“My poor pets!” a lady
exclaimed, sorrowfully; “it is too bad.
They all knew me so well; and ran to meet me, when
they saw me coming; and seemed really pleased to see
me, even when I had no food to give them.”
“Which was not often, my dear,”
Captain Ripon her husband said.
“However it is, as you say, too bad; and I will
bring the fellow to justice, if I can. There
are twelve prize fowls worth a couple of
guineas apiece, not to mention the fact of their being
pets of yours stolen, probably by tramps;
who will eat them, and for whom the commonest barn-door
chickens would have done as well. There are marks
of blood in two or three places, so they have evidently
been killed for food. The house was locked up
last night, all right; for you see they got in by
breaking in a panel of the door.
“Robson, run down to the village,
at once, and tell the policeman to come up here; and
ask if any gypsies, or tramps, have been seen in the
neighborhood.”
The village lay at the gate of Captain
Ripon’s park, and the gardener soon returned
with the policeman.
“I’ve heard say there
are some gypsies camped on Netherwood Common, four
miles away,” that functionary said, in answer
to Captain Ripon.
“Put the gray mare in the dog
cart, Sam. We will drive over at once. They
will hardly expect us so soon. We will pick up
another policeman, at Netherwood. They may show
fight, if we are not in strength.”
Five minutes later, Captain Ripon
was traveling along the road at the rate of twelve
miles an hour; with Sam by his side, and the policeman
sitting behind. At Netherwood they took up another
policeman and, a few minutes later, drove up to the
gypsy encampment.
There was a slight stir when they
were seen approaching; and then the gypsies went on
with their usual work, the women weaving baskets from
osiers, the men cutting up gorse into skewers.
There were four low tents, and a wagon stood near;
a bony horse grazing on the common.
“Now,” Captain Ripon said,
“I am a magistrate, and I daresay you know what
I have come for. My fowl house has been broken
open, and some valuable fowls stolen.
“Now, policeman, look about,
and see if you can find any traces of them.”
The gypsies rose to their feet, with angry gestures.
“Why do you come to us?”
one of the men said. “When a fowl is stolen
you always suspect us, as if there were no other thieves
in the world.”
“There are plenty of other thieves,
my friend; and we shall not interfere with you, if
we find nothing suspicious.”
“There have been some fowls
plucked, here,” one of the policemen said.
“Here is a little feather ”
and he showed one, of only half an inch in length
“ and there is another, on that woman’s
hair. They have cleaned them up nicely enough,
but it ain’t easy to pick up every feather.
I’ll be bound we find a fowl, in the pot.”
Two of the gypsies leaped forward,
stick in hand; but the oldest man present said a word
or two to them, in their own dialect.
“You may look in the pot,”
he said, turning to Captain Ripon, “and maybe
you will find a fowl there, with other things.
We bought ’em at the market at Hunston, yesterday.”
The policeman lifted the lid off the
great pot, which was hanging over the fire, and stirred
up the contents with a stick.
“There’s rabbits here two
or three of them, I should say and a fowl,
perhaps two, but they are cut up.”
“I cannot swear to that,”
Captain Ripon said, examining the portions of fowl,
“though the plumpness of the breasts, and the
size, show that they are not ordinary fowls.”
He looked round again at the tents.
“But I can pretty well swear
to this,” he said, as he stooped and picked
up a feather which lay, half concealed, between the
edge of one of the tents and the grass. “This
is a breast feather of a Spangled Dorking. These
are not birds which would be sold for eating in Hunston
market, and it will be for these men to show where
they got it from.”
A smothered oath broke from one or
two of the men. The elder signed to them to be
quiet.
“That’s not proof,”
he said, insolently. “You can’t convict
five men, because the feather of a fowl which you
cannot swear to is found in their camp.”
“No,” Captain Ripon said,
quietly. “I do not want to convict anyone
but the thief; but the proof is sufficient for taking
you in custody, and we shall find out which was the
guilty man, afterwards.
“Now, lads, it will be worse
for you, if you make trouble.
“Constables, take them up to
Mr. Bailey. He lives half a mile away. Fortunately,
we have means of proving which is the fellow concerned.
