And now it seemed as if our difficulties
were at an end, for the passage to Kingston, Jamaica,
was a pleasant one, and we took our berths from there
in the mail, which landed us in safety at Southampton,
without a soul suspecting the nature of the treasure
that we had on board, one which we had gone through
so much peril to obtain.
It was a fine evening in July, that,
after leaving my uncle and the others at a comfortable
London hotel, Tom and I, after a quick run down by
rail, found ourselves once more in the streets of the
little town which we had left upon our setting off
to foreign lands in quest of our fortunes.
How familiar everything seemed and
yet how shrunken! Houses that I used to consider
large appeared to have grown small, and people that
I had been in the habit of considering great and important,
somehow looked as if they were of no consequence at
all.
“Lor’, look ye there,
Mas’r Harry, they’re practising in the
cricket field. What a while it seems since I
have handled a bat! Come and give us a few balls,
the chaps would be glad enough to see us.”
“No, no, Tom,” I said
hastily, “I want to see the old people.”
“Oh, yes, of course, I forgot
all about that, Mas’r Harry. I haven’t
got no one to see.”
“Why, what about Sally?” I said.
“Pooh, it’s all nonsense!
What stuff! How you do talk, Mas’r Harry!”
he cried indignantly. “Just as if Sally
was anything to me!”
“Come, Tom,” I said, “you
know you were always very great friends.”
“Friends, Mas’r Harry!
Why, she were allus giving me spanks in the
face. I do wish you wouldn’t be so foolish,
Mas’r Harry.”
“All right, Tom,” I said,
for he was speaking in quite an ill-used tone.
“There, what’s that?” I cried, as
with beating heart, longing to look into the old home
and yet almost afraid, I stopped short at the corner
of the lane, and caught Tom by the arm.
“What’s that?” cried
Tom grinning, as he took a long sniff. “Taller.
Say, Mas’r Harry, after missing it all this long
time, it don’t smell so very bad after all.”
“Well, it is not nice, Tom,”
I said smiling, “but how familiar it all does
seem! What days and nights it does recall!
Why, Tom, we hardly seem to have been away.”
“Oh, but don’t we though?”
said Tom, pulling down the front of a new waistcoat
and pushing his hat a little on one side. “We
went away nobodies like, at least I did, Mas’r
Harry, and I’ve come back an independent gentleman.
I wonder whether Sally’s altered.”
I did not make any reply, but walked
steadily on till I reached the familiar gates leading
into our yard, and through which I had seen the laden
van pass so many hundreds of times. There beyond
it was the soap-house with its barred window, the
tall chimney, and, on looking over, there were the
usual litter of old and new boxes, while an unpleasantly
scented steam was floating out upon the evening air.
How strange and yet how familiar it
all seemed! How old and shabby and forlorn everything
looked, and yet how dear! I wanted to creep in
and catch my mother in my arms, but something seemed
to hold me back, so that I dare not stir.
I walked straight by, with Tom following
me slowly, looking across at the opposite side of
the road, and whistling softly, and as we walked on
I could see into the garden, and my heart gave a throb,
for, instead of being neat and well stocked as of
old, everything appeared to have been neglected creepers
had run wild, the apple and pear trees were covered
with long shoots, and tall thistles and nettles stood
in clumps.
My heart seemed to stand still, and
I hesitated no longer. My father must be ill,
I thought, or the garden in which he took so much pride
would never have been allowed to run wild like that.
“Tom,” I said, “there’s something
wrong.”
“Lor’, no, Mas’r
Harry, not there. Nothing’s wrong, only
that Sally’s left, and that’s all right,
ain’t it?”
I did not answer, but, going to the
yard gate, pushed it open, and the hinges gave a dismal
creak.
“Bit o’ soap would not
hurt them,” said Tom sententiously, and he followed
me through the yard.
I peeped in at the old, familiar boiling-house,
but though work had lately been in progress there
was no one there; so I went on to the back door and
was about to enter, but Tom laid his hand on my arm.
