MISSING!
“Well, well,” said Mr.
Rowles, “never mind; we must eat our dinners
without her. She would not miss her share of this
cabbage if she knew how tasty and juicy it is.”
Mrs. Rowles sat down very unwillingly.
If the child was not on the island where could she
be? It was very strange.
“She has no idea of time,”
Mr. Rowles went on, between mouthfuls of the cabbage.
“I’m not going to blame her for that; she
only takes after her father, who does not know day
from night.”
They had a dull meal, being more anxious
about Juliet than they cared to confess to each other.
They thought she might have gone up the towing-path,
or down the towing-path, or by the road towards the
village, or by the fields towards the station.
And at every sound from outside someone went to the
door peering out with the hope of seeing the child.
But an hour passed, and no Juliet appeared. Then
her aunt became seriously anxious, dreading lest some
terrible thing should have happened.
“If she had fallen into the lock ”
said Mrs. Rowles.
“We should have heard her scream,” said
Mr. Rowles.
“If she had been kidnapped by gipsies,”
said Emily; “but then ”
“There are no gipsies about,” said Philip.
Mrs. Rowles now began to think that
Juliet must have set off to go home. “We
have not been kind enough to her, poor child, and she
can’t bear it any longer.”
“Don’t talk nonsense,”
was Rowles’s reply, as he obeyed a call to the
lock. “We’ve been too kind; and if
Thomas Mitchell had taken to any sensible business
that did not keep him up all night, thereby breaking
down his health, he would be able to support his family,
and there would be no need for us to bother ourselves
with such a cross-grained girl as that. Now,
Phil, off to your digging again. Yes, gents, I
know; how they do keep calling out for one, to be sure!”
Philip went out to the kitchen-garden.
Within a few minutes his voice was heard, loudly raised.
“Here! Father! Mother!
Emily! Come quick! Just look here!”
All three responded to his call
“Whatever is the matter?”
“Why, look there! The boat is gone!”
“So she is! Well, I never!”
and Mr. Rowles stared blankly at the post to which
his boat was usually moored. “Someone has
made off with the Fairy. That beats everything!”
Mrs. Rowles was wringing her hands.
“Oh, dear, dear, dear! This is worse than
I expected. She never will come home again safe!”
“No,” said the lock-keeper,
“them that has took her are not likely to send
her back; and if so be as she has drifted down by accident
she will be drawn over Banksome Weir and be smashed.
I’m glad she is only an old, worn-out thing.”
“An old, worn-out thing!”
cried Mrs. Rowles, quite wildly. “A poor,
dear child of twelve! What are you thinking of?”
“I was thinking of the Fairy.
You don’t mean, wife ” and he
grew more serious “you don’t
mean that you think the child was in her?”
“That is what I do think, Ned.”
“Well, that is bad.”
“And see,” cried Phil,
“she must have taken the sculls, for they are
gone too. I know Juliet thought she could manage
a boat; she said so the other day.”
Emily was crying. Mr and Mrs.
Rowles looked at each other in an agony. They
knew pretty well what must happen to Juliet alone in
a boat. She would be carried rapidly down stream,
and the current would draw the little bark to the
weir, and over the weir, and it would be dashed about
by the swirling rush of water, capsized, and its occupant
thrown out. And nothing more would be seen of
poor Juliet but a white, lifeless body carried home.
Oh, it was too sad to think of!
“What can we do? What can we do? What
would her own mother do?”
“Hope for the best, Emma,”
said Mr. Rowles. “If I had another boat
I would send Phil down to look for her. Perhaps
the next boat that goes through would let him jump
into the bows.”
“I might run down the towing-path,”
said Phil. “I can run pretty quick.”
“And if you did see her in the
Fairy out in mid-stream, how could you get
near enough to help her? No; the only chance will
be to ask some of them to take you down in their boat.
Here they come; both ways.”
The lower gate of the lock was open,
so that the boat coming up passed through first.
Rowles worked the handles as quickly as he could;
standing on the bank while the lock filled he asked
the two gentlemen in the boat if they had seen anything
of a little girl out by herself on the river.
“No,” replied one of the
young men; “we only started from just below
Littlebourne Ferry. I have noticed no little girl
in a boat.”
“Nor I,” added the other
gentleman. “And I think I should have noticed
such a person, for little girls don’t often go
out boating alone.”
“And an ignorant London child,
too,” groaned Mr. Rowles. “And many
a time I told her never to think of boating by herself;
but she is so obstinate and so stupid, there is no
knowing what she has done. And if you gentlemen
have not met her, she must have got below Littlebourne
Ferry, and then she would be very near Banksome Weir,
and there is no saying what has become of her.”
The two gentlemen looked very grave,
but did not offer to turn and go down stream to look
for Juliet.
As their boat came out of the lock
another was waiting to come in. It contained
Mr. Webster, the vicar of Littlebourne, and his wife.
“Beg your pardon, sir,”
said Rowles as soon as he had closed the gate above
them, “would you mind if Philip was to jump into
your bows and go down a bit with you? Because
there’s a girl, my niece in fact, who must have
gone off in my little Fairy, and she don’t
know bow oar from stroke, and if she gets alongside
Banksome Weir she’ll go over and be drowned.”
“Oh, dear me!” said Mr.
Webster. “How did the child come to be all
alone in a boat?”
“Through being brought up without
a grain of sense. What can you expect when the
father sleeps all day so that he never can give a word
of advice to his children? Now, in with you, Phil;
and I shall be glad to see you come back ”
he broke off with a cough.
“I will pull as hard as I can,”
said Mr. Webster. “We must hope that by
God’s mercy the child will be saved.”
Phil dropped from the bank into the
boat, and the moment they were out of the lock the
boat went flying down the river as fast as the current
and the vicar’s strong arms could send her.
“She will be very wet when she
comes in,” said Mrs. Rowles; “it is beginning
to rain.”
“She’ll be pretty wet
if she’s been in the river,” said Mr. Rowles.
His wife heaped up the kitchen fire
and put coffee on to boil, and laid some clean garments
to get warm, and waited with anxious heart for some
news of the missing child.
Emily went up to the attic and looked
at the belongings of Juliet, which lay on the table
and hung on pegs. Her cousin’s real character
was better known to Emily than to anyone else at Littlebourne
Lock. Juliet was proud and conceited, and thought
she could do whatever other people did; then, when
her carelessness brought her into accidents and difficulties,
she would grow very cross and angry with herself,
and when reproved for her faults would say, “I
don’t care; I’m that stupid and awkward
that I can’t do anything right.” Emily
had seen her stamping on the ground at the end of
the garden after some unfortunate occurrence, and
had heard her sobbing and choking in her bed after
some stern words from Mr. Rowles. Emily knew that
it was not humility but wounded pride which made Juliet
so sullen and dull; and Emily wondered if a girl who
did not wish to learn, and would not condescend to
be taught, could ever possibly improve.
“And if she is drowned,”
cried Emily with a burst of tears, “she can
never learn anything more on earth! Oh, I do pray
to God to let Juliet be saved, and learn, and grow
better!”
The sky became dark, distant thunder
growled over the hill; would Juliet Mitchell escape
the consequences of her disobedience and self-conceit?