He awoke to find the sun shining in
at his window. At first he wondered what had
happened. The window seemed to be in the ceiling,
and the ceiling sloped down to the walls, and all the
furniture had gone astray into wrong positions.
Then he remembered, jumped out of bed, and drew the
blind.
He saw a blue line of sea, so clearly
drawn that the horizon might have been a string stretched
from the corner eaves to the snow-white light-house
standing on the farthest spit of land; blue sea and
yellow sand curving round it, with a white edge of
breakers; inshore, the sand rising to a cliff ridged
with grassy hummocks; farther inshore, the hummocks
united and rolling away up to inland downs, but broken
here and there on their way with scars of sand; over
all, white gulls wheeling. He could hear the
nearest ones mewing as they sailed over the house.
Taffy had seen the sea once before,
at Dawlish, on the journey to Tewkesbury; and again
on the way home. But here it was bluer altogether,
and the sands were yellower. Only he felt disappointed
that no ship was in sight, nor any dwelling nearer
than the light-house and the two or three white cottages
behind it. He dressed in a hurry and said his
prayers, repeating at the close, as he had been taught
to do, the first and last verses of the Morning Hymn:
“Awake, my soul,
and with the sun
Thy
daily stage of duty run;
Shake off dull
sloth, and joyful rise
To
pay thy morning sacrifice.
“Praise God, from
whom all blessings flow;
Praise
Him, all creatures here below;
Praise Him above,
ye heavenly host,
Praise
Father, Son, and Holy Ghost.”
He ran downstairs. In this queer
house the stairs led right down into the kitchen.
The front door, too, opened into the kitchen, which
was really a slate-paved hall, with a long table set
between the doorway and the big open hearth.
The floor was always strewn with sand; there was
no trouble about this, for the wind blew plenty under
the door.
Taffy found the table laid, and his
mother busily slicing bread for his bread and milk.
He begged for a hot cake from the hearth, and ran
out of doors to eat it. Humility lifted the latch
for him, for the cake was so hot that he had to pass
it from hand to hand.
Outside, the wind came upon him with
a clap on the shoulder, quite as if it had been a
comrade waiting.
Taffy ran down the path and out upon
the sandy hummocks, setting his face to the wind and
the roar of the sea, keeping his head low, and still
shifting the cake from hand to hand. By-and-by
he fumbled and dropped it; stooped to pick it up,
but saw something which made him kneel and peer into
the ground.
The whole of the sand was moving;
not by fits and starts, but constantly; the tiny particles
running over each other and drifting in and out of
the rushes, like little creatures in a dream.
While he looked, they piled an embankment against
the edge of his cake. He picked it up, ran forward
a few yards, and peered again. Yes, here too;
here and yonder, and over every inch of that long
shore.
He ate his cake and climbed to the
beach, and ran along it, watching the sandhoppers
that skipped from under his boots at every step, and
were lost on the instant. The beach here was
moist and firm. He pulled off his boots and stockings,
and ran on, conning his footprints and the driblets
of sand split ahead from his bare toes. By-and-by
he came to the edge of the surf. The strand here
was glassy wet, and each curving wave sent a shadow
flying over it, and came after the shadow, thundering
and hissing, and chased it up the shore, and fell
back, leaving for a second or two an edge of delicate
froth which reminded the boy of his mother’s
lace-work.
He began a sort of game with the waves,
choosing one station after another, and challenging
them to catch him there. If the edge of froth
failed to reach his toes, he won. But once or
twice the water caught him fairly, and ran rippling
over his instep and about his ankles.
He was deep in this game when he heard
a horn blown somewhere high on the towans behind him.
He turned. No one was in sight.
The house lay behind the sand-banks, the first ridge
hiding even its chimney-smoke. He gazed along
the beach, where the perpetual haze of spray seemed
to have removed the light-house to a vast distance.
A sense of desolation came over him with a rush,
and with something between a gasp and a sob he turned
his back to the sea and ran, his boots dangling from
his shoulders by their knotted laces.
He pounded up the first slope and
looked for the cottage. No sign of it!
An insane fancy seized him. These silent moving
sands were after him.
