To the skipper’s surprise and
disapproval Annis kept her word. To be sure she
could not prevent him meeting her in the road when
the schooner was at Northfleet, his attitude when
she tried to, being one of wilful and deliberate defiance.
She met this disobedience adeptly by taking a pupil
home with her, and when even this was not sufficient
added to the number. The day on which she appeared
in the road with four small damsels was the last day
the skipper accompanied her. He could only walk
in front or behind; the conversation was severely technical,
and the expression on the small girls’ faces
precocious in the extreme.
The search went on all the summer,
the crew of the Seamew causing much comment
at the various ports by walking about as though they
had lost something. They all got to wear a bereaved
appearance after a time, which, in the case of the
cook who had risked some capital in the
affair was gradually converted to one of
resignation.
At the beginning of September they
found themselves at Ironbridge, a small town on the
East Coast, situated on the river Lebben. As usual,
the skipper’s inquiries revealed nothing.
Ironbridge was a small place, with absolutely nothing
to conceal; but it was a fine day, and Henry, who
disliked extremely the task of assisting to work out
the cargo, obtained permission to go ashore to purchase
a few small things for the cook and look round.
He strolled along blithely, casting
a glance over his shoulders at the dusty cloud which
hung over the Seamew as he went. It was
virgin soil to him, and he thirsted for adventure.
The town contained but few objects
of interest. Before the advent of railways it
had been a thriving port with a considerable trade;
now its streets were sleepy and its wharves deserted.
Besides the Seamew the only other craft in
the river was a tiny sloop, the cargo of which two
men were unloading by means of a basket and pulley
and a hand truck.
The quietude told upon Henry, who,
after a modest half-pint, lit his pipe and sauntered
along the narrow High Street with his hands in his
pockets. A short walk brought him to the white
hurdles of the desolate market-place. Here the
town as a town ended and gave place to a few large
houses standing in their own grounds.
“Well, give me London,”
said Henry to himself as he paused at a high brick
wall and looked at the fruit trees beyond. “Why,
the place seems dead!”
He scrambled up on to the wall, and,
perched on the top, whistled softly. The grown-up
flavor of half-pints had not entirely eradicated a
youthful partiality for apples. He was hidden
from the house by the trees, and almost involuntarily
he dropped down on the other side of the wall and
began to fill his pockets with the fruit.
Things were so quiet that he became
venturesome, and, imitating the stealthy movement
of the Red Indian, whom he loved, so far as six or
seven pounds of apples would allow him, made his way
to a large summer-house and peeped in. It was
empty, except for a table and a couple of rough benches,
and after another careful look round, he entered,
and seating himself on the bench, tried an apple.
He was roused to a sense of the danger
of his position by footsteps on the path outside,
which, coming nearer and nearer, were evidently aimed
at the summer-house. With a silence and celerity
of which any brave would have been proud, he got under
the table.
“There you are, you naughty
little girl,” said a woman’s voice.
“You will not come out until you know your rivers
perfectly.”
Somebody was pushed into the summer-house,
the door slammed behind, and a key turned in the lock.
The footsteps retreated again, and the embarrassed
brave realized that he was in a cruelly false position,
his very life, so to speak, depending on the strength
a small girl’s scream.
“I don’t care!”
said a dogged voice. “Bother your rivers!
bother your rivers! bother your rivers!”
The owner of the voice sat on the
table and hummed fiercely. In the stress of mental
anguish caused by his position, Henry made a miscalculation,
and in turning bumped the table heavily with his head.
“Ough!” said the small girl breathlessly.
“Don’t be frightened,”
said Henry, popping up humbly; “I won’t
hurt you.”
“Hoo!” said the small girl in a flutter;
“a boy!”
Henry rose and seated himself respectfully,
coughing confusedly, as he saw the small girl’s
gaze riveted on his pockets.
“What have you got in your pockets?” she
asked.
“Apples,” said Henry softly. “I
bought ’em in the town.”
The small girl extended her hand,
and accepting a couple, inspected them carefully.
“You’re a bad, wicked
boy!” she said seriously as she bit into one.
“You’ll get it when Miss Dimchurch comes!”
“Who’s Miss Dimchurch?”
inquired Henry with pardonable curiosity.
“Schoolmistress,” said the small girl.
“Is this a school?” said Henry.
The small girl, her mouth full of apple, nodded.
“Any men here?” inquired Henry with an
assumed carelessness.
