On the fourth day of Judy’s
residence in the loft, Martha Tomlinson remarked to
her fellow-servant and sufferer, Bridget, that she
believed them blessed children were in a conspiracy
to put her “over the river.”
Bridget’s digestion was impaired
that morning, and she merely remarked that she supposed
the dear little things only felt a desire to see her
in her proper place.
I should explain to you, perhaps,
that “over the river” meant Gladesville,
which is Sydney’s Colney Hatch.
Many things had led the unhappy Martha
to a belief in this conspiracy. For instance,
when she went to make Pip’s bed as usual one
morning all the bedclothes had gone. The white
counterpane was spread smoothly over the mattress,
but there was absolutely no trace of the blankets,
sheets, and pillows. She hunted in every possible
and impossible place, questioned the children, and
even applied to Esther, but the missing things could
not be found.
“There’s a man in corduroy
trousers hanging round here every night,” Pip
said, gloomily regarding his stripped bed. “I
shouldn’t wonder if he had something to do with
it.”
Which suggestion was distinctly unkind,
seeing the man in corduroy trousers was Martha’s
most ardent and favoured admirer.
The next day the washing basin in
Meg’s room went, and after that a chair from
the nursery, and a strip of carpet from the top landing,
not to mention such small things as a teapot, a spirit-lamp,
cups and plates, half a horn, and a whole baking of
gingerbread nuts.
The losses preyed upon Martha, for
the things seemed to disappear while the children
were in bed; and though she suspected them, and watched
them continually, she could get no clear proof of their
guilt, nor even find any motive for them abstracting
such things.
And after the disappearance of each
fresh article, Pip used to ask whether the corduroy-trousered
gentleman had been to the house the night before.
And as it always happened, that he had, Martha could
do nothing but cast a wrathful glance at the boy and
flounce from the room.
One night the little chess-table from
the nursery was spirited away.
Pip fell upon Martha’s neck
the next morning early, as she was sweeping the carpet,
and affected to be dissolved in tears.
“‘We never prize the violet,’”
he said, in broken tones. “Ah! Martha,
Martha! we never felt what a treasure we had in you
till now, when your days with us are numbered.”
“Get along with you,”
she said, hitting out at him with the broom handle.
“And I ain’t a-goin’ to leave, so
don’t you think it. You’d have it
your own way then too much. No; you don’t
get shut of Martha Tomlinson just yet, young man.”
“But won’t he be wanting
you, Martha?” he said gently. “His
furnishing must be nearly finished now. He’s
not taken a saucepan yet, nor a flat-iron, I know;
but there’s everything else, Martha; and I don’t
mind telling you in confidence I’m thinking of
giving you a flat-iron myself as a wedding present,
so you needn’t wait till he comes for that.”
“Get out with you!” said
Martha again, thrusting the broom-head right into
his face, and nearly choking him with dust. “It’s
a limb of the old gentleman himself you are.”
Away in the loft things were getting very comfortable.
A couple of rugs hung on the walls
kept out the draught. Judy’s bed, soft
and warm, was in a corner; she had a chair to sit in,
a table to eat at, even a basin in which to perform
her ablutions. And she had company all day; and
nearly always all night. Once Meg had stolen
away, after fastening her bedroom door, and had shared
the bed in the loft; once Nellie had gone, and the
other night Pip had taken a couple of blankets and
made himself a shakedown among the straw. They
used to pay her visits at all hours of the day, creeping
up the creaking ladder one after the other, whenever
they could get away unnoticed.
The governess had, as it happened,
a fortnight’s holiday, to nurse a sick mother,
so the girls and Bunty had no demands on their time.
Pip used to go to school late and come back early,
cajoling notes of excuse, whenever, possible, out
of Esther. He even played the truant once, and
took a caning for it afterwards quite good-humouredly.
Judy still looked pale and tired,
and her cough was rather troublesome; but she was
fast getting her high spirits back, and was enjoying
her adventure immensely.
The only drawback was the cribbed,
cabined, and confined space of the loft.
“You will have to arrange
things so that I can go for a run,” she said
one morning, in a determined manner. “My
legs are growing shorter, I am sure, with not exercising
them. I shall have forgotten how to walk by
the end of the week.”
Pip didn’t think it could be
done; Meg besought her to run no risks; but Bunty
and Nell were eager for it.
“Meg could talk to Father,”
Bunty said, “and Pip could keep teasing General
till Esther would be frightened to leave the room,
and then me and Judy would nick down and have a run,
and get back before you let them go.”
Judy shook her head.
“That would be awfully stale,”
she said. “If I go, I shall stay down
some time. Why shouldn’t we have a picnic
down at the river?”
“Oh, yes, let’s!” Bunty cried, with
sparkling eyes.
“I’m sure we could manage
it especially as it’s Saturday, and Pip hasn’t
to go to school,” Judy continued, thinking it
rapidly out. “Two of you could go and get
some food. Tell Martha you are all going for
a picnic she’ll be glad enough not
to have dinner to set then you go on.
Two others can watch if the coast’s clear while
I get down and across the paddocks, and once we’re
at the corner of the road we’re safe.”
It seemed feasible enough, and in
a very short time the preparations were all made.
Pip was mounting guard at the shed, and had undertaken
to get Judy safely away, and Bunty had been stationed
on the back veranda to keep cave and whistle three
times if there was any danger.