“Now, Sam, you and I will go
up with the Netherwood constable to Mr. Bailey.
“And do you,” he said,
to the other policeman, “keep a sharp watch
over these women. You say you can find nothing
in the tents; but it is likely the other fowls are
hid, not far off, and I will put all the boys of the
village to search, when I come back.”
The gypsies, with sullen faces, accompanied
Captain Ripon and the policeman to the magistrate’s.
“Is that feather the only proof
you have, Ripon?” Mr. Bailey asked, when he
had given his evidence. “I do not think
that it will be enough to convict, if unsupported;
besides, you cannot bring it home to any one of them.
But it is sufficient for me to have them locked up
for twenty-four hours and, in the meantime, you may
find the other fowls.”
“But I have means of identification,”
Captain Ripon said. “There is a footmark
in some earth, at the fowl house door. It is made
by a boot which has got hobnails and a horseshoe heel,
and a piece of that heel has been broken off.
“Now, which of these men has
got such a boot on? Whichever has, he is the
man.”
There was a sudden movement among the accused.
“It’s of no use,”
one of them said, when the policeman approached to
examine their boots. “I’m the man,
I’ll admit it. I can’t get over the
boot,” and he held up his right foot.
“That is the boot, sir,”
the constable exclaimed. “I can swear that
it will fit the impression, exactly.”
“Very well,” the magistrate
said. “Constable, take that man to the
lockup; and bring him before the bench, tomorrow, for
final committal for trial. There is no evidence
against the other four. They can go.”
With surly, threatening faces the
men left the room; while the constable placed handcuffs
on the prisoner.
“Constable,” Mr. Bailey
said, “you had better not put this man in the
village lockup. The place is of no great strength,
and his comrades would as likely as not get him out,
tonight. Put him in my dog cart. My groom
shall drive you over to Hunston.”
Captain Ripon returned with his groom
to Netherwood, and set all the children searching
the gorse, copses, and hedges near the common, by
the promise of ten shillings reward, if they found
the missing fowls. Half an hour later, the gypsies
struck their tents, loaded the van, and went off.
Late that afternoon, the ten missing
fowls were discovered in a small copse by the wayside,
half a mile from the common, on the road to Captain
Ripon’s park.
“I cannot bring your fowls back
to life, Emma,” that gentleman said, when he
returned home, “but I have got the thief.
It was one of the gypsies on Netherwood Common.
We found two of the fowls in their pot. No doubt
they thought that they would have plenty of time to
get their dinner before anyone came, even if suspicion
fell on them; and they have hidden the rest away somewhere,
but I expect that we shall find them.
“They had burnt all the feathers,
as they thought; but I found a breast feather of a
Spangled Dorking, and that was enough for me to give
them in custody. Then, when it came to the question
of boots, the thief found it no good to deny it, any
longer.”
That evening, Captain Ripen was told
that a woman wished to speak to him and, on going
out into the hall, he saw a gypsy of some thirty years
of age.
“I have come, sir, to beg you
not to appear against my husband.”
“But, my good woman, I see no
reason why I should not do so. If he had only
stolen a couple of common fowls, for a sick wife or
child, I might have been inclined to overlook it for
I am not fond of sending men to prison but
to steal a dozen valuable fowls, for the pot, is a
little too much. Besides, the matter has gone
too far, now, for me to retract, even if I wished
to which I certainly do not.”
“He is a good husband, sir.”
“He may be,” Captain Ripon
said, “though that black eye you have got does
not speak in his favor But that has nothing to do with
it. Matters must take their course.”
The woman changed her tone.
“I have asked you fairly, sir;
and it will be better for you if you don’t prosecute
Reuben.”
“Oh, nonsense, my good woman!
Don’t let me have any threats, or it will be
worse for you.”
“I tell you,” the woman
exclaimed, fiercely, “it will be the worse for
you, if you appear against my Reuben.”
“There, go out,” Captain
Ripon said, opening the front door of the hall.
“As if I cared for your ridiculous threats!
Your husband will get what he deserves five
years, if I am not mistaken.”
“You will repent this,”
the gypsy said, as she passed out.
Captain Ripon closed the door after
her, without a word.
