It was much too fine a night to think
of going to bed at once, and so, although the witching
hour of nine P.M. had struck, Edward and I were still
leaning out of the open window in our nightshirts,
watching the play of the cedar-branch shadows on the
moonlit lawn, and planning schemes of fresh devilry
for the sunshiny morrow. From below, strains of
the jocund piano declared that the Olympians were enjoying
themselves in their listless, impotent way; for the
new curate had been bidden to dinner that night, and
was at the moment unclerically proclaiming to all
the world that he feared no foe. His discordant
vociférations doubtless started a train of thought
in Edward’s mind, for the youth presently remarked,
a propos of nothing that had been said before, “I
believe the new curate’s rather gone on Aunt
Maria.”
I scouted the notion. “Why,
she’s quite old,” I said. (She must have
seen some five-and-twenty summers.)
“Of course she is,” replied
Edward, scornfully. “It’s not her,
it’s her money he’s after, you bet!”
“Didn’t know she had any money,”
I observed timidly.
“Sure to have,” said my brother, with
confidence. “Heaps and heaps.”
Silence ensued, both our minds being
busy with the new situation thus presented, mine,
in wonderment at this flaw that so often declared
itself in enviable natures of fullest endowment, in
a grown-up man and a good cricketer, for instance,
even as this curate; Edward’s (apparently),
in the consideration of how such a state of things,
supposing it existed, could be best turned to his own
advantage.
“Bobby Ferris told me,”
began Edward in due course, “that there was a
fellow spooning his sister once ”
“What’s spooning?” I asked meekly.
“Oh, I dunno,”
said Edward, indifferently. “It’s it’s it’s
just a thing they do, you know. And he used to
carry notes and messages and things between ’em,
and he got a shilling almost every time.”
“What, from each of ’em?” I innocently
inquired.
Edward looked at me with scornful
pity. “Girls never have any money,”
he briefly explained. “But she did his
exercises and got him out of rows, and told stories
for him when he needed it and much better
ones than he could have made up for himself.
Girls are useful in some ways. So he was living
in clover, when unfortunately they went and quarrelled
about something.”
“Don’t see what that’s got to do
with it,” I said.
“Nor don’t I,” rejoined
Edward. “But anyhow the notes and things
stopped, and so did the shillings. Bobby was fairly
cornered, for he had bought two ferrets on tick, and
promised to pay a shilling a week, thinking the shillings
were going on for ever, the silly young ass. So
when the week was up, and he was being dunned for the
shilling, he went off to the fellow and said, ’Your
broken-hearted Bella implores you to meet her at sundown, by
the hollow oak, as of old, be it only for a moment.
Do not fail!’ He got all that out of some rotten
book, of course. The fellow looked puzzled and
said,
“‘What hollow oak? I don’t
know any hollow oak.’
“‘Perhaps it was the Royal
Oak?’ said Bobby promptly, ’cos he saw
he had made a slip, through trusting too much to the
rotten book; but this didn’t seem to make the
fellow any happier.”
“Should think not,” I
said, “the Royal Oak’s an awful low sort
of pub.”
“I know,” said Edward.
“Well, at last the fellow said, ’I think
I know what she means: the hollow tree in your
father’s paddock. It happens to be an elm,
but she wouldn’t know the difference. All
right: say I’ll be there.’ Bobby
hung about a bit, for he hadn’t got his money.
’She was crying awfully,’ he said.
Then he got his shilling.”
“And wasn’t the fellow
riled,” I inquired, “when he got to the
place and found nothing?”
“He found Bobby,” said
Edward, indignantly. “Young Ferris was a
gentleman, every inch of him. He brought the fellow
another message from Bella: ’I dare not
leave the house. My cruel parents immure me closely
If you only knew what I suffer. Your broken-hearted
Bella.’ Out of the same rotten book.
This made the fellow a little suspicious,’cos
it was the old Ferrises who had been keen about the
thing all through: the fellow, you see, had tin.”
“But what’s that got to ”
I began again.
“Oh, I dunno,”
said Edward, impatiently. “I’m telling
you just what Bobby told me. He got suspicious,
anyhow, but he couldn’t exactly call Bella’s
brother a liar, so Bobby escaped for the time.
But when he was in a hole next week, over a stiff
French exercise, and tried the same sort of game on
his sister, she was too sharp for him, and he got caught
out. Somehow women seem more mistrustful than
men. They’re so beastly suspicious by nature,
you know.”
“I know,” said
I. “But did the two the fellow
and the sister make it up afterwards?”
“I don’t remember about
that,” replied Edward, indifferently; “but
Bobby got packed off to school a whole year earlier
than his people meant to send him, which
was just what he wanted. So you see it all came
right in the end!”
I was trying to puzzle out the moral
of this story it was evidently meant to
contain one somewhere when a flood of golden
lamplight mingled with the moon rays on the lawn,
and Aunt Maria and the new curate strolled out on
the grass below us, and took the direction of a garden
seat that was backed by a dense laurel shrubbery reaching
round in a half-circle to the house. Edward mediated
moodily. “If we only knew what they were
talking about,” said he, “you’d soon
see whether I was right or not. Look here!
Let’s send the kid down by the porch to reconnoitre!”
“Harold’s asleep,” I said; “it
seems rather a shame ”
“Oh, rot!” said my brother;
“he’s the youngest, and he’s got
to do as he’s told!”
So the luckless Harold was hauled
out of bed and given his sailing-orders. He was
naturally rather vexed at being stood up suddenly
on the cold floor, and the job had no particular interest
for him; but he was both staunch and well disciplined.