He was to wait for a quarter of an
hour by the kitchen clock, and then, if all was well,
to bring the big billy and a bread loaf, and catch
the others up on the road.
It was slow work waiting there, and
he stood on one leg, like a meditative fowl, and reviewed
the events of the last few exciting days.
He had a depressed feeling at his
heart, but why he could hardly tell. Perhaps
it was the lie he had told his father, and which was
still unconfessed, because the horse was seriously
lame, and his courage oozed away every time he thought
of that riding-whip.
Perhaps it was the reaction after
the great excitement. Or it may have been a
rankling sense of injustice at the small glory his
brave deeds on Judy’s behalf evoked from the
others. They did not seem to attach any importance
to them, and, indeed, laughed every time he alluded
to them or drew public attention to his scars.
Two or three of the scratches on his legs were really
bad ones, and while he was standing waiting he turned
down his stockings and gazed at these with pitying
eyes and something like a sob in his throat.
“Nobody cares!” he muttered,
and one of his ever-ready tears fell splashing down
on one extended bare leg. “Judy likes Pip
best, and he never climbed the cactus; Meg thinks
I tell stories; and Nellie says I’m a greedy
pig nobody cares!”
Another great fat tear gathered and
fell. “Have you taken root there?”
a voice asked.
His father, smoking at the open french
window, had been watching him, and marvelling at his
rare and exceeding quietness.
Bunty started, guiltily, and pulled up his stockings.
“I’m not doin’ nothin’,”
he said aggrievedly, after a minute’s pause.
Bunty always lapsed into evil grammar when agitated.
“Nothing at all. I’m goin’
to a picnic.”
“Ah, indeed!” said the
Captain. “You looked as if you were meditating
on some fresh mischief, or sorrowing over some old which
was it?”
Bunty turned a little pale, but remarked
again he “wasn’t doin’ nothin’.”
The Captain felt in a lazy, teasing
mood, and his little fat, dirty son, was the only
subject near.
“Suppose you come here and confess
every bit of mischief you’ve done this week,”
he said gravely. “I’ve the whole
morning to spare, and it’s time I saw to your
morals a little.”
Bunty approached the arm of the chair
indicated, but went whiter than ever.
“Ah, now we’re comfortable.
Well, there was stealing from the pantry on Tuesday that’s
one,” he said, encouragingly. “Now
then.”
“I n n never
did n nothin’ else,” Bunty gasped.
He felt certain it was all over with him, and the
cricket ball episode was discovered. He even
looked nervously round to see if the riding-whip was
near. Yes, there was Esther’s silver-topped
one flung carelessly on a chair. He found time
to wish fervently Esther was a tidy woman.
“Nothing at all, Bunty?
On your word?” said his father, in an impressive
tone.
“I was p playin’
marbles,” he said, in a shaking voice.
“How c c could I have
sh shot anything at y y your
old horse?”
“Horse ah!”
said his father. A light broke upon him, and
his face grew stern. “What did you throw
at Mazeppa to lame him? Answer me at once.”
Bunty gave a shuddering glance at the whip.
“N-n-nothin’,” he
answered “n nothin’
at all. My c c cricket
b ball was up in the st st stables.
I was only p p playin’
marbles.” The Captain gave him a little
shake.
“Did you lame Mazeppa with the
cricket ball?” he said sternly.
“N n no
I n never,” Bunty whispered, white
to the lips. Then semi-repentance came to him,
and he added: “It just rolled out of my
p p pocket, and M Mazeppa
was passing and h h hit his l-leg
on it.”
“Speak the truth, or I’ll
thrash you within an inch of your life,” the
Captain said, standing up, and seizing Esther’s
whip: “Now then, sir was it
you lamed Mazeppa?”
“Yes,” said Bunty, bursting
into a roar of crying, and madly dodging the whip.
Then, as the strokes descended on
his unhappy shoulders, he filled the air with his
familiar wail of “’Twasn’t me, ’twasn’t
my fault!”
“You contemptible young cur!”
said his father, pausing a moment when his arm ached
with wielding the whip. “I’ll thrash
this mean spirit of lying and cowardice out of you,
or kill you in the attempt.” Swish, swish.
“What sort of a man do you think you’ll
make?” Swish, swish. “Telling lies
just to save your miserable skin!” Swish, swish,
swish, swish.
“You’ve killed me oh,
you’ve killed me! I know you have!”
yelled the wretched child, squirming all over the
floor. “’Twasn’t me, ’twasn’t
my fault hit the others some.”
Swish, swish, swish. “Do
you think the others would lie so contemptibly?
Philip never lied to me. Judy would cut her
tongue out first.” Swish, swish, swish.
“Going to a picnic, are you? You can
picnic in your room till to-morrow’s breakfast.”
Swish, swish, swish. “Pah get
away with you!”
Human endurance could go no further.
The final swish had been actual agony to his smarting,
quivering shoulders and back. He thought of
the others, happy and heedless, out in the sunshine,
trudging merrily off to the river, without a thought
of what he was bearing, and his very heart seethed
to burst in the hugeness of its bitterness and despair.
“Judy’s home!” he said, in a choking,
passionate voice. “She lives in the old
shed in the cow, paddock. Boo, hoo, hoo!
They’re keepin’ it secret from you.
Boo, hoo. She’s gone to the picnic, and
she’s run away from school.”