LITTLE SLIDDER RESISTS TEMPTATION
SUCCESSFULLY, AND I BECOME ENSLAVED.
“Pompey,” said I, one
afternoon, while reclining on the sofa in Dobson’s
drawing-room, my leg being not yet sufficiently restored
to admit of my going out “Pompey,
I’ve got news for you.”
To my surprise my doggie would not
answer to that name at all when I used it, though
he did so when it was used by Miss Blythe.
“Dumps!” I said, in a somewhat injured
tone.
Ears and tail at once replied.
“Come now, Punch,” I said,
rather sternly; “I’ll call you what I
please Punch, Dumps, or Pompey because
you are my dog still, at least as long as your
mistress and I live under the same roof; so, sir,
if you take the Dumps when I call you Pompey, I’ll
punch your head for you.”
Evidently the dog thought this a very
flat jest, for he paid no attention to it whatever.
“Now, Dumps, come here and let’s
be friends. Who do you think is coming to stay
with us to stay altogether? You’ll
never guess. Your old friend and first master,
little Slidder, no less. Think of that!”
Dumps wagged his tail vigorously;
whether at the news, or because of pleasure at my
brushing the hair off his soft brown eyes, and looking
into them, I cannot tell.
“Yes,” I continued, “it’s
quite true. This fire will apparently be the
making of little Slidder, as well as you and me, for
we are all going to live and work together.
Isn’t that nice? Evidently Dr McTougall
is a trump, and so is his friend Dobson, who puts
this fine mansion at his disposal until another home
can be got ready for us.”
I was interrupted at this point by
an uproarious burst of laughter from the doctor himself,
who had entered by the open door unobserved by me.
I joined in the laugh against myself, but blushed,
nevertheless, for man does not like, as a rule, to
be caught talking earnestly either to himself or to
a dumb creature.
“Why, Mellon,” he said,
sitting down beside me, and patting my dog, “I
imagined from your tones, as I entered, that you were
having some serious conversation with my wife.”
“No; Mrs McTougall has not yet
returned from her drive. I was merely having
a chat with Dumps. I had of late, in my lodgings,
got into a way of thinking aloud, as it were, while
talking to my dog. I suppose it was with an
unconscious desire to break the silence of my room.”
“No doubt, no doubt,”
replied the doctor, with a touch of sympathy in his
tone. “You must have been rather lonely
in that attic of yours. And yet do you know,
I sometimes sigh for the quiet of such an attic!
Perhaps when you’ve been some months under the
same roof with these miniature thunderstorms, Jack,
Harry, Job, Jenny, and Dolly, you’ll long to
go back to the attic.”
A tremendous thump on the floor overhead,
followed by a wild uproar, sent the doctor upstairs three
steps at a stride. I sat prudently still till
he returned, which he did in a few minutes, laughing.
“What d’you think it was?”
he cried, panting. “Only my Dolly tumbling
off the chest of drawers. My babes have many
pleasant little games. Among others, cutting
off the heads of dreadful traitors is a great favourite.
They roll up a sheet into a ball for the head.
Then each of them is led in turn to the scaffold,
which is the top of a chest of drawers. One
holds the ball against the criminal’s shoulders,
another cuts it off with a wooden knife, a basket
receives it below, then one of them takes it out,
and, holding it aloft shouts `Behold the head of a
traitor!’ It seems that four criminals had been
safely decapitated, and Dolly was being led to the
fatal block, when she slipped her foot and fell to
the ground, overturning Harry and a chair in her descent.
That was all.”
“Not hurt, I hope?”
“Oh no! They never get
hurt seriously hurt, I mean. As to
black-and-blue shins, scratches, cuts, and bumps, they
may be said to exist in a perpetually maimed condition.”
“Strange!” said I musingly,
“that they should like to play at such a disagreeable
subject.”
“Disagreeable!” exclaimed
my friend, “pooh! that’s nothing.
You should see them playing at the horrors of the
Inquisition. My poor wife sometimes shudders
at the idea that we have been gifted with five monsters
of cruelty, but any one can see with half an eye that
it is a fine sense of the propriety of retributive
justice that influences them.”
“Any one who chooses to go and
look at the five innocent faces when they are asleep,”
said I, laughing, “can see with a quarter
of an eye that you and Mrs McTougall are to be congratulated
on the nature of your little ones.”
“Of course we are, my dear fellow,”
returned the doctor with enthusiasm. “But to
change the subject has little Slidder been
here to-day?”
“Not that I know of.”
“Ah! there he is” said
the doctor, as, at that instant, the door-bell rang;
“there is insolence in the very tone of his ring.
He has pulled the visitor’s bell, too, and
there goes the knocker! Of all the imps that
walk, a London street-boy is ” The
sentence was cut short by the opening of the door
and the entrance of my little protege.