“Well, who was it?” his
wife inquired, when he returned to the drawing room.
“An insolent gypsy woman, wife
of the man who stole the fowls. She had the impudence
to threaten me, if I appeared against him.”
“Oh, Robert!” the young
wife exclaimed, apprehensively, “what could
she do? Perhaps you had better not appear.”
“Nonsense, my dear!” her
husband laughed. “Not appear, because an
impudent gypsy woman has threatened me? A nice
magistrate I should be! Why, half the fellows
who are committed swear that they will pay off the
magistrate, some day; but nothing ever comes of it.
Here, we have been married six months, and you are
wanting me to neglect my duty; especially when it
is your pet fowls which have been stolen.
“Why, at the worst, my dear,”
he went on, seeing that his wife still looked pale,
“they could burn down a tick or two, on a windy
night in winter and, to satisfy you, I will have an
extra sharp lookout kept in that direction, and have
a watchdog chained up near them.
“Come, my love, it is not worth
giving a second thought about; and I shall not tell
you about my work on the bench, if you are going to
take matters to heart like this.”
The winter came and went, and the
ricks were untouched, and Captain Ripon forgot all
about the gypsy’s threats. At the assizes
a previous conviction was proved against her husband,
and he got five years penal servitude and, after the
trial was over, the matter passed out of the minds
of both husband and wife.
They had, indeed, other matters to
think about for, soon after Christmas, a baby boy
was born, and monopolized the greater portion of his
mother’s thoughts. When, in due time, he
was taken out for walks, the old women of the village perhaps
with an eye to presents from the Park were
unanimous in declaring that he was the finest boy
ever seen, and the image both of his father and mother.
He certainly was a fine baby; and
his mother lamented sorely over the fact that he had
a dark blood mark, about the size of a three-penny
piece, upon his shoulder. Her husband, however,
consoled her by pointing out that as it
was a boy the mark did not matter in the
slightest; whereas had it been a girl the
mark would have been a disfigurement, when she attained
to the dignified age at which low dresses are worn.
“Yes, of course, that would
have been dreadful, Robert. Still, you know,
it is a pity.”
“I really cannot see that it
is even a pity, little woman; and it would have made
no great difference if he had been spotted all over,
like a leopard, so that his face and arms were free.
The only drawback would have been he would have got
some nickname or other, such as ‘the Leopard,’
or ‘Spotty,’ or something of that sort,
when he went to bathe with his school fellows.
But this little spot does not matter, in the slightest.
“Some day or other Tom will
laugh, when I tell him what a fuss you made over it.”
Mrs. Ripon was silenced but, although
she said nothing more about it, she was grieved in
her heart at this little blemish on her boy; and lamented
that it would spoil his appearance, when he began to
run about in little short frocks; and she determined,
at once, that he should wear long curls, until he
got into jackets.
Summer, autumn, and winter came and
passed. In the spring, Tom Ripon was toddling
about; but he had not yet begun to talk, although
his mother declared that certain incoherent sounds,
which he made, were quite plain and distinct words;
but her husband, while willing to allow that they
might be perfectly intelligible to her, insisted that to
the male ear they in no way resembled words.
“But he ought to begin to talk,
Robert,” his wife urged. “He is sixteen
months old, now, and can run about quite well.
He really ought to begin to talk.”
“He will talk, before long,”
her husband said, carelessly. “Many children
do not talk till they are eighteen months old, some
not till they are two years. Besides, you say
he does begin, already.”
“Yes, Robert, but not quite plainly.”
“No, indeed, not plainly at
all,” her husband laughed. “Don’t
trouble, my dear, he will talk soon enough; and if
he only talks as loud as he roars, sometimes, you
will regret the hurry you have been in about it.”
“Oh, Robert, how can you talk
so? I am sure he does not cry more than other
children. Nurse says he is the best child she
ever knew.”
“Of course she does, my dear;
nurses always do. But I don’t say he roars
more than other children. I only say he roars,
and that loudly; so you need not be afraid of there
being anything the matter with his tongue, or his
lungs.
“What fidgets you young mothers are, to be sure!”
