I am afraid the last chapter was rather
dull. It is always dull in books when people
talk and talk, and don’t do anything, but I was
obliged to put it in, or else you wouldn’t have
understood all the rest. The best part of books
is when things are happening. That is the best
part of real things too. This is why I shall
not tell you in this story about all the days when
nothing happened. You will not catch me saying,
’thus the sad days passed slowly by’ or
’the years rolled on their weary course’ or
’time went on’ because it is
silly; of course time goes on whether you
say so or not. So I shall just tell you the nice,
interesting parts and in between you will
understand that we had our meals and got up and went
to bed, and dull things like that. It would be
sickening to write all that down, though of course
it happens. I said so to Albert-next-door’s
uncle, who writes books, and he said, ’Quite
right, that’s what we call selection, a necessity
of true art.’ And he is very clever indeed.
So you see.
I have often thought that if the people
who write books for children knew a little more it
would be better. I shall not tell you anything
about us except what I should like to know about if
I was reading the story and you were writing it.
Albert’s uncle says I ought to have put this
in the preface, but I never read prefaces, and it is
not much good writing things just for people to skip.
I wonder other authors have never thought of this.
Well, when we had agreed to dig for
treasure we all went down into the cellar and lighted
the gas. Oswald would have liked to dig there,
but it is stone flags. We looked among the old
boxes and broken chairs and fenders and empty bottles
and things, and at last we found the spades we had
to dig in the sand with when we went to the seaside
three years ago. They are not silly, babyish,
wooden spades, that split if you look at them, but
good iron, with a blue mark across the top of the iron
part, and yellow wooden handles. We wasted a
little time getting them dusted, because the girls
wouldn’t dig with spades that had cobwebs on
them. Girls would never do for African explorers
or anything like that, they are too beastly particular.
It was no use doing the thing by halves.
We marked out a sort of square in the mouldy part
of the garden, about three yards across, and began
to dig. But we found nothing except worms and
stones and the ground was very hard.
So we thought we’d try another
part of the garden, and we found a place in the big
round flower bed, where the ground was much softer.
We thought we’d make a smaller hole to begin
with, and it was much better. We dug and dug
and dug, and it was jolly hard work! We got very
hot digging, but we found nothing.
Presently Albert-next-door looked
over the wall. We do not like him very much,
but we let him play with us sometimes, because his
father is dead, and you must not be unkind to orphans,
even if their mothers are alive. Albert is always
very tidy. He wears frilly collars and velvet
knickerbockers. I can’t think how he can
bear to.
So we said, ‘Hallo!’
And he said, ‘What are you up to?’
‘We’re digging for treasure,’
said Alice; ’an ancient parchment revealed to
us the place of concealment. Come over and help
us. When we have dug deep enough we shall find
a great pot of red clay, full of gold and precious
jewels.’
Albert-next-door only sniggered and
said, ‘What silly nonsense!’ He cannot
play properly at all. It is very strange, because
he has a very nice uncle. You see, Albert-next-door
doesn’t care for reading, and he has not read
nearly so many books as we have, so he is very foolish
and ignorant, but it cannot be helped, and you just
have to put up with it when you want him to do anything.
Besides, it is wrong to be angry with people for not
being so clever as you are yourself. It is not
always their faults.
So Oswald said, ’Come and dig!
Then you shall share the treasure when we’ve
found it.’
But he said, ’I shan’t I
don’t like digging and I’m just
going in to my tea.’
‘Come along and dig, there’s
a good boy,’ Alice said. ’You can
use my spade. It’s much the best ’
So he came along and dug, and when
once he was over the wall we kept him at it, and we
worked as well, of course, and the hole got deep.
Pincher worked too he is our dog and he
is very good at digging. He digs for rats in
the dustbin sometimes, and gets very dirty. But
we love our dog, even when his face wants washing.
‘I expect we shall have to make
a tunnel,’ Oswald said, ’to reach the
rich treasure.’ So he jumped into the hole
and began to dig at one side. After that we took
it in turns to dig at the tunnel, and Pincher was
most useful in scraping the earth out of the tunnel he
does it with his back feet when you say ‘Rats!’
and he digs with his front ones, and burrows with
his nose as well.
At last the tunnel was nearly a yard
long, and big enough to creep along to find the treasure,
if only it had been a bit longer. Now it was
Albert’s turn to go in and dig, but he funked
it.
‘Take your turn like a man,’
said Oswald nobody can say that Oswald
doesn’t take his turn like a man. But Albert
wouldn’t. So we had to make him, because
it was only fair.
‘It’s quite easy,’
Alice said. ’You just crawl in and dig with
your hands. Then when you come out we can scrape
out what you’ve done, with the spades.
Come be a man. You won’t notice
it being dark in the tunnel if you shut your eyes
tight. We’ve all been in except Dora and
she doesn’t like worms.’
‘I don’t like worms neither.’
Albert-next-door said this; but we remembered how
he had picked a fat red and black worm up in his fingers
and thrown it at Dora only the day before. So
we put him in.
But he would not go in head first,
the proper way, and dig with his hands as we had done,
and though Oswald was angry at the time, for he hates
snivellers, yet afterwards he owned that perhaps it
was just as well. You should never be afraid
to own that perhaps you were mistaken but
it is cowardly to do it unless you are quite sure you
are in the wrong.
‘Let me go in feet first,’
said Albert-next-door. ’I’ll dig with
my boots I will truly, honour bright.’
