It really was not such a bad baby for
a baby. Its face was round and quite clean, which
babies’ faces are not always, as I daresay you
know by your own youthful relatives; and Dora said
its cape was trimmed with real lace, whatever that
may be I don’t see myself how one
kind of lace can be realler than another. It
was in a very swagger sort of perambulator when we
saw it; and the perambulator was standing quite by
itself in the lane that leads to the mill.
‘I wonder whose baby it is,’
Dora said. ‘Isn’t it a darling, Alice?’
Alice agreed to its being one, and
said she thought it was most likely the child of noble
parents stolen by gipsies.
‘These two, as likely as not,’
Noel said. ’Can’t you see something
crime-like in the very way they’re lying?’
They were two tramps, and they were
lying on the grass at the edge of the lane on the
shady side fast asleep, only a very little further
on than where the Baby was. They were very ragged,
and their snores did have a sinister sound.
’I expect they stole the titled
heir at dead of night, and they’ve been travelling
hot-foot ever since, so now they’re sleeping
the sleep of exhaustedness,’ Alice said.
’What a heart-rending scene when the patrician
mother wakes in the morning and finds the infant aristocrat
isn’t in bed with his mamma.’
The Baby was fast asleep or else the
girls would have kissed it. They are strangely
fond of kissing. The author never could see anything
in it himself.
‘If the gipsies did steal
it,’ Dora said ’perhaps they’d sell
it to us. I wonder what they’d take for
it.’
‘What could you do with it if you’d got
it?’ H. O. asked.
‘Why, adopt it, of course,’
Dora said. ’I’ve often thought I should
enjoy adopting a baby. It would be a golden deed,
too. We’ve hardly got any in the book yet.’
‘I should have thought there
were enough of us,’ Dicky said.
‘Ah, but you’re none of you babies,’
said Dora.
‘Unless you count H. O. as a baby: he behaves
jolly like one sometimes.’
This was because of what had happened
that morning when Dicky found H. O. going fishing
with a box of worms, and the box was the one Dicky
keeps his silver studs in, and the medal he got at
school, and what is left of his watch and chain.
The box is lined with red velvet and it was not nice
afterwards. And then H. O. said Dicky had hurt
him, and he was a beastly bully, and he cried.
We thought all this had been made up, and were sorry
to see it threaten to break out again. So Oswald
said
‘Oh, bother the Baby! Come along, do!’
And the others came.
We were going to the miller’s
with a message about some flour that hadn’t
come, and about a sack of sharps for the pigs.
After you go down the lane you come
to a clover-field, and then a cornfield, and then
another lane, and then it is the mill. It is a
jolly fine mill: in fact it is two water
and wind ones one of each kind with
a house and farm buildings as well. I never saw
a mill like it, and I don’t believe you have
either.
If we had been in a story-book the
miller’s wife would have taken us into the neat
sanded kitchen where the old oak settle was black
with time and rubbing, and dusted chairs for us old
brown Windsor chairs and given us each
a glass of sweet-scented cowslip wine and a thick
slice of rich home-made cake. And there would
have been fresh roses in an old china bowl on the
table. As it was, she asked us all into the parlour
and gave us Eiffel Tower lemonade and Marie biscuits.
The chairs in her parlour were ‘bent wood’,
and no flowers, except some wax ones under a glass
shade, but she was very kind, and we were very much
obliged to her. We got out to the miller, though,
as soon as we could; only Dora and Daisy stayed with
her, and she talked to them about her lodgers and
about her relations in London.
The miller is a man. He
showed us all over the mills both kinds and
let us go right up into the very top of the wind-mill,
and showed us how the top moved round so that the
sails could catch the wind, and the great heaps of
corn, some red and some yellow (the red is English
wheat), and the heaps slice down a little bit at a
time into a square hole and go down to the mill-stones.
The corn makes a rustling soft noise that is very
jolly something like the noise of the sea and
you can hear it through all the other mill noises.
