Jake"s fingers closed and held. He said nothing, merely waited.
And very suddenly--after his own headlong fashion--Bunny made unconditional surrender. "Oh, get out, you beastly groom!" he said, and wrung Jake"s hand with all the force he could muster. "All right! It"s done!"
Jake made an odd movement as of tension relaxed though none had been apparent in his bearing. He struck Bunny on the shoulder the blow of a friend.
"That"s the biggest thing you"ve ever done for me, pard," he said with a smile. "Reckon I shan"t forget it. Take it out of me next time!"
"You bet I will!" said Bunny.
He linked his arm through Jake"s and gripped it hard. His eyes were shining as they pa.s.sed out together into the gathering dusk. He had made a considerable sacrifice, but Jake had the gift of making him realize that it was worth while.
CHAPTER VIII
THE ALLY
A squeal of childish laughter echoed down the long pa.s.sage that led from the nurseries, followed by a shuffling sound along the floor.
"Hold tight!" cried a voice, a gay, boyish voice, "I"m going to gallop!"
There followed a tremendous scrambling along the corridor and shrieks of delight from three excited children. Jake, who had just mounted the stairs, paused in his progress; but in a moment there came a dramatic sound indicative of collapse, and immediately there arose cries of dismay. He turned an intervening corner and came upon the newly-arrived guest quite p.r.o.ne upon the floor with his three little girls scuffling in delighted agitation over her inert body.
He hesitated to interrupt the game, but in an instant Betty the youngest had spied him and uttered a shrill cry of welcome. The heap upon the floor swiftly resolved itself into four separate beings, and the newcomer sprang up with the litheness of a squirrel and met him with a free grace that was not without a suggestion of defiance.
He held out his hand to her. He understood the defiance and replied to it with characteristic directness.
"Guess you thought me a rough sort of animal when we met in the paddock this afternoon," he said. "I"m sorry. It was Bunny I was up against--not you."
"Not me?" said Toby, her wide eyes lifted quite openly to his. "Sure?"
He pinched the slim young hand without ceremony. Somehow she took him by storm--this girl with the open brow and curiously pathetic face. "Well, not so much you," he said. "Bunny knows that gambling on a big scale is against the law for children of his age."
"Oh, I see," said Toby. She smiled and slipped her hand free. "Well, I"m years older than he is, so that doesn"t apply to me. Bunny wasn"t doing any gambling either."
"I gathered that," said Jake.
She stopped and lifted Molly the second child, partially veiling her own face with the little girl"s soft curls. "Then you are up against me," she said.
"No, I"m not," Jake"s voice held a queer, compa.s.sionate note. "We won"t quarrel till we know each other better anyway. I see you"re pretty intimate with the youngsters already."
"Oh, that"s easy, isn"t it?" said Toby. "Babies always take you at your face value. They are never prejudiced beforehand. There"s never any handicap of that sort with babies."
Betty was clamouring at her knees. She bent and lifted her also, bracing her slight form to a double burden of which Jake instantly relieved her, gathering both children into his own strong arms.
"You"re not to do that ever again," he said, with the authority of the man accustomed to obedience. "Understand?"
"Why not?" said Toby.
He turned to carry the two babies to the nursery. "Because I say it," he said briefly.
"Oh, but that"s no reason," said Toby, with light a.s.surance.
Eileen at her side looked up in shocked amazement. "Not if Daddy says so?" she questioned.
Toby stooped and swung her up to her shoulder. "You little featherweight!
Daddy"s only a man!" she said.
"Quite true," said Jake deliberately. "The sort of man who means what he says--always, and sees that he gets it."
"What a frightful undertaking!" laughed Toby. "Then if you told me to go to blazes you"d see that I went?"
There was a pause. Eileen"s little hands locked themselves nervously under Toby"s chin. Perhaps she was aware of a certain electricity in the atmosphere. She was plainly not at her ease.
Jake"s voice sounded, very quiet and distinct, from the nursery door as he entered. "I reckon that"s just one of the things I"ve learnt not to say."
"Oh glory!" said Toby, "There goes the odd trick!"
It was several minutes later, after a wild final romp that they left the room together. There was certainly no ceremony left between them.
They came out as comrades, laughing at the same joke, their brief pa.s.sage-at-arms apparently forgotten.
Toby, however, reverted to it very suddenly as they walked along the pa.s.sage. "Mr. Bolton, I"m sorry I got Bunny into hot water this afternoon. It was all my fault. And I"m sorry I said blazes in front of the babies just now. You"ll have to kick me when I do these things, and then I"ll remember."
Jake paused and looked at her. "Say! Are you a boy or a girl?" he said.
She smiled, a faintly dubious smile, but her reply was prompt. "Mostly boy, sir. That"s what makes it so difficult."
He put his hand on her shoulder. "Look here! Call me Jake, see? Are you keen on horses?"
Toby"s eyes shone. "Like mad," she said.
"I"ll see you ride tomorrow," said Jake.
Toby whooped with delight. "But I"ll have to borrow some breeches from someone. You don"t want me to ride in a skirt do you?"
"Not specially," said Jake. "What do you generally ride in?"
"Tights," said Toby, and then suddenly clapped her hand to her mouth in dismay. "There! Now I"ve done it! You won"t tell--you"ll never tell, will you? Promise!"
"Sure!" said Jake. He was smiling a little, but there was compa.s.sion in his eyes.
And Toby"s hand came out to him in sudden confidence. "I like you," she said. "You"re a friend."
Jake"s grasp was strong and kindly. "I guess I shan"t let you down," he said.
Toby nodded. "You"ve been a cow-boy, haven"t you? I knew that directly I saw you."