The small girl shook her head.
“You’re the only boy I’ve
ever seen here,” she said gleefully. “You’ll
get it when Miss Dimchurch comes!”
His mind relieved of a great fear,
Henry leaned back and smiled confidently.
“I’m not afraid of the
old girl,” he said quietly, as he pulled out
his pipe and filled it.
The small girl’s eyes glistened with admiration.
“I wish I was a boy,”
she said plaintively, “then I shouldn’t
mind her. Are you a sailor-boy?”
“Sailor,” corrected Henry; “yes.”
“I like sailors,” said
the small girl amicably. “You may have a
bite of my apple if you like.”
“Never mind, thanks,”
said Henry hastily; “I’ve got a clean one
here.”
The small girl drew herself up and
eyed him haughtily, but finding that he was not looking
at her resumed her apple.
“What’s your name?” she asked.
“’Enery Hatkins,”
replied the youth, as he remembered sundry cautions
about the letter h he had received at school.
“What’s yours?”
“Gertrude Ursula Florence Harcourt,”
said the small girl, sitting up straighter to say
it. “I don’t like the name of Atkins.”
“Don’t you?” said
Henry, trying not to show resentment. “I
don’t like Gertrude, or Ursula, or Florence,
and Harcourt’s the worst of all.”
Miss Harcourt drew off three or four
inches and drummed with the tips of her fingers on
the table. “I don’t care what you
like,” she said humming.
“I like Gerty,” said Henry
with the air of a connoisseur, as he looked at the
small flushed face. “I think Gerty’s
very pretty.”
“That’s what they always
call me,” said Miss Harcourt carelessly.
“Does your ship go right out to sea?”
“Yes,” said the boy.
They had been blown out to sea once, and he salved
his conscience with that.
“And how many times,”
said Gertrude Ursula Florence Harcourt, getting nearer
to him again, “have you had fights with pirates?”
She left absolutely no loophole.
If she had asked him whether he had ever fought pirates
he would have said “No,” though that would
have been hard with her little excitable face turned
towards his and the dark blue eyes dancing with interest.
“I forget whether it was six
or seven,” said Henry Atkins. “I think
it was only six.”
“Tell us all about them,”
said Miss Harcourt, shifting with excitement.
Henry took a bite of his apple and
started, thankful that a taste for reading of a thrilling
description had furnished him with material.
He fought ships in a way which even admirals had never
thought of, and certainly not the pirates, who were
invariably discomfited by the ingenious means by which
he enabled virtue to triumph over sin. Miss Harcourt
held her breath with pleasurable terror, and tightened
or relaxed the grip of her small and not too clean
fingers on his arm as the narrative proceeded.
“But you never killed a man
yourself,” said she, when he had finished.
There was an inflection, just a slight inflection,
of voice, which Henry thought undeserved after the
trouble he had taken.
“I can’t exactly say,”
he replied shortly. “You see in the heat” he
got it right that time “in the heat
of an engagement you can’t be sure.”
“Of course you can’t,”
said Miss Harcourt, repenting of her unreasonableness.
“You are brave!” Henry blushed.
“Are you an officer?” inquired Miss Harcourt.
“Not quite,” said Henry, wishing somehow
that he was.
“If you make haste and become
an officer I’ll marry you when I grow up,”
said Miss Harcourt, smiling on him kindly. “That
is if you like, of course.”
“I should like it very much,”
said Henry wistfully, “I didn’t mean it
when I said I didn’t like your names just now.”
“You shouldn’t have told
stories, then,” said Miss Harcourt severely,
but not unkindly; “I can’t bear storytellers.”
The conscience-stricken Henry groaned
inwardly, but, reflecting there was plenty of time
to confess before the marriage, brightened up again.
The “Rivers of Europe” had fallen beneath
the table, and were entirely forgotten until the sounds
of many feet and many voices in the garden recalled
them to a sense of their position.
“Play-time,” said the
small girl, picking up her book and skipping to the
farthest seat possible from Henry. “Thames,
Seine, Danube, Rhine.”
A strong, firm step stopped outside
the door, and a key turned in the lock. The door
was thrown open, and Miss Dimchurch peeping in, drew
back with a cry of surprise. Behind her some
thirty small girls, who saw her surprise, but not
the reason for it, waited eagerly for light.
“Miss Harcourt!” said the principal in
an awful voice.
“Yes, ma’am,” said
Miss Harcourt looking up, with her finger in the book
to keep the place.