“And what heartless things you
young fathers are, to be sure!” his wife retorted,
laughing. “Men don’t deserve to have
children. They do not appreciate them, one bit.”
“We appreciate them, in our
way, little woman; but it is not a fussy way.
We are content with them as they are, and are not in
any hurry for them to run, or to walk, or to cut their
first teeth. Tom is a fine little chap, and I
am very fond of him, in his way principally,
perhaps, because he is your Tom but I cannot
see that he is a prodigy.”
“He is a prodigy,” Mrs.
Ripon said, with a little toss of her head, “and
I shall go up to the nursery, to admire him.”
So saying, she walked off with dignity;
and Captain Ripon went out to look at his horses,
and thought to himself what a wonderful dispensation
of providence it was, that mothers were so fond of
their babies.
“I don’t know what the
poor little beggars would do,” he muttered,
“if they had only their fathers to look after
them; but I suppose we should take to it, just as
the old goose in the yard has taken to that brood
of chickens, whose mother was carried off by the fox.
“By the way, I must order some
wire netting. I forgot to write for it, yesterday.”
Another two months. It was June,
and now even Captain Ripon allowed that Tom could
say “Pa,” and “Ma,” with tolerable
distinctness; but as yet he had got no farther.
He could now run about sturdily and, as the season
was warm and bright, and Mrs. Ripon believed in fresh
air, the child spent a considerable portion of his
time in the garden.
One day his mother was out with him,
and he had been running about for some time.
Mrs. Ripon was picking flowers, for she had a dinner
party that evening, and she enjoyed getting her flowers,
and arranging her vases, herself. Presently she
looked round, but Tom was missing. There were
many clumps of ornamental shrubs on the lawn, and
Mrs. Ripon thought nothing of his disappearance.
“Tom,” she called, “come
to mamma, she wants you,” and went on with her
work.
A minute or two passed.
“Where is that little pickle?”
she said. “Hiding, I suppose,” and
she went off in search.
Nowhere was Tom to be seen. She
called loudly, and searched in the bushes.
“He must have gone up to the house.
“Oh, here comes nurse.
Nurse, have you seen Master Tom? He has just
run away,” she called.
“No, ma’am, I have seen nothing of him.”
“He must be about the garden
then, somewhere. Look about, nurse. Where
can the child have hidden itself?”
Nurse and mother ran about, calling
loudly the name of the missing child. Five minutes
later Mrs. Ripon ran into the study, where her husband
was going through his farm accounts.
“Oh, Robert,” she said,
“I can’t find Tom!” and she burst
into tears.
“Not find Tom?” her husband
said, rising in surprise. “Why, how long
have you missed him?”
“He was out in the garden with
me. I was picking flowers for the dinner table
and, when I looked round, he was gone. Nurse and
I have been looking everywhere, and calling, but we
cannot find him.”
“Oh, he is all right,”
Captain Ripon said, cheerfully. “Do not
alarm yourself, little woman. He must have wandered
into the shrubbery. We shall hear him howling,
directly. But I will come and look for him.”
No better success attended Captain
Ripon’s search than that which his wife had
met with. He looked anxious, now. The gardeners
and servants were called, and soon every place in
the garden was ransacked.
“He must have got through the
gate, somehow, into the park,” Captain Ripon
said, hurrying in that direction. “He certainly
is not in the garden, or in any of the hothouses.”
Some of the men had already gone in
that direction. Presently Captain Ripon met one,
running back.
“I have been down to the gate,
sir, and can see nothing of Master Tom; but in the
middle of the drive, just by the clump of laurels
by the gate, this boot was lying just as
if it had been put there on purpose, to be seen.”
“Nonsense!” Captain Ripon
said. “What can that have to do with it?”
Nevertheless he took the boot, and
looked at it. It was a roughly-made, heavy boot,
such as would be worn by a laboring man. He was
about to throw it carelessly aside, and to proceed
on his search, when he happened to turn it over.
Then he started, as if struck.
“Good Heaven!” he exclaimed, “it
is the gypsy’s.”
Yes, he remembered it now. The
man had pleaded not guilty, when brought up at the
assizes, and the boot had been produced as evidence.