He had evidently got himself up for the occasion,
for his shoeblack uniform had been well brushed, his
hands and face severely washed, and his hair plastered
well down with soap-and-water.
“Come in, Slidder that’s
your name, isn’t it?” said the doctor.
“It is, sir Robin
Slidder, at your sarvice,” replied the urchin,
giving me a familiar nod. “’Ope your
leg ain’t so cranky as it wos, sir. Gittin’
all square, eh?”
I repressed a smile with difficulty
as I replied “It is much better,
thank you. Attend to what Dr McTougall has to
say to you.”
“Hall serene,” he replied,
looking with cool urbanity in the doctor’s face,
“fire away!”
“You’re a shoeblack, I see,” said
the doctor.
“That’s my purfession.”
“Do you like it?”
“Vell, w’en it’s
dirty weather, with lots o’ mud, an’ coppers
goin’, I does. W’en it’s all
sunshine an’ starwation, I doesn’t.”
“My friend Mr Mellon tells me that you’re
a very good boy.”
Little Slidder looked at me with a solemn, reproachful
air.
“Oh! what a wopper!” he said.
We both laughed at this.
“Come, Slidder,” said
I, “you must learn to treat us with more respect,
else I shall have to change my opinion of you.”
“Wery good, sir, that’s
your business, not mine. I wos inwited
here, an’ here I am. Now, wot ’ave
you got to say to me? that’s the p’int.”
“Can you read and write?” resumed the
doctor.
“Cern’ly not,” replied
the boy, with the air of one who had been insulted;
“wot d’you take me for? D’you
think I’m a genius as can read an’ write
without ‘avin’ bin taught or d’you
think I’m a monster as wos born readin’
an’ writin’? I’ve ’ad
no school to go to nor nobody to putt me there.”
“I thought the School Board looked after such
as you.”
“So they does, sir; but I’ve been too
many for the school-boarders.”
“Then it’s your own fault
that you’ve not been taught?” said the
doctor, somewhat severely.
“Not at all,” returned
the urchin, with quiet assurance. “It’s
the dooty o’ the school-boarders to ketch me,
an’ they can’t ketch me. That’s
not my fault. It’s my superiority.”
My friend looked at the little creature
before him with much surprise. After a few seconds’
contemplation and thought, he continued “Well,
Slidder, as my friend here says you are a good sort
of boy, I am bound to believe him, though appearances
are somewhat against you. Now, I am in want
of a smart boy at present, to attend to the hall-door,
show patients into my consulting-room, run messages in
short, make himself generally useful about the house.
How would such a situation suit you?”
“W’y, doctor,” said
the boy, ignoring the question, “how could any
boy attend on your ’all-door w’en it’s
burnt to hashes?”
“We will manage to have another
door,” replied Dr McTougall, with a forbearing
smile; “meanwhile you could practise on the door
of this house. But that is not answering
my question, boy. How would you like the place?
You’d have light work, a good salary, pleasant
society below stairs, and a blue uniform. In
short, I’d make a page-in-buttons of you.”
“Wot about the wittles?” demanded this
remarkable boy.
“Of course you’d fare
as well as the other servants,” returned the
doctor, rather testily, for his opinion of my little
friend was rapidly falling; I could see that, to my
regret.
“Now give me an answer at once,”
he continued sharply. “Would you like
to come?”
“Not by no manner of means,” replied Slidder
promptly.
We both looked at him in amazement.
“Why, Slidder, you stupid fellow!”
said I, “what possesses you to refuse so good
an offer?”
“Dr Mellon,” he replied,
turning on me with a flush of unwonted earnestness,
“d’you think I’d be so shabby, so
low, so mean, as to go an’ forsake Granny Willis
for all the light work an’ good salaries and
pleasant society an’ blue-uniforms-with-buttons
in London? Who’d make ’er gruel?
Who’d polish ‘er shoes every mornin’
till you could see to shave in ’em, though she
don’t never put ’em on? Who’d
make ‘er bed an’ light ‘er fires
an’ fetch ‘er odd bits o’ coal?
An’ who’d read the noos to ’er,
an’ ”
“Why, Slidder,” interrupted
Dr McTougall, “you said just now that you could
not read.”
“No more I can, sir but I takes
in a old newspaper to ’er every morning’,
an’ sets myself down by the fire with it before
me an’ pretends to read. I inwents the
noos as I goes along; an you should see that old lady’s
face, an’ the way ‘er eyes opens we’n
I’m a tapin’ off the murders
an’ the ‘ighway robberies, an’ the
burglaries an’ the fires at ‘ome, an’
the wars an’ earthquakes an’ other scrimmages
abroad. It do cheer ‘er up most wonderful.
Of course, I stick in any hodd bits o’ real
noos I ’appens to git hold of, but I ain’t
partickler.”
“Apparently not,” said
the doctor, laughing. “Well, I see it’s
of no use tempting you to forsake your present position indeed,
I would not wish you to leave it. Some day I
may find means to have old Mrs Willis taken better
care of, and then well, we shall see.