“Would you mind my going in
first, Mas’r Harry?” he said softly.
“I know it ain’t right, but I should
like to go in just once first.”
I drew back and Tom stepped forward
to go in, but as he raised his hand to the latch he
dropped it again and turned back to me.
“’Twouldn’t be right,
sir, for me to go afore you; and don’t you think,
Mas’r Harry, now that you’re a great, rich
gentleman just come over from foreign abroad, that
it would be more genteel-like to go round to the front
and give a big knock afore you went in?”
“Well, let’s go round
to the front, Tom. Perhaps it isn’t right
to come round here. We might startle them.”
“Wouldn’t startle Sally,
even if she were here, Mas’r Harry. Nothing
never did startle she, though she ain’t here
now.”
The fact was that I felt as nervous
and tremulous about going in as poor Tom, and accordingly
we went round to the front, and after a moment’s
hesitation I gave a rap at the door.
No answer.
I rapped again, and then, finding
the door unfastened, I pushed against it with trembling
hand to find it yield, and, walking straight in, I
turned to the right and entered the little parlour.
As I went in some one who had been
sitting back asleep in the easy-chair started up and
took a great red handkerchief from his face.
As he did this I was advancing with
open hands, but only to stop short, for it was not
my father.
“Hillo!” said the stranger,
a dirty-looking man with an inflamed nose.
“Hallo!” I said; “who are you?”
“Who am I?” said the stranger,
staring at me as if I were asking a most absurd question.
“Why, persession that’s about
what I am. Are you come to pay me out?”
“Pay you out! possession!”
I faltered. “Why, what does it mean?”
“Sold by hockshin without reserve
by one of the morkygees,” said the man, “soon
as the inwintory’s took.”
“Where are my father and mother?”
I said, with my heart sinking at the idea of the
distress they must have been in.
“Now, then!” said a sharp
voice, and a young woman came to the inner door; “who
do you want?”
“Sally!” whispered Tom excitedly.
“Why, Sally!” I exclaimed, “don’t
you know me again?”
“It isn’t Master Harry, is it?”
she said wonderingly.
“Yes, Sally,” I said. “Why,
how you have altered and improved!”
“Get along, Master Harry; it’s
you that’s improved. Who’s that big,
stoopid-looking young man with you?”
“Oh, I say!” groaned Tom.
“Oh, I see!” she said carelessly, “it’s
the boy!”
“Ain’t she hard on a fellow,
Mas’r Harry?” whispered Tom; but I did
not reply, for I was questioning Sally.
“What! haven’t you heard?” she said.
“No, I’ve heard nothing,” I exclaimed.
“What do you mean?”
“‘Bout master’s
having failed, and a set o’ wretches,” here
she glanced at the dirty-looking man “coming
and robbing him of his business, and his house, and
his furniture, and everything a’most he’s
got.”
“No, no, Sally, I have heard nothing.
But are they well?”
“Oh, yes, as well as folks can
be as is being robbed by folks who come sitting in
all the chairs with hankychers over their heads, and
going to sleep all over the place.”
“But where are they?” I cried; “upstairs?”
“Upstairs? No,”
cried Sally. “They’re down at the
little cottage in Back Lane, where old Mrs Wigley
used to live.”
“I’ll run down at once,”
I cried. “Come along, Tom!” I did
not look back, for I was intent upon my task; and
if I had I should have had no satisfaction, for Tom
had stayed behind, as he afterwards said, to look
after old master’s property; but I never believed
that tale for several reasons, one being that Tom
looked shamefaced and awkward as he said it, and circumstances
afterwards tended to show that he had some other reason.
The old cottage named was one that
I well remembered, and my spirit seemed to sink lower
and lower as I neared the place; for it was terrible
to think of those whom I had left, if not in affluence,
at least in a comfortable position in life, brought
down to so sad and impecunious a state, suffering
real poverty, and with the home of so many years now
in the broker’s hands.
Then I felt a wave of high spirits
come over me, as it were, to hurl me down and then
lift me and carry me on and on, till I literally set
off and ran down turning after turning, till I came
to the little whitewashed cottage where my father
and mother had their abode.