Then the miller let us go all over
the water-mill. It is fairy palaces inside a
mill. Everything is powdered over white, like
sugar on pancakes when you are allowed to help yourself.
And he opened a door and showed us the great water-wheel
working on slow and sure, like some great, round,
dripping giant, Noel said, and then he asked us if
we fished.
‘Yes,’ was our immediate reply.
‘Then why not try the mill-pool?’
he said, and we replied politely; and when he was
gone to tell his man something we owned to each other
that he was a trump.
He did the thing thoroughly.
He took us out and cut us ash saplings for rods; he
found us in lines and hooks, and several different
sorts of bait, including a handsome handful of meal-worms,
which Oswald put loose in his pocket.
When it came to bait, Alice said she
was going home with Dora and Daisy. Girls are
strange, mysterious, silly things. Alice always
enjoys a rat hunt until the rat is caught, but she
hates fishing from beginning to end. We boys
have got to like it. We don’t feel now as
we did when we turned off the water and stopped the
competition of the competing anglers. We had
a grand day’s fishing that day. I can’t
think what made the miller so kind to us. Perhaps
he felt a thrill of fellow-feeling in his manly breast
for his fellow-sportsmen, for he was a noble fisherman
himself.
We had glorious sport eight
roach, six dace, three eels, seven perch, and a young
pike, but he was so very young the miller asked us
to put him back, and of course we did. ‘He’ll
live to bite another day,’ said the miller.
The miller’s wife gave us bread
and cheese and more Eiffel Tower lemonade, and we
went home at last, a little damp, but full of successful
ambition, with our fish on a string.
It had been a strikingly good time one
of those times that happen in the country quite by
themselves. Country people are much more friendly
than town people. I suppose they don’t have
to spread their friendly feelings out over so many
persons, so it’s thicker, like a pound of butter
on one loaf is thicker than on a dozen. Friendliness
in the country is not scrape, like it is in London.
Even Dicky and H. O. forgot the affair of honour that
had taken place in the morning. H. O. changed
rods with Dicky because H. O.’s was the best
rod, and Dicky baited H. O.’s hook for him,
just like loving, unselfish brothers in Sunday School
magazines.
We were talking fishlikely as we went
along down the lane and through the cornfield and
the cloverfield, and then we came to the other lane
where we had seen the Baby. The tramps were gone,
and the perambulator was gone, and, of course, the
Baby was gone too.
‘I wonder if those gipsies had
stolen the Baby?’ Noel said dreamily. He
had not fished much, but he had made a piece of poetry.
It was this:
’How
I wish
I
was a fish.
I
would not look
At
your hook,
But
lie still and be cool
At
the bottom of the pool
And
when you went to look
At
your cruel hook,
You
would not find me there,
So
there!’
‘If they did steal the Baby,’
Noel went on, ’they will be tracked by the lordly
perambulator. You can disguise a baby in rags
and walnut juice, but there isn’t any disguise
dark enough to conceal a perambulator’s person.’
‘You might disguise it as a wheel-barrow,’
said Dicky.
‘Or cover it with leaves,’ said H. O.,
‘like the robins.’
We told him to shut up and not gibber,
but afterwards we had to own that even a young brother
may sometimes talk sense by accident.
For we took the short cut home from
the lane it begins with a large gap in
the hedge and the grass and weeds trodden down by the
hasty feet of persons who were late for church and
in too great a hurry to go round by the road.
Our house is next to the church, as I think I have
said before, some time.
The short cut leads to a stile at
the edge of a bit of wood (the Parson’s Shave,
they call it, because it belongs to him). The
wood has not been shaved for some time, and it has
grown out beyond the stile and here, among the hazels
and chestnuts and young dogwood bushes, we saw something
white. We felt it was our duty to investigate,
even if the white was only the under side of the tail
of a dead rabbit caught in a trap.
