such a purpose. He
would have no dealings with so foul a traitor except through his
lawyer, Honyman. "But Honyman thinks you'd better settle with him,"
pleaded Mrs. T. "Then I'll go to another lawyer," said Tappitt. "If
Honyman won't stand to me I'll go to Sharpit and Longfite. They won't
give way as long as there's a leg to stand on." For the time Mrs.
Tappitt let this pass. She knew how useless it would be to tell her
husband at the present moment that Sharpit and Longfite would be the
only winners in such a contest as that of which he spoke. At the
present moment Mr. Tappitt felt a pride in his anger, and was almost
happy in the fury of his wrath; but Mrs. Tappitt was very wretched.
If that nasty girl, Rachel Ray, had not come in the way all might
have been well.</p>
<p>"He shan't eat another meal in this house," said Tappitt. "I don't
care," he went on, when his wife pleaded that Luke Rowan must be
admitted to their table because of Mrs. Rowan and Mary. "You can say
what you like to them. They're welcome to stay if they like it, or
welcome to go; but he shan't put his feet under my mahogany again."
On this point, however, he was brought to relent before the hour of
dinner. Baslehurst, his wife told him, would be against him if he
turned his guests away from his house hungry. If a fight was
necessary for them, it would be everything to them that Baslehurst
should be with them in the fight. It was therefore arranged that Mrs.
Tappitt should have a conversation with Mrs. Rowan after dinner,
while the young people were out in the evening. "He shan't sleep in
this house to-morrow," said Tappitt, riveting his assertion with very
strong language; and Mrs. Tappitt understood that her communications
were to be carried on upon that basis.</p>
<p>At three o'clock the Tappitts and Rowans all sat down to dinner. Mr.
Tappitt ate his meal in absolute silence; but the young people were
full of the ball, and the elder ladies were very gracious to each
other. At such entertainments Paterfamilias is simply required to
find the provender and to carve it. If he does that satisfactorily,
silence on his part is not regarded as a great evil. Mrs. Tappitt
knew that her husband's mood was not happy, and Martha may have
remarked that all was not right with her father. To the others I am
inclined to think his ill humour was a matter of indifference.</p>
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