I half-paused for a moment, and then
tapping lightly, raised the latch and entered.
My father was seated at a common uncovered
deal table, poring over an old account-book, as if
in hopes of finding a way out of his difficulties.
My mother, looking very care-worn and grey, was seated
by a back window mending some old garments, and now
and then stopping to wipe her eyes. At least
that is what I presumed, for she was in the act of
wiping them as I dashed in.
“Mother! father!” I exclaimed,
and the next moment the poor old lady was sobbing
in my arms, kissing me again and again, and amidst
her sobbing telling my father that she knew how it
would be that it had been foolish of him
to despair, for she was certain that her boy would
come back and help them as soon as he knew that they
were in trouble.
“When did you get the letter,
my darling?” she said as she clung closer to
me.
“Letter!” I said; “I’ve had
no letter.”
My mother looked up at me wonderingly.
“Had no letter, Harry?”
“No, my dear mother; I have not had a line since
I have been gone.”
My mother loosened her hold of me
and turned to my father as he stood looking on.
“You did not write to him,” she said.
“Oh, yes, I daresay he did,
mother,” I cried, “but of late I have been
travelling about a great deal.”
“Then the letter would have
come back, Harry,” said my mother. “He
did not write.”
“No,” said my father quietly;
“I did not write. What was the use of
troubling the poor fellow about our miserable affairs
when he was far away?”
“Then you did not come, Harry,
because we were in trouble?”
“No, mother,” I replied.
“I came home because my task was done.”
“Your task was done?”
said my mother. “I don’t understand
you. I thought you went to work at your uncle’s.”
“I was with my uncle, mother,”
I replied, enjoying the knowledge of the surprise
I had in store, and feeling that now, indeed, the treasure
I had found was worth having, for what changes it
would work! “but he was in trouble too.”
“In trouble!” said my father and mother
in a breath.
“Yes, he was in the same predicament
as you are, and his coffee plantation was going to
be sold up.”
“What an unhappy family ours
is!” said my mother. “Harry Harry!
you might as well have stayed at home.”
“If I had stayed at home, mother,
would it have spared you this trouble?”
“I I don’t
know, my boy. Would it, my dear?” she said,
turning to my father.
“No, wife no,”
he said; “Harry was quite right to go.
He foresaw what was coming, and how useless it was
for me to try. The hardest part of it, my lad,
is that I can’t go out of business an honest
man and pay every one his due.”
“Don’t fret, dear,”
said my mother; “you’ve done your best
and given up everything. But tell me, Harry,”
she cried, “what did my poor brother do?
Had he no friend to help him?”
“Yes, mother.”
“And did he?”
“Yes, mother.”
“What! paid his debts?”
“Yes, dear mother.”
“God bless him!” said
my mother fervently. “I wish I could take
him by the hand. And how is your uncle now?”
“He was quite well when I left him to-day, mother.”
“Left him! to-day?” said my
mother wonderingly.
“Yes, he is in town. I
brought him with me, and he will come down and see
you with some one, mother, I want you very much to
love.”
“You foolish boy!” said
my mother. “Ah, Harry Harry!
you are too young to think of that.”
“I’m sorry he’s
coming to see us,” said my father sadly.
“We are not in condition to see company, wife.”
“No,” said my mother,
sighing as she glanced round. “But don’t
be down-hearted, dear,” she cried more cheerfully;
“when things are at their worst they always
mend, and I think they have got to their worst now,
and have begun to mend, for Harry has come back.”
“Yes, mother,” I cried,
unable to keep back my good news, knowing as I did
how welcome it must be to them at such a time.
“Yes, mother, I have come back, and brought
with me the friend who helped my poor uncle in such
a strait, and now he shall help you.”
“Ah, but my dear boy, we have
no claims upon your uncle’s friend.”
“The greatest of claims, mother,”
I cried excitedly, “for he is your own flesh
and blood.”