It was not it was part
of the perambulator. I forget whether I said
that the perambulator was enamelled white not
the kind of enamelling you do at home with Aspinall’s
and the hairs of the brush come out and it is gritty-looking,
but smooth, like the handles of ladies very best lace
parasols. And whoever had abandoned the helpless
perambulator in that lonely spot had done exactly
as H. O. said, and covered it with leaves, only they
were green and some of them had dropped off.
The others were wild with excitement.
Now or never, they thought, was a chance to be real
detectives. Oswald alone retained a calm exterior.
It was he who would not go straight to the police
station.
He said: ’Let’s try
and ferret out something for ourselves before we tell
the police. They always have a clue directly they
hear about the finding of the body. And besides,
we might as well let Alice be in anything there is
going. And besides, we haven’t had our dinners
yet.’
This argument of Oswald’s was
so strong and powerful his arguments are
often that, as I daresay you have noticed that
the others agreed. It was Oswald, too, who showed
his artless brothers why they had much better not
take the deserted perambulator home with them.
’The dead body, or whatever
the clue is, is always left exactly as it is found,’
he said, ’till the police have seen it, and the
coroner, and the inquest, and the doctor, and the
sorrowing relations. Besides, suppose someone
saw us with the beastly thing, and thought we had stolen
it; then they would say, “What have you done
with the Baby?” and then where should we be?’
Oswald’s brothers could not answer this question,
but once more Oswald’s native eloquence and
far-seeing discerningness conquered.
‘Anyway,’ Dicky said,
’let’s shove the derelict a little further
under cover.’
So we did.
Then we went on home. Dinner
was ready and so were Alice and Daisy, but Dora was
not there.
‘She’s got a well,
she’s not coming to dinner anyway,’ Alice
said when we asked. ‘She can tell you herself
afterwards what it is she’s got.’
Oswald thought it was headache, or
pain in the temper, or in the pinafore, so he said
no more, but as soon as Mrs Pettigrew had helped us
and left the room he began the thrilling tale of the
forsaken perambulator. He told it with the greatest
thrillingness anyone could have, but Daisy and Alice
seemed almost unmoved. Alice said
‘Yes, very strange,’ and
things like that, but both the girls seemed to be
thinking of something else. They kept looking
at each other and trying not to laugh, so Oswald saw
they had got some silly secret and he said
’Oh, all right! I don’t
care about telling you. I only thought you’d
like to be in it. It’s going to be a really
big thing, with policemen in it, and perhaps a judge.’
‘In what?’ H. O. said; ‘the perambulator?’
Daisy choked and then tried to drink,
and spluttered and got purple, and had to be thumped
on the back. But Oswald was not appeased.
When Alice said, ‘Do go on, Oswald. I’m
sure we all like it very much,’ he said
‘Oh, no, thank you,’ very
politely. ‘As it happens,’ he went
on, ’I’d just as soon go through with
this thing without having any girls in it.’
‘In the perambulator?’ said H. O. again.
‘It’s a man’s job,’ Oswald
went on, without taking any notice of H. O.
‘Do you really think so,’ said Alice,
‘when there’s a baby in it?’
‘But there isn’t,’ said H. O., ‘if
you mean in the perambulator.’
‘Blow you and your perambulator,’ said
Oswald, with gloomy forbearance.
Alice kicked Oswald under the table and said
’Don’t be waxy, Oswald.
Really and truly Daisy and I have got a secret,
only it’s Dora’s secret, and she wants
to tell you herself. If it was mine or Daisy’s
we’d tell you this minute, wouldn’t we,
Mouse?’
‘This very second,’ said the White Mouse.
And Oswald consented to take their apologies.
Then the pudding came in, and no more
was said except asking for things to be passed sugar
and water, and bread and things.
Then when the pudding was all gone, Alice said
‘Come on.’