He remembered it particularly because, after the man
was sentenced, his wife had provoked a smile by asking
that the boots might be given up to her; in exchange
for a better pair for her husband to put on, when
discharged from prison.
Yes, it was clear. The gypsy
woman had kept her word, and had taken her revenge.
She had stolen the child, and had placed the boot
where it would attract attention, in order that the
parents might know the hand that struck them.
Instantly Captain Ripon ran to the
stable, ordered the groom to mount at once, and scour
every road and lane; while he himself rode off to
Hunston to give notice to the police, and offer a large
reward for the child’s recovery. He charged
the man who had brought the boot to carry it away,
and put it in a place of safety till it was required;
and on no account to mention to a soul where he put
it.
Before riding off he ran in to his
wife, who was half wild with grief, to tell her that
he was going to search outside the park; and that
she must keep up her spirits for, no doubt, Tom would
turn up all right, in no time.
He admitted to himself, however, as
he galloped away, that he was not altogether sure
that Tom would be so speedily recovered. The
woman would never have dared to place the boot on the
road, and so give a clue against herself, unless she
felt very confident that she could get away, or conceal
herself.
“She has probably some hiding
place, close by the park,” he said to himself,
“where she will lie hid till night, and will
then make across country.”
He paused at the village, and set
the whole population at work, by telling them that
his child was missing and had, he believed,
been carried off by a gypsy woman and that
he would give fifty pounds to anyone who would find
him. She could not be far off, as it was only
about half an hour since the child had been missed.
Then he galloped to Hunston, set the
police at work and, going to a printer, told him instantly
to set up and strike off placards, offering five hundred
pounds reward for the recovery of the child.
This was to be done in an hour or two, and then taken
to the police station for distribution throughout
the country round. Having now done all in his
power, Captain Ripon rode back as rapidly as he had
come, in hopes that the child might already have been
found.
No news had, however, been obtained
of him, nor had anyone seen any strange woman in the
neighborhood.
On reaching the house, he found his
wife prostrated with grief and, in answer to her questions,
he thought it better to tell her about the discovery
of the boot.
“We may be some little time,
before we find the boy,” he said; “but
we shall find him, sooner or later. I have got
placards out already, offering five hundred pounds
reward; and this evening I will send advertisements
to all the papers in this and the neighboring counties.
“Do not fret, darling.
The woman has done it out of spite, no doubt; but
she will not risk putting her neck in a noose, by
harming the child. It is a terrible grief, but
it will only be for a time. We are sure to find
him before long.”
Later in the evening, when Mrs. Ripon
had somewhat recovered her composure, she said to
her husband -
“How strange are God’s
ways, Robert. How wicked and wrong in us to grumble!
I was foolish enough to fret over that mark on the
darling’s neck, and now the thought of it is
my greatest comfort. If it should be God’s
will that months or years should pass over, before
we find him, there is a sign by which we shall always
know him. No other child can be palmed off upon
us, as our own. When we find Tom we shall know
him, however changed he may be!”
“Yes, dear,” her husband
said, “God is very good, and this trial may
be sent us for the best. As you say, we can take
comfort, now, from what we were disposed to think,
at the time, a little cross. After that, dear,
we may surely trust in God. That mark was placed
there that we might know our boy again and, were it
not decreed that we should again see him, that mark
would have been useless.”
The thought, for a time, greatly cheered
Mrs. Ripon but, gradually, the hope that she should
ever see her boy again faded away; and Captain Ripon
became much alarmed at the manifest change in her
health.
In spite of all Captain Ripon could
do, no news was obtained of the gypsy, or Tom.
For weeks he rode about the country, asking questions
in every village; or hurried away to distant parts
of England, where the police thought they had a clue.
It was all in vain. Every gypsy
encampment in the kingdom was searched, but without
avail; and even the police, sharp eyed as they are,
could not guess that the decent-looking Irishwoman,
speaking when she did speak, which was seldom,
for she was a taciturn woman with a strong
brogue, working in a laundry in a small street in
the Potteries, Notting Hill, was the gypsy they were
looking for; or that the little boy, whose father she
said was at sea, was the child for whose discovery
a thousand pounds was continually advertised.