“Harry!” cried my father,
“what do you mean? Did you help your uncle?”
“Yes, father,” I said modestly.
“And paid his debts?”
“Yes, father, and now I’m
going to pay yours, or rather you are going to pay
them yourself, and be what you called an
honest man.”
His eyes lit up, and he looked as
if he were about to catch me by the hands, but he
stopped short and shook his head.
“No, no, no, my boy, you do
not understand these things. I owe nearly five
hundred pounds.”
“My dear father,” I cried,
“I’m ready to pay it if you owe nearly
five thousand. I went out to make my fortune
and I have made it, and I never knew its value thoroughly
till I came home to-day. There, come away home
and I’ll pay out that fellow, and oh,
come, mother mother, mother!” I
cried as I took hold of her hands to raise her up,
for she had sunk upon her knees and was embracing
my legs. “You must not give way like this,
or you will make me behave like a great girl.”
“It is because I am so happy,”
she sobbed, and as I raised her so that she could
weep on my shoulder, my father caught me by the hand.
“God bless you, my boy!
God bless you!” he cried. “I won’t
question you now, for like your mother I feel as if
this is more than I can bear.”
We lost no time as soon as they had
grown calmer. For though I had not the money
with me sufficient to pay all my father’s debts,
I had plenty to pay what was needed to get rid of
the unpleasant tenant of my old home, and that night
I slept happily once more beneath its roof.
I had hard work to satisfy the old
people about my right to the large sum of money I
had brought back, but I found no difficulty with their
creditors, who took the cash without asking any questions,
and were very loud in their praises, saying that I
was the best of sons, which was all nonsense, for
I should have been the worst of sons if I had not done
my duty as I did.
The next few months were chiefly spent
in getting things into order, and in the midst of
my busiest time Tom came to me one day, bringing with
him Sally.
“Hallo!” I said, “what does this
mean?”
“Oh, nothing at all, Mas’r
Harry; only now I’m settled as a gentleman of
property I’m going to be married.”
“Don’t you believe him,
Master Harry,” said Sally; “it’s
all his nonsense,” and she was scarlet as she
spoke.
“Don’t you believe her,
Mas’r Harry,” said Tom grinning; “she
promised me she would, and she can’t draw back,
can she?”
“Certainly not, Tom,”
I said. “A lady’s under her bond
just as a gentleman is.”
“There! hear that, Sally?” said Tom.
“Yes, I hear,” she said,
“so I suppose I must;” and Sally spoke
in quite a resigned way, keeping her word to Tom within
three months, my father saying that Sally had been
the most faithful of servants, and had forced upon
them all her little savings in the time of their distress.
You may be sure I did not forget this
on the day when my father gave her away, and Tom had
a nice little dowry with his wife.
It may be thought that, with so great
a sum of money so large a fortune I
must have lived in great splendour during the rest
of my life. But it was not so. Certainly
I have always since enjoyed the comfort of a pleasant,
well-kept, unostentatious home; but the fact is this it
was my fate to marry a woman generous almost to a fault.
As you have seen, she began by giving the greatest
treasure I found in the New World herself to
me; and then, upon the strength of our having plenty
of money, she was of opinion that its proper purpose
was being spent in doing good to others.
My uncle and Mrs Landell were settled
in a pleasant little estate of their own; and after
a great deal of persuasion my father was induced to
take upon himself the position of a country gentleman.
One way and another our income became shrunk down
to very reasonable proportions; though, after Lilla
has done all the good that she can in the course of
the year, we have always a little to spare.
My story is ended. And now that
grey hairs have made their appearance, bringing with
them sounder thought and the ripe judgment of experience,
I often go over my adventures again, and chat about
them with Tom, and Sally his wife, when I have taken
a run over to their prosperous farm; but in spite
of all the success that has attended me and mine, I
think, have thought, and I hope I shall still think
to my last day, that my journey to the New World,
my adventures, and all I gained, would have been but
so much vanity and emptiness had I not won Lilla, who
has shed upon my life a sunshine such as has proved
that after all she was the true gold.