And we came on. We did not want
to be disagreeable, though really we were keen on
being detectives and sifting that perambulator to the
very dregs. But boys have to try to take an interest
in their sisters’ secrets, however silly.
This is part of being a good brother.
Alice led us across the field where
the sheep once fell into the brook, and across the
brook by the plank. At the other end of the next
field there was a sort of wooden house on wheels,
that the shepherd sleeps in at the time of year when
lambs are being born, so that he can see that they
are not stolen by gipsies before the owners have counted
them.
To this hut Alice now led her kind
brothers and Daisy’s kind brother. ‘Dora
is inside,’ she said, ’with the Secret.
We were afraid to have it in the house in case it
made a noise.’
The next moment the Secret was a secret
no longer, for we all beheld Dora, sitting on a sack
on the floor of the hut, with the Secret in her lap.
It was the High-born Babe!
Oswald was so overcome that he sat
down suddenly, just like Betsy Trotwood did in David
Copperfield, which just shows what a true author Dickens
is.
‘You’ve done it this time,’
he said. ’I suppose you know you’re
a baby-stealer?’
‘I’m not,’ Dora said. ‘I’ve
adopted him.’
‘Then it was you,’ Dicky
said, ’who scuttled the perambulator in the
wood?’
‘Yes,’ Alice said; ’we
couldn’t get it over the stile unless Dora put
down the Baby, and we were afraid of the nettles for
his legs. His name is to be Lord Edward.’
‘But, Dora really, don’t you
think ’
‘If you’d been there you’d
have done the same,’ said Dora firmly. ’The
gipsies had gone. Of course something had frightened
them and they fled from justice. And the little
darling was awake and held out his arms to me.
No, he hasn’t cried a bit, and I know all about
babies; I’ve often nursed Mrs Simpkins’s
daughter’s baby when she brings it up on Sundays.
They have bread and milk to eat. You take him,
Alice, and I’ll go and get some bread and milk
for him.’
Alice took the noble brat. It
was horribly lively, and squirmed about in her arms,
and wanted to crawl on the floor. She could only
keep it quiet by saying things to it a boy would be
ashamed even to think of saying, such as ‘Goo
goo’, and ‘Did ums was’, and ‘Ickle
ducksums, then’.
When Alice used these expressions
the Baby laughed and chuckled and replied
‘Daddadda’, ‘Bababa’, or ‘Glueglue’.
But if Alice stopped her remarks for
an instant the thing screwed its face up as if it
was going to cry, but she never gave it time to begin.
It was a rummy little animal.
Then Dora came back with the bread
and milk, and they fed the noble infant. It was
greedy and slobbery, but all three girls seemed unable
to keep their eyes and hands off it. They looked
at it exactly as if it was pretty.
We boys stayed watching them.
There was no amusement left for us now, for Oswald
saw that Dora’s Secret knocked the bottom out
of the perambulator.
When the infant aristocrat had eaten
a hearty meal it sat on Alice’s lap and played
with the amber heart she wears that Albert’s
uncle brought her from Hastings after the business
of the bad sixpence and the nobleness of Oswald.
‘Now,’ said Dora, ’this
is a council, so I want to be business-like. The
Duckums Darling has been stolen away; its wicked stealers
have deserted the Precious. We’ve got it.
Perhaps its ancestral halls are miles and miles away.
I vote we keep the little Lovey Duck till it’s
advertised for.’
‘If Albert’s uncle lets you,’ said
Dicky darkly.
‘Oh, don’t say “you”
like that,’ Dora said; ’I want it to be
all of our baby. It will have five fathers and
three mothers, and a grandfather and a great Albert’s
uncle, and a great grand-uncle. I’m sure
Albert’s uncle will let us keep it at
any rate till it’s advertised for.’
‘And suppose it never is,’ Noel said.
‘Then so much the better,’ said Dora,
‘the little Duckyux.’
She began kissing the baby again.
Oswald, ever thoughtful, said ’Well,
what about your dinner?’