The means of exit were simple enough. A porch
of iron trellis came up to within easy reach of the
window, and was habitually used by all three of us,
when modestly anxious to avoid public notice.
Harold climbed deftly down the porch like a white
rat, and his night gown glimmered a moment on the gravel
walk ere he was lost to sight in the darkness of the
shrubbery. A brief interval of silence ensued,
broken suddenly by a sound of scuffle, and then a
shrill, long-drawn squeal, as of metallic surfaces
in friction. Our scout had fallen into the hands
of the enemy!
Indolence alone had made us devolve
the task of investigation on our younger brother.
Now that danger had declared itself, there was no
hesitation. In a second we were down the side
of the porch, and crawling Cherokee-wise through the
laurels to the back of the garden-seat. Piteous
was the sight that greeted us. Aunt Maria was
on the seat, in a white evening frock, looking for
an aunt really quite nice. On the
lawn stood an incensed curate, grasping our small brother
by a large ear, which judging from the
row he was making seemed on the point of
parting company with the head it adorned. The
gruesome noise he was emitting did not really affect
us otherwise than aesthetically. To one who has
tried both, the wail of genuine physical anguish is
easy distinguishable from the pumped-up ad misericordiam
blubber. Harold’s could clearly be recognised
as belonging to the latter class. “Now,
you young ” (whelp, I think
it was, but Edward stoutly maintains it was devil),
said the curate, sternly; “tell us what you mean
by it!”
“Well, leggo of my ear
then!” shrilled Harold, “and I’ll
tell you the solemn truth!”
“Very well,” agreed the
curate, releasing him; “now go ahead, and don’t
lie more than you can help.”
We abode the promised disclosure without
the least misgiving; but even we had hardly given
Harold due credit for his fertility of resource and
powers of imagination.
“I had just finished saying
my prayers,” began that young gentleman, slowly,
“when I happened to look out of the window, and
on the lawn I saw a sight which froze the marrow in
my veins! A burglar was approaching the house
with snake-like tread! He had a scowl and a dark
lantern, and he was armed to the teeth!”
We listened with interest. The
style, though unlike Harold’s native notes,
seemed strangely familiar.
“Go on,” said the curate, grimly.
“Pausing in his stealthy career,”
continued Harold, “he gave a low whistle.
Instantly the signal was responded to, and from the
adjacent shadows two more figures glided forth.
The miscreants were both armed to the teeth.”
“Excellent,” said the curate; “proceed.”
“The robber chief,” pursued
Harold, warming to his work, “joined his nefarious
comrades, and conversed with them in silent tones.
His expression was truly ferocious, and I ought to
have said that he was armed to the t ”
“There, never mind his teeth,”
interrupted the curate, rudely; “there’s
too much jaw about you altogether. Hurry up and
have done.”
“I was in a frightful funk,”
continued the narrator, warily guarding his ear with
his hand, “but just then the drawing-room window
opened, and you and Aunt Maria came out I
mean emerged. The burglars vanished silently
into the laurels, with horrid implications!”
The curate looked slightly puzzled.
The tale was well sustained, and certainly circumstantial.
After all, the boy might have really seen something.
How was the poor man to know though the
chaste and lofty diction might have supplied a hint that
the whole yarn was a free adaptation from the last
Penny Dreadful lent us by the knife-and-boot boy?
“Why did you not alarm the house?” he
asked.
“’Cos I was afraid,”
said Harold, sweetly, “that p’raps they
mightn’t believe me!”
“But how did you get down here,
you naughty little boy?” put in Aunt Maria.
Harold was hard pressed by his own flesh
and blood, too!
At that moment Edward touched me on
the shoulder and glided off through the laurels.
When some ten yards away he gave a low whistle.
I replied by another. The effect was magical.
Aunt Maria started up with a shriek. Harold gave
one startled glance around, and then fled like a hare,
made straight for the back door, burst in upon the
servants at supper, and buried himself in the broad
bosom of the cook, his special ally. The curate
faced the laurels hesitatingly. But
Aunt Maria flung herself on him. “O Mr.
Hodgitts!” I heard her cry, “you are brave!
for my sake do not be rash!” He was not rash.
When I peeped out a second later, the coast was entirely
clear.
By this time there were sounds of
a household timidly emerging; and Edward remarked
to me that perhaps we had better be off. Retreat
was an easy matter. A stunted laurel gave a leg
up on to the garden wall, which led in its turn to
the roof of an out-house, up which, at a dubious angle,
we could crawl to the window of the box-room.
This overland route had been revealed to us one day
by the domestic cat, when hard pressed in the course
of an otter-hunt, in which the cat somewhat
unwillingly was filling the title rôle;
and it had proved distinctly useful on occasions like
the present. We were snug in bed minus
some cuticle from knees and elbows and
Harold, sleepily chewing something sticky, had been
carried up in the arms of the friendly cook, ere the
clamour of the burglar-hunters had died away.
The curate’s undaunted demeanour,
as reported by Aunt Maria, was generally supposed
to have terrified the burglars into flight, and much
kudos accrued to him thereby. Some days later,
however, when he hid dropped in to afternoon tea,
and was making a mild curatorial joke about the moral
courage required for taking the last piece of bread-and-butter,
I felt constrained to remark dreamily, and as it were
to the universe at large, “Mr. Hodgitts! you
are brave! for my sake, do not be rash!”
Fortunately for me, the vicar was
also a caller on that day; and it was always a comparatively
easy matter to dodge my long-coated friend in the
open.