“I was just a-goin’ to
ring the big bell,” said Mrs. Brown.
She was standing on the front verandah
as the children came up the lawn.
“Why, we’re not late, Brownie, are we?”
asked Norah.
“Not very.” The old
housekeeper smiled at her. “Only when your
Pa’s away I allers feels a bit nervis
about you sech thoughtless young people,
an’ all them animals and snakes about!”
“Gammon!” said Jim laughing.
“D’you mean to say I can’t look after
them, Brownie?”
“I’d rather not say anythink
rash, Master Jim,” rejoined Mrs. Brown with
a twinkle.
“I guess Mrs. Brown’s
got the measure of your foot, old man,” grinned
Harry.
“Oh, well,” said Jim resignedly,
“a chap never gets his due in this world.
I forgive you, Brownie, though you don’t deserve
it. Got a nice tea for us?”
“Sech as it is, Master Jim,
it’s waitin’ on you,” said Mrs. Brown,
with point.
“That’s what you might
call a broad hint,” cried Jim. “Come
on, chaps race you for a wash-up!”
They scattered, Mrs. Brown laying
violent hands on the indignant Norah, and insisting
on arraying her in a clean frock, which the victim
resisted, as totally unnecessary. Mrs. Brown carried
her point, however, and a trim little maiden joined
the boys in the dining-room five minutes later.
Mrs. Brown’s cooking was notable,
and she had excelled herself over the boys’
farewell tea. A big cold turkey sat side by side
with a ham of majestic dimensions, while the cool
green of a salad was tempting after the hot walk.
There were jellies, and a big bowl of fruit salad,
while the centre of the table was occupied by a tall
cake, raising aloft glittering white tiers. There
were scones and tarts and wee cakes, and dishes of
fresh fruit, and altogether the boys whistled long
and softly, and declared that “Brownie was no
end of a brick!”
Whereat Mrs. Brown, hovering about
to see that her charges wanted nothing, smiled and
blushed, and said, “Get on, now, do!”
Jim carved, and Jim’s carving
was something to marvel at. No method came amiss
to him. When he could cut straight he did; at
other times he sawed; and, when it seemed necessary,
he dug. After he had finished helping every one,
Wally said that the turkey looked as if a dog had
been at it, and the ham was worse, which remarks Jim
meekly accepted as his due. Nor did the inartistic
appearance of the turkey prevent the critic from coming
back for more!
Everyone was hungry, and did full
justice to “Brownie’s” forethought;
while Norah, behind the tall teapot, declared that
it was a job for two men and a boy to pour out for
such a thirsty trio. Harry helped the fruit salad,
and Harry’s helpings were based on his own hunger,
and would have suited Goliath. Finally, Norah
cut the cake with great ceremony, and Wally’s
proposal that everyone should retire to the lawn with
a “chunk” was carried unanimously.
Out on the grass they lay and chattered,
while the dusk came down, and slowly a pale moon climbed
up into the sky. Norah alone was silent.
After a while Harry and Wally declared they must go
and pack, and Jim and his sister were left alone.
Wally and Harry scurried down the
hail. The sound of their merry voices died away,
and there was silence on the lawn.
Jim rolled nearer to Norah.
“Blue, old girl?”
“’M,” said a muffled voice.
Jim felt for her hand in the darkness and
found it. The small, brown fingers closed tightly
round his rough paw.
“I know,” he said comprehendingly.
“I’m awfully sorry, old woman. I do
wish we hadn’t to go.”
There was no answer. Jim knew
why and also knowing perfectly well that
tears would mean the deepest shame, he talked on without
requiring any response.
“Beastly hard luck,” he
said. “We don’t want to go a bit fancy
school after this! Ugh! But there are three
of us, so it isn’t so bad. It wouldn’t
matter if Dad was at home, for you. But I must
say it’s lowdown to be leaving you all by your
lonely little self.”
Norah struggled hard with that abominable
lump in her throat, despising herself heartily.
“Brownie’ll be awfully
good to you,” went on Jim. “You’ll
have to buck up, you know, old girl, and not let yourself
get dull. You practise like one o’clock;
or make jam, or something; or get Brownie to let you
do some cooking. Anything to keep you ‘from
broodin’ on bein’ a dorg,’ as old
David Harum says. There’s all the pets
to look after, you know you’ve got
to keep young black Billy up to the mark, or he’ll
never feed ’em properly, and if you let him alone
he changes the water in the dishes when the last lot’s
dry. And, by George, Norah” Jim
had a bright idea “Dad told me last
night he meant to shift those new bullocks into the
Long Plain. Ten to one he forgot all about it,
going away so suddenly. You’ll have to
see to it.”
“I’d like that,”
said Norah, feeling doubtfully for her voice.
“Rather best thing
you can do,” Jim said eagerly. “Take
Billy with you, of course, and a dog. They’re
not wild, and I don’t think you’ll have
any trouble only be very careful to get
’em all examine all the scrub in
the paddock. Billy knows how many there ought
to be. I did know, but, of course, I’ve
forgotten. Of course Dad may have left directions
with one of the men about it already.”