‘Bother dinner!’ Dora
said so like a girl. ’Will you
all agree to be his fathers and mothers?’
‘Anything for a quiet life,’
said Dicky, and Oswald said
‘Oh, yes, if you like.
But you’ll see we shan’t be allowed to
keep it.’
‘You talk as if he was rabbits
or white rats,’ said Dora, ’and he’s
not he’s a little man, he is.’
‘All right, he’s no rabbit,
but a man. Come on and get some grub, Dora,’
rejoined the kind-hearted Oswald, and Dora did, with
Oswald and the other boys. Only Noel stayed with
Alice. He really seemed to like the baby.
When I looked back he was standing on his head to amuse
it, but the baby did not seem to like him any better
whichever end of him was up.
Dora went back to the shepherd’s
house on wheels directly she had had her dinner.
Mrs Pettigrew was very cross about her not being in
to it, but she had kept her some mutton hot all the
same. She is a decent sort. And there were
stewed prunes. We had some to keep Dora company.
Then we boys went fishing again in the moat, but we
caught nothing.
Just before tea-time we all went back
to the hut, and before we got half across the last
field we could hear the howling of the Secret.
‘Poor little beggar,’
said Oswald, with manly tenderness. ’They
must be sticking pins in it.’
We found the girls and Noel looking
quite pale and breathless. Daisy was walking
up and down with the Secret in her arms. It looked
like Alice in Wonderland nursing the baby that turned
into a pig. Oswald said so, and added that its
screams were like it too.
‘What on earth is the matter with it?’
he said.
‘I don’t know,’
said Alice. ’Daisy’s tired, and Dora
and I are quite worn out. He’s been crying
for hours and hours. You take him a bit.’
‘Not me,’ replied Oswald,
firmly, withdrawing a pace from the Secret.
Dora was fumbling with her waistband
in the furthest corner of the hut.
‘I think he’s cold,’
she said. ’I thought I’d take off
my flannelette petticoat, only the horrid strings
got into a hard knot. Here, Oswald, let’s
have your knife.’
With the word she plunged her hand
into Oswald’s jacket pocket, and next moment
she was rubbing her hand like mad on her dress, and
screaming almost as loud as the Baby. Then she
began to laugh and to cry at the same time. This
is called hysterics.
Oswald was sorry, but he was annoyed
too. He had forgotten that his pocket was half
full of the meal-worms the miller had kindly given
him. And, anyway, Dora ought to have known that
a man always carries his knife in his trousers pocket
and not in his jacket one.
Alice and Daisy rushed to Dora.
She had thrown herself down on the pile of sacks in
the corner. The titled infant delayed its screams
for a moment to listen to Dora’s, but almost
at once it went on again.
‘Oh, get some water!’ said Alice.
‘Daisy, run!’
The White Mouse, ever docile and obedient,
shoved the baby into the arms of the nearest person,
who had to take it or it would have fallen a wreck
to the ground. This nearest person was Oswald.
He tried to pass it on to the others, but they wouldn’t.
Noel would have, but he was busy kissing Dora and
begging her not to. So our hero, for such I may
perhaps term him, found himself the degraded nursemaid
of a small but furious kid.
He was afraid to lay it down, for
fear in its rage it should beat its brains out against
the hard earth, and he did not wish, however innocently,
to be the cause of its hurting itself at all.
So he walked earnestly up and down with it, thumping
it unceasingly on the back, while the others attended
to Dora, who presently ceased to yell.
Suddenly it struck Oswald that the
High-born also had ceased to yell. He looked
at it, and could hardly believe the glad tidings of
his faithful eyes. With bated breath he hastened
back to the sheep-house.
The others turned on him, full of
reproaches about the meal-worms and Dora, but he answered
without anger.
‘Shut up,’ he said in
a whisper of imperial command. ’Can’t
you see it’s gone to sleep?’
