SHARK
“Hullo, here’s Marjorie!”
exclaimed Eric. He vaulted out of the carriage,
and flung his arms round Marjorie’s little squat
figure, lifting her off the ground, and squeezing
her in an ecstasy of delight. “Here I am,
Mag, and there are two pouters in a cage, and four
new fantails-they’re coming with the
luggage-and I’ve got a lop-eared
rabbit with black spots, and my ferrets-there
are two of them in the carriage. Wait until you
see Shark’s teeth-I call him Shark,
he’s such a good ’un at biting. We’ll
have some fun these holidays; don’t you make
any mistake!”
“Yes, yes, of course we will!
I’m delighted, Eric, delighted! Where are
the ferrets? When can I see them? Oh, how
are you, Basil? Have you on a tight boot to-day?
Does your corn pinch you?”
“No, I’ve got over those
small ailments,” said Basil. “What
a roundabout you are, Marjorie,” he continued,
pinching her cheek. “Now, what’s
the matter? You are quite frowning.”
Marjorie’s round good-humored
freckled face wore an expression of consternation.
“I made some slippers during
the term for you,” she said. “They’re
large, and I wadded them so that they are most comfortable.
But-it isn’t that-the
slippers are in your room, I put them there-Ermie,
won’t you get out?”
“No,” said Ermengarde.
“I’m going to drive down to the house.”
Marjorie frowned more than ever.
“They are all coming up from
the shore; Miss Nelson, and all of them; and they’ll
see the horses and they’ll run. Even Miss
Nelson will run, she’s so fond of Basil, and-
Mr. Wilton, who still remained in
the carriage by Ermengarde’s side, now interposed.
“We won’t wait for the
small fry,” he said. “We’ll
drive on to the house at once. Oh, yes, Eric,
you can go to meet the party from the shore of course,
if you like, and Basil too.”
“I’ll stay with Ermie,” said Basil.
He jumped into the carriage again,
and they drove down the long winding avenue to the
house.
Great elm trees shaded the avenue,
and Basil pushed back his cap and looked up into the
green. He was a dark and handsome lad, and his
expression was unusually thoughtful for his years.
“How grand those old trees are!”
he said. “Whenever I think of home while
I’m away, I remember the old elm trees in the
avenue, and the rooks’ nests-I remember,
too-” Here he stopped suddenly,
and a wave of red mantled his cheeks. Ermengarde’s
bright eyes were fixed on him; she guessed his thoughts.
Basil had often walked under those elm trees with
his mother.
Mr. Wilton had opened the Times,
and was not attending to the chatter of the young
folk.
“You don’t look quite
the thing, Ermie,” said Basil in a low voice.
“I’m perfectly well,” she replied.
“But you turned quite white
that time at the lodge. I noticed it. That
time when Marjorie wanted you to get out. Have
you been worrying yourself lately? You know you
are such a girl to mope, and make mountains out of
mole-hills. School would be the place for you.”
Mr. Wilton dropped his paper.
“Are you recommending school
for Ermengarde?” he said. “Sometimes
I have thought of it, but your mother had a prejudice
against school-life for girls, and Ermie does very
well with Miss Nelson and the masters who come here
to instruct her. Now here we are, and here’s
your Aunt Elizabeth.”
Miss Wilton was not a graceful woman.
She was a feminine edition of her brother, and Mr.
Wilton, although handsome as a man, had by no means
the type of face which best lends itself to womanly
graces.
Miss Wilton was standing on the steps
in a riding-habit. Her horse had just been taken
round to the stables. She had her whip in her
hand, and her masses of hair looked untidy-her
face, too, was flushed.
“Really, Roderick,” she
said to her brother, “that groom is past bearing.
He had the impertinence- Oh, is
that you, Basil? So you’ve come back-how
are you? Now one thing I do beg, and that is,
that you never come into the house except by the side
door, and that you and Eric keep your pets to yourselves.
I don’t mind what is done behind the schoolroom
doors, but I will not-I cannot-permit
messy lounging school-boys in my part of the house.
Roderick, what is the matter? Are you laughing
at me?”
“I think I am, Elizabeth,”
replied Mr. Wilton. “Boys will be boys,
and no one can accuse Basil of lounging.”
Miss Wilton had a very hearty loud
laugh herself. She indulged in it now, and going
up to Basil, hit him a blow on the shoulders.
“You’re a true Wilton,”
she said. “By and by I’ll be proud
of you-by and by I’ll want your help.