He was panting along in real distress
when he heard the baying of dogs, and at the same
instant from the top of a hummock caught sight of
a figure outlined against the sky, and barely a quarter
of a mile away; the figure of a girl on horseback a
small girl on a very tall horse.
Just as Taffy recognised her, she
turned her horse, walked him down into the hollow
beyond, and disappeared. Taffy ran towards the
spot, gained the ridge where she had been standing,
and looked down.
In a hollow about twenty feet deep
and perhaps a hundred wide were gathered a dozen riders,
with five or six couples of hounds and two or three
dirty terriers. Two of the men had dismounted.
One of these, stripped to his shirt and breeches,
was leaning on a long-handled spade and laughing.
The other a fellow in a shabby scarlet
coat held up what Taffy guessed to be a
fox, though it seemed a very small one. It was
bleeding. The hounds yapped and leapt at it,
and fell back a-top of each other snarling, while the
Whip grinned and kept them at bay. A knife lay
between his wide-planted feet, and a visgy close
behind him on a heap of disturbed sand.
The boy came on them from the eastward,
and his shadow fell across the hollow.
“Hullo!” said one of the
riders, looking up. It was Squire Moyle himself.
“Here’s the new Passon’s boy!”
All the riders looked up. The
Whip looked up too, and turned to the old Squire with
a wider grin than before.
“Shall I christen en, maister?”
The Squire nodded. Before Taffy
knew what it meant, the man was climbing toward him
with a grin, clutching the rush bents with one hand,
and holding out the blood-dabbled mask with the other.
The child turned to run, but a hand clutched his ankle.
He saw the man’s open mouth and yellow teeth;
and, choking with disgust and terror, slung his boots
at them with all his small force. At the same
instant he was jerked off his feet, the edge of the
bank crumbled and broke, and the two went rolling
down the sandy slope in a heap. He heard shouts
of laughter, caught a glimpse of blue sky, felt a
grip of fingers on his throat, and smelt the verminous
odour of the dead cub, as the Whip thrust the bloody
mess against his face and neck. Then the grip
relaxed, and it seemed to him, amid dead
silence Taffy sprang to his feet, spitting
sand and fury.
“You you devils!”
He caught up the visgy and stood, daring all to come
on. “You devils!” He tottered forward
with the visgy lifted it was all he could
manage at Squire Moyle. The old man
let out an oath, and the curve of his whip-thong took
the boy across the eyes and blinded him for a moment,
but did not stop him. The grey horse swerved,
and half-wheeled, exposing his flank. In another
moment there would have been mischief; but the Whip,
as he stood wiping his mouth, saw the danger and ran
in. He struck the visgy out of the child’s
grasp, set his foot on it, and with an open-handed
cuff sent him floundering into a sand-heap.
“Nice boy, that!” said
somebody, and the whole company laughed as they walked
their horses slowly out of the hollow.
They passed before Taffy in a blur
of tears; and the last rider to go was the small girl
Honoria on her tall sorrel. She moved up the
broad shelving path, but reined up just within sight,
turned her horse, and came slowly back to him.
“If I were you, I’d go
home.” She pointed in its direction.
Taffy brushed the back of his hand
across his eyes. “Go away. I hate
you I hate you all!”
She eyed him while she smoothed the
sorrel’s mane with her riding-switch.
“They did it to me three years
ago, when I was six. Grandfather called it ‘entering’
me.”
Taffy kept his eyes sullenly on the
ground. Finding that he would not answer, she
turned her horse again and rode slowly after the others.
Taffy heard the soft footfalls die away, and when
he looked up she had vanished.
He picked up his boots and started
in the direction to which she had pointed. Every
now and then a sob shook him. By-and-by the chimneys
of the house hove in sight among the ridges, and he
ran toward it. But within a gunshot of the white
garden-wall his breast swelled suddenly and he flung
himself on the ground and let the big tears run.
They made little pits in the moving sand; and more
sand drifted up and covered them.
“Taffy! Taffy! Whatever has become
of the child?”
His mother was standing by the gate
in her print frock. He scrambled up and ran
toward her. She cried out at the sight of him,
but he hid his blood-smeared face against her skirts.