“Well, I could go too, couldn’t I?”
queried Norah.
“Rather. They’d be glad to have you.”
“Well, I’ll be glad of
something to do. I wasn’t looking forward
to to-morrow.”
“No,” said Jim, “I
know you weren’t. Never mind, you keep busy.
You might drive into Cunjee with Brownie on Tuesday probably
you’d get a letter from Dad a day earlier, and
hear when he’s coming home and if
he says he’s coming home on Thursday, Wednesday
won’t seem a bit long. You’ll be
as right as ninepence if you buck up.”
“I will, old chap. Only I wish you weren’t
going.”
“So do I,” said Jim, “and
so do the other chaps. They want to come again
some holidays.”
“Well, I hope you’ll bring them.”
“My word! I will.
Do you know, Norah, they think you’re no end
of a brick?”
“Do they?” said Norah, much pleased.
“Did they tell you?”
“They’re always telling me. Now,
you go to bed, old girl.”
He rose and pulled her to her feet.
Norah put her arms round his neck a very
rare caress.
“Good night,” she said. “I I
do love you, Jimmy!”
Jim hugged her.
“Same here, old chap,” he said.
There was such scurrying in the early
morning. Daylight revealed many things that had
been overlooked in the packing overnight, and they
had to be crammed in, somehow. Other things were
remembered which had not been packed, and which must
be found, and diligent hunt had to be made for them.
Norah was everybody’s mate,
running on several errands at once, finding Jim’s
school cap near Harry’s overcoat while she was
looking for Wally’s cherished snake-skin.
Her strong brown hands pulled tight the straps of
bulging bags on which their perspiring owners knelt,
puffing. After the said bags were closed and
carried out to the buggy, she found the three toothbrushes,
and crammed each, twisted in newspaper, into its owner’s
pocket. She had no time to think she was dull.
Mrs. Brown, who had been up since
dawn, had packed a huge hamper, and superintended
its placing in the buggy. It was addressed to
“Master James, Master Harry, and Master Wallie,”
and later Jim reported that its contents were such
as to make the chaps at school speechless a
compliment which filled Mrs. Brown with dismay, and
a wish that she had put in less pastry and perhaps
a little castor oil. At present she felt mildly
safe about it and watched it loaded with a sigh of
relief.
“Boom-m-m!” went the big
gong, and the boys rushed to the dining-room, where
Norah was ready to pour out tea.
“You have some, Norah,”
said Harry, retaining his position close to the teapot,
whence Wally had vainly striven to dislodge him.
“Yes, old girl, you eat some breakfast,”
commanded Jim.
Norah flashed a smile at him over the cosy.
“Lots of time afterwards,” she said, a
little sadly.
“No time like the present.”
Wally took a huge bite out of a scone, and surveyed
the relic with interest. Someone put a smoking
plateful before him, and his further utterances were
lost in eggs and bacon.
Mrs. Brown flitted about like a stout
guardian angel, keeping an especially watchful eye
on Jim. If the supply on his plate lessened perceptibly,
it was replenished with more, like manna from above.
To his laughing protests she merely murmured, “Poor
dear lamb!” whereat Wally and Harry laughed
consumedly, and Jim blushed.
“Well, you’ve beaten me
at last, Brownie,” Jim declared finally.
He waved away a chop which was about to descend upon
his plate. “No truly, Brownie dear; there
are limits! Tea? No thanks, Norah, I’ve
had about a dozen cups already, I believe! You
fellows ready?”
They were, and the table was briskly deserted.
There was a final survey of the boys’
room, which resembled a rubbish heap, owing to vigorous
packing.
Everybody ran wildly about looking for something.
Wally was found searching frantically
for his cap, which Norah discovered on
his head. There was a hurried journey to the kitchen,
to bid the servants “Good-bye.”
The buggy wheels scrunched the gravel
before the hall door. The overseer coo-ee’d
softly.
“All aboard!”
“All right, Evans!” Jim
appeared in the doorway, staggering under a big Gladstone
bag. Billy, similarly laden, followed. His
black face was unusually solemn.
“Chuck ’em in, Billy. Come on, you
chaps!”
The chaps appeared.
“Good-bye, Norah. It’s been grand!”
Harry pumped her hand vigorously.
“Wish you were coming!”
said Wally dismally. “Good-bye. Write
to us, won’t you, Norah?”
“Now then, Master Jim!” Evans glanced
at his watch.
“Right oh!” said Jim.
He put his arm round the little girl’s shoulders
and looked keenly into her face. There was no
hint of breaking down. Norah met his gaze steadily
and smiled at him. But the boy knew.
“Good-bye, little chap,”
he said, and kissed her. “You’ll keep
your pecker up?”
She nodded. “Good-bye, Jimmy, old boy.”
Jim sprang into the buggy.
“All right, Evans.”
They whirled down the drive.
Looking back, waving their caps, the boys carried
away a memory of a brave little figure, erect, smiling
and lonely on the doorstep.