As exhausted as if they had all taken
part in all the events of a very long Athletic Sports,
the youthful Bastables and their friends dragged their
weary limbs back across the fields. Oswald was
compelled to go on holding the titled infant, for
fear it should wake up if it changed hands, and begin
to yell again. Dora’s flannelette petticoat
had been got off somehow how I do not seek
to inquire and the Secret was covered with
it. The others surrounded Oswald as much as possible,
with a view to concealment if we met Mrs Pettigrew.
But the coast was clear. Oswald took the Secret
up into his bedroom. Mrs Pettigrew doesn’t
come there much, it’s too many stairs.
With breathless precaution Oswald
laid it down on his bed. It sighed, but did not
wake. Then we took it in turns to sit by it and
see that it did not get up and fling itself out of
bed, which, in one of its furious fits, it would just
as soon have done as not.
We expected Albert’s uncle every minute.
At last we heard the gate, but he
did not come in, so we looked out and saw that there
he was talking to a distracted-looking man on a piebald
horse one of the miller’s horses.
A shiver of doubt coursed through
our veins. We could not remember having done
anything wrong at the miller’s. But you
never know. And it seemed strange his sending
a man up on his own horse. But when we had looked
a bit longer our fears went down and our curiosity
got up. For we saw that the distracted one was
a gentleman.
Presently he rode off, and Albert’s
uncle came in. A deputation met him at the door all
the boys and Dora, because the baby was her idea.
‘We’ve found something,’
Dora said, ’and we want to know whether we may
keep it.’
The rest of us said nothing.
We were not so very extra anxious to keep it after
we had heard how much and how long it could howl.
Even Noel had said he had no idea a baby could yell
like it. Dora said it only cried because it was
sleepy, but we reflected that it would certainly be
sleepy once a day, if not oftener.
‘What is it?’ said Albert’s
uncle. ’Let’s see this treasure-trove.
Is it a wild beast?’
‘Come and see,’ said Dora, and we led
him to our room.
Alice turned down the pink flannelette
petticoat with silly pride, and showed the youthful
heir fatly and pinkly sleeping.
‘A baby!’ said Albert’s
uncle. ‘The Baby! Oh, my cat’s
alive!’
That is an expression which he uses
to express despair unmixed with anger.
‘Where did you? but
that doesn’t matter. We’ll talk of
this later.’
He rushed from the room, and in a
moment or two we saw him mount his bicycle and ride
off.
Quite shortly he returned with the distracted horse-man.
It was his baby, and not titled
at all. The horseman and his wife were the lodgers
at the mill. The nursemaid was a girl from the
village.
She said she only left the Baby
five minutes while she went to speak to her sweetheart
who was gardener at the Red House. But we knew
she left it over an hour, and nearly two.
I never saw anyone so pleased as the distracted horseman.
When we were asked we explained about
having thought the Baby was the prey of gipsies, and
the distracted horseman stood hugging the Baby, and
actually thanked us.
But when he had gone we had a brief
lecture on minding our own business. But Dora
still thinks she was right. As for Oswald and
most of the others, they agreed that they would rather
mind their own business all their lives than mind
a baby for a single hour.
If you have never had to do with a
baby in the frenzied throes of sleepiness you can
have no idea what its screams are like.
If you have been through such a scene
you will understand how we managed to bear up under
having no baby to adopt. Oswald insisted on having
the whole thing written in the Golden Deed book.
Of course his share could not be put in without telling
about Dora’s generous adopting of the forlorn
infant outcast, and Oswald could not and cannot forget
that he was the one who did get that baby to sleep.
What a time Mr and Mrs Distracted
Horseman must have of it, though especially
now they’ve sacked the nursemaid.
If Oswald is ever married I
suppose he must be some day he will have
ten nurses to each baby. Eight is not enough.
We know that because we tried, and the whole eight
of us were not enough for the needs of that deserted
infant who was not so extra high-born after all.