Page:Shiana - Peadar Ua Laoghaire.djvu/167

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SHIANA
153

business in the place but to make the match and to take his wife home. Then when he had had his will in settling matters for you and had put the hemp about your neck, he would marry Sive, and then see who would say he was a thief! It would not have been very difficult for him to make the city people believe the story when he would tell them how little money you had a short time ago and the greatness of your wealth now."

"No one has ever said that he got base coin from me," said Shiana.

"Neither did he get it," said Cormac. "When I was told that it was you that gave the rent to the widow that day long ago, I tested every piece of it, and it was all as true as if it had come out that very morning from the King's own mint."

"I suppose," said Shiana, "if it had been base, things would have gone hard with me," and he gave a little laugh.

"There was no danger that anything would go hard with you through me," said Cormac, "as long as you were doing no wrong." It just happened that he looked Shiana in the face, and he stopped.

Sheila.—Why did he stop, Peg? I should think that, whomsoever that look of Shiana's would startle or not startle, it would be very hard for it to startle Nosey Cormac. I'll bet if John of the Fair were there it would not startle him. No, indeed; no more than it would startle a sow pig if she were there.
Peg.—Why, the way the matter stood with Cormac was that Shiana knew an ugly secret about him. A short time after that day on which he came to take possession from the widow, Shiana found