“How dare you stay in here with
this person?” demanded the principal.
“It wasn’t my fault,”
said Miss Harcourt, working up a whimper. “You
locked me in. He was here when I came.”
“Why didn’t you call after me?”
demanded Miss Dimchurch.
“I didn’t know he was here; he was under
the table,” said Miss Harcourt.
Miss Dimchurch turned and bestowed
a terrible glance upon Henry, who, with his forgotten
pipe in his hand, looked uneasily up to see whether
he could push past her. Miss Harcourt, holding
her breath, gazed at the destroyer of pirates, and
waited confidently for something extraordinary to
happen.
“He’s been stealing my
apples!” said Miss Dimchurch tragically.
“Where’s the gymnasium mistress?”
The gymnasium mistress, a tall pretty
girl, was just behind her.
“Remove that horrid boy, Miss
O’Brien,” said the principal.
“Don’t worry,” said
Henry, trying to speak calmly; “I’ll go.
Stand away here. I don’t want to be hard
on wimmin.”
“Take him out,” commanded the mistress.
Miss O’Brien, pleased at this
opportunity of displaying her powers, entered, and
squaring her shoulders, stood over the intruder in
much the same way that Henry had seen barmen
stand over Sam.
“Look here, now,” he said,
turning pale; “you drop it. I don’t
want to hurt you.”
He placed his pipe in his pocket,
and rose to his feet as the gymnasium mistress caught
him in her strong slender arms and raised him from
the ground. Her grip was like steel, and a babel
of admiring young voices broke upon his horrified
ears as his captor marched easily with him down the
garden, their progress marked by apples, which rolled
out of his pockets and bounded along the ground.
“I shall kick you,” whispered
Henry fiercely ignoring the fact that both
legs were jammed together as he caught sight
of the pale, bewildered little face of Gertrude U.
F. Harcourt.
“Kick away,” said Miss
O’Brien sweetly, and using him as a dumb-bell,
threw in a gratuitous gymnastic display for the edification
of her pupils.
“If you come here again, you
naughty little boy,” said Miss Dimchurch, who
was heading the procession behind, “I shall give
you to a policeman. Open the gate, girls!”
The gate was open, and Henry, half
dead with shame, was thrust into the road in full
view of the cook, who had been sent out in search of
him.
“Wot, ’Enery?” said
the cook in unbelieving accents as he staggered back,
aghast at the spectacle “wotever ‘ave
you been a-doin’ of?”
“He’s been stealing my
apples!” said Miss Dimchurch sternly. “If
I catch him here again I shall cane him!”
“Quite right, ma’am!
I hope he hasn’t hurt anybody,” said the
cook, unable to realize fully the discomfiture of
the youth.
Miss Dimchurch slammed the gate and
left the couple standing in the road. The cook
turned and led the way down to the town again, accompanied
by the crestfallen Henry.
“’Ave a apple, cook?”
said the latter, proffering one; “I saved a beauty
a-purpose for you.”
“No, thanks,” said the cook.
“It won’t bite you,” said Henry
shortly.
“No, and I won’t bite it either,”
replied the cook.
They continued their way in silence,
until at the market-place Henry paused in front of
the “Farmer’s Arms.”
“Come in and ’ave a pint, old chap,”
he said cordially.
“No, thankee,” said the
cook again. “It’s no use, Enery, you
don’t git over me in that way.”
“Wot d’ye mean?” blustered the youth.
“You know,” said the other darkly.
“No, I don’t,” said Henry.
“Well, I wouldn’t miss
tellin’ the other chaps, no, not for six pints,”
said the cook cheerfully. “You’re
a deep un, ’Enery, but so am I.”
“Glad you told me,” said
the out-generalled youth “Nobody’d think
so to look at your silly, fat face.”
The cook smiled indulgently, and,
going aboard, left his youthful charge to give the
best explanation he could of his absence to the skipper an
explanation which was marred for him by the childish
behavior of the cook at the other end of the ship,
who taking the part of Miss O’Brien for himself,
gave that of Henry to a cork fender, which, when it
became obstreperous as it frequently did
on the slightest provocation he slapped
vigorously, giving sundry falsetto howls, which he
fondly imagined were in good imitation of Henry.
After three encores the skipper stepped forward for
enlightenment, returning to the mate with a grin so
aggravating that the sensitive Henry was near to receiving
a thrashing for insubordination of the most impertinent
nature.