So we let him get in feet first and
he did it very slowly and at last he was in, and only
his head sticking out into the hole; and all the rest
of him in the tunnel.
‘Now dig with your boots,’
said Oswald; ’and, Alice, do catch hold of Pincher,
he’ll be digging again in another minute, and
perhaps it would be uncomfortable for Albert if Pincher
threw the mould into his eyes.’
You should always try to think of
these little things. Thinking of other people’s
comfort makes them like you. Alice held Pincher,
and we all shouted, ‘Kick! dig with your feet,
for all you’re worth!’
So Albert-next-door began to dig with
his feet, and we stood on the ground over him, waiting and
all in a minute the ground gave way, and we tumbled
together in a heap: and when we got up there was
a little shallow hollow where we had been standing,
and Albert-next-door was underneath, stuck quite fast,
because the roof of the tunnel had tumbled in on him.
He is a horribly unlucky boy to have anything to do
with.
It was dreadful the way he cried and
screamed, though he had to own it didn’t hurt,
only it was rather heavy and he couldn’t move
his legs. We would have dug him out all right
enough, in time, but he screamed so we were afraid
the police would come, so Dicky climbed over the wall,
to tell the cook there to tell Albert-next-door’s
uncle he had been buried by mistake, and to come and
help dig him out.
Dicky was a long time gone. We
wondered what had become of him, and all the while
the screaming went on and on, for we had taken the
loose earth off Albert’s face so that he could
scream quite easily and comfortably.
Presently Dicky came back and Albert-next-door’s
uncle came with him. He has very long legs, and
his hair is light and his face is brown. He has
been to sea, but now he writes books. I like him.
He told his nephew to stow it, so
Albert did, and then he asked him if he was hurt and
Albert had to say he wasn’t, for though he is
a coward, and very unlucky, he is not a liar like
some boys are.
‘This promises to be a protracted
if agreeable task,’ said Albert-next-door’s
uncle, rubbing his hands and looking at the hole with
Albert’s head in it. ‘I will get another
spade,’ so he fetched the big spade out of the
next-door garden tool-shed, and began to dig his nephew
out.
‘Mind you keep very still,’
he said, ’or I might chunk a bit out of you
with the spade.’ Then after a while he said
’I confess that I am not absolutely
insensible to the dramatic interest of the situation.
My curiosity is excited. I own that I should like
to know how my nephew happened to be buried.
But don’t tell me if you’d rather not.
I suppose no force was used?’
‘Only moral force,’ said
Alice. They used to talk a lot about moral force
at the High School where she went, and in case you
don’t know what it means I’ll tell you
that it is making people do what they don’t want
to, just by slanging them, or laughing at them, or
promising them things if they’re good.
‘Only moral force, eh?’
said Albert-next-door’s uncle. ‘Well?’
‘Well,’ Dora said, ’I’m
very sorry it happened to Albert I’d
rather it had been one of us. It would have been
my turn to go into the tunnel, only I don’t
like worms, so they let me off. You see we were
digging for treasure.’
‘Yes,’ said Alice, ’and
I think we were just coming to the underground passage
that leads to the secret hoard, when the tunnel fell
in on Albert. He is so unlucky,’
and she sighed.
Then Albert-next-door began to scream
again, and his uncle wiped his face his
own face, not Albert’s with his silk
handkerchief, and then he put it in his trousers pocket.
It seems a strange place to put a handkerchief, but
he had his coat and waistcoat off and I suppose he
wanted the handkerchief handy. Digging is warm
work.
He told Albert-next-door to drop it,
or he wouldn’t proceed further in the matter,
so Albert stopped screaming, and presently his uncle
finished digging him out. Albert did look so funny,
with his hair all dusty and his velvet suit covered
with mould and his face muddy with earth and crying.
We all said how sorry we were, but
he wouldn’t say a word back to us. He was
most awfully sick to think he’d been the one
buried, when it might just as well have been one of
us. I felt myself that it was hard lines.
‘So you were digging for treasure,’
said Albert-next-door’s uncle, wiping his face
again with his handkerchief. ’Well, I fear
that your chances of success are small. I have
made a careful study of the whole subject. What
I don’t know about buried treasure is not worth
knowing. And I never knew more than one coin
buried in any one garden and that is generally Hullo what’s
that?’
He pointed to something shining in
the hole he had just dragged Albert out of. Oswald
picked it up. It was a half-crown. We looked
at each other, speechless with surprise and delight,
like in books.
‘Well, that’s lucky, at
all events,’ said Albert-next-door’s uncle.
‘Let’s see, that’s fivepence each
for you.’
‘It’s fourpence something;
I can’t do fractions,’ said Dicky; ’there
are seven of us, you see.’
‘Oh, you count Albert as one
of yourselves on this occasion, eh?’
‘Of course,’ said Alice;
’and I say, he was buried after all. Why
shouldn’t we let him have the odd somethings,
and we’ll have fourpence each.’
We all agreed to do this, and told
Albert-next-door we would bring his share as soon
as we could get the half-crown changed. He cheered
up a little at that, and his uncle wiped his face
again he did look hot and began
to put on his coat and waistcoat.
When he had done it he stooped and
picked up something. He held it up, and you will
hardly believe it, but it is quite true it
was another half-crown!
‘To think that there should
be two!’ he said; ’in all my experience
of buried treasure I never heard of such a thing!’
I wish Albert-next-door’s uncle
would come treasure-seeking with us regularly; he
must have very sharp eyes: for Dora says she was
looking just the minute before at the very place where
the second half-crown was picked up from, and she
never saw it.