You shall ride with me, and keep those lazy intolerable
grooms in some sort of order, but just at present
your place is in the schoolroom part of the house.
Ermengarde! You here? Has Miss Nelson promoted
you to drive in the carriage? That is an honor
only conferred on very good children.”
Ermengarde hated to be called a child.
She disliked her Aunt Elizabeth’s manner to
her at all times, and now she flushed and frowned,
and looked decidedly unamiable.
“Come, Basil,” she said,
touching her brother on his arm.
“No, miss, you’re not
to go with that cross face on,” said her aunt.
“Look pleasant, or I shall desire Miss Nelson
on no account to permit you to drive with your father
again. What is it, Roderick? What’s
the matter?”
“Leave the poor child alone,”
said Mr. Wilton. “Run away, chicks, both
of you; run off and be happy. Now, Elizabeth,
what is this story about the groom?”
Ermengarde slipped her hand within
Basil’s arm, and they both walked round to the
other side of the house. High tea was spread in
the pleasant schoolroom. Miss Nelson, who looked
worried and over-tired, was desiring her pupils to
take their places. All the nursery children were
to sup in the schoolroom to-night, in honor of the
boys’ return, and nurse was bringing in toddling
Ethel, and little Dick and Bobby, and placing them
in their chairs, and then cutting bread-and-butter
for them.
Basil rushed down a side passage to
a lavatory to wash his hands, and Ermengarde flew
upstairs to dispose of her best hat. Miss Nelson
had not noticed it.
When the elder boy and girl came into
the room the meal had commenced. Marjorie, as
usual, was trotting from chair to chair, helping everyone,
pushing the butter nearer to little Mollie, the youngest
schoolroom child, stopping Bobby’s rebellious
lips with strawberries, and lugging a great jug of
milk in her arms, and with a red face, and chubby
hands that would tremble under their load, refilling
mugs of milk as fast as they got empty.
“That will do now, Marjorie;
you can sit down,” called out Miss Nelson.
Marjorie subsided at once into a seat beside Eric.
“Ermengarde,” said her
governess, glancing quickly at her eldest pupil; “you
are late again for tea. You forfeit five marks.”
“Oh, I say,” exclaimed
Basil, “I’m late, too, Miss Nelson.
And it wasn’t Ermie’s fault, her being
late this time; she could not help herself. Why,
what is the matter, Ermie?”
Ermengarde had given him a shove under
the table. He looked round at her, guessed that
she did not wish him to say something, and instantly
subsided into absolute silence.
Basil was a favorite of Miss Nelson’s.
He was a kind-hearted lad; he had something of Marjorie’s
spirit, and was always willing to throw himself into
breaches, to heal disputes, to be a sort of peacemaker
and server all round. Miss Nelson dreaded beyond
anything the long summer vacation when the boys were
home from school, and the girls had only half work.
These were the weeks for disputes, for quarrels, for
disagreeables, for scrapes. During these weeks
poor Miss Nelson’s hair became more gray, and
her face more wrinkled and anxious; but she dreaded
the holidays, not because Basil was at home, but on
account of Eric, who was a perfect imp of mischief,
and because all the home children were more or less
demoralized by his presence.
Now Miss Nelson smiled into Basil’s
eyes, handed him a plate of the best strawberries,
and after a pause, said: “You’d like
me not to punish Ermengarde?”
“Of course I should; she has
done nothing to be punished for.”
Again Ermengarde kicked him under
the table. He was lifting a cup of tea to his
lips, and part of its contents were spilt on the white
tablecloth, and over his own shirt-cuff. Basil
hated messes and awkward ways of doing things.
He gave Ermengarde a return kick of some force, murmured,
“You’re a perfect muff, Ermie,” and
then looked up, with his momentary annoyance gone,
at Miss Nelson.
“Thank you for excusing Ermengarde,”
he said. “She’s under my command
now. I’m her captain. I’ll see
that she’s in good time in the future.”
“Well, Ermengarde, you may consider
yourself excused,” said the governess.
“I hope you have thoroughly mastered your imposition.
If so, as you must want fresh air, you may go out
with Basil for an hour after tea.”
Basil glanced at his sister’s
blooming and blushing face. As he did not want
to be kicked any more, however, he was silent.
Marjorie had left her seat, and was bringing all the
cups up to Miss Nelson to be refilled with tea.
As the governess poured some hot water into the teapot
she turned again to Ermengarde, “Do you know
your piece of poetry, Ermie?”