Meanwhile, I respect your feelings. Good-bye,
and give my regards to granny. Say I’ll
be over to see her soon.”
“Stay,” said I, as the
boy turned to leave, “you never told me that
one of your names was Robin.”
“’Cause it wasn’t
w’en I saw you last; I only got it a few days
ago.”
“Indeed! From whom?”
“From Granny Willis. She
gave me the name, an’ I likes it, an’ mean
to stick by it Good arternoon, gen’lemen.
Ta, ta, Punch.”
At the word my doggie bounced from
under my hand and began to leap joyfully round the
boy.
“I say,” said Robin, pausing
at the door and looking back, “she’s
all right I ‘ope. Gittin’ better?”
“Who do you mean?”
“W’y, the guv’ness, in course my
young lady.”
“Oh, yes! I am happy to
say she is better,” said the doctor, much amused
by the anxious look of the face, which had hitherto
been the quintessence of cool self-possession.
“But she has had a great shake, and will have
to be sent to the country for change of air when we
can venture to move her.”
I confess that I was much surprised,
but not a little gratified, by the very decided manner
in which Slidder avowed his determination to stand
fast by the poor old woman in whom I had been led to
take so strong an interest. Hitherto I had felt
some uncertainty as to how far I could depend on the
boy’s affection for Mrs Willis, and his steadiness
of purpose; now I felt quite sure of him.
Dr McTougall felt as I did in the
matter, and so did his friend the City man.
I had half expected that Dobson would have laughed
at us for what he sometimes styled our softness, because
he had so much to do with sharpers and sharp practice,
but I was mistaken. He quite agreed with us
in our opinion of my little waif, and spoke admiringly
of those who sought, through evil and good report,
to rescue our “City Arabs” from destruction.
And Dobson did more than speak: he gave liberally
out of his ample fortune to the good cause.
That evening, just after the gas was
lighted, while I was lying on the sofa thinking of
these things, and toying with Dumps’s ears, the
door opened and Mrs McTougall entered, with Miss Blythe
leaning on her arm. It was the first time she
had come down to the drawing-room since her illness.
She was thin, and pale, but to my mind more beautiful
than ever, for her brown eyes seemed to grow larger
and more lustrous as they beamed upon me.
I leaped up, sending an agonising
shoot of pain through my leg, and hastened to meet
her. Dumps, as if jealous of me, sprang wildly
on before, and danced round his mistress in a whirlwind
of delight.
“I am so glad to see you, Miss
Blythe,” I stammered; “I had feared the
consequences of that terrible night that
rude descent. You you are
better, I ”
“Thank you; very much
better,” she replied, with a sweet smile; “and
how shall I ever express my debt of gratitude to you,
Mr Mellon?”
She extended her delicate hand.
I grasped it; she shook mine heartily.
That shake fixed my fate. No
doubt it was the simple and natural expression of
a grateful heart for a really important service; but
I cared nothing about that. She blushed as I
looked at her, and stooped to pat the jealous and
impatient Dumps.
“Sit here, darling, on this
easy-chair,” said Mrs McTougall; “you know
the doctor allows you only half an hour or
an hour at most to-night; you may be up
longer to-morrow. There; and you are not to speak
much, remember. Mr Mellon, you must address
yourself to me. Lilly is only allowed to listen.
“Yes, as you truly said, Mr
Mellon,” continued the good lady, who was somewhat
garrulous, “her descent was rough, and indeed,
so was mine. Oh! I shall never forget that
rough monster into whose arms you thrust me that awful
night; but he was a brave and strong monster too.
He just gathered me up like a bundle of clothes,
and went crashing down the blazing stair, through
fire and smoke and through bricks and mortar
too, it seemed to me, from the noise and shocks.
But we came out safe, thank God, and I had not a
scratch, though I noticed that my monster’s
hair and beard were on fire, and his face was cut and
bleeding. I can’t think how he carried
me so safely.”
“Ah! the firemen have a knack
of doing that sort of thing,” said I, speaking
to Mrs McTougall, but looking at Lilly Blythe.
“So I have heard. The
brave, noble men,” said Lilly, speaking to Mrs
McTougall, but looking at me.
I know not what we conversed about
during the remainder of that hour. Whether I
talked sense or nonsense I cannot tell. The only
thing I am quite sure of is that I talked incessantly,
enthusiastically, to Mrs McTougall, but kept my eyes
fixed on Lilly Blythe all the time; and I know that
Lilly blushed a good deal, and bent her pretty head
frequently over her “darling Pompey,”
and fondled him to his heart’s content.
That night my leg violently resented
the treatment it had received. When I slept I
dreamed that I was on the rack, and that Miss Blythe,
strange to say, was the chief tormentor, while Dumps
quietly looked on and laughed yes, deliberately
laughed at my sufferings.