Ermengarde said “Yes.”
This happened to be true, for the poem selected for
her punishment lesson was “Casabianca,”
which she admired very much, and had long ago committed
to memory for pleasure.
“Yes, I know it quite well,
thank you, Miss Nelson,” she said in a cheerful
voice.
The clouds had left her face; she
was now in an excellent humor. To be with Basil
was always delightful to her, and she sincerely hoped
that her disobedience and open defiance of authority
might never be discovered. If it was, she was
prepared to defend her action, but she had an intuition
that Basil would disapprove. His good opinion
was of the utmost value to her: she loved Basil;
she had no particular affection for any other human
being, unless, perhaps, her father; but Basil’s
presence caused a warm satisfied glow to steal around
her heart.
Miss Nelson had supplied all the second
cups of tea. She was again at liberty to ask
her favorite a question.
“Basil, I should like to ask
you in confidence, has Eric brought home any strange
pets this time?”
Basil’s eyes sparkled.
“Only two ferrets,” he
said; “and two carrier pigeons, and two fantails,
and a pouter (Eric is dead nuts on that pouter), and
a lop-eared rabbit. I think that’s all.
I have some pups, too,” he added modestly, “but
they are coming by parcel-post to-morrow.”
“By parcel-post, Basil!”
here almost screamed Marjorie. “Oh, I hope
they won’t be squashed.”
“Silence, children!” said
the governess. A red spot had risen on both her
cheeks. “I had hoped no more pets were coming.
And ferrets! I dread ferrets. Now the pups-
“But they’re of a very
wicked breed,” shouted Eric. “They’re
worse than my ferret Shark. They are young bloodhounds.
Don’t you deny it, Basil. You know you
gave a sov. for them to Dandy Macjones.”
“But they are quite harmless
at present,” said Basil. “There are
only two; they haven’t arrived yet. They’ll
come by post, or train, or something to-morrow.
When they do come, I’ll promise to be careful.”
“Yes. Basil, I believe
you are a boy to be trusted.-Eric!”
“What is it, ma’am?”
Eric put on a comical face, which
set all the nursery children laughing.
“Stand up, Eric. While
you are at home, at least whenever you are in the
schoolroom-in fact, I may say always-you
have got to yield to my authority.”
“Thank you, ma’am. I didn’t
know it, ma’am.”
Eric pulled his forelock after the
fashion of a charity school-boy. The nursery
children clapped their hands with delight, and a wave
of color swept over Miss Nelson’s face.
“I say, shut up and be respectful,” growled
Basil.
Eric glanced at his brother.
His whole funny face became rigid except his eyes,
which still danced with mirth. He folded his hands
on his breast, and said in a demure, mincing tone,
“I beg your pardon, Miss Nelson.”
Even the governess had to smile.
“It is granted, my dear boy.
Now with regard to your pets. The rabbits are
not to be in the house.”
“Oh, no, ma’am.”
“There’s no rabbit-hutch.”
“I’ll stow them somewhere, Miss Nelson.”
“See you do. The pigeons can share the
dovecotes, I suppose.”
“Very well, Miss Nelson.”
“The ferrets-”
here Miss Nelson almost shivered. “Dangerous,
disgusting beasts!”
“I say, don’t,” exclaimed Eric.
“Shark’s a stunner!”
“Their teeth,” continued
the governess. “I have heard that their
teeth can penetrate through any obstacle.”
“Shark’s teeth!”
pursued Eric. “Well, they ought to be strong;
he has six rows; when he opens his mouth they start
upright.”
“Six rows! Nonsense, Eric.
Please don’t talk in that silly way. And
once for all understand that I cannot allow that animal
to be kept on the premises.”
“But he’s a stunner,”
said Eric. “Shall I bring him in for you
to see?”
“You must not attempt it, sir.
It is awful to think of such a horrid creature being
so close to one, and I forbid you to bring it into
the house.”
“You shall see him, you shall
see him,” said Eric. “He’s a
perfect tip-topper. He’d kill anything.
I paid five bob for him, and six ginger-beers, and
ten and a half Betty cakes.”
“Silence, Eric; I shall have
to speak to your father. Keep the ferret in his
basket or box until I can have a word with Mr. Wilton.”
“But he’ll starve, ma’am.
He’d gnaw you if he was starving.”
“That will do. Leave the
table now, all children. I can let you know before
bed-time, Eric, what